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🚂 Good morning, RVA: Boostertown, a HUD grant, and model trains

Good morning, RVA! It’s 30 °F, and today looks chilly! You can expect highs in the 40s today, so make sure you grab something cozy before you head out the door—a coat, a hot beverage, maybe both!
 

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Take a look at this week’s coronacounts via these all-time graphs of cases, hospitalizations, and deaths due to COVID-19 in Virginia, and you’ll see mostly positive trends. While cases have started to rise again, hospitalizations and deaths, at least for now, continue to drop. This is good and expected, I think! We know transmission of coronaviruses seems to increase in the colder months, so the rise in cases tracks, but we’ve also vaccinated a ton of Virginians over the last 11 months which should help keep folks alive and out of the hospital. I hadn’t checked in a while, but 6.2 million people, or 73.5% of the state’s population, have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine. Given the year we just had, I think that’s impressive.
 

Also coronarelated, I totally forgot to mention that the CDC expanded eligibility of booster shots to basically every adult. Before this past weekend, eligibility requirements were loose and confusing, now they’re still loose but way more straightforward. Here’s the gist: Everyone 18 and up who is fully vaccinated is eligible for a booster—two months after a J&J or six months after the second Pfizer or Moderna. So if you got your J&J shot on September 23rd or your mRNA shot on May 23rd, you can walk right on up to any of these events, or get an appointment at a local pharmacy, and get boosted. So easy!
 

#561
November 23, 2021
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🌉 Good morning, RVA: The need for a CRB and a Marcus Alert, bridges, and single-use plastic

Good morning, RVA! It’s 51 °F and rainy. You can expect the rain to continue through this morning, the clouds to stick around until later this afternoon, and the temperatures to stay pretty consistent until the sun sets.
 

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Chris Saurez at the Richmond Times-Dispatch reports on yet another reason Richmond needs a Civilian Review Board to monitor police behavior. Last month, as police were arresting a woman who “appeared to be homeless” in the Sauer Center, another woman started recording that interaction. From the piece: “[The woman recording the interaction] says police forced her to the ground and left her with cuts, bruises and an injured elbow. Police say she injured herself.” You can watch the video yourself here, which escalates until a police officer says “stop” and takes her phone. Lots of things bother me about this video, and we really need a functioning Marcus Alert system to have folks other than armed police officers available to respond to calls like this.
 

Twitter user @3StripeStrife put up a quick poll about the safety of riding bikes across Richmond’s bridges, and, if you’ve ever done so yourself, you will not be surprised by the results. The poll has an admittedly small n (about 60ish folks), but you know there’s a larger issue when 92% of people says yes to “Does comfort and safety of biking over any of these four bridges influence your decisions in going to activities, businesses, working in or living where you have to cross a bridge.” I agree, I’m one of the 92%, and so I’ve got bridge hot takes! The Nickel Bridge, while beautiful, needs to be replaced. It can’t support bus traffic and the current teensy pedestrian/bike sidewalk is unsafe and terrifying—I always feel like I’m going to fly right over the railing into the river! I think plans to replace this bridge do exist in some form or another. The Mayo Bridge, also terrifying, always shows up on the “super old infrastructure that probably has exceeded its useful lifespan lists.” It carries a ton of traffic, and I’m not sure you could take a lane for bikes without screwing up a very important and frequent bus route (although folks have wanted to put a light rail across that thing for decades, which would take a ton of space away from car traffic). The other two bridges are literal enormous highways because when they were built we thought it’d be amazing to pour thousands of speeding vehicles directly into our downtown, so we built enormous bridges in anticipation of future highways. Fortunately, the highways never materialized, but now we just have these six-lane monsters that are under-used and incredibly unsafe. These two bridges, Belvidere and 9th, aren’t going anywhere, but, luckily, are easy-ish to fix: Take a lane on either side, block it off in its entirety with concrete barricades, and call it a day. The entries and exits for bikes and pedestrians would need some thoughtful consideration, but lessening the amount of Mad Max: Fury Road while riding across these bridges is pretty straightforward. Anyway, the best part of this Twitter poll/thread is that two Councilmembers (Jordan and Addison) agreed to take a ride across these horrible bridges and think on how to make them safer (if they survive the crossings, of course).
 

#454
November 22, 2021
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🐿 Good morning, RVA: A media acquisition, bus operator shortage, and you still should email your state representatives

Good morning, RVA! It’s 39 °F, and, as foretold, today will be chilly. Expect highs right around 50 °F today and tomorrow, with maybe a little warmer weather headed our way on Sunday. We’ve got a boots-and-flannel weekend in front of us, for sure!
 

