Y'all!

Once upon a time I ran a news site, now I just have opinions on the news. 

Good morning, RVA: 394 • 40 • 13.6; casino terms; and (restaurant) life finds a way

Good morning, RVA! It's 68 °F, and today looks hot—but not as hot as yesterday. Expect highs near 90 °F, and, luckily, NBC12's Andrew Freiden says to expect less humidity soaking through your shirts.

Water cooler

As of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports the seven-day average of new COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, and deaths as: 394, 40, and 13.6, respectively. VDH reports a seven-day average of 29.9 new cases in and around Richmond (Richmond: 5.4; Henrico: 14.3, and Chesterfield: 10.1). Since this pandemic began, 1,324 people have died in the Richmond region. 42.6%, 53.1%, and 49.6% of the population in Richmond, Henrico, and Chesterfield have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine. For whatever reason, Chesterfield actually reported -43 new cases yesterday, so that accounts for the significant drop in its seven-day average of new cases. Data Reporting: There's always something.

Now that Virginia is so dang close to reaching President Biden's goal of 70% of adults with at least one does by July 4th, I cannot stop watching the numbers slowwwwwly tick upwards. Two days ago 65.7% of Virginia's adults had one dose, today 66.2%. Forgetting for a second that fewer people are making the decision to get vaccinated each day and pretending that we'll just continue along at the same rate we're seeing right now, we should hit Biden's goal on June 12th. Mark your calendars (which is a thing I actually just did)!


Chris Suarez at the Richmond Times-Dispatch went through the terms sheet of the newly put-forth casino project so you don't have to (but you totally still can if you're into that sort of thing). Suarez reports that the casino would give the City a $25 million cash payment within 30 days of the referendum (should it pass, of course), $30,000 annual payments to Richmond Public Schools for five years, reimburse the City for up to $500,000 it spent during the casino evaluation process, and, of course, a chunk of the gambling-related revenue each year. And that's just a short list, the terms sheet is 20 pages long and includes all sorts of things about jobs, wages, construction, and even a $325,000 annual payment to "support transit mobility solutions to support travel of its employees to and from work." I'm interested in all of these things, but I'm particularly interested in what happens to that $25 million in cash. If it were me, I'd put it in a special fund dedicated specifically for new infrastructure improvements on the Southside with a focus on the neighborhoods near the casino. I certainly would not let it end up in the general fund, and I would be really careful to not let this $25 million get used to replace funding already earmarked for Southside projects. This is new money and should be used for new projects. I wonder if Council will start putting together a plan for all this hypothetical new money before the actual referendum as a way to sell the public on the casino?

Also, the RTD continues their ongoing series talking to Richmonders one year after the murder of George Floyd. Make some time to read this piece by Kenya Hunter about Corey Stuckey, founder of the 381 Movement. You might recognize Stuckey and the 381 Movement, because recently they've been focused on "trying to convince the School Board to rescind a resolution that gave the board control over school construction." I'll tell you what, it's life-giving to see movements built during last summer grow and expand into influencing some of the important (but day-to-day) policies of our city.

Another sign that post-pandemic life finds a way: Mary Scott Hardaway has a list of newly opened, recently opened, and newly reopened restaurants in Style Weekly.

It's Thursday which means the Richmond and Henrico Health Districts will host a free COVID-19 community testing event at Diversity Thrift (1407 Sherwood Avenue) from 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM.

This morning's longread

Weekly Obsession: Cicadas

Quartz has these lovely Obsession emails, put together by Friend of the Email Susan Howson, to which you should most certainly subscribe. This week they tackle cicadas, which are big and weird but also pretty cool.

Love them or hate them (at Quartz, we’re divided), they are undeniably a net positive for our ecosystem. They don’t damage plants once they emerge from the ground. They don’t bite, they don’t spread disease, they feed a lot of other wildlife, and their exoskeletons decompose into nice tree fertilizer. In a lot of ways, periodical cicadas are one of nature’s more spectacular reminders that, for the most part, the planet is still operational. If Brood X hadn’t made its entrance, it would have been a truly terrifying sign. It may feel like a bug invasion, but cicadas have been doing their thing for hundreds of millions of years. How long have you been doing yours?

If you’d like your longread to show up here, go chip in a couple bucks on the ol’ Patreon.

25F1A07E-8A85-4221-9F1D-B2D8C4A0AAC1.jpeg

Good morning, RVA: 360 • 37 • 12.0; no more restrictions; and a bunch of reminders

Good morning, RVA: 418 • 39 • 13.6; candidate questionnaires; and an official new City logo