Good morning, RVA! Itâs 64 °F, and today looks great. Expect highs in the mid 80s plus some clouds in the sky later this afternoon. The weekend looks decent, tooâweâll just have to see if any rogue rain pops up or not. For now, though, call dibs on your favorite outside chair and plan to spend the next couple mornings out there drinking your beverage of choice.
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As of last night the COVID-19 Community Level is high in Richmond but medium in both Henrico and Chesterfield. The 7-day average of new COVID-19 cases per 100,000 people in each locality is 296, 197, and 150, respectively. The 7-day average of new COVID-19 hospital admissions per 100,000 is 15.3. Weâre back into split decision territory! Which I donât love! While the case rates do appear to be dropping in parts of our region, the hospital admission rates keep climbing, and Iâm not sure what to make of that. Iâll still be wearing my mask and doing what I can to reduce my chances of getting COVID for the foreseeable future because 1) itâs easy, 2) Henricoâs â197â case rate is real close to â200â (at which itâd be in a high level), and 3) Iâm patiently waiting to hear about those new fall COVID-19 boosters.
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One other COVID-related piece of news, did yâall see the FDAâs new guidance on using at-home tests? Because our current at-home tests are less successful at accurately detecting omicron, the FDA now recommends that folks with symptoms follow a negative at-home test with a second at-home test 48 hours later. If you donât have symptoms but believe youâve been exposed, follow that original negative test with another 48 hours later and then one more after that (for a total of three). Do you have a huge pile of at-home tests in your cabinet? If not, nowâs the time to grab a few more!
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KidsFirst RPS has put together their summary from this past Mondayâs RPS School Board meeting. With Board meetings that run over five hours long, Iâm thankful that someone is doing this workâand that itâs not me. Youâll definitely want to pair the summary with the scorecard for the meeting, too, which includes this bummer of a sentence: âRPS staff confusion, followed by the sinking realization that their work has been sabotaged by the Boardâs unrelenting skepticism and cynicism for the admin, is becoming a really disheartening trademark of these meetings.â KidsFirst is referencing this discussion on a student assessment data tracking platform (that the Board eventually voted down), but they could be talking about almost any and every issues that ever comes up at these Board meeting. Itâs exhausting and demoralizing, and Iâm just sitting on the sidelines. I canât imagine what itâs like for school administration and staff.
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Also schools-related, Jessica Nocera at the Richmond Times-Dispatch reports on the newly released statewide SOL scores, which you can dig around in for yourself here. Passing rates across the boardâacross the regionâare down from pre-pandemic levels, which, I dunno. Certainly not great, but does that tell us much new information? The last couple of years have been hard for everyone, and I think itâs reasonable to expect to see that reflected in the SOLS (and, of course, to expect a lot of hard work from everyone involved to move beyond the last couple of years, too).
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VPMâs Ben Paviour has a quick follow up from this weekâs Virginia Board of Education meeting, at which the Board decided to delay a review of new history and social science standards. Virginia Superintendent of Public Instruction, Jillian Balow, has this quote that I wanted to preserve for the record (just in case): âShe said a delay in reviewing the standards is not connected to Youngkinâs campaign pledge to ban the teaching of critical race theoryâŠâWe donât want to conflate concepts like African American History and CRT,â Balow told reporters on Wednesday. âThose are different conversations entirely.ââ OK, sounds goodâŠish. Letâs check back in a couple weeks and see what those words actually mean.
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Did Virginians invent barbecue? Karri Peifer (and RIchmond-based writer Deb Freeman) say yes! Thatâs a bold, saucy claim, but who am I to argue?
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Reminder: VCU move-in days continue! Expect the flood of young people and family-member tears to continue through the weekend.
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A disappointing case of Betteridgeâs Law of Headlines, but still an interesting read.
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To tell the story of how a purported cow tooth dug up in the Caribbean might corroborate the mythical origin of wild horses off the coast of Maryland and Virginia, let us begin, naturally, with a childrenâs book, Misty of Chincoteague. If you know, you knowâhorse girls, Iâm looking at you. For everyone else: This beloved 1947 childrenâs novel tells the story of Misty the pony, born on the beaches of an uninhabited barrier island. The story is fictional, but the setting is real. A band of wild horses still roams that island today, eating seagrass and largely ignoring tourists who come for selfies with a real-life version of Misty. No one knows how the horses first arrived there, but Misty of Chincoteague retells a dramatic bit of local lore.
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Bikes for Jonah.
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