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Yesterday, VPM announced that it has acquired Style Weekly. This is fascinating! From the release: “In the coming weeks, VPM plans to resume publication of arts and culture feature stories and the calendar of events on StyleWeekly.com and its Facebook, Instagram and Twitter channels as it evaluates the future of the print publication.” I wonder if they’ll mirror stories on both the VPM site and the Style Weekly site or if Style Weekly will live on its own tiny media island. Will they bring back the same editors, reporters, and freelancers? So many questions!
 

Wyatt Gordon at the Virginia Mercury looks into the bus operator shortage that’s impacting public transit service in Richmond and, basically, everywhere else in Virginia. In fact, GRTC plans on cutting a bunch of service in December because they just don’t have enough operators to drive enough buses—this despite an $8,500 hiring bonus. So what can we do? David Bragdon, head of the national transit advocacy nonprofit TransitCenter, gets it right: “There is not really a lack of bus operators…There’s just a lack of labor at the wages employers are willing to offer, so raising pay has to be part of the answer to the perceived shortage.” If our region wanted to solve this problem, it would mean localities increasing their transit funding—without expanding service—to pay higher operator salaries. That’ll be a tough sell to the mayor and county managers, though.
 

#980
November 19, 2021
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💌 Good morning, RVA: Email your legislators, a Council work session, and the State of the James

Good morning, RVA! It’s 53 °F, and we have one, final warm day before rain moves in tonight, bringing with it much colder temperatures. Today you can expect highs in the mid 70s and maybe some clouds, tomorrow you can look forward to highs around 50 °F. The sun sets right before 5:00 PM today, so if you want to enjoy this weather, get out there early!
 

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“State proposes ban on riding bikes past Capitol,” reports Ned Oliver at the Virginia Mercury. This headline does such an excellent job at highlighting the absolute absurdity of the Department of General Service’s plan to permanently sever Richmond’s bike network by making Bank Street—the primary east-west connector for people on bikes—forever impassable. The Director of DGS, Joe Damico, who plans to disrupt all east-west bike traffic for the rest of time, “defended the proposed dismount area as a sensible safety measure, noting that he had occasionally seen near collisions between bicycles and pedestrians in the area.” To rephrase what’s happening here: The State wants to permanently ban riding bikes on a long-standing piece of Richmond’s bike network because one man never once saw an actual problem. If this shortsighted, unsafe plan makes you furious, please email your state legislators today, and tell them you would like the Department of General Services to include on Bank Street “a 10-foot-wide path with no requirement to dismount—an approach…in keeping with accepted design standards for bike lanes.” Don’t feel like you have to write a Federalist Paper about it either—you can literally just copy/paste the previous sentence. The important thing here is just to raise the issue to your elected representatives. You can find your legislators and their email addresses using this tool. It’s time for civics!
 

Today, Richmond’s City Council will hold a work session to hammer out the details of the legislative requests they’ll make at this year’s General Assembly plus potential changes they’d like made to the City’s charter. Both of those documents, and this one of legislation that are not recommended to include in the request, are really interesting windows into Council’s priorities (if a little over my head). Flip through the PDFs and you will see a bunch of topics that come up in this email regularly, like an ask for millions of dollars to rebuild our sewer system and school buildings, tweaking Council’s influence over future master plans, and giving localities the authority to do inclusive zoning. Don’t hold your breath on the new Republican-heavy General Assembly moving on any of these things, but it is nice to have them written down in a public document I suppose.
 

#457
November 18, 2021
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🦢 Good morning, RVA: Walk-up vaccinations, Richmond 300 amendments, and a new place

Good morning, RVA! It’s 37 °F, and today looks absolutely lovely. You can expect sunshine, highs in the 70s, bikes, long walks in the park, naps in the hammock, and a quiet evening on the porch.
 

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I’ve got good news if you or a member of your family still needs a COVID-19 vaccine but making an appointment seems like a huge drag. As of yesterday, anyone can walk up to any of the vaccination clinics hosted by the Richmond and Henrico Health Districts and get vaccinated without an appointment—this includes boosters and kids aged 5–11. Here’s the huge list of events taking place over the next couple of weeks, should you need it.
 

