Categories
The Editor's Desk

Mailbag

Don’t you forget about me

Last week’s C-VILLE recognized people in the Charlottesville community [“C-VILLE 20,” June 21]. One of those people who is a tireless advocate for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender rights is Claire Kaplan. She works hard for domestic partner benefits at UVA and does an amazing job at the Women’s Center. My concern with the article that featured her as one of the C-VILLE 20 was that the piece does not recognize all the other people who worked hard to get Charlottesville’s City Council to pass the resolution condemning the Marriage Affirmation Act.

   Meredith Richards worked countless hours to write the resolution, and we need to recognize her for that. Wendy Repass worked hard to get people to the City Council chambers to support it. We need to recognize everyone who showed up in the City Council chambers that night in November that it passed. Blake Caravati sponsored this resolution, still the only one to have passed in the Commonwealth, and we need to recognize his courage for that. We need to recognize all four City Councilors who voted for it, David Brown, Kendra Hamilton, Kevin Lynch and Blake Caravati, and thank them for making Charlottesville the leader on LGBT issues.

   My concern with the article is that it gave one person the majority of the credit for something that many people worked on and believed in. Thanks to everyone who worked tirelessly over the last year on LGBT issues here in Virginia and especially to all those who helped to get this important and historic resolution passed by Charlottesville’s City Council.

 

Michael Pudhorodsky

Charlottesville

 

The price is wrong

I read your “C-VILLE 20” profile of David and Elizabeth Breeden with deep dismay. The Breeden’s 1,000-acre tract on Old Lynchburg Road is a local treasure and its sale to high-end housing developers is a loss to our community. You write: “Elizabeth points to the need for development close to Charlottesville so that people aren’t pushed farther into Albemarle…” Does Ms. Breeden really believe she’s performing a public service by turning her still-remote property into low-density housing for the rich? I’ll try to remember that as my taxes rise to pay for the new schools and infrastructure.

 

Aaron Wunsch

Charlottesville

 

We feel his pain

I am writing in regards to your recent article “Road to recovery” in the C-VILLE [June 7]. Though I found the article interesting, I am once again very disappointed in the type of article presented, and specifically in what I believe to be an unfair and unbalanced report. Though your story
is about addiction, it helps to continue
the myth that methadone equals heroin addiction.

   Though methadone, the primary drug in your story, can be used for heroin and other opioid addiction, it is also used more and more as an effective drug for chronic pain control. Not everyone who uses methadone is an addict, and not everyone who uses methadone will become an addict. In fact, most studies and information out there shows time and time again that methadone and other opioid medicines that are used by people especially for chronic pain have little or no addiction (less than 1 percent).

   The problem that bothers me is that articles like yours not only give, but perpetuate a false assumption that opioid drugs (like methadone) are bad, as are the people taking them. To sum it up, this is wrong.

   The World Health Organization (WHO) and the American Chronic Pain Association estimate that half of all Americans suffer from chronic pain. Many of these people are on disability, and sometimes unable to function. In many, if not most cases, opioid drugs are the only thing left after all other forms of prevention and rehabilitation have not worked. Most importantly, the overwhelming majority of these people who
do use opioid medications, including methadone, are not addicted.

   I wish you and your paper would write another article with a more fair and balanced position, or a whole new article spotlighting methadone as an excellent treatment for chronic pain. Maybe if these drugs—methadone and oxycontin—were understood and seen in a more positive light and not as yet another story of a drug addicted person going to recovery, people could get the medicine they need and not worry whether doctors will help them due to negative stigma.

   So please consider this when writing your next story. Please take time to offer a more fair and balanced picture of methadone, or any medicine that can be used for pain relief, and not just as another addiction story.

   And by the way, I do use methadone for chronic pain relief. No addiction, no recovery, just functioning better from disability.

 

Ken Hoff

Charlottesville

 

 

The Scheem of things

I would like to address an article in a recent issue of C-VILLE Weekly regarding radio station WNRN’s “Boombox” show [“Hip hop hooray,” The Week, May 31]. This show is a true blend of hip hop, hosted by DJ Illustrious, but was soured by the misrepresentation of an artist.

   The article was opened with the mention of artist Grand Scheem, who resides in Miami, Florida. Scheem’s first single, “The Greatest Scheem Ever Sold,” recently charted No. 37 in the country by College Music Journal—a site that monitors airplay in the college radio circuit, similar to the Billboard charts. Along with this, the artist is being featured in the The Source magazine in September, and is picking up new fans around the country and the world everyday.

   My qualm was not that these facts were simply overlooked or not stated in Harry Terris’ article, but the fact that the article misrepresented Grand Scheem’s ideals and purpose. Scheem is a 10-year music industry veteran who hails from Pakistan, but was raised in America since age 1. The reason he left his well-paying position as a regional radio promoter for several major labels was because just making money was not fulfilling enough.

