Good Morning, RVA logo

Good Morning, RVA

Archives

Good Morning, RVA Good Morning, RVA

Archive

Good morning, RVA: So much rain, a bunch of new buses, and independent media

Photo by: sandy's dad

Good morning, RVA! It’s 72 °F, and today’s weather looks wonderful. Highs should hit the mid 80s, and thunderstorms should stay far, far away. Good riddance.

Speaking of, the Richmond Times-Dispatch’s John Boyer has a look at this past weekend’s record-breaking rain that made this month the wettest June on record. 10 points to John for tying our extreme local weather to global climate change!

Water cooler

#288
June 25, 2018
Read more

Good morning, RVA: A disgusting cartoon, some more Blackwell thoughts, and the Pulse!

Good morning, RVA! It’s 74 °F, and temperatures should be a bit cooler than the last couple of days with highs around 80 °F. Unfortunately, there’s a decent chance for storms from now until tomorrow.

Water cooler

Yesterday, the Richmond Times Dispatch’s editorial team ran this disgusting cartoon about immigration. First: “Stay away” is a heartless and cruel take on immigration that has no basis in reality and only serves to normalizes our current president’s push for more xenophobic and white-nationalist policies. Running it was irresponsible. Second: The reaction to this cartoon has come quick and from a few folks I would not have expected. First, the Editorial Board claimed that “We love balance!” and included a condescending exclamation point to make sure you really felt gross. Reporter Graham Moomaw, who at this point must be exhausted from tweeting this same thing over and over again, reminded us that the newsroom has zero control over whatever disturbing thing editorial chooses to run. The Mayor called the cartoon “shameful” and threw in a #ThisisAmerica, too, while Delegate Jeff Bourne said it was “disgusting.” VCU prof and national thinker on inequity Dr. Tressie McMillan Cottom wrote up a great thread comparing this sort of garbage to role the RTD played in massive resistance. Finally, Publisher Tom Silvestri weighed in and said that while he disagreed with the cartoon, “it represents a viewpoint that invites discourse and debate.” Nope. The current editorial side of the paper is a liability to the newsroom and, in my opinion, diminishes the hard work of the reporters out there keeping all of us informed. While it is true that these two things, editorial and news, are functionally separated, they both sit under the same leadership and are paid for by the same advertisers and the same subscribers. When one side vomits up racist garbage under the guise of “balance” it can’t not hurt the long-term future of the other side.

I keep thinking and reading about the stuff going on in Blackwell, the expansion of the Manchester Historic District, and how public engagement works (or doesn’t) in Richmond. Somehow I missed this thoughtful piece by Barrett Hardiman from over the weekend. Here’s something that I don’t often read: “I am a white gentrifier, a colonizer. That’s not a title I want, but it is the one I deserve. We moved here with good intentions. We want to be a part of the history of this neighborhood, celebrate it, and tell its story. However, despite our best intentions and efforts, we are still contributing to the erasure of that history. We both cause and benefit from rising home values, increased rents for businesses, and the replacement of the historic barbershop with the hipster coffee joint.” Additionally, RVADirt wrote up a thread on Twitter about the timeline of this whole thing, and, while it feels medium conspiratorial, brings up some heckin’ good points. Meanwhile, since I’ve been writing about this over the past couple of days, I’ve received a bunch of really thoughtful comments from folks who are genuinely disappointed and hurt that this part of the Southside is possibly missing out on a major influx of cash and development. All of that to say: This is a real complex and sensitive issue only made more so by the lack of strong affordable housing policy in the City (and in the State—if we want to get technical, we’ve got to change some state-level policy before we can take big steps on affordable housing).

#386
June 22, 2018
Read more

Good morning, RVA: Sanctuary, Historic District drama, and an Executive Order explained

Photo by: sandy's dad

Good morning, RVA! It’s 71 °F, and today’s forecast looks a lot like yesterday’s: Highs around 90 °F and a chance for thunderstorms later in the day and into evening.

Water cooler

Vanessa Remmers in the Richmond Times-Dispatch writes this unreal but extremely, very real story about a local woman who has taken refuge in the First Unitarian Universalist Church to avoid being deported back to Honduras and back to a domestic abuser.

#948
June 21, 2018
Read more

Good morning, RVA: Separating children, RVA Transit Week, and Black Widows

Photo by: Graylight

Good morning, RVA! It’s 73 °F, and today’s highs are, thankfully, a bit cooler than yesterday. Expect temperatures near 90 °F and a chance for some more thunderstorms this afternoon.