Yesterday, City Council’s Land Use, Housing and Transportation committee up and voted to send RES. 2021-R026, the laundry list of Richmond 300 amendments, to full Council with a recommendation to approve. This will be the first time since April that the poorly-thought-out resolution has done anything other than bounce around between Council and committee. To be clear, since I’ve been writing about this for over 200 days now and it’s easy to forget what’s happening, RES. 2021-R026 is not even actual amendments. It’s a resolution asking the Planning Commission to take this eight-page list of conflicting and confusing bullets and do the massive amount of work to turn them into a cohesive set of actual master plan amendments. Don’t take my word for it: Back in July, Maritza Pechin, who ran the entire Richmond 300 process and now serves as the Deputy Director of the Office of Equitable Development, put together this incredibly comprehensive memo outlining why most of Council’s bullets are either already in the plan, out of scope for a master plan, or a fundamental change that deserve a more serious community engagement process than a single, sloppy list submitted to the Planning Commission. Setting aside that there were literal years for City Council to get involved in building the master plan with their constituents, councilmembers can, today, draft thoughtful, specific amendments to the master plan and then work with the City on running the appropriate community engagement around those amendments. It’d take awhile to arrive at some sort of consensus, sure, but would it take fewer than 200 days? Maybe!
 

#567
November 17, 2021
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🍻 Good morning, RVA: Plateau or nah, sweet trail money, and infrastructuring our way out of this

Good morning, RVA! It’s 36 °F, and you can expect a sunny, cool day with temperatures right around 60 °F. Stay tuned for tomorrow, though, when we’ll see highs back up in the 70s!
 

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Plateau or nah? Take a look at this week’s all-time graphs of COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, and deaths in Virginia and see what you think. Even if cases have started to level out, we’re not seeing that same thing in the hospitalization or deaths graphs (or we’re waiting on those to catch up). The New York Time’s nationwide graphs are not as optimistic as all that, showing an increase in cases and a definite plateauing in hospitalizations. However, I feel pretty good about Virginia’s statewide vaccine numbers: 63.8% of the population is fully vaccinated, 72.2% have had at least one dose, and 85.6% of adults have received at least one dose. Over on the kid side of things, just a couple weeks in to vaccinating children aged 5–11, and 12.4% have gotten their first dose. Is that a lot? I can’t tell, but knocking out an eighth of eligible children in that age range in just a couple of weeks seems like progress.
 

Jack Jacobs at Richmond BizSense reports that our newish Central Virginia Transit Authority will “earmark around $108 million toward the Fall Line trail, a proposed 43-mile walking and biking trail that would connect Petersburg to Ashland.” That’s a huge chunk of money! Last we checked in on the funding of the Fall Line (via this excellent PDF), only $73 million of the $234 million total cost had been committed. This new money puts the trail well on its way to full funded. With at least some of the money in hand, I wonder when we’ll start seeing segments of this trail on the ground and completed?
 

#816
November 16, 2021
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📅 Good morning, RVA: The rent is too high, Bank Street, and a parking deck

Good morning, RVA! It’s 43 °F, and today looks chilly with highs in the 50s for most of the day. Expect temperatures possibly below freezing tonight!
 

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Mark Robinson at the Richmond Times-Dispatch reports that “it has never been more expensive to be a renter in Richmond.” I know I say this every week, but we need to build more and denser homes in all of our neighborhoods. Here’s Robinson again, “Fueling the trend is surging demand for apartments in the region, coupled with a historically low vacancy rate that has left tenants with fewer options to choose from and, in turn, given property managers more leverage to hike costs…” Keep this—and the teachers, nurses, and civil servants—in mind next time a project ends up in front of the Planning Commission and people turn out in droves to complain about shade, neighborhood character, and parking.
 

Richmond’s Planning Commission will meet today, and you can find the full agenda here. Two items of note: ORD. 2021–308 and ORD. 2021–311. The former is the mayor’s ordinance to transfer money around so that the School Board can actually pay to design the schools they’ve bullied their way into building. Since it’s a transfer of funds between buckets in the City’s capital budget, the Planning Commission needs to sign off. I don’t think any of the commissioners will want to get in between the mayor/Council and the School Board on this one, so I imagine it passes quickly without much discussion. The later ordinance officially hands over the entirety of Bank Street to the State so that General Assembly can continue to block pedestrian and bicycle through-traffic with that incredibly silly gate and those ridiculously huge cement balls. I want to be mad at the City for rolling over on this one, but I’m not sure what they could—when the General Assembly demands you give them a street, you give them the street. To the City’s credit, the staff report on this ordinance closes with, “However, under the current directive, the City would not retain an easement to ensure that pedestrian and bicycle access would be retained across the conveyed right-of-way to maintain adequate circulation of pedestrians and cyclists in the area. Bank Street is currently improved with bike lanes in both directions. It serves as the main connection for cyclists between the Capital Trail and the Franklin Street bikeway via the 17th Street bikeway, the Farmer’s Market pedestrian plaza, and the East Franklin Street bike lanes. Therefore, Planning & Development Review staff finds that pedestrian and bicycle access should not be impeded along Bank Street.” Maybe Planning Commission or City Council could sneak something into the deed retaining a bike-ped easement? I have no idea, but I’m interested in today’s conversation about it.
 

