Good morning, RVA! Itâs 45 °F, and a bunch of cold weather and rain has snuck back in to our weekly forecast. Today, expect highs right around 50 °F with a significant amount of rain later this afternoonâbundle up a bit if youâre headed outside. Meanwhile, lows tonight and tomorrow night dip down into the 30s! Good luck, outside plants!
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Iâve got two fun City Council updates for you this Monday morning. First, Council will meet for Amendment Session #1 today at 1:00 PM. Amendment Session #1 is great because you get to see and hear where each individual councilpersonâs priorities differ from the Mayorâs priorities. Sometimes those differences can mean multi-million dollar amendments, but, usually, they manifest in small amendments that are much easier to fund with similarly small budget cuts (or fee increases). Subsequent amendment sessions are usually tense affairs where Council really gets into the business of finding ways to fund nine different peopleâs different priorities all while trying to avoid making huge, cascading changes to the Mayorâs budget. See? Fun! I canât find any of the submitted amendments on the Cityâs legislative website yet, but I imagine theyâll show up later today or tomorrow. Second, Planning Commission will meet today and consider ORD. 2022â112, the ordinance which will transfer money to RPS for designing an 1,800-seat replacement for George Wythe High School. That ordinance sits on the consent agenda, so it should pass without much commentâI donât imagine the Planning Commission has any desire at all to get stuck in the middle of that whole situation.
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Jonathan Spiers at Richmond BizSense sat down with Maritza Pechin, the Cityâs Deputy director for the Office of Equitable Development, to talk about the Diamond District redevelopment project. Tap through for a bit of Pechinâs history before working for the City, but make sure you read her thoughts on Councilâs laundry list of confusing changes to Richmond 300 (RES. 2021-R026, which pops back up on Councilâs agenda on April 25th). Iâll spoil it for you a bit, though: âBut a lot of councilâs concerns that came up through their amendment requests are either related to things that are fundamentally not in a master plan â things that you wouldnât include in a big land-use master plan document, thatâs either way too specific or completely out of scope â or theyâre things that will get done via implementation.â Agree!
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The Central Virginia Transportation Authority opened a 15-day public comment period on their FY 2023â2026 Regional Revenue Draft Funding Scenario back on April 13thâso youâre already running out of time to weigh in! If you canât remember back a million years ago to when the CVTA launched: This regional body collects taxes and distributes cash to fund transportation-related projectsâsome of that money goes back to the locality in which the tax was collected, some of it goes to GRTC, and some of it ends up in a bucket to be spent by the region on regional projects. Itâs the latter that the Draft Funding Scenario is concerned about, and it lays out a big list of projects on which the region could spend $276 million dollars of shared transportation money. Honestly, I donât know the best way to give feedback on this PDF, other than âplease fund all of the bike-ped projects and none of the highway widening projects.â For context, the CVTA will consider a $680 million list of âhighway projectsâ compared to a much, much smaller $28 million list of bike and pedestrian projects (just four individual projects). If you have smarter thoughts than the above sentence, please let me know; Iâd definitely be interested in sharing an example of an intelligent public comment on this list of projects. Anyway, you can email CVTA@PlanRVA.org before 3:00 PM on April 28th with any of your (intelligent or otherwise) questions, comments, or concerns.
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Youâre going to want to watch this fascinating video from Paul Roberts at VPM about how two Canadians tuned and voiced the organ in the Cathedral of the Sacred Heart. How cool is this! âFor this instrument, that means Robin and Alex will voice 25 stops (groups of pipes simulating other instruments), about 1,400 pipes total. Itâs a long, detailed process that takes five to six weeks. Voicing focuses on a few main elements: timbre (or tone), pitch, volume, and attack, which is how a pipe initially reacts when a key is pressed on the console. This is also known as how the pipe âspeaks.ââ
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Reminder! Broad Street repaving continues, and DPW crews have already moved on to Phase 2, which stretches from Belvidere to Meadow. Yeah itâs an inconvenience, but at least itâs a fast-moving inconvenience.
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Even if youâre not into bikes, you should read this interview from the 90s about how a small bike company thought the internet would impact their business. So much has changed in so little time!
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It may affect our sales and profits, but not our margins. I donât know how others will react to it, whether theyâll go direct more. We have to go directâŚI think most dealers are more interested in high-tech add-on sales and accessories than they are in something like Brooks leather saddles or Carradice waxed cotton saddlebags. Iâm just guessing, of course. I appreciate the internet, but itâs still such a mystery to me, all that http:// - stuff. Some company sent me a free CD-Rom thing, and after I figured out where to put it and clicked a few buttons, some terrible things happened. I am not comfortable with the internet, not yet. I know itâs important and has such potential, but itâs not part of what I think about.
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Pollen on a pondâgross or art? Photo by Karen Catrow.
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