Water cooler

Yesterday, Governor Northam “ordered the recall of four Virginia National Guard Soldiers and one helicopter from the U.S. Southwest border in response to the federal government’s enforcement of a ‘zero-tolerance’ policy that separates immigrant children from their families.” This is a good state-level response to a truly evil federal policy. What were those National Guard soldiers doing there in the first place? The Gov says, “preventing criminals, drug runners and other threats to our security from crossing into the United States.” But the Richmond Times-Dispatch’s Graham Moomaw linked to this over on Twitter, which isn’t super specific but does make it sound like training on the helicopter was a big part of the mission. If you feel appalled by Trump’s policy to separate parents and children at our southern border but helpless and frustrated about how to get involved, check out this trustworthy list of organizations mobilizing to help. Donations to these organizations support the important, on-the-ground work to make a difference.

#542
June 20, 2018
Read more

Good morning, RVA: Obama Elementary!, a Bon Secours delay, and a need for bus route creativity

Good morning, RVA! It’s already 80 °F, and today’s anther hot one. Count on highs near 100 °F for most of the day followed by a possible chance of rain this evening.

Water cooler

Richmond Police are reporting a double shooting on Saturday as a homicide and an aggravated assault. Early in the morning, officers arrived to the 1700 block of Carlisle Avenue and found Tevon M. Cook, 26, suffering from a fatal gunshot wound. Another adult male was taken to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.


#88
June 19, 2018
Read more

Good morning, RVA: Obama Elementary!, a Bon Secours delay, and a need for bus route creativity

Good morning, RVA! It’s already 80 °F, and today’s anther hot one. Count on highs near 100 °F for most of the day followed by a possible chance of rain this evening.

Water cooler

Richmond Police are reporting a double shooting on Saturday as a homicide and an aggravated assault. Early in the morning, officers arrived to the 1700 block of Carlisle Avenue and found Tevon M. Cook, 26, suffering from a fatal gunshot wound. Another adult male was taken to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.


#88
June 19, 2018
Read more

Good morning, RVA: A public meeting, gentrification, and border policy

Good morning, RVA! It’s 71 °F, and it’s gonna be hot today! Expect highs in the upper 90s and plenty of sun. Stay cool, and stay hydrated!

Water cooler

GRTC will host a public meeting tonight at 6:00 PM (2300 W. Broad Street) to discuss removing a stop at Davis & Broad. They’ll also solicit feedback on a proposed permanent redesign of the three routes that turn around on the block bounded by Broad, Davis, Grace, and Robinson. The fact that a single block of humans and a single councilperson were able to force GRTC into redesigning our new bus network—a system used by tens of thousands of Richmonders every day—just weeks before that new network even launches is…not promising. Council does not and should not have the authority to design bus routes and place bus stops, for good reason. I’m attending tonight’s meeting to hear what GRTC proposes as their permanent redesign and to ask them how much it will cost to implement. Any additional costs to move service away from these folks in the Fan likely means cuts in service from folks living elsewhere in the City. It’s a fixed budget, that’s how it works. However, I do hold out some hope that GRTC’s planners have found a clever way to expand service as part of their permanent plan to remove these three bus routes from this Fan neighborhood. We’ll see. If you can’t make tonight’s meeting but would like to weigh in, you can email planningcomment@ridegrtc.com.

Gentrification is very complicated. Read this thorough piece from Mark Robinson in the Richmond Times-Dispatch about an attempt to expand the Manchester Historic District to include Blackwell 💸 and you’ll probably have some complicated thoughts. Then you’ll get to the part of the article about CONSPIRACY and will maybe roll your eyes the folks involved. Ultimately, if you are a white dude trying to wholesale modify a majority Black neighborhood—a neighborhood that was once bulldozed under the guise of “revitalization” and never rebuilt—you’ve got to go talk to the community and neighbors first. And, to be fair, maybe the Hilds did just that, I don’t know!

#1087
June 18, 2018
Read more

Good morning, RVA: RVA311, La Milpa, and more breweries

Photo by: sandy's dad

Good morning, RVA! It’s 69 °F, and highs are back in the upper 80s. Expect warm temperatures and sunshine over the weekend. Keep an eye out for some real hot temperatures in the mid 90s on Sunday.