   Enter September 11, 2001. Not only did this event change the lives of those involved, but it changed America’s perspective of entire races of people. Individuals who resemble the Middle Eastern or South Asian complexion were instantly recognized as a threat and kept at a distance (whether literally or mentally).

   Living as a foreign-born American for the past several years has been uneasy at best. Many of the injustices (murders, hate crimes, etc.) against these communities have been swept under the rug, while the PATRIOT Act and race profiling have taken basic civil liberties away from one group to give another a false sense of security.

   These are the everyday forces that provoked Grand Scheem to pursue his project—even in the face of danger and scrutiny—as a mission to stand for what is just. His music and video are offered for free on his website because what he is doing is out of purity, and his goal is to “…impact perspectives not pocketbooks” (see www. ScheemOfTheCentury.com).

   I am a fan of Grand Scheem, and have had the opportunity to witness many different peoples’ reactions to his music. This is why I was very upset by the Terris article, without any quotes or input from Scheem’s side.

   Bottom line, I hope people recognize true character when they encounter it. Grand Scheem is a stand-up individual who has steadily established his fan-base through a very personal, grassroots basis. If more people would stand for what they feel is right, we would all be better off in the long run.

 

Raj Cutty

sotcmultimedia@gmail.co

 The writer is Grand Scheem’s manager.

 

 

Busting the filibuster myth

Frederick Kahler’s letter in the June 7 C-VILLE [“Liberal application,” Mailbag] attacking Sen. John Warner and praising Sen. George Allen on the deal to save the filibuster of judicial nominees is misguided on its main point. Even conservative Senate Republicans have not talked of “nuking” the filibuster for other than judicial nominations. That fact shows that they recognize the importance of the filibuster historically in creating the reputation of the Senate as a more deliberative, moderate legislative body in comparison to the House of Representatives, which has no filibuster rule. They only want to narrowly abolish the rule so that they can pack the courts with arch-conservative nominees nominated (not appointed) by George W. Bush.

   As much as Kahler’s attack on Senate Democrats for their filibuster of the nomination of John Bolton as being obstructionist is therefore wishful thinking, it is also disingenuous. I say that because, while I have not checked, I would bet good money that there is no letter to the editor of
C-VILLE during the Clinton presidency decrying the Senate Republicans use or threat of the use of filibuster against Cabinet nominees chosen by Clinton. Lani Gunier, for example, was denied the post of Attorney General because she had, in what now appears to be views far ahead of her time, the audacity to say something good about the use of proportional representation in elections.

   As for Kahler’s question as to how a nominee can be considered “arch-conservative,” we only need to look at Janice Rogers Brown, who was appointed recently to the second-most important federal court in the nation as a result of the agreement Sen. Warner helped negotiate. In one of the most warped revisions of history since the Dred Scott case (the history of civilization shows that black Africans are inferior to white Europeans), Rogers Brown has stated that “in the heyday of liberal democracy, all roads led to slavery.”

   Not only did liberalism free the slaves (Abe Lincoln, too, was a liberal), it provided a leg up to millions of poor families of all races who needed to keep food on their tables before they could muster a clean set of clothes that even today helps you get a job. No one ever forced anyone to apply for public assistance of any kind. After all, it was a socialist, Frederick Engels, who in a famous essay first pointed out the primary importance of work in the development of modern enlightened individuals.

 

Charles Murn

Charlottesville

Categories
Uncategorized

News in review

Tuesday, June 21
Teen drinking couple gets another chance

The Virginia Court of Appeals today decided to review the case of an Earlysville couple who served alcohol to more than 60 teens at their son’s 16th birthday party in 2002 and were eventually sentenced to 27 months for their actions. Investigating three complaints of underage drinking at the party, Albemarle Police Cpl. Scott Cox drove into the family’s driveway and witnessed teens in the yard holding beer bottles. The case review will examine whether Cox conducted an illegal search when he drove up the driveway.

 

Wednesday, June 22
Plenty o’ love for Pleven

Charlottesville takes another step toward the sister-city death match today with a press release from
the U.S. Agency for International Development, which announced that though “Bulgaria would seem to have little in common with the state of Virginia,” City Manager Gary O’Connell has just returned from the town of Pleven, where he found “his community shares much in common” with the formerly Communist city. Sister-city enthusiasts recall that the “much-in-common” argument is a pillar of Councilor Blake Caravati’s effort to officially bond Charlottesville to Besançon, France. USAID funds a “CityLinks” project that gives Charlottesville the means to “assist Pleven in its local economic development efforts.” No word yet on whether Pleven seeks advice on how to broker sweetheart deals with deep-pocketed developers or send friendly contracts to its architect chums in Philadelphia.

 

Thursday, June 23
Council selects new School Board members

Concluding the unusually public selection process, City Council tonight named two new School Board members and reappointed an incumbent. Rev. Alvin Edwards, a former mayor, and Louis Bograd, a legal consultant who has worked with the Legal Aid Justice Center, were picked from a pool of 12. Peggy Van Yahres was chosen for a second term on the Board. During the month-long interview process, the issue of public communication took center stage. The new Board takes office July 1, when, it’s hoped, they’ll quickly move forward to substantive issues, such as hiring a new superintendent and improving Charlot-tesville’s high school graduation rate.

