Category: Planning
-
Here, Piggy Piggy Piggy!
by James A. Bacon Any time business leaders, university presidents and legislatorsย agree on a great new spending initiative, I put my hand on my pants pocketย to make sure my wallet is still there. When their brilliant idea slidesย through the General Assembly without a dissenting voice, or even a word of skepticism from the news media,…
-
VLDS Big Data Just Got Bigger
by James A. Bacon This blog post is geeky, but it’s important — so stick with me! If youย favorย public policy based on what works as opposed to public policy based on ideology or political muscle, then you should be very encouraged by the progress made by the Virginia Longitudinal Data Survey (VLDS) in incorporating new…
-
A Humble Proposal for Addressing Recurrent Flooding
By James A. Bacon The recurrence of tidal/surge flooding in Hampton Roads has increased from 1.7 days of “nuisance” flooding yearly in 1960 to 7.3 daysย in 2o14, and with continued land subsidence and sea-level rise, the flooding will become even more common. So say the authors of “Building Resiliency in Response to Sea Level Rise…
-
Alpha Natural Resources: Running Wrong
โ
by
in Business and Economy, Courts and law, Crime, Corrections, Law Enforcement, Demographics, Disasters and Disaster Preparedness, Economic development, Energy, Environment, Federal issues, Government Finance, Health Care, Housing, Infrastructure, Insurance, Labor and Workforce, Land use & Development, Media, Money in politics, Planning, Politics, Poverty & income gap, Property rights, Public safety & health, Regulations, Gov’t Oversight, Science & Technology, Social Services and Entitlements, Taxesย By Peter Galuszka Four years ago, coal titan Alpha Natural Resources, one of Virginiaโs biggest political donors, was riding high. It was spending $7.1 billion to buy Massey Energy, a renegade coal firm based in Richmond that had compiled an extraordinary record for safety and environmental violations and fines. Its management practices culminated in a…
-
Renewable Energy: A Tale of Two Virginias
โ
by
By Peter Galuszka Call it a tale of two Virginias โ at least when it comes to renewable energy. One is the stateโs traditional political and business elite, including Dominion Resources and large manufacturers, the State Corporation Commission and others. They insist that the state must stick with big, base-loaded electricity generating plants like nuclear…
-
Why Can’t Dominion Do Big Wind Projects?
ย By Peter Galuszka Down in the swamplands and farmlands of northeastern North Carolina, construction has begun on a huge new wind farm that will be the largest so far in the southeastern U.S. Iberdrola Renewables LLC, a Spanish firm, has begun construction on the long-awaited $600 million project with financial help from Amazon, which also…
-
Why Can't Dominion Do Big Wind Projects?
ย By Peter Galuszka Down in the swamplands and farmlands of northeastern North Carolina, construction has begun on a huge new wind farm that will be the largest so far in the southeastern U.S. Iberdrola Renewables LLC, a Spanish firm, has begun construction on the long-awaited $600 million project with financial help from Amazon, which also…
-
Why There’s No Swimming Pool at Gilpin Court
โ
by
in Business and Economy, Courts and law, Demographics, Economic development, Housing, Infrastructure, Labor and Workforce, Land use & Development, Media, Money in politics, Planning, Politics, Poverty & income gap, Property rights, Public safety & health, Race and Race Relations, Regulations, Gov’t OversightBy Peter Galuszka Heat and humidity seem to have been especially intense this summer. But it can be much worse at an inner city public housing project where there are few trees and other vegetation and lots of bricks and concrete that and retain heat. So, wouldnโt a swimming pool seem nice, especially when your…
-
Why There's No Swimming Pool at Gilpin Court
โ
by
in Business and Economy, Courts and law, Demographics, Economic development, Housing, Infrastructure, Labor and Workforce, Land use & Development, Media, Money in politics, Planning, Politics, Poverty & income gap, Property rights, Public safety & health, Race and Race Relations, Regulations, Gov’t OversightBy Peter Galuszka Heat and humidity seem to have been especially intense this summer. But it can be much worse at an inner city public housing project where there are few trees and other vegetation and lots of bricks and concrete that and retain heat. So, wouldnโt a swimming pool seem nice, especially when your…
-
Don’t Stop a Welcome Purge
By Peter Galuszka The Confederate Battle flag is quickly unraveling throughout the Old Dominion. With it are going many icons of an era racked with controversy and hatred, along with mythology, which regretfully will still continue in some form. Following the example of South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley who asked that stateโs legislature to take…
-
Don't Stop a Welcome Purge
By Peter Galuszka The Confederate Battle flag is quickly unraveling throughout the Old Dominion. With it are going many icons of an era racked with controversy and hatred, along with mythology, which regretfully will still continue in some form. Following the example of South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley who asked that stateโs legislature to take…
-
Tobacco Commission: Six of Eight Projects Fail
ย By Peter Galuszka Down Danville way, of eight companies that have received money from the Tobacco Region Opportunity Fund (the old, embattled tobacco commission) only two have managed to fulfill contractual obligations to create jobs and help the local economy. According to a report by Vicky M. Cruz in the Danville Register & Bee, the…
-
Richmond’s Pathetic Leadership
By Peter Galuszka Richmond is going through an existential crisis. Its โleadershipโ canโt get anything done after wasting the publicโs time and attention on the supposed possibilities of this so-called โCapital of Creativity.โ Two examples come to mind. One is the cityโs and regionโs utter failure to do anything about its crumbling ballpark. The other…
-
Richmond's Pathetic Leadership
By Peter Galuszka Richmond is going through an existential crisis. Its โleadershipโ canโt get anything done after wasting the publicโs time and attention on the supposed possibilities of this so-called โCapital of Creativity.โ Two examples come to mind. One is the cityโs and regionโs utter failure to do anything about its crumbling ballpark. The other…
-
“Spankdown” at Woodlake
By Peter Galuszka Homeowners Associations are double-edged swords. They can preserve home values by enforcing covenants but sometimesย morph into Neo-Nazi privatized governments that make life miserable by meddling. One HOA in suburban Richmond is in something of a unique situation. Woodlake, a 2,800 home, 1980s-styled PUD in Chesterfield County, has been having problems. The…
