
Jill Stein March In Monroe Park This Saturday
The Young Greens at VCU are hosting a march in support of Green Party Presidential candidate Jill Stein and her running mate Ajamu Baraka.
Click here for the FaceBook event page.
It starts in Monroe Park on Saturday at noon.
This follows a Monroe Park rally for Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson a few weeks ago, and a more recent visit by Baraka to VCU.

Trash/Recycling Pickup Tomorrow
This Wednesday is a red Wednesday, which means trash and recycling pickup. Ideally, rolling recycling containers are stored and deployed in the back alleys along with trash cans. Please make sure you pick up containers after pickup tomorrow night.
If you have not done so already, don’t forget to sign up for your Recycling Perks.
In order to take your recycling to the next level, read this: 10 ways to improve your recycling.
Think you know how to recycle? Look for the new labels on your favorite products to find out if they’re recyclable nationwide, recyclable on a local level or not yet recyclable. This way you’ll know which products you can avoid sending the landfill. Click here for more info.
About 90 percent of the 8 billion soda cans sold in California every year get turned in for recycling and a 5¢ refund. But cheaper commodity prices, plus lower Chinese demand for America’s used bottles and cans, have upended the economics of the state’s recycling industry. Over the past two years, California’s recycling rate has fallen enough to relegate more than 2 billion containers a year to landfills.
That said, the amount of energy conserved by recycling a single aluminum can should give everyone incentive to continue to recycle- recycling a single aluminum can saves 96% of the energy used to make a can from ore. The equivalent energy could power a television for over 3 hours.
Moving Sound Pictures At Triple Crossing Friday

This Friday at 7:30 pm at Triple Crossing Brewing.
From the FaceBook event page:
Moving Sound Pictures is a one-man-band project/concept which evolved from Victor’s mastery of his vision for playing the Electronic Wind Instrument (EWI). Moving Sound Pictures utilizes the EWI, live sampling/looping, and virtuosic improvisation to transcend genre in order to present to audiences a very unique and wondrous experience of live orchestration.
Update: Not A Shooting On 500 Block of S. Laurel
From Community Crime Map:
SHOOTING AT/WITHIN OCCUPIED DWELLING
5XX S LAUREL ST
Oct 8, 2016 at 7:25 pm
Data provided by Richmond Police Department
Update: Despite that report, unofficial police comment is
No shooting in the 500blk of Laurel. Two people exchanged words and a rock was thrown through the window breaking the glass.
Last Night
Dinner rush at Mamma Zu’s

Adonis Puentes & The Voice of Cuba Orchestra

L’Orchestre Afrisa International

The Richmond Folk Festival continues today and tomorrow, rain or shine.
Friday Vibes at Vinyl Conflict
It ain’t all punk and metal. Bobby at Vinyl Conflict has some pretty sweet Trojan box sets of classic reggae and ska for sale.

Folk Festival Cometh

The noncontroversial stuff:
This weekend is the Richmond Folk Festival, which takes place just down the hill. It starts Friday night and continues till Sunday evening. It celebrates culture through music, dance, traditional crafts, storytelling and food. It started with Richmond hosting the National Folk Festival and has continued since then, becoming one of the best music festivals in the state if not the country. It has always had free attendance, though donations are encouraged and heavily solicited to augment the local corporate sponsorships. It goes on rain or shine.
Personally, I have attended every year and have enjoyed countless performances by musicians that I probably would never have been able to travel to and afford to see otherwise. I remember going to the first night of the National Folk Festival a dozen years ago when no one really knew what to expect. It was rainy and I was often one of the tens of people there at the tents as opposed to the thousands who now attend. I also enjoyed volunteering for the festival for a few years, helping with its recycling program.
So every year I do look forward to seeing the schedule and picking out the performances I want to attend. This year I am really looking forward to seeing L’Orchestre Afrisa International, Marquise Knox, Sri Lankan Dance Academy of NY, Kaynak Pipers Band, and Conteño, to name a few. Definitely take the time to at least check out the list and listen- there may be something that will pleasantly surprise you.
This year the weather is looking soggy and possibly windy. Regardless, having walked down there yesterday, I can promise it will be muddy. My suggestion is to wear old clothes, bring a rain jacket and umbrella, and open ears. The weather is no excuse to not take advantage of this great festival.
The controversial stuff:
I only bring up controversy in conjunction with this happy event for three reasons:
One is that it is pretty clear that the Folk Festival, as great and amazing as it is, has also been used as cover to push some inappropriate riverfront development, brushing aside citizen concerns about impacts on the environment, historic preservation, and quality of life issues for nearby neighbors. What has been particularly disturbing about this is the suggestion that anyone bringing up concerns is anti-Folk Festival and trying to end it. That is false.
Secondly, it is definitely worth noting that Venture Richmond, the nonprofit that runs the Folk Festival, has still not come to terms with this neighborhood over some very reasonable requests for the future use of the site, BEYOND the Folk Festival. Venture Richmond describes itself as a ‘public private partnership’, but has never had any real checks and balances for its overall role in the City, and it has served as the de facto marketing arm for a local corporate agenda that is often at odds with the public. For example, it was behind the wasteful lobbying for the failed Shockoe stadium proposal.
Lastly, and perhaps most urgently, former Venture Richmond executive director Jack Berry is running for Mayor (Election Day is only a few weeks away!), and has used the Folk Festival throughout much of his own campaign to give people the impression that he has values of diversity and inclusivity. I urge people to look past this advertising and take the time to learn about the Jack Berry that many City residents have come to know- someone who will arrogantly say anything but cannot be trusted on anything. Last week he came to the Oregon Hill neighborhood association meeting seeking votes but still refused to make any amends for past breaks in trust or, more importantly, make any commitments to how he would help and protect THIS fragile, historic neighborhood in the future.
I sincerely hope everyone enjoys the Folk Festival, appreciates the volunteers and performers who help make it happen, but also keeps in mind these last three points. The Folk Festival comes once a year, and, as has often been expressed- it has an impact that goes well beyond that.
Giant Hole In Laurel Street Off W. Cary


Recent Crime Log
From CommunityCrimeMap.com:
HIT AND RUN
XX S CHERRY ST
Oct 2, 2016 at 8:55 am
Data provided by Richmond Police DepartmentDESTRUCTION PROPERTY/PRIVATE PROPERTY
3XX S CHERRY ST
Oct 2, 2016 at 4:00 am
Data provided by Richmond Police DepartmentHIT AND RUN
1XX S BELVIDERE ST
Oct 1, 2016 at 12:11 am
Data provided by Richmond Police Department