 

Friday, June 24
Curtain rises on Paramount’s 2005-06 season

Flush with the success of its premiere season (18 of the 32 performances were sell-outs), Paramount Executive Director Chad Hershner unveiled the Downtown venue’s “spectacular encore” at a press conference today. Big gets include legendary funnyman Bill Cosby (April 29), virtuoso cellist Yo-Yo Ma (February 24) and blue-eyed soul masters Hall & Oates (September 10). The remainder of the 46-show season skews mostly to older audiences and families, although Hershner added that Starr Hill Presents would bring in even more big-name shows, like the recent Aimee Mann concert. Tickets go on sale to the general public on August 15. For the complete schedule, visit www.theparamount.net.

 

Reservoir pipeline: pals in high places?

Encouraged by a friendly reception from State and federal regulators to a pipeline proposal, the Rivanna Water and Sewer Authority will begin to draft a timetable for the project, according to a report in today’s Daily Progress. Earlier in the week, the RWSA met in Richmond with regulators to discuss four potential solutions to the region’s impending water supply problems. Reportedly, the option that met with the most support was a pipeline between the South Fork Rivanna Reservoir and the Ragged Mountain Reservoir, which could extend as much as 10 miles. Earlier in the month, a different pipeline proposal, to connect the James River in Scottsville to Charlottesville, spurred environmental protests.

 

Saturday, June 25
Negative vibration

Party people at Club 216 tonight had the opportunity to take a few minutes off the dance floor and gain some important personal health information with free HIV testing as part of National HIV Testing Day. Monday, June 27, is the event’s official date, but Charlottesville’s AIDS/HIV Services Group tested people all week long. ASG HIV Prevention Educator Amdie Mengistu says, “It’s best to know your status. It’s a wonderful feeling to know you’re negative.” The Virginia Department of Health estimates that 22,000 Virginians are HIV-positive, and up to one-third of them might not know it.

 

Sunday, June 26
Strikers hit UVA

The U.S. women’s soccer team’s weeklong practice in Charlottesville paid off today with a 2-0 victory over the Canadian national team in Virginia Beach. The American team arrived last Sunday for its first domestic training camp of the year, held at UVA’s Klöckner Stadium. The young group needs the work. Less than half of the current roster was part of the gold-medal team from the 2004 Athens Olympics, and the formerly dominant squad is struggling for an identity following the departure of superstars Mia Hamm and Brandi Chastain, and the arrival of a new coach, Greg Ryan.

 

Monday, June 27
Public housing:
Two down, three to go

One week after City Council filled two of four seats on the City’s Redevelopment and Housing Authority’s Board of Commissioners, the Commissioners themselves will announce today a new executive director. On May 11, CRHA dismissed Paul Chedda from that job, after a brief and contentious stint. The CRHA manages the City’s 376 public housing units, many of which are in extremely poor condition. Chedda was outspoken about the disrepair and lack of adequate funds to address it; he was also reportedly confrontational and hard to work with. Last Monday, City Council reappointed fellow Councilor Kendra Hamilton as a CRHA Commissioner and tagged Jason Halbert, a low-income housing advocate, for another seat. Council will fill the two CRHA Commission seats that remain open by July 11.

Compiled by Cathy Harding from staff reports and news media.

 

Big Brother and the scolding company
Creigh Deeds proposes GPS technology to track sex offenders

Little dots blink across a state police officer’s computer screen, tracking the movements of civilians. If one of those civilians passes within 100 yards of a school while on his way to work, an alarm will sound, bringing the officer monitoring these movements to attention. At that point, he’ll jump up, run to his squad car and gun it to said school.

   This imaginary scene is the picture conjured by Democratic State Senator Creigh Deeds, who is now running for Attor-ney General. This is how AG Deeds would propose to track all the Commonwealth’s convicted sex offenders—with Global Positioning Systems (GPS) technology. Defined by the Virginia Code, sex offenders are people convicted of rape, attempted rape, aggravated sexual battery and indecent liberties with a minor, among other offenses.

   “[Such] images of the war on crime are literal,” says Anne Coughlin, a UVA law professor and expert in criminal law and procedure, commenting on the GPS scenario. “This feels like a move towards a police-dominated state.”

   Studies, such as one released in 2003 by the U.S. Department of Justice, support the theory that sex offenders repeat their crime at a higher rate (40 percent within a year of release) than other criminals. Moreover, one in four entries in the Virginia Sex Offender and Crimes Against Minors Registry is out of date, according to the Deeds campaign.

   But besides putting Big Brother on speed dial, as Coughlin suggests it would, would GPS technology really make a difference in sex crime rates? Or is this another example of the campaign season’s favorite game, political lip service?