#1062
November 15, 2021
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😤 Good morning, RVA: Heritage foundation tentacles, FOIA suggestions, and the Richmond Marathon

Good morning, RVA! It’s 63 °F, and it’s a little rainy out there. Expect that to continue through the morning but then dry out before we get too far into the day. This evening—and the weekend—look lovely, if a bit chillier than the last couple of magical November days.
 

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Mel Leonor at the Richmond Times-Dispatch reports that Governor-elect Youngkin has rustled up a bunch of old governors to advise his transition: Bob McDonnell, Jim Gilmore, George Allen, and Doug Wilder (who is 90!). My take on this is that looping in these Coca-Cola Classic Conservatives—from a more moderate time—helps Youngkin distance himself from the Trump wing of the party. Yet, buried in Leonor’s piece is this critical bit of information: His transition steering committee “will be co-chaired by Sen. Steve Newman, R-Lynchburg, and Kay Coles James, a former Virginia health secretary under Allen, who served as director of the Office of Personnel Management under President George W. Bush and is outgoing president of the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank.” Oh, the same Heritage Foundation that’s out there convincing state legislators across the country to prevent our children from learning about how racism has been built into America’s systems since day one? Gotcha. The decision to include Wilder in the transition grabbed up all the headlines, but the big news, to me, is Youngkin’s quiet alignment with a Trumpian organization that denies climate change, pushes Trump’s Big Lie of voter fraud, and believes we solved racism in the 1960s.
 

Ned Oliver at the Virginia Mercury reports on how Virginia’s Republicans might change the Commonwealth’s new marijuana legalization plans. It’s all depressingly predictable: Republicans are excited to speed along retail marijuana sales (a good thing that’d generate a bunch of cash for all involved), but want to make sure that those lucrative licenses end up in the hands of well-resourced, established medical-marijuana business owners (a bad thing that does nothing to undo the decades of inconsistent and racist enforcement of our previous marijuana laws). Oliver puts it this way: “It’s unlikely GOP lawmakers would share that concern given their general opposition to equity programs.” That’s obvious, I know, but it still shocks me to read it so plainly put. I mean, if you’re generally opposed to equity, what are you generally in support of? It’s wild to me that, somehow, we’ve normalized Republicans’ position of increasing racial inequity in Virginia.
 

#514
November 12, 2021
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🌔 Good morning, RVA: Balance of power, affordable (gingerbread) housing, and deviled eggs

Good morning, RVA! It’s 46 °F, and we’ve got another incredibly pleasant day ahead of us. Expect highs in the mid 70s (!) and tons of sunshine. This evening, if you’re not watching the sun set from a porch somewhere, you’re doing it wrong.
 

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Kenya Hunter and Chris Suarez at the Richmond Times-Dispatch report on the latest turn in the work to replace George Wythe High School. I’m not sure I’ve got my mind totally wrapped around what’s happening and why, but I’ll do my best to lay out the pieces.
 

On Monday night, the RPS School Board voted to move $2 million “earmarked for several projects, including structural repairs and new generators, fire alarm systems and roofs for at least 10 different schools” to instead pay to begin design work on a replacement for George Wythe High School. First, the replacement school the Board wants to build is smaller than either the Mayor and Superintendent would like, and, second, it’s not clear to me that the Board even has the authority to move money around like that. Also on Monday night, the Mayor introduced ORD. 2021–308, which would transfer about $7.3 million from the City’s Capital Improvement Program budget for “School Planning & Construction” to “School Modernization - George Wythe High School.” The City would then pay out that money to the School District monthly to cover design costs for the new school.
 

#809
November 10, 2021
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😏 Good morning, RVA: $1.20, a School Board meeting to untangle, and a private parcel sneak peek

Good morning, RVA! It’s 41 °F, but today you can expect sunny skies and highs in the mid 70s. Get out there and squeeze the last remaining drops of summer out of the empty, pulpy rind of 2021.
 

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It’s been a while, so here are the all-time graphs of COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, and deaths in Virginia. You can see in all three that we’re still steadily sliding down the backside of this summer’s delta peak, which feels great. Honestly, I almost feel like I did during those blissful three weeks of early summer, where it looked like we’d have this whole thing wrapped up by fall. I’ve learned my lesson and now I’m optimistic but wary—fool me once, etc—especially when the New York Times has this to say on their global State of the Virus page: “Cases are rising again in Europe, where pandemic restrictions have been relaxed and temperatures have dropped.” Relaxed restrictions and dropping temperatures is totally us just a couple of weeks from now!
 

