Good morning, RVA! Itâs 42 °F, and today you can expect chilly temperatures in the 50sâmy weather app is even alerting me to a frost advisory through 9:00 AM tomorrow. Fall has certainly arrived!
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Appointments for families trying to get their 5â11 year olds the COVID-19 vaccine officially exist! It looks like chain pharmacies will open up appointments this weekend, and, as of right now, there are still a few appointments remaining at the Raceway for this weekend, too. Next week, though, is flush with plenty of options and opportunities to go get your kid jabbedâeven as late into the day as 7:45 PM. Youâll most likely have no problems finding a date and time that works for you.
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Meg Schiffres at VPM has a council-district breakdown of the Casino vote, which is fascinating. Heavily against: 1st, 2nd, and 4th Districts; Split decision: 3rd, 5th, and 7th Districts; Heavily in favor: 6th, 8th, and 9th districts. If this would have been a mayoral election, where the Casino needed to win five council districts, it would have passed, winning the 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, with the 3rd barely providing the swing vote (by just 45 votes according to VPAPâs admittedly incomplete vote tallies!). As foretold, Chris Suarez and Mark Robinson at the Richmond Times-Dispatch have a piece focusing on the racial breakdown of the referendum vote, reporting that âevery precinct with a majority white population received more votes against the casino than for it.â Theyâve also got the Mayorâs statement: âWhile I believe this was a $565 million opportunity lost to create well-paying jobs, expand opportunity, keep taxes low and increase revenue to meet the needs of our growing city, I am proud of the transparent and public process we went through to listen to our residents and put this opportunity before our voters.â However, I think the best quote Iâve read this morning belongs to former Richmond BizSense reporter, J. Elias OâNeal, who told VPM, "The key to crucial economic development endeavors is investing in neighborhoods by maintaining and providing key services and public investment, something the city has neglected to do in the Southside for decades.â
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Ali Rockett at the Richmond Times-Dispatch reports that a driver struck and killed a pedestrian on Broad Street in Henrico County out near Innsbrook. Rockett says this is âthe countyâs third pedestrian fatality in as many weeks,â which is just awful. All three of these fatal incidents happened after dark, which will tempt folks into saying people should wear lights or bright-colored clothing or just not walk around at night. Instead, the County should build safe infrastructure so residents who need to walk somewhere can do so without risking their lives. This is not an impossible task, itâs just about priorities.
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Jack Jacobs at Richmond BizSense reports that youâll soon find Sous Casaâs frozen burritos at a couple physical locations around town. I frequently take advantage of Sous Casaâs home delivery set up, which puts frozen burritos that have no right being as good as they are directly on my doorstep. I guess other people do leave their homes more frequently than I do, so having some retail options probably makes sense.
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Also food related, Richmond Magazineâs Eileen Mellon speaks to a couple restaurant owners about how business has changed during the pandemic and what it looks like as we slowly emerge (đ¤). I love these sorts of thingsâlike yesterdayâs longreadâwhere folks reevaluate what was normal before and what makes sense moving forward. Maybe things donât have to be exactly like they were in 2019?
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Logistical note! I am getting boosted this evening (Pfizer, in case you were interested), and I have blocked out most of tomorrow on my calendar as âshivering in bed.â This week has been weird (for many reasons), but Iâll be back in your inbox come Monday. Have an excellent weekend, and why donât you join me in making some vaccination appointments for you and yours, too?
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Hereâs an essay about death and memories, which sounds sad but is actually pretty cozy and a perfect longread for a fall Thursday.
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Here is the most important story as I know it: My dad is young, in his twenties, and has moved into a building downtown. He meets his neighbor in the stairwell. His neighbor is trying to fix something with a drill, but has the drill set backward. He gently attempts to correct her, and she yells at him, and then they are best friends for the next fifty years. Lee is already a downtown legend; my dad is young and lost and nobody. His life grows out of knowing Lee and her wife Essie, whose love story is also already a small legend below fourteenth street. I donât remember when I first heard this story. I only remember knowing it.
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Just perfect!
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