   According to Kristine Hall, executive director of the Sexual Assault Resource Agency, the Virginia Sex Offender Registry may represent only 10 percent of sex offenders. Although some may be listed in the registry, 90 percent, she says, are acquaintances of the victim and their crimes often go unreported. Thus, promoting GPS technology as protection against sex offenders, says Hall, could foster a false sense of security.

   The Sex Offender Registry (http://sex offender.vsp.state.va.us) lists all convicted sex offenders in the Commonwealth. There are 90 cons registered in Charlottesville and Albemarle alone: to find them, type in your zip code and wait for their pictures to pop up.

   In addition to the registry being out of date, currently only 10 or 11 state police officers are assigned to keeping an eye on Virginia’s registered sex offenders. Deeds, says his campaign press secretary Peter Jackson, sees the GPS technology as a way to simultaneously tighten the registry and provide needed support to police.

   “It comes down to granting more rights to convicted felons or protecting children and Virginia’s families,” says Jack-son. “Deeds is err-ing on the side of keeping us all safe from violent sexual predators.”

   As to why funds wouldn’t be better spent on more parole officers and rehabilitation, Jackson gave no specific response.

Originally developed by the U.S. Air Force, GPS systems use satellites to locate a person’s latitude, longitude and altitude to within a few hundred feet.

   Pro Tech Monitoring, a Florida-based company, used this technology to craft a device that can track sex offenders. According to the company’s CEO, Steve Chapin, a 2.5-ounce anklet tethers the offender to a 16-ounce tracking unit on the belt. The anklet transmits a signal to the tracking device, so that if a signal is not received, those monitoring the device know that the offender has walked away from the anklet.

   The device recently made headlines in the wake of the murder of 9-year-old Florida girl, Jessica Lunsford. In February, she was killed by a convicted sex offender. The murder prompted Republican Governor Jeb Bush to sign the Jessica Lunsford Act requiring lifetime GPS tracking for those convicted of sex crimes on children 11 and younger. This contraption, or something like it, is what Deeds proposes.

   Besides Florida, red states Tennessee, Georgia, Oklahoma and Texas each use GPS technology to track convicted sex offenders. These programs, however, are all isolated either to certain geographical areas or to smaller groups within the convicted sex offender population, such as child molesters. Should Deeds be elected and his proposal to track all sex offenders in the entire Commonwealth come to fruition, it would be the harshest yet. (Deeds’ campaign has no estimate yet for the cost of such a comprehensive GPS program. In Florida, the price tag so far has been $4 million.)

   Anne Coughlin agrees GPS tracking could provide a false sense of security. Other dilemmas arise, too.

    “It’s treating [sex offenders] like animals,” she says. “We have invisible fences for dogs.”

   Coughlin is also concerned about the Pavlovian response that seeing a GPS anklet might engender in children. The message it sends is that an enemy population lives among us, she says. It could be interpreted further as an invitation to vigilantism on the part of the greater community against a stigmatized population. For example, last month in Illinois, a neighbor allegedly set fire to a man’s house after hearing that he was a convicted sex offender.

   According to Coughlin, the constitutionality of such GPS tracking will undoubtedly get tested in the courts, where concerns will center on questions of cruel and unusual punishment. It is there that the call will be made as to whether such tracking constitutes punishment or simply
civil regulation.

   And then there’s the whole question of imperfection in our criminal justice system: Sometimes innocent people go to jail.

   In a nutshell, “You just want to be really careful with these kinds of innovations,” says Coughlin.—Nell Boeschenstein

 

Buy! Sell! Buy! Sell!
Lee Danielson puts the Boxer building back on the market

Since January they’ve been saying the wrecking balls are aimed at the old Boxer Learning building at 200 E. Main St., near Central Place on the Downtown Mall. But a prominent “For Sale” sign that went up on the side of the 16,100-square-foot piece of prime real estate last week suggests otherwise.

   The building’s owner, California-based developer Lee Danielson, maintained for a year-and-a-half that the plans were on track to turn the building into a boutique hotel complete with outdoor café, restaurant and roof terrace. January came and went, no go. Sud-denly, it was the end of April and the building stood stubbornly intact. At this juncture Danielson still insisted to C-VILLE that ground would be broken by July 1, and the entire project completed by October 2006.

   But in the intervening two months things have apparently fallen apart.

   Stu Rifkin is managing the sale for with Hasbrouk Real Estate Corporation. The asking price, he says, is $5.2 million, although he has yet to begin to market the building. However, when he does begin the marketing process, chances are Rifkin will still push the property as prime hotel material.

   “I think that would be one of the highest and best uses for the building,” says Rifkin, while allowing that residential condos are also a reasonable possibility.

   The City, says Aubrey Watts, Char-lottesville’s director of economic development, hopes Rifkin is successful in marketing the building’s hotel-readiness and that the previously planned makeover will go forward under a future proprietor.

   “Our hope,” says Watts, “is that if there’s a nice hotel Downtown that [the old Boxer Learning building] would be a good place for it.”

