Good morning, RVA! Itâs 63 °F, and today looks pretty pleasant with highs in the mid 80s. Can anything top this past weekend though? What wonderful weather!
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Over this past weekend, each necessary domino of vaccine authorization fell, and, as of Saturday, âall Virginians from the age of six moths and older are eligible now to get a free COVID-19 vaccine.â Finally! This is great news, and I know a wave of relief washed over a bunch of families out there whoâve waited to vaccinate their babies for years at this point. If that describes you and your family but youâre still trying to figure out where to make a vaccination appointment, youâve got a bunch of options: Firstly, you should call your pediatrician (if you have one), but you can also head down to your neighborhood pharmacy for kids three and older, or check the list of vaccination events put on by the Richmond and Henrico Health Districts. Iâm not trying to raise a Mission Accomplished banner on COVID-19 or anything like that, but having everyone eligible for vaccination does seem like a big milestone. Great work, everyone.
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Jenna Portnoy at the Washington Post continues to write about âthe embattled Virginia health commissioner who in comments to his staff and media interviews dismissed the role of structural racism in public health.â In a piece published this past Friday, Portnoy reports a couple new items, including that the Commissioner issued a statementâexpressing regret yet not apologizingâsaying in part âI am fully aware that racism at many levels is a factor in a wide range of public health outcomes and disparities across the Commonwealth and the United States. I also deeply regret that any of this has caused you to feel discounted or disrespected; such has never and will never be my intent.â Senator McClellan called the statement âgaslighting.â Looking forward, the Commissioner will give a report to the Stateâs Board of Health this coming Thursdayâthe chair of which thinks he should resign.
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We have a State budget! Michael Martz at the Richmond Times-Dispatch reports that Governor Youngkin will ceremonially sign the budget today. âToday is a good day in Virginia,â the Governor saidâbut itâs not all sunshine and roses for the Gov and his platform. Neither the gas tax holiday, which would have had almost zero impact on Virginians while crippling transportation funding, nor the sneaky amendment to further restrict abortions in the Commonwealth made it into the final budget. Things could have been a lot worse, and Iâm thankful for the Democratsâ razor-thin margin in the Senate.
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Today at 12:00 PM the City will host an online meeting to kick off the Richmond Connects process. What is Richmond Connects? Well, RVAConnects.com is glad you asked! âRichmond Connects is the process to develop the Cityâs strategic multimodal transportation plan. Itâs focused on equity and will work towards healing past injustices by elevating the voices of people harmed in the past.â I am so incredibly excited about this planâmostly since Richmondâs current transportation plan is an old, desiccated husk in desperate need of updating but also because the pre-planning that took place over the last couple of months (aka Path to Equity) was pretty wonderful. The entire Richmond Connects process will produce two documents, an action plan (of actual projects the city should prioritize over the next 10 years), and a scenario plan (a longer-term look at âhigh-level projects and policies for the 2050 planning horizon). Expect to hear a lot from me on this over the next forever, until the planning process wraps up in fall of 2023. Get stoked!
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The Cityâs Planning Commission meets today with a medium-sized agenda and two Richmond 300-related items of note. First, RES. 2022-R033 would adjust some maps in Richmond 300 to change Oregon Hillâs future land use from Neighborhood Mixed Use to Residential. I do not think Oregon Hill will keep winning their decades-long battle to prevent more development in their neighborhood, but I guess weâll see. Second, the Commission will have a discussion âregarding the City Council resolution to amend the Richmond 300 Master Plan.â This is the resolution that Iâve written about a ton before and is titled âEmbarrassing amendments to R300â in my local legislation Trello board (RES. 2021-R026). I have a feeling todayâs conversation about what Council is asking the Planning Commission to do could get spicy. Tune in at 1:30 PM to find out!
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FYI! Crews are out there starting to paint the Pulseâs bus-only lanes today, so that means delays and detours and alternate stop locations. The general plan is for the Pulse to use the nearest local service stops instead of the stations, but you can find a precise list of changes in this Twitter thread.
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Setting aside my initial reaction of âPeecycling!â, I do think the feeling of creating a sustainable cycle between yourself and the things you grow is pretty compelling. This is definitely why (some) people get so into composting.
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One of the biggest problems, though, is that it doesnât make environmental or economic sense to truck urine, which is mostly water, from cities to distant farmlands. To address that, the Rich Earth Institute is working with the University of Michigan on a process to make a sanitized pee concentrate. And at Cornell, inspired by the efforts in Niger, Dr. Nelson and colleagues are trying to bind urineâs nutrients onto biochar, a kind of charcoal, made, in this case, from feces. (Itâs important to not to forget about the poop, Dr. Nelson noted, because it contributes carbon, another important part of healthy soil, along with smaller amounts of phosphorus, potassium and nitrogen.)
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Mile marker 24 of the Greenbriar Trail. I spent the long weekend bikepacking this entire thing and had a great time.
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