Good morning, RVA! It's 55 °F, and Iāve got some personal news.
Bittersweet news: This is the last edition of Good Morning, RVA for the foreseeable future! Iāve taken a job with the Cityās Office of Strategic Communications and Civic Engagementāwhich Iām incredibly stoked aboutāand I think this professional transition marks the perfect time to press pause on this, Richmondās premiere zoning and rezoning newsletter.
The last time I had to write a post like this it was for dramatic and sad reasons: Closing down RVANews because I couldnāt find a way to financially support a newsroom of multiple people doing good work in an industry that was (and still is!) struggling to figure out how to make ends meet. This time, though, I get to write a see-you-around post (very different from a so-long post) with a much better perspective: Making a proactive choice to do something new. Iām excited to move on, interested in exploring new projects, and, without a doubt, looking forward to getting a little more sleep each morningābecause, to answer a Frequently Asked Question, I do (did!) write everything fresh each morning, waking up at 5:15 AM (another FAQ) to make tea and read the news.
Iāve read and written about a lot of newsāand a lot of PDFsāover the last eight years, and when I look back, Iām proud of what Iāve accomplished. Eight years is a lot of years, and, while I havenāt really kept track, Iāve written somewhere north of 1,800 daily emails, with maybe just one single unplanned absence (when I got my first COVID-19 vaccine). Thatās incredible!
As the years piled up, I got less and less interested in āwhat people want to readā and more and more interested in āwhat I want to write about.ā I think, maybe counterintuitively, thatās what makes (made!) Good Morning, RVA successful. Iāve tried real hard, especially in recent years, to only write about what I find fun and interesting and to write about it in fun and interesting ways. Now, many years down the road in 2024, I write (wrote!) a daily, ad-free email about budgets, zoning, bicycles, and fascinating stories I happen upon (have I told you about the lifecycle of bamboo??). Itās not something that Iād ever have predicted thousands and thousands of people would want to read every morning, and Iām proud of that.
Iām most proud of the work Iāve done to normalize actual news coverage on topics like the combined sewer overflow system, transportation infrastructure, and, of course, budget season. I think Richmonders now expect our local media to cover those sorts of things, and Iāll take a small portion of the credit for creating that culture. Iām also particularly proud of the work I did during COVID-19 and the summer of 2020. Iāve been reading over those entries from four years ago, and itās both a humbling and affirming experienceāFour Years Ago Me really knew how to put together a sentence!
I am also just incredibly proud of you, the audience, who has read about whatever thing I decided to write about each and every morning for eight straight years. What an amazing and supportive group of people! I think I can count on two hands the number of negative emails I got in response to nearly a decade of having (sometimes strong) opinions on (sometimes emotional) local issues. If Iām honest, the part Iāll most miss is that Iāll no longer have people emailing me thoughtful feedback and kind words.
At this point, though, it definitely feels like itās time for me to move on to something different. Donāt get me wrong: zoning is still, of course, fun, interesting, and incredibly important, especially with the big zoning rewrite coming up. But Iām having a harder and harder time writing about it in fun and interesting ways. One of my hopes is that by stepping away from GMRVA, I will leave space for the next great zoning and rezoning email newsletter writer to step in and start explaining how the City works in new ways. Itās clearly something Richmonders crave, and Iām sure folks would love to hear from someone with a different perspective than my own.
So, thatās it! Thank you so much for reading. If youāre a Patron, youāve allowed me to keep time and space in my life for this email, and Iām incredibly thankful for that. Finally, an infinite thank you to all of Richmondās actual reporters who make it their job to sit in endless meetings, interview our community leaders, and lift up issues important to residents. Without yāall Good Morning, RVA would not have existed.
Eight years ago, when writing my previous sign off post, I ended with this, which still feels just as true now as it did in 2016:
Other than that, though, who knows! I donāt want to commit to anything, but you know how sometimes I just canāt not write about buses, or bikes, or education, or City Councilā¦
I donāt know where youāll find my next thing and what thatāll look like...but you know how I sometimes just canāt not!
Lastly, some logistical bits
Iām gonna keep the GMRVA email list around, and I canāt promise I wonāt send out some infrequent emails about whatever random stuff Iām into at the moment. Please donāt offer to buy GMRVA, step in and run it, or fold it into some other thing youāre working on.
Later this morning I will āpauseā Patreon and with the eventual goal of āunpublishingā my Patreon page. I need to figure out how all the tax stuff works before I go ahead and unpublish, but, moving forward, Patrons will not have their cards charged again. It wonāt be necessary, but if you want to make double sure, youāre also welcome to cancel your patronage.
I intend on keeping the GMRVA-adjacent projects running: the Boring Show, the RVA.FYI mastodon server, and the legislation and candidate trackers.
You can always email me at my personal email, rcatrow@gmail.com! Itās not like Iām dead, Iāll still be around having opinions!