   Danielson made himself a household name in Charlottesville in the mid-’90s when he and then-partner Colin Rolph
put in the Regal Theater and Ice Park at
the west end of the Mall. He bought the Boxer Learning build-ing in 2002 for $3.3 million, after he and Rolph had parted ways acrimoniously.

   Given the $1.9 million difference be-tween the buying price three years ago and the present selling price, is this deal a protracted real-estate flip? Danielson did not return repeated calls for comment before press time.

   Run-ins with the City’s Board of Architectural Review stemming from the designs for the Ice Park and movie theater prompted Danielson’s vow that he would never build in Charlottesville again. He ate his words early last year, however, when he announced preliminary plans for the boutique hotel.

   Early plans drawn up by San Francisco-based architecture firm Hornberger and Worstell (known for high-end hotel designs) retained the building’s black granite façade, and called for an additional seven stories on top of the original two. That would have added up to 90,300
square feet of hotel magic. The BAR was enthusiastic about the designs, and Danielson had already dubbed it The Landmark Hotel.

   Moreover, Danielson said he had lined up the Windsor Capital Group to operate the place. This is the group that also runs chains such as Embassy Suites, Marriott, Hawthorn Suites, Radisson and Renaissance. While the impact on Downtown is yet unknown, the loss of one boutique hotel probably won’t hurt the Windsor group too much.—Nell Boeschenstein

 

Local motion
Richards launches grassroots rail group

Meredith Richards has a few numbers she wants you to learn: 4,118, 2,258 and 708. Those represent the ounces of chemical emissions created by a round-trip to Washington, D.C. from Charlottesville by plane, car and train, respectively. Come the next session of the General Assembly in January, Richards would like you to direct your newfound transportation knowledge to elected officials. Since the Virginia Department of Transportation has written rail funding into its six-year plan for the first time in 25 years—$1.5 billion for rail and public transportation projects, combined—Richards knows that the time is now to make the case for enhanced rail service.

   “We may well need your help during the next session of the General Assembly,” Richards said at a press conference she called on Wednesday, June 22, to plug her new rail advocacy group.

   Though she no longer holds elected office, the former City Councilor and longtime rail supporter has something of a second career pushing for the creation of rail alternatives around here. On Wednesday she announced the creation of Charlottesville Citizens for Better Rail Alternatives (www.cvillerail.org). The goal: to “promote accessible efficient passenger rail service” between here and Washington, D.C., particularly, to get the Virginia Railway Express extended southward from its last stop in Manassas to Charlottesville’s Union Station on W. Main Street.

   Richards used the smartly refurbished, historic station as the setting for her press conference, where, despite the week’s headlines concerning the threatened elimination of a federal subsidy for Amtrak, she noted that “it’s not against the Amtrak backdrop that this work has been done.”

   Indeed, even before Congress aimed its scalpel at Amtrak, State politicians signed off on the Rail Enhancement Fund, which, folded into VDOT’s six-year plan, provides $23 million annually for rail improvements. Richards says that some of that money could be applied to “improvements to some of the stations or the tracks.” For operating funds, she says, her group will go after other State transportation money.

   Richards, joined by Butch Davies, the regional representative to the Common-wealth Transportation Board, as well as Harrison Rue, who heads the Metropolitan Planning Organization, laid out the many pluses of a 236-mile round-trip Char-lottesville-to-D.C. rail service. It’s better for the environment and relieves traffic congestion. It’s convenient for business travelers who can get work done both before and after a meeting. It’s easier on families with children, because it’s less confining. It lures D.C. tourists to our own historic burg. It could reduce the number of cars brought to the area by UVA students who would have another option for getting home to NoVa.

   Even John Pfaltz, one-time Richards rival for a seat on City Council, joined in: “Transporta-tion is the issue facing Charlottesville today,” he said. “If we don’t get together—bus, transit, rail—so it works, this city will have serious problems.”

   But some wonder if easier rail access to D.C. would yield some serious problems of its own. Richards mentioned the goal of two trains daily. “You hear a lot of people who are pretty divided on this thing,” says Stratton Salidis, chair of Alternatives to Paving, “some thinking it could create sprawl by making Charlottesville a bedroom community. But at the same time, anytime you can shift people to transportation that’s more efficient in some way, that’s good.”

   The journey to the nation’s capital would run close to two-and-a-half hours, which seems at the extreme end of commuter tolerance. Still, Albemarle County Executive Robert Tucker allows that “there’s a balance you have to consider.”

   But in the main, Albemarle is behind the idea. “The County has always been supportive of any kind of increased or improved rail service to our area,” Tucker says.

   Peter Kleeman has also heard concerns about rail spawning sprawl. But the transportation planning consultant, who also sits on the board of the Alliance for Community Choice in Transportation, a group promoting streetcars in Charlottesville, doesn’t buy it.