As foretold, the Richmond Times-Dispatch’s Chris Suarez reports that City Council passed the ordinance necessary to maintain the City’s real estate tax rate at $1.20 with Councilmembers Trammell and Jones voting against. I think this is the first time, that I can remember, that more than one councilmember joined in on a vote to decrease the tax rate—which, again, I think is absolutely bonkers. Yes, assessments have increased and that has resulted in increased revenue, but in what world does it make sense to reduce the real estate tax rate to keep the City’s budget flat?? Is anyone living in the Richmond right now looking around and saying “Yep, we’re done here, this is the best we can do!” If rising taxes for lower-income home owners is a concern, let’s certainly address that with thoughtful and clever legislation. But once the tax rate goes down, it’s never going back up—and in five, ten, fifteen years from now, when these members of Council have moved on, we may desperately need that additional revenue.
 

#850
November 9, 2021
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🚰 Good morning, RVA: New bike lanes, new map, and Pipeline is back!

Good morning, RVA! It’s 41 °F, and today looks lovely. Expect highs in the upper 60s and lots of sunshine. The rest of this week looks warm and wonderful, too—enjoy!
 

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Richmond’s City Council will meet today for their regularly scheduled meeting, and you can find the entire agenda here. The annual ordinance the City must pass to keep the real estate tax rate at $1.20 sits on the regular agenda and should easily pass. Of note, Councilmember Trammel’s competing paper, ORD. 2021–286, which would lower the real estate tax to $1.135, also appears on the regular agenda. I think it’s fascinatingly inconsistent that someone who was pro-Casino because of the non-gambling investment it would bring to Richmond would simultaneously submit a paper that would strip a huge amount of revenue from the city’s budget. Council’s Finance and Economic Development committee has recommended that Trammell’s paper be stricken.
 

It’s infrastructure week! After laying some fresh pavement, Richmond’s Department of Public Works will begin installing new bike lanes across the city. Specifically, you’ll see new infrastructure pop up on: Brookland Parkway, Marshall Street from 29th to 21st, Walmsley Boulevard (from the city line to Belmont), and Warwick Road (from Hull to Richmond Highway). This is great news, and quick work by DPW in moving from public engagement, to paving, to bike laning. Unfortunately, we’ll have to wait on the proposed Colorado Avenue bike lane as that street was removed from the paving schedule. Double unfortunately, “based on feedback received, DPW will not move forward with the proposed bike lane project on Grove Avenue [from Shadwell to Seneca] at this time.” That’s a bummer. You can see the polarized results from this past summer’s public engagement process on page 19 of this PDF. About the same number of respondents super hated and strongly supported the very fast, wide, and dangerous existing conditions. In the end, though, slightly more respondents opposed replacing the parking lane with a bike lane, and parking wins again. Idk, wild idea here, what if we removed a travel lane and kept the parking—just like Brook Road? That seems to have worked just fine.
 

#723
November 8, 2021
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🍁 Good morning, RVA: Vaccine appointments exist, more casino analysis, and burritos

Good morning, RVA! It’s 42 °F, and today you can expect chilly temperatures in the 50s—my 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 5–11 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 jabbed—even as late into the day as 7:45 PM. You’ll most likely have no problems finding a date and time that works for you.
 

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 VPAP’s 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 “every precinct with a majority white population received more votes against the casino than for it.” They’ve also got the Mayor’s statement: “While 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.” However, I think the best quote I’ve read this morning belongs to former Richmond BizSense reporter, J. Elias O’Neal, 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.”
 

#171
November 4, 2021
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🍁 Good morning, RVA: Vaccine appointments exist, more casino analysis, and burritos

Good morning, RVA! It’s 42 °F, and today you can expect chilly temperatures in the 50s—my weather app is even alerting me to a frost advisory through 9:00 AM tomorrow. Fall has certainly arrived!
 

Water cooler

Appointments for families trying to get their 5–11 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 jabbed—even as late into the day as 7:45 PM. You’ll most likely have no problems finding a date and time that works for you.
 

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 VPAP’s 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 “every precinct with a majority white population received more votes against the casino than for it.” They’ve also got the Mayor’s statement: “While 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.” However, I think the best quote I’ve read this morning belongs to former Richmond BizSense reporter, J. Elias O’Neal, 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.”
 

#171
November 4, 2021
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🌫 Good morning, RVA: Not very hopeful, a casiNO, and a COVID-19 vaccine for kids

Good morning, RVA! It’s 39 °F, and I think the rain is on its way out of the region. Once that happens, you can expect drier times with highs in the mid-50s and cooler-than-expected temperatures for the next couple of days.
 

