đ¤ Good morning, RVA: Themed public schools, drones, and slowing streets with paint & posts
Good morning, RVA! Itâs 48 °F, and today weâve got highs in the 60s. Thatâs hardly fall-like! Thereâs a small but decent chance for rain throughout the day, and, honestly, throughout the weekend. Keep your eye on the wealth map.
Water cooler
At 9:49 PM this past Tuesday, Police were called to the 2900 block of Route 1 on the Cityâs Southside and found Carlos D. Delgado, 65, shot to death in the doorway of his home. According to the RPDâs website, this is at least the 51st murder in 2019.
Justin Mattingly at the Richmond Times-Dispatch has some details on the Superintendentâs proposal to create theme-based middle and high schools đ¸. This proposal should ring some bells: Action 1.1 under Priority 1 of the Districtâs Dreams4RPS strategic plan (PDF) is âPassion4Learningâ, which seeks to launch âa comprehensive, multi-year effort to nurture our studentsâ passion for learning by creating an exciting, hands-on, and rigorous theme at every RPS middle & high school.â The five proposed themes are science, technology, engineering, and mathematics; visual and performing arts; languages and international affairs; law, policy, and public service; and advanced career and technical education. First up to get the theme treatment: STEM academies at Henderson and MLK middle in Fall of 2020. STEM is cool and all, but let me know how I can get involved in the public service academy. In my experience, youth have the absolute best ideas about how to fix/save our city/world. You can flip through the administrationâs presentation to the School Board (PDF) for some details on the process planned over the next couple of months.
The RTDâs Editorial Board has mixed feelings about the Richmond Police Departmentâs recent acquisition of small fleet of drones đ¸. Iâve got mixed feelings, too, after reading this piece last week by Ali Rockett that has all the droney details. Some of the language in Rockettâs piece is a little loosey-gooseyâeven for me, and, as Iâve said a bunch of times before, Iâm not a privacy expert. Like: âThe departmentâs operating manual has other safeguards, such as preventing any recording until the drone is over the point of interest. So the drone doesnât record its trip out or back.â But does the drone stream video to police on its trip out or back? And, as with all these sorts of things, what is the data retention policy on the video that the drones do record? While the RPD said they consulted the ACLU when putting together their internal drone policy, the ACLU âdid not return a request for commentâ for last weekâs story. Sounds like Iâve got some research to do!
Iâm so ultra tired of engineers, elected officials, and everyone else blaming âdistracted pedestriansâ for the increase in injuries on our roads. Last week on Bainbridge Street, a driver crashed into a parked car, ramming it up on to the sidewalk. Thankfully no one was walking by at the time. Maybe the sidewalk was too distracted, though? Should it have been wearing reflective sidewalk clothing? Did it remember to pause its podcast and take out its headphones? Pfft. Residents of Bainbridge want traffic calming measures ASAP, and I donât blame them. This wide, fast street seems like a good spot for some paint and posts, narrowing the intersections, increasing visibility, and slowing drivers, way, way down.
You think I jest when I say there are an infinite and ever-increasing number of NoBro meetings to attend? Well, JEST NO MORE. The Navy Hill Development Advisory Commission (thatâs the group created by Council to help vet the project) just announced their four public hearing datesâwhich were, I think, required by Councilâs establishing legislation. Public hearing means public comment so buckle up, yâall. If youâve got strong feelings one way or the other, you should put one of these four meetings on your calendar. All of them start at 6:00 PM, and please note the lack of specified end time (đł): 12/16 , MLK Middle School; 12/17, Carver Elementary School; 12/18, Hickory Hill Community Center; and 12/19 Richmond Government Southside Community Services Center.
I canât get this cover of the presidentâs âI want no quid pro quoâ note, in the style of the Ramones, out of my head. Sometimes people are so talented and wonderful!
This morningâs patron longread
Gimme Shelter
Submitted by Patron Rachel. âPersonal essay explores larger social issueâ is one of my faves, and this one about housing in the Bay Area was a delight to read.
I was unwittingly among the vanguard of a wave of gentrificationâa transient âcreativeâ living in a âroughâ neighborhood not yet fully colonized by the white middle classâand sometimes it was tense. I almost brawled one night with three teens who shoved me out front of a liquor store; another night I fought off a mugger and came home with a black eye. But otherwise the Bay was astonishingly convivialâfor the first time in Oaklandâs history, the cityâs populations of African-American, Latino, Asian, and white residents were almost exactly equal in sizeâand I fell in love with dozens of squats, warehouses, galleries, and underground bars, where black hyphy kids and white gutter punks and queer Asian ravers all hung out and partied together, paving the way for later spaces like Ghost Ship. It felt like the perfect time to be there, like I imagined the Eighties on New York Cityâs Lower East Side.
If youâd like your longread to show up here, go chip in a couple bucks on the olâ Patreon.
This morningâs Instagram
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