   “People say from being our own center we would become a satellite community for a bigger urban center. I don’t think that would be the case,” he says, “but if we did, I don’t think that would be so bad, either.”—Cathy Harding

 

Invention is a mother
UVA’s Patent Foundation spreads the wealth among the innovative and lucky

In 1954, George Stibitz of Boonton, New Jersey, received a patent for the electric calculator. Five years later, Bertha Dlugi of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, earned patent number 2,882,858 for her invention—a diaper for parakeets. The calculator went on to revolutionize math class, while the bird diaper was lost in an indifferent marketplace.

   Those are the breaks in the invention game.

   “I’ve been in this business for 20 years,” says Robert MacWright, the bearded, enthusiastic, 51-year-old patent attorney who directs UVA’s Patent Foundation. “I’ve learned that you cannot pick the winners.”

   Well, maybe the bird diaper was a stinker from the beginning. Most of the inventions that come through the Patent Foundation are far more complicated, and their potential doesn’t seem as crappy.

   UVA’s Patent Foundation, housed on the third floor of the Lewis and Clark building on W. Main Street, shepherds ideas from UVA’s best minds from the laboratory to the marketplace. The process is complex. If the idea is good, though, and the inventor is lucky, the Patent Foundation can reap millions of dollars to spread around.

   A lucrative invention is like a million-selling rock album—lots of people want one, many people try, but only a few succeed. For UVA inventors, the process begins when they disclose an invention to the Patent Foundation for an evaluation.

   “We consider its ‘patentability,’” says MacWright. To earn a patent, an invention must, first of all, be useful. It must be new and original. Finally, it must be non-obvious—that is, you can’t take a green lamp, paint it red, and call it a new invention. “There has to be a spark of genius, as it were,” MacWright says.

   Since it can take three years to finally get a patent, the Foundation first applies for a provisional patent, a shorter process that basically lays claim to an invention while a full patent is pending. Once the U.S. Patent Office grants a patent, the invention is legally protected from copycats for 20 years. If an invention has at least a patent application on file, companies will consider developing it for sale.

   In the past two years, UVA inventors have disclosed 311 inventions to the Foundation, with about half coming from the School of Medicine. Of those, 253 earned provisional patents, while only 33 earned a full U.S. patent. In 2003 and 2004, 108 inventions patented through UVA earned deals with companies, reaping a total of $11.6 million in license fees and royalties for their patents.

   Depending on how much an invention earns, the inventor draws between 50 percent of the total profits (if that figure is below $100,000) to 15 percent (if it’s more than $1 million). Money also goes to the inventor’s laboratory, the Patent Foundation, and the school where the inventor works.

   Benjamin Gaston, a professor of pediatrics at UVA who earned three patents through the Foundation last year, says UVA is a better place for inventors than other elite schools. “It’s better than Harvard. They’re just out for the cash,” says Gaston, who has invented various techniques for diagnosing and treating respiratory diseases. “The Foundation here is pretty reasonable about keeping the inventor involved and returning some of the licensing fees to the labs where they work,” he says.

   In 2000, the Foundation established a for-profit consulting subsidiary called Spinner Technologies, which counsels faculty inventors on how to start their own companies. One such UVA spin-off is a Charlottesville company called Respira-tory Research, Inc. Run by UVA pediatrics professor John Hunt, Respiratory Research now distributes Gaston’s device for monitoring asthma to customers on six continents.

   It’s a gratifying process for Gaston, who says that while he knows something about lungs, he doesn’t know squat about product development. Without guidance from the Patent Foundation, his asthma treatment could have ended up alongside the parakeet diaper.

   “In the capitalist world in which we live, there’s no stomach for developing an idea that won’t make money,” says Gaston. “And an idea won’t make money if it’s not protected. It’s the only way an idea will ever get turned into anything useful.”—John Borgmeyer

Categories
News

Trash or Treasure?

At first glance, there’s nothing ex-ceptional about the green house at 223 Fourth St. SW. In fact, it looks pretty shabby. The building slouches. The wood around the windows seems to be rotting. The yard is a mess—there’s a picnic table with no benches, a brown Christmas tree, a rusty folding chair sitting in a garden of weeds and wildflowers. A red mailbox leans precariously atop a rust gate.

   This is the picture of history in Charlottesville.

   The City is keenly aware of its history, and sensitive about preserving old buildings as a way of keeping the past alive. Historic buildings like Monticello or the Rotunda stand as tourist destinations and cultural brands, displayed as a way to show outsiders how this place differs from others.

   Charlottesville’s eight “design control districts,” which include the Mall, North Downtown, W. Main Street and the Corner, are like open-air museums where pedestrians stroll past both old and new buildings, and where the Board of Architectural Review strictly oversees any renovation or new construction.

   Apart from the landmarks and the eight historic neighborhoods, there are 65 individual houses in Charlottesville that the City has designated “historically significant” [see sidebar, page 23]. These buildings are not always beautiful or grand, or associated with rich or famous people. The house at 223 Fourth St., known as the Smith-Reaves house, is one such property.

