Good morning, RVA! Itâs 62 °F, and todayâs highs are in the 70s! Welcome back, wonderfully temperate weather. I hope you stick around for at least a couple of days. This list of Virginiaâs 12 seasons, via /r/reddit, is super applicable.
Police are reporting that Antoine Deleston, 28, was shot to death Thursday afternoon on the 2000 block of Conrad Street. Anyone with information about this murder can call Detective A. Coates (804.646.0729) or Crime Stoppers (804.780.1000, 7801000.com).
After several columns and editorials skeptical of the Mayorâs proposed new downtown arena project, the Richmond Times-Dispatch Editorial Board has come out with this pretty darn favorable editorial thatâs basically just a list of the amenity requirements included in the projectâs RFP (PDF). They donât get into the details of the financing and the possible short-to-medium-term impacts it could have on the Cityâs general fundâwhich is my second biggest concern after âdo we even need an arena downtown?â They also donât tackle why an arena and the associated development is the only possible way to take advantage of âopportunities for downtown revitalization.â What really ticked me off, though, is this throwaway line about bus riders: âA new GRTC transit center, which can serve community members without the means for or interest in spending on leisure activities.â I think thatâs a gross, monolithic, and lazy way to view folks who ride the bus that, perhaps, reveals who the RTD editorial board thinks the majority of this project is for. For what itâs worth and dispite whatever I think about the project and its details, I do think that the Mayorâs administration fully believes all Richmonders, whatever their means or mode of transportation, deserve the kind of quality-of-life improvements that they hope will come out of this North of Broad project. Anyway, having the paperâs editorial team on board is a big PR win for NoBro.
Itâs wild how NIMBY resident complaints against density and new development are universally the same across our region. Do they all get the same newsletter? Maybe a bizarro version GMRVA thatâs Richmondâs premiere downzoning and status quo email? Most recently, Sean Gorman in the RTD says đž that folks in Chesterfield are railing against the new Midlothian Community Special Area Plan because it may encourage building apartments. In this quote, one resident deploys a double classic anti-growth technique of âWe Want Development, Just Not This Developmentâ plus âWhat About The Children!â: âWe want growth. We want development, but at the same time the amount of apartments that are popping up in the short period of time that theyâre popping up is concerning because of schools.â Weâve heard these same complaints in Richmond during conversations about the Pulse, bike lanes, the new apartments on Brook Road, and just about every other progressive, urbanist project that I can think of.
Meanwhile, in Scottâs Addition, developers are looking to take advantage of the recent upzoning of the neighborhood and will build a tower that will âgo up to nearly the limit of its [12-story] height restriction.â Now thatâs the density Iâm after! J. Elias OâNeal at Richmond BizSense has all the details. The developers will also use Opportunity Zone funding, which I still do not understand. I imagine theyâll bring lots of opportunity to folks looking for market-rate housing, which is definitely a need we have in the City, but for anyone looking for a more affordable opportunityâŠđ€·ââïž.
The RTDâs Karrie Peifer says that Fuzzy Cactus, a new rock and roll bar, has opened on Brookland Park Boulevard. Iâve been following the changes to and grown of this area for a couple of years now, and new bars and nightlight are certainly one type of change/growth.
Today, at 11:00 AM on the Capitol steps, folks from VAratiftyERA will hold a press conference and kick of their 2020 campaign to get Virginia to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment. Should Virginia Ratify the ERA, weâd be the final state needed to kick offâŠsome sort of federal process. Itâs legally unclear what would happen, but, certainly, something would happen. Plus, itâs the right thing to do.
Ban cars. But seriously, Semmes is a speedway and either needs a reconfiguration of the street to keep people from driving into houses or some serious speed limit enforcement by the police.
Submitted by Patron Kathleen. Michael Twitty is a Black historical interpreter who focuses on food and cooking. His blog is great and worth subscribing to.
Southern food is my vehicle for interpretation because it is not apolitical. It is also drenched in all the dreadful funkiness of the history it was created in. Itâs not my job to comfort you. Itâs not my job to assuage any guilt you may feel. Thatâs really none of my business. My job is to show you that my Ancestors, (and some of yours quiet as its keptâŠgo get your DNA doneâŠlike right nowâŠtalking to you Louisiana and South CarolinaâŠ) resisted enslavement by maintaining links to what scholar Charles D. Joyner famously called a âculinary grammarâ that contained whole narratives that reached into spirituality, health practices, linguistics, agricultural wisdom and environmental practices that constituted in the words of late historian William D. Piersen, âa resistance âtoo civilized to notice.â
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