Good morning, RVA! Itâs 65 °F, and today looks excellent. Get outside and enjoy highs in the upper 70s and no rain until late this evening or tomorrow. While Saturday does look kind of like a wash for outdoor activities, it looks great for staying inside and watching horror movies.
Â
The Richmond Times-Dispatchâs Gregory J. Gilligan reports that Capital One and Genworth Financial have both postponed their return to in-person work plans until at least next year. Seems like something weâll see more and more of from large employers as we move into the winterâand maybe even beyond. I keep thinking about this excellent piece I read earlier this week by Anne Helen Petersen about the future of in-person work. Read the whole thing, but hereâs the part that grabbed me: âI am not anti-office. I am anti arbitrary office. I am against sucking two hours [of commuting] out of someoneâs day just to briefly make a bad manager feel good. I am against siphoning power from workers and piping it directly to leadersâ already overflowing stores of it. We have such a unique, authentically exciting moment to take stock of what âofficeâ work could look like moving forward â what parts of it need a collective space, which parts do not, and what office spaces will look like and provide. And so many organizations are straight up squandering that opportunity.â
Â
Ian M. Stewart at VPM has an update to the Brookland Park Boulevard Bump Out Situation: âmembers of the Historic Brookland Park Collective and the Brookland Park Merchants Association, called for the city to investigate if the proper steps were taken before the sidewalk extensions, called bump-outs, were removed.â Also notable, as Councilmember Lambert frequently mentioned a petition with 1,000 signatures as one of the reasons she asked the Cityâs Department of Public Works to remove the bump outs: âA copy of the petition has not been made publicâŚVPM has sent a FOIA request to Director of Public Works Bobby Vincent and Lambert asking for a copy of the petition.â Iâm really interested to see where this goes and am glad neighbors and journalists are continuing to push the City for an explanation. For me, itâs less about the City taking two steps backwards from their transportation and Vision Zero goals (although, thatâs pretty bad), but itâs more about the process. Iâm particularly concerned about the process that halted the already-approved parklet. While the Director of Public Works may have the authority to rip out street infrastructure at his own discretion (does he though?), I donât love the idea that a single Councilmember can quietly intervene and stop a project that both the Urban Design Committee and Planning Commission have approved. Those are both public bodies and both have opportunities for citizens and councilmembers alike to weigh in with concerns. My biggest question remains: How did, months after public approval, a Councilmember convince the Mayorâs Director of Public Works to squash the parklet?
Â
Eileen Mellon at Richmond Magazine writes, âThe Brenner Pass team transforms its adjacent cafe, Black Lodge, into a bar serving late-night hot dogs,â and thatâs pretty much all I need to know about that.
Â
After taking a one-year coronahiatus, Richmondâs biggest music festival returns to the riverfront today through Sunday; all hail the Richmond Folk Festival! Music from the world over kicks off tonight at 6:30 PM and does not stop until Sunday at 6:00 PM. If live music is even tangentially your thing, youâll undoubtedly find something worth listening to by just wandering around Brownâs Island. Or, if you prefer a little more structure in your life, you can check out the full schedule here, artist profiles here, and the COVID-19 protocols here.
Â
Logistical note! Monday is officially Indigenous Peoples Day in Virginia, and, as such, Iâll take the opportunity to sleep in a bit and spend a little extra time in the yard or on the bicycle. If youâre able, I hope you find a little time in the day to spend doing what makes you happiest.
Â
âHip New Yorker experiences a New York tourist attraction and has fun despite themselvesâ is a well-established genre, and I always enjoy it.
Â
The 5 oâClock Somewhere Bar does not open until 5 oâ Clock, which puts a crimp in trying to live out the metaphor of its name. The whole point of the phrase is a justification to start drinking early, before the workday is done, because somebody, somewhere is off work. But no, for the 5 oâClock Somewhere Bar, one of four restaurants and bars at Manhattanâs new Margaritaville Resort Times Square, you must wait until the workday is over. I am furious about this. Sure, the License to Chill Bar opens at 2, but itâs the principle of the thing. Jimmy Buffett would not wait until the boss says you can go home
Â
If youâd like your longread to show up here, go chip in a couple bucks on the olâ Patreon.
Â