   Once the City bestows a “historic” designation, that’s about where the public responsibility ends. There is no procedure for inspecting these historic properties on a regular basis, and over the years many of them have fallen into disrepair. Furthermore, there is no standard procedure for informing prospective buyers that the house they’re looking at has been designated as a historic structure.

   So new homeowners are often unaware that the house they just bought is protected—until they decide to demolish some of it, or build an addition. Only then, in most cases, does the City inform owners that the house is protected, and that they must take on the often-expensive responsibility of preserving the structure. Otherwise, the City could shut down the work.

   The Piedmont Housing Alliance (PHA) bought the Smith-Reaves house in January from Franklin White for $75,000. The Alliance buys old properties and vacant lots in Charlottesville, and builds “affordable” homes on the sites, usually sold for less than $200,000. That was the plan for 223 Fourth St., until PHA discovered the house they had just purchased was a historic structure.

   According to Mark Watson, director of development for PHA, in 2000 the City gave the Alliance a list of various homes that were vacant and boarded up, or that had racked up lots of City Code violations. “One of those houses that we were given as a target to buy was 223,” says Watson. “We had no idea it was a historic house.”

   Watson claims PHA didn’t further learn the Smith-Reaves house was protected as a historic structure until they applied for demolition permits. In April, the City’s Board of Architectural Review (BAR) denied their request to demolish the house on the grounds that it was historic. Reviewing the case on appeal in May, City Council seemed ready to uphold the BAR’s decision, so PHA withdrew their request to demolish. Now, PHA is trying to hammer out a preservation strategy with the BAR.

 

Upon closer inspection, there’s something kooky about the Smith-Reaves house. It’s the tiny second-storey windows. They sit merely two feet above the front door; at floor level on the second storey. This is one of the features that make the house either “quirky” or “obsolete,” depending on your point of view. Regardless, preservationists think they make the house worth saving.

   According to the City’s Architecture and Historic Survey, Armistead Smith built the Smith-Reaves house sometime between 1866 and 1870. At that time, the house sat behind a grand estate on Ridge Street, where today sits a fire station and the Salvation Army homeless shelter.

   Daniel Bluestone, director of the historic preservation program at UVA’s School of Architecture, says the early owners were probably freed slaves, and that subsequent owners likely worked for owners of the nearby Ridge Street estates. City directories and Census data provide historical touchstones for the house.

   “In 1893 a woman named Mary Brown bought the house,” says Bluestone. “In 1895 a black woman named Mary Brown is listed as a servant at 408 Park St. in the City Directory.”

   Further, the U.S. Census from 1920 shows that a 36-year-old black woman named Lucy Washington rented the house that year, working as a “laundress.” In 1930, a 65-year-old black man named John Reeves, a laborer, owned the house with his wife, Fannie, a cook. They shared the house with four children.

   The Smith-Reaves house, Bluestone says, “is one of the oldest wood-frame structures in Charlottesville. It captures the story of freedmen in Charlottesville pulling together meager resources to live in this city.”

   Jacky Taylor, a member of the local group Preservation Piedmont who spoke against demolition at the BAR hearing, says modest buildings like the Smith-Reaves house need love, too.

   “Even though it’s not very beautiful, it’s significant for other reasons,” Taylor says. “It provides a context for a broader understanding of life in the community. Everyday life is also important.”

   Aaron Wunsch, also of Preservation Piedmont, says the Smith-Reaves house represents a history that, in Charlottesville, is often marginalized. “If we’re going to say that the grand 19th-century homes on Ridge Street and Park Street are the historical core of Charlottesville, shouldn’t we also include the people who did the work?”

 

Yet even committed preservationists admit that any house, especially one built for poor folks, isn’t going to last 140 years without careful maintenance. The Smith-Reaves house, the PHA’s Watson argues, has not been cared for.

   In his presentation to the BAR on April 19, PHA’s Watson presented a structural engineer’s report and several City Code violation notices received by the previous owner. According to draft minutes of the meeting, Watson argued that there were many reasons to demolish the house—the roof and floors are decayed and failing, the wiring is deficient, the foundation is deteriorating. In addition, there is evidence of termites and Powder Post beetles as well as rotting joists and beams. The ceiling, said Watson, is less than 7′ high.

   “You can’t even put a shirt on without jamming your fingers into the ceiling,” says Watson. “It’s quaint, but it’s not the type of house I would be trying to put my buyers into.”

   Watson says that restoring the Smith-Reaves house could cost $150,000 to $175,000; when added to the purchase price, it would push up the retail cost of the 1,080-square-foot house to $250,000. Watson suggested they would measure and photograph the house before PHA tore it down, and recognize the site with a marker. The BAR, however, voted 4-3 to deny demolition, with PHA staffer Katie Swenson abstaining.

   In May, Watson appealed the BAR’s decision to City Council, but as the Councilors’ discussion seemed to indicate that they would uphold the BAR’s ruling, Watson decided to go a different course. He has met with BAR members, trying to figure out a new solution. However, he says that trying to preserve the Smith-Reaves house out of respect for the City’s black history is a case of too little, too late.

