Good morning, RVA! Itâs 71 °F, and temperatures today are not blazing hot! You can expect highs in the upper 70s and, gasp!, even cooler days over the weekend.
This headline in the Richmond Times-Dispatch makes me nervous: âNew buses, bathrooms and teachers: Richmond Public Schools rezoning could have high price tagâ đ¸. Superintendent Kamras presented detailsâincluding costsâfor pairing a handful of schools at a recent rezoning meeting, and you can read all of those details in this PDF. Depending on how things work out, itâd cost the District between $617,500 and $842,500 per pairing. This new money would cover hiring teachers and staff, transportation costs, and a few other things. âHigh price tagâ seems a weirdly relative phrase to use to describe whatâs happening here. Weâre talking a couple million dollarsâsome of that one-time capital expenses. For my household thatâs a high price tag. For a city with an $800 million operating budget and a $230 million capital improvement program? Maybe not so much. And maybe itâs not a new cost at all, but the deferred cost of decades of racist and segregationist policies? So Iâm nervous. Not because of the cost, but Iâm nervous because any additional cost is a real easy thing for peopleâelected officials and otherwiseâto use to rationalize our current, unacceptable status quo.
Yâall! You did it! After a bunch of emails from regular folks, the Stateâs Department of General Services has pulled their plan to redesign 9th Streetâa plan that would have punched a huge whole right in the middle of Richmondâs Downtown bike network. This is excellent news! However, as usual with these sorts of things, our work here is not done. DGS will almost certainly rejigger and resubmit their plan for 9th, and, when they do, it must include a safe and protected bike path connecting the existing bike lane on Franklin Street to Bank Street all the way through to 12th Street. Because DGS answers to the General Assembly, now we need to let Del. Jeff Bourne (@JeffMBourne) and Sen. Jennifer McClellan (@JennMcClellanVA) know that a safe east-west bike passage is a priority for any redesign of the streets around the Capitol. I know that reactive civic emailing is a lot easier than proactive civic emailing, but if we can get the State moving in the right direction we can start using our time to advocate FOR things instead of AGAINST things. Anyway, holler at those two electeds and tell them whatâs up.
Over in the GMRVA Slack (something you get access to as a patron!, this next story was summarized as âFOOD HALL FOOD HALL FOOD HALL,â which I think illustrates an appropriate level of excitement. Mike Platania at Richmond BizSense has the details on plans to bring, yes, a food hall to Scottâs Addition. A couple of years ago, I went to Pittsburghâs Federal Galley and thought it would be an absolutely perfect model to replicate in Richmond. Of course, thatâs what I thought the Blues Armory would end up as, so shows how much I know. The planned food hall is way, way back in the back of Scottâs Addition, so no time like the present to push for better infrastructure to get you back there on foot or by bike. Maybe we should move ahead on the Scottâs Addition Greenway?
The James River Association has put out their 2019 State of the James report. The overall grade remains unchanged from the 2017 report at a B-. Sounds like climate change is taking a negative toll on our river, from the report: âThe increased polluted runoff associated with heavier than normal downpours caused setbacks for a number of indicators, including sediment reductions, bacteria pollution, tidal water quality, and oysters.â
RVA Hub says that Topgolf opens today atâŚ9:00 AM? Thatâs kind of incredible, but, hey, the weather is great and I can think of worse ways to spend a Friday morning.
We just watched First Man the other day, and, because Iâm a bad student of American history, I had no idea this Rice vs. Texas college football joke was in the most famous presidential speech of all time!
âBut why, some say, the moon?â Kennedy said. "Why choose this as our goal? And they may well ask why climb the highest mountain? Why, 35 years ago, fly the Atlantic? âWhy does Rice play Texas?â As the home crowd reacted, with smiles, laughs and applause, Kennedy â clenching the lectern with his left hand and pumping his right fist â emphatically spouted the signature line of that speech: âWe choose to go to the moon. We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard.â Kennedyâs speech, delivered on Sept. 12, 1962, is remembered as one of the greatest presidential speeches in history. Its legacy remains, as this summer the country celebrated the 50th anniversary of the moon landing.
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