Water cooler

Today, the City will retire See-Click-Fix (RIP, ol’ buddy), and will launch RVA311 as the primary way for Richmonders to report non-emergency problems and get them fixed. Got a massive pothole? Storm drain backed up? Garbage in the bike lane? These are the kinds of things that you can submit using the RVA311 website (RVA311.com) and, theoretically, those issues will make their way through the dark twists and turns of local government and end up in front of the exact right person. As of this very second, it looks like the tool has not yet launched, so keep your potholes to yourself until later today. A mobile app should hit the app store of your choice later this month.

#408
June 15, 2018
Read more

Good morning, RVA: Goodbye supervisor, hello Coliseum, and new ice cream options

Good morning, RVA! It’s 74 °F, and today’s highs are back up in the 90s. Expect tons of sun, tons of fun, and probably some sweaty underclothes.

Water cooler

Michael O’Connor at the Richmond Times-Dispatch has the astounding news that Courtney Lynch will resign from the Henrico County Board of Supervisors this month 💸. Lynch’s election and vote were critical in expanding public transportation into the County, and her public insistence on higher teacher pay—which ran totally counter to The Henrico Way—ended with the $3.2 million more allocated for Henrico County Public Schools. I don’t get it, like, those are some serious successes in a really short period of time. The Board of Supervisors will soon make some decisions about when and whether to hold a special election, but now it’s hard not to feel like progressive Democrats are toast in the Brookland District of Henrico County.

The City has taken another step toward redeveloping the area around the Coliseum by entering into negotiations with the NH District Corporation. These are the folks led by Dominion’s Tom Farrell and the only cats who submitted a response to the City’s Request For Proposal. The Mayor says he believes “there is potential in this proposal to provide transformational change in an underutilized portion of downtown, without negatively impacting the city finances or debt capacity.” We still haven’t seen the group’s juicy proposal PDF, which would give us some insight into how the NH District Corp plans to meet all of the kind of numerous requirements set out in the RFP (PDF). I’m looking forward to getting my hands on it and hope it checks some of my boxes like: reconnecting the street grid; returning Leigh Street to grade; good pedestrian, bike, and transit infrastructure; affordable housing; not a ton of parking decks; and, fingers crossed, zero surface parking lots. Did I miss anything?

#368
June 14, 2018
Read more

Good morning, RVA: Primary results, scuffle in a park, and sustainable fashion

Photo by: sandy's dad

Good morning, RVA! It’s 67 °F, and highs are back up near 90 °F today. I think, fingers crossed, we should see a return of the sun as well!

Water cooler

VPAP has all of the primary election results that you could ever want or need. Women won the Democratic primaries in Congressional Districts 1, 2, 6, 7, and 10—that’s 100% of the Democratic races in which a woman was on the ballot! Good luck moving forward to Vangie Williams, Elaine Luria, Jennifer Lewis, Abigail Spanberger, and Jennifer Wexton. Vox even declared Democratic women as one of their winners from Tuesday’s primaries. On the other side of the ticket, Confederate sympathizer Corey Stewart won the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate by about 5,000 votes. His fixated-on-the-past supporters chanted “Lock her up!” at his victory party last night. He’s disappointing and disgusting, but his nomination is unfortunately unsurprising. Vox had some words to say about him, too.

#494
June 13, 2018
Read more

Good morning, RVA: Primaries, a Human Rights Commission, and a civics lesson

Good morning, RVA! It’s 61 °F, and highs will settle in around 75 °F. Expect those clouds to stick around, though.

Water cooler

It’s primary day in Virginia! If you’re a Richmond City resident and looking to vote for a democrat, I have bad news: They’re all running unopposed (PDF). I mean, maybe that’s not bad news, but there’s no one for you to vote for today. If, however, you live in the 7th Congressional District, you’ve got the opportunity to vote for either Abigail Spanberger or Daniel Ward. Not sure what’s your situation? You can check your voter registration information here, which includes info on all of your various districts.

City Council met last night and approved the creation of a Human Rights Commission (and now I wonder how the nomination process for this commission works). They also heard public comment from community advocates and family members of Marcus-David Peters. Folks on Twitter were not happy about the lack of response from Council, and RVA Mag has a quick recap of some of those public comments. Since I’m a little confused about what exactly did or did not happened at the meeting, I’ll get the audio up over on The Boring Show as soon as it hits the City’s website.

#965
June 12, 2018
Read more

Good morning, RVA: Housing instability, parking, and City Council

Good morning, RVA! It’s 70 °F, and today looks cloudy with a continued, but smallish, chance of rain later this afternoon. Things will dry out and heat up beginning tomorrow.