   “I wish the Fourth Street area had been designated long before it was,” he says. “This house is sitting all by itself. Its age is important, but the impact of its history has been so subverted by the destruction over time of its context.”

 

“I think they should make more affordable housing,” says Anthony Johnson, who lives near the Smith-Reaves house at 233 Fourth St. SW. “The house is pretty run down,” he says, casting a skeptical glance down the block. “It’s just been sitting there.”

   But this is Charlottesville, and clearly, preservationists will fight for even a dilapidated house on an obscure dead-end street. So perhaps the moral of this story is caveat emptor, “let the buyer beware.”

   Mary Joy Scala, the City’s preservation and design planner, says conflicts between the desire to preserve and the urge to modernize are infrequent—but PHA’s experience on Fourth Street has prompted the City to improve communication with prospective homebuyers on the question of historic designation. Scala says she wants a home’s “historic” status to appear on the real estate assessor’s website.

   Once you own a historic property, the government doesn’t provide much help with the potentially expensive task of renovation. Properties on the national or state register of historic places can get tax credits, but Scala says they’re only helpful if the improvements are major. The City has a fund earmarked for loans to help pay for small projects, at a 3 percent interest rate.

   Reflecting on the PHA’s dilemma, Scala says, “I don’t think this happens too often.

   “Usually, people find out that their house is historic before they get in that situation, one way or another. People call us and ask if they’re in a historic district, which makes it so much easier for them and us.”

 

Don’t know much about history?
These houses have been designated by the City

The 65 properties below have been designated by the City of Charlottesville as “historically significant.” The City compiled the list in 1990, including every building that was at least 100 years old. Based on recommendations from the Planning Commission and the Board of Architectural Review, the City Council can bestow “historic” designation on any building that meets one of eight criteria set out in the City’s zoning codes. According to Mary Joy Scala, the City’s preservation and design planner, a building can be “historic” if it has historic, architectural or cultural significance; if it is associated with a historic person, event, or renowned architect; if it has distinguishing aesthetic qualities or distinctive design; if it is a rare, first or last example of a particular style; if it is part of a geographic area that is significant as a whole; or if it is linked to similar significant buildings.—J.B.

Belmont
759 Belmont Ave.

Disney-Keith House
123 Bollingwood Rd.

Young Building
1102 Carlton Ave.

B.W. Rosser Cottage No. 1
907 Cottage Ln.

Rugby
908 Cottage Ln.

Rosser Cottage No. 2
909 Cottage Ln.

Shackelford-Bannister House
513 Dice St.

Barksdale-Totty House or The Grove
402 Dice St.

Tyree Thomas House
406 Dice St.

Elijah Thomas House
410 Dice St.

Ferrell House
412 Dice St.

Carter-Gilmer Outbuildings
210 Eighth St. NE

Cottage at Hillcrest Apartments
200 15th St. NW

Brand-Edwards House
205 Fifth St. SW

Barksdale-Coles-Hailstock House
217 Fifth St. SW

Shelton-Fuller House
301 Fifth St. SW

Hawkins-Wondree House
418 Fifth St. SW

King-Runkle House
201 14th St. NW

Smith-Reaves House
223 Fourth St. SW

Dabney-Thompson House
1602 Gordon Ave.

Gardner-Mays Cottage
1022 Grove St.

Armstrong Knitting Factory
700 Harris St.

George T. Nimmo House
204 Hartman’s Mill Rd.

James D. Nimmo-Simms House
208 Hartman’s Mill Rd.

C.D. Fishburne House
801 High St.

Barringer Mansion
1404 Jefferson Park Ave.

The Farm
1201 Jefferson St.

Carter Gilmer House
800 Jefferson St.

Leitch-Haden House
901 Jefferson St.

Keith House
1615 Keith Valley Rd.

Robert Goins House
114 Lankford Ave.

Howard-Jackson House
214 Lankford Ave.

Locust Grove
810 Locust Ave.

Lyons House
610 Lyons Court

Lyons House Carriage House
706 Lyons Court Ln.

The Willow Cottage House
1118 Market St.

Timberlake-Branham House
1512 Market St.

Woolen Mills Chapel
1819 Market St.

Pireus Store
1901 Market St.

Nais House
224 Ninth St. SW

Oaklawn
501 Ninth St. SW

Hard Bargain
1105 Park St.

Geiger-Coles House
1108 Park St.

 Finch-McGee Cottage
1112 Park St.

King Lumber Co. Warehouse
608 Preston Ave.

The Rock House
1010 Preston Ave.

Wyndhurst
605 Preston Pl.

Preston-Norris Cottage/Wyndhurst Servants Quarters
611 Preston Pl.

Robert L. Updike House
620 Prospect Ave./
105 University Manor

Hoppe-Humphrey-Ferron House
752 Ridge St.

Joseph Brown House
818 Ridge St.

Riverdale
1328 Riverdale Dr.

House at Pireus
202 Riverside Ave.

Stonefield
1