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Yesterday, a CDC’s advisory committee and the CDC proper both signed off on the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine for kids aged 5–11! This means pharmacies, pediatricians, and other healthcare providers will start jabbing kids as soon as today. If you’ve been waiting and waiting (and waiting) to get the younger members of your family vaccinated, get thee to a pharmacy website or call up your healthcare provider to see if they’ve got appointments available! And remember, Kid Pfizer still requires two doses—but the doses are smaller—so you’ll need to eventually make that second appointment, too.
 

The Virginia Public Access Project has last night’s election results, if you can stomach them. Republicans won all three statewide offices and took control of the House of Delegates. Here’s the Virginia Mercury’s Graham Moomaw and Ned Oliver on the big-three races and here’s the Richmond Times-Dispatch’s Michael Martz on the House races. I’m sure you’ve read all the hottest takes by now, but here’s mine: White voters across the state, afraid of kids learning about systemic racism (which is what the anti-CRT meme was always about), elected a bunch of Republicans specifically to build racism into our education system. What a scary and dangerous step backward. It’s incredibly naive to carry on with this Pollyanna rhetoric of “Republicans want to ban Critical Race Theory, which isn’t even a thing, look how logically inconsistent they are!”. Republicans' anti-CRT platform is a way for them to launder straight-up racism as something folks—especially liberals—don’t know how to debate. Michael Hobbes, who I’ve written about before, has a great thread on this and says it “short circuits our conventional way off doing politics.” We’ll quickly see how banning something “which isn’t even a thing” turns into policy that strips rights from our neighbors and cements inequities that’ll take decades to tear down. As Youngkin said in his victory speech: “We will change the trajectory of this Commonwealth on day one.” Anyway, I don’t feel very hopeful this morning as there are an unlimited number of mediocre rich white dudes out there willing to outwardly soften Trumpism enough to get elected while holding tight to a platform of explicitly backwards and bad policies. Expect to see a million Glen Youngkins on every ballot across the country for the foreseeable future.
 

#99
November 3, 2021
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🌫 Good morning, RVA: Not very hopeful, a casiNO, and a COVID-19 vaccine for kids

Good morning, RVA! It’s 39 °F, and I think the rain is on its way out of the region. Once that happens, you can expect drier times with highs in the mid-50s and cooler-than-expected temperatures for the next couple of days.
 

Water cooler

Yesterday, a CDC’s advisory committee and the CDC proper both signed off on the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine for kids aged 5–11! This means pharmacies, pediatricians, and other healthcare providers will start jabbing kids as soon as today. If you’ve been waiting and waiting (and waiting) to get the younger members of your family vaccinated, get thee to a pharmacy website or call up your healthcare provider to see if they’ve got appointments available! And remember, Kid Pfizer still requires two doses—but the doses are smaller—so you’ll need to eventually make that second appointment, too.
 

The Virginia Public Access Project has last night’s election results, if you can stomach them. Republicans won all three statewide offices and took control of the House of Delegates. Here’s the Virginia Mercury’s Graham Moomaw and Ned Oliver on the big-three races and here’s the Richmond Times-Dispatch’s Michael Martz on the House races. I’m sure you’ve read all the hottest takes by now, but here’s mine: White voters across the state, afraid of kids learning about systemic racism (which is what the anti-CRT meme was always about), elected a bunch of Republicans specifically to build racism into our education system. What a scary and dangerous step backward. It’s incredibly naive to carry on with this Pollyanna rhetoric of “Republicans want to ban Critical Race Theory, which isn’t even a thing, look how logically inconsistent they are!”. Republicans' anti-CRT platform is a way for them to launder straight-up racism as something folks—especially liberals—don’t know how to debate. Michael Hobbes, who I’ve written about before, has a great thread on this and says it “short circuits our conventional way off doing politics.” We’ll quickly see how banning something “which isn’t even a thing” turns into policy that strips rights from our neighbors and cements inequities that’ll take decades to tear down. As Youngkin said in his victory speech: “We will change the trajectory of this Commonwealth on day one.” Anyway, I don’t feel very hopeful this morning as there are an unlimited number of mediocre rich white dudes out there willing to outwardly soften Trumpism enough to get elected while holding tight to a platform of explicitly backwards and bad policies. Expect to see a million Glen Youngkins on every ballot across the country for the foreseeable future.
 

#99
November 3, 2021
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🗳 Good morning, RVA: VOTE!, final casino thoughts, and a cool list of Richmond 300 projects

Good morning, RVA! It’s 44 °F, and today looks lovely. Expect highs in the mid 60s and sunshine. Temperatures cool straight down to boots-and-flannel weather starting tomorrow, so get ready and/or get excited.
 