Water cooler

Katie O’Connor at the Richmond Times-Dispatch has written an excellent piece on mental illness and housing instability in Richmond and Virginia. Please block out some time this morning to read it in full, because the picture it paints is a dark one: “And even though the state has made some efforts to address the issues, people with mental and behavioral issues still wind up in hotels, tents and jail cells.” Those are not great options. And while the state’s recently passed budget does include more money for mental health services, we’ve still got a long way to go to adequately provide for the thousands of Virginians with mental health issues floating between unstable housing and homelessness.

Do you spend a lot of time thinking about where and how much parking Richmond has and needs? Do you dream of removing park spaces and replacing them with sidewalks, bike lanes, and bus lanes? No? Just me? As part of the Richmond 300 master planning process, the City will host seven public meetings about the parking in seven different neighborhoods. These meetings will share and discuss the data collected as part of the ongoing parking study and will focus on these neighborhoods: Libbie & Grove, Scott’s Addition, Carytown, the Fan, Brookland Park Boulevard, Downtown, and Manchester. The meetings kick off with a Carytown-focused meeting tomorrow at 8:00 AM at Studio Two Three (3300 W. Clay Street), and you can download the full schedule of meetings (PDF). I’ll try and get all the PDFs that these meetings are based on for folks that are interested but can’t make seven meetings in a single week!

#694
June 11, 2018
Read more

Good morning, RVA: Unsolved murders, scooters, and GO CAPS!

Photo by: sandy's dad

Good morning, RVA! It’s 64 °F, and today expect temperatures to top out near 90 °F. This weekend: Probably some rain.

Water cooler

Richmond Police are reporting a murder on the 900 block of Belt Boulevard. Officers arrived and found Kenneth L. Brown, 43, shot to death. According to the RPD website, this is the first murder in the City since May 17th and the 21st murder in 2018.

#705
June 8, 2018
Read more

Good morning, RVA: More apartments, an idea about parking, and headline semantics

Photo by: sandy's dad

Good morning, RVA! It’s 63 °F, and today you can expect another round of excellent temperatures in the low 80s. Sounds great!

Water cooler

A group of Richmond Times-Dispatch reporters has a long piece on the background of the man who drove the tank through town. My favorite part of the article is when they explain who the Wu-Tang Clan is.

#15
June 7, 2018
Read more

Good morning, RVA: More apartments, an idea about parking, and headline semantics

Photo by: sandy's dad

Good morning, RVA! It’s 63 °F, and today you can expect another round of excellent temperatures in the low 80s. Sounds great!

Water cooler

A group of Richmond Times-Dispatch reporters has a long piece on the background of the man who drove the tank through town. My favorite part of the article is when they explain who the Wu-Tang Clan is.

#15
June 7, 2018
Read more

Good morning, RVA: A tank, some testing irregularities, and a land purchase

Photo by: JOzPhotography

Good morning, RVA! It’s 65 °F, and, with highs in this upper 70s, today has some amazing potential. Use it wisely!

Water cooler

Last night, a man stole a tank (more accurately, but less fun, an armored personnel carrier) and drove it from the Fort Pickett military base in Nottoway County, all the way to Richmond, through the Fan, and ended up out front of City Hall. @RichmondGL has put together a comprehensive set of videos that bewildered folks shot on their phones as this thing sped through the City (warning: those videos mostly all contain NSFW language, which is a completely understandable reaction to seeing a tank and dozens of police vehicles drive by on Broad Street). Jokes aside, it’s really hard not to immediately think of Marcus-David Peters. One man—naked and unarmed—was shot to death by police, while another man—who stole a military vehicle and led police on a inter-city chase—was apprehended without issue and without a single shot fired.

#339
June 6, 2018
Read more

Good morning, RVA: Schools, baseballs, and beers

Photo by: VaDOT

Good morning, RVA! It’s 64 °F, and more sunshine awaits you today. Expect highs in the pleasant low 80s and a chance of thunderstorms near midnight.

Water cooler

The Richmond Times-Dispatch’s Justin Mattingly has a bunch of budget-related updates from last night’s RPS School Board meeting. Something to keep your eye on for next year: The Board approved the Superintendent’s plan to use one-time money to fund recurring operating costs. This, of course, means schools will either need to make cuts elsewhere to keep this money or will ask for more operating money next year. Jot it down in your text file of Things To Remember Several Months From Now.txt and we’ll come back to it.

