Good morning, RVA! Itâs 70 °F, and today looks hot. You can expect humid highs in the mid 90s with no respite in sight until Saturday. Remember: Hydrate or diedrate! Stay cool out there, yâall.
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Over the weekend a bipartisan group of Senators (including enough Republicans to overcome a Senate filibuster) announced theyâd reached an agreement on how to finally pass a tiny bit of gun violence legislation. Vox has a good explainer of whatâs in the proposed agreement, and opens with this great summary: âPerhaps what is most surprising about the [gun violence] framework is that it exists at all.â As you might have guessed, the framework is heavy on mental health and increasing the presence of armed police officers in schools and light on, you know, actual legislation to prevent people from getting guns. Disappointing, but, like Vox said, while thereâs nothing shocking about these proposals, it is surprising that more than just the same few Senate Republicans have decided to do anything at all to help keep their communities safer. Weâll see if any of these proposals become actual laws and if this small moment of compromise leads to more action in the future.
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Exciting news! Richmondâs Department of Public Works has a new survey up to collect feedback on the next round of proposed bike lanes. This round features some new infrastructure on the Southside, in Scottâs Addition, and a couple other bits here and there that would help connect pieces of our existing bike network. If you need help getting oriented, the folks at RICToday put together this handy map of all the proposed segments. You should definitely take this survey before it closes on June 26th, and you should definitely rank poorly every option featuring sharrows. Sharrows, the weird arrow/bike glyph stenciled on a street, are not bike infrastructure and do not keep people safe. They shouldnât even be in the Cityâs tool box. Anyway, exciting news, and Iâm impressed at the regular pace the City has kept up rolling out new infrastructure over the last couple of years.
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City Council meets tonight with an agenda packed full of ordinances and resolutions Iâve got my eye on. Unfortunately, I think almost every single one of them will be continued until a later date except the ordinance authorizing the Cityâs participation in a gun buyback program (ORD. 2022â169). Reading through the text of this ordinance, I think the City has allocated $500,000 towards gun buybacks in general and will spend $83,050 of that on a first event in partnership with the Robby Poblete Foundation. I donât think gun buybacks are the end-all-be-all of making our communities safer from gun violence, but given the limited authority localities have over gunsâas aboveâevery little bit helps.
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Ned Oliver and Karri Peifer at Axios Richmond have an update on the ugly fencing around Marcus-David Peters Circle, which should, fingers crossed, come down by fall. The Mayorâs press secretary says the grass in the circle needs time to reestablish itself and then âthe area will then be landscaped and planted with shrubbery until a longer term use for the space is determined.â At this point, unfortunately, I donât think a process exists to determine that longer-term use.
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Mark your calendars! Breakaway RVAâs second ride of the year will celebrate Pride in Richmond. This easy-pace, super chill group ride kicks off at the Monroe Park fountain and, over the course of 7.5 miles, will tour âsignificant LGTBQ+ sites in Richmond.â Theyâll finish up at Barcode for some (optional) post-ride drinks. Big group rides like Breakaway are a blast, and I always have an excellent time. Wheels up at 5:45 PM this coming Thursday, June 16th, and you can register (for free!) over on the Eventbrite.
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Climate change and population change has led to a huge reduction in the amount of water that feeds the Great Salt Lake. Thatâs not good for a ton of reasonsâincluding a few I wouldnât have guess. Make sure you tap through for some pretty dramatic before-and-after satellite images of the lake.
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Among Utahâs coterie of nervous advocates for the Great Salt Lake, Owens Lake has become shorthand for the risks of failing to act quickly enough and the grave damage if the lake dries up, the contents of its bed spinning into the air. On what used to be the shore of what used to be Owens Lake is whatâs left of the town of Keeler. When the lake still existed, Keeler was a boom town. Today it consists of an abandoned school, an abandoned train station, a long-closed general store, a post office thatâs open from 10 a.m. to noon, and about 50 remaining residents who value their space, and have lots of it.
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An abandoned shop on Arthur Ashe Boulevardâa street which is slowly, slowly becoming a real place.
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