Water cooler

The Richmond Times-Dispatch has dueling casino columns, the no-vote perspective provided by Jim Ukrop and the yes-vote perspective by the folks who run Urban One. In what I think is a pretty telling sign, the yes-voters’ piece mentions gambling or gaming just a single time. It shows up in this sentence describing the project in glowing terms while completely glossing over the fact that this is a proposed casino: “The project — a premier gaming, dining and entertainment facility — will include 15 unique restaurants and bars, including some famed local eateries; 250 luxurious hotel rooms; a 3,000-capacity theater that will bring the best in music and entertainment to the city; an on-site radio and television studio and soundstage; and 20,000 square feet of event space.” All of those things sound rad because they describe a thriving neighborhood, and that’s what folks want to see across Richmond—not casinos or downtown arenas, but neighborhoods and communities. The benefits and amenities promised by the casino developers (and the Navy Hill developers before them) sound great—and they’re what a lot of folks are excited about—but all of those things could be built without a casino as the anchor. We could just invest into supporting and building thriving and sustainable neighborhoods in the Southside. Heck, we’re doing that right now in the Diamond District with nary a slot machine in sight!
 

Today, Kevin Vonck, the new Director of the Department of Planning and Development Review, will give a really interesting presentation on the Richmond 300 Priority Project List to City Council’s Organizational Development committee. This is a great PDF that you should definitely scroll through! Beginning on page six, you’ll find tables linking projects to legislation to the Richmond 300 Big Moves—plus start and finish dates! Incredible! So far the City has finished three projects (B-3 zoning, rezoning the area around the Alison Street Pulse Station, and the Greater Scott’s Addition rezoning). They’ve listed out about 20 in-progress projects, 16 of which are on track to finish up before the end of 2022 (fun things like: the City Center small area plan, rezoning Shockoe, redeveloping the Diamond District, finalizing ADUs, and getting rid of parking minimums). It’d be rad for someone to drop these in a public spreadsheet so we can all remember the timelines and track the progress made!
 

#215
November 1, 2021
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🧟 Good morning, RVA: Enforcing mandates, reading critically, and a shambling horde

Good morning, RVA! It’s 60 °F, and it’s rainy. You should expect the rain to continue for most of the day, tapering off later this evening. This weekend looks lovely though, so get out there and enjoy it (after things dry off a bit).
 

Water cooler

The Richmond Times-Dispatch’s Kenny Hunter reports that Richmond Public Schools “has started its promised disciplinary measures for teachers and employees who are out of compliance with the COVID-19 vaccine mandate.” Mandates aren’t mandates if you don’t enforce them! Unpaid suspensions begin this coming Monday, and I’m really interested to see how many folks choose leaving their job over getting a life-saving vaccine.
 

The Richmond Police Department will hold their third quarter crime briefing today, and afterwards their presentation should end up somewhere on their website. Yesterday, I wrote a little bit about police being a biased voice in the discussion around the creation of Richmond’s Civilian Review Board. Today, I’ve got two press releases in my inbox from the RPD that I think are great, low-consequence examples of how police are treated as infallible sources by media, when, just like the rest of us, they get stuff wrong. First, RPD sent out a press release yesterday morning titled “Tow Truck Pirate” claiming an unlicensed tow truck was being used to “quickly steal vehicles throughout the city.” Give “Richmond tow truck pirate” a quick Google, and you can see how the charming subject line and panic-inducing topic made it irresistible to write about. Then, later in the evening, RPD sent out another press release titled “UPDATE: Tow Truck Determined to Have Engaged in Lawful Tow.” So not only was no one stealing cars with a tow truck, it was a single tow truck (legally) towing a single car: “the tow truck featured in today’s release about a possible vehicle theft has been identified and it has been determined the vehicle was lawfully towed.” Not nearly as exciting as a rogue tow pirate sailing our streets snatching vehicles at their pleasure. This low-stakes example is a great reminder of how we always need to critically read releases and reporting where police are the only voice present. Michael Hobbes, host of the You’re Wrong About and Maintenance Phase podcasts talks about this a lot, and I encourage you to give both podcasts a listen and to give him a follow on Twitter.
 

#775
October 29, 2021
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👻 Good morning, RVA: Casino impacts, CRB recommendations, and not closing Hanover Avenue

Good morning, RVA! It’s 50 °F, and today looks ominous. Expect highs in the 60s and cloudy skies while we wait for tonight/tomorrow’s big rain.
 