#523
June 5, 2018
Read more

Good morning, RVA: Dry weather, Public Art Master Plan, and photos from the March for Justice

Good morning, RVA! It’s 58 °F, but don’t worry, highs will creep back up into the mid 80s before the day’s out. Expect plenty of sunshine and no rain!

Speaking of, the Richmond Times-Dispatch’s John Boyer has a really great thread on Twitter about this past month’s place in the Weather Hall of History, featuring Edward Avery Evans, Richmond’s first meteorologist.

Water cooler

Yesterday, the mayor tweeted out this picture of himself, Chesterfield County Manager Joe Casey, Henrico County Manager John Vithoulkas, and Hanover County Board of Supervisor Rep Angela Kelley-Wiecek hanging at the Greek Festival. Part of the promise of electing a fresh, young mayor was for him to repair, reestablish, reinvigorate—whatever the right word is—the City’s relationship with the surrounding counties and work together on important things like housing, transportation, and education. I don’t know what, if anything, they’ve got cooking up, but hanging out like actual humans over some baklava certainly can’t hurt.

#880
June 4, 2018
Read more

Good morning, RVA: A news paywall, absent councilmembers, and new music

Good morning, RVA! It’s 73 °F, and it’s gonna be hot today. Sunshine and highs in the mid 90s mean you need to drink water and stay hydrated—it’s important!

Water cooler

Logistical note: Beginning today, the Richmond Times-Dispatch has turned on a partial paywall, meaning certain articles are only available to paying subscribers. I’ll try to mark those stories I link to behind the paywall with a 💸. I’m really interested to see which and how many stories end up subscriber-only and how that impacts both the paper’s coverage of local news and general human awareness of local news. You can subscribe to the RTD here.

The Mayor’s Education Compact met last night…kind of: Only two of nine City Council members showed up. The RTD’s Mark Robinson covered the meeting on Twitter and was NOT impressed, and it sounds like the Mayor was disappointed at the turnout, too: “‘It’s going to take us reaching some sort of grand compromise, but first it takes everyone being here, as well,’ Stoney said before thanking Larson and Agelasto for showing up.” Augh. After all the tough talk during both the meals tax and cigarette tax debates, you’d think elected officials would make it their beeswax to attend these quarterly meeting where all the decision makers are in the room. Every time one of these meetings slips away, it’s a huge wasted opportunity for our leaders to start building trust and human relationships with one another. I continue to believe that this is incredibly important work to do as we move forward on schools. Tangentially related: Yesterday, I bemoaned the lack of a dedicated Education Compact website, but behold: https://sharepoint.richmondgov.com/EducationCompact.

#145
June 1, 2018
Read more

Good morning, RVA: A news paywall, absent councilmembers, and new music

Good morning, RVA! It’s 73 °F, and it’s gonna be hot today. Sunshine and highs in the mid 90s mean you need to drink water and stay hydrated—it’s important!

Water cooler

Logistical note: Beginning today, the Richmond Times-Dispatch has turned on a partial paywall, meaning certain articles are only available to paying subscribers. I’ll try to mark those stories I link to behind the paywall with a 💸. I’m really interested to see which and how many stories end up subscriber-only and how that impacts both the paper’s coverage of local news and general human awareness of local news. You can subscribe to the RTD here.

The Mayor’s Education Compact met last night…kind of: Only two of nine City Council members showed up. The RTD’s Mark Robinson covered the meeting on Twitter and was NOT impressed, and it sounds like the Mayor was disappointed at the turnout, too: “‘It’s going to take us reaching some sort of grand compromise, but first it takes everyone being here, as well,’ Stoney said before thanking Larson and Agelasto for showing up.” Augh. After all the tough talk during both the meals tax and cigarette tax debates, you’d think elected officials would make it their beeswax to attend these quarterly meeting where all the decision makers are in the room. Every time one of these meetings slips away, it’s a huge wasted opportunity for our leaders to start building trust and human relationships with one another. I continue to believe that this is incredibly important work to do as we move forward on schools. Tangentially related: Yesterday, I bemoaned the lack of a dedicated Education Compact website, but behold: https://sharepoint.richmondgov.com/EducationCompact.

#145
June 1, 2018
Read more
  Newer archives Older archives  
rva.fyi
instagram.com
gmrva.com
Powered by Buttondown, the easiest way to start and grow your newsletter.