Water cooler

Former 2nd District City Council candidate Tarvarris Spinks has put together a great post on the harm a casino can cause to their surrounding communities, saying “When casinos implant themselves into struggling communities, they inflict caustic, irreparable social harm, with proximity to a casino being the key factor in creating a surge in pathological gamblers.” I really enjoy this bit, too: “I firmly believe that our city can and should embark on bold projects that uplift and empower our struggling communities. But, unfortunately, we have yet to see a project or proposal that meaningfully prioritizes the interests of vulnerable communities…”Just like Navy Hill, the casino project is not the ONLY way to create tax revenue for the city and build into communities that have seen decades of disinvestment. It is a big, shiny, temporary fix that gives some folks the opportunities to cut a ribbon and add a bullet point to their campaign website. It does not and will not build a thriving, sustainable community or neighborhood.
 

As foretold, letting the Richmond Police Department update Council’s Public Safety committee about officer morale right before the Civilian Review Board Task Force presentation was not the best idea. Jon Burkett at WTVR reports that Chief Smith told Council that “morale and retention is a problem already and that if the CRB is implemented, he says it’s likely more officers will abandon ship.” Ali Rockett at the Richmond Times-Dispatch has a few more details and quotes worth reading through, too. I don’t have a lot of empathy for the RPD in this situation. City Council created the CRB task force and asked them to come up with recommendations on how to best implement a CRB in Richmond. The task force has spent months doing just that, researching, according to Rockett, “more than 200 other bodies to tailor their recommendations specifically to Richmond’s needs.” Council should listen to their own task force and realize that the Chief of Police is in no way unbiased when it comes to civilian review boards—which are specifically designed to keep police accountable.
 

#972
October 28, 2021
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🐐 Good morning, RVA: One step closer to kid vax, bus service cuts, and inside a penthouse

Good morning, RVA! It’s 52 °F, and today looks lovely. Expect sunshiney highs in the 70s and no chance for rain until Friday. This looks like a great afternoon to spend on the patio of your choosing.
 

Water cooler

Yesterday, COVID-19 vaccines for children aged 5–11 cleared their first hurdle as an FDA advisory committee voted to recommend the shots. The New York Times has the details. Sounds like the committee was at it for hours and, while they ended up voting unanimously in favor of kid vax, some folks had concerns about the number of kids involved the clinical trials and whether or not all kids 5–11 needed vaccination or just high-risk children. Honestly, I think regular folks and families would have lost their minds if the vote had gone a different way, and I’m not really sure what to do with that feeling. Next up, the full FDA will need to give its authorization, and then we’re on to the CDC’s advisory committee which already has meetings on the books for November 2nd and 3rd. Barring an unexpected plot twist, we should see shots in little arms by the end of next week.
 

Chris Suarez at the Richmond Times-Dispatch reports on GRTC’s board meeting (which you can watch in full here) and has the disappointing news about proposed bus service cuts due "an ongoing shortage of drivers and mechanics amid the COVID-19 pandemic." Riders could see reduction of frequency across a bunch of routes (#4A, #4B, #5, #20, #76, #77, #78, and #88) and even the Pulse—which could have its headway cut back to 15-minutes or 30-minutes off-peak. Yuck. GRTC CEO Julie Timm expects cuts to be temporary, but, dang, still, any cuts in bus service make me worry about our ability to restore them at a later date. While we’re at it, take a look at this graph comparing systemwide ridership over the last four years. While bus ridership has not returned to pre-pandemic levels, it has increased compared to last year, which I think is a good sign.
 

#660
October 27, 2021
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🥾 Good morning, RVA: Digital vaccine cards, ARPA spending approved, and a CRB Task Force presentation

Good morning, RVA! It’s 58 °F, and it rained! The storms have moved through, though, and now we’ve got a pleasant fall day ahead of us. Expect highs in the mid 60s, some clouds, and dry weather for at least the next couple of days.
 

Water cooler

One quick coronaupdate this morning for iPhone users: iOS 15.1 came out yesterday, and that means you can now store your vaccination card in the Wallet app. Just fill out this form on vaccinate.virginia.gov, and you’ll end up with a QR code and a link that’ll automatically load up your information as a fun card in Wallet.app. I think once you get boosted, you can even update it with that information, too. Neat!
 

The Richmond Times-Dispatch’s Chris Suarez has the update from last night’s final City Council meeting on the Mayor’s proposed ARPA spending plan, and it sounds like Council approved the whole shebang. You can find more details on the City’s ARPA page, but the big-ticket investments are parks, trails, and community centers; the Affordable Housing Trust Fund; stormwater infrastructure; and a new Healthy Equity Trust Fund. While the full spending plan is approved, this huge bucket of money will be allocated over two years. Someone should definitely set up a spreadsheet or a Trello or something to track progress on all these rad projects. In particular, I can’t wait for some of the new trails!
 

#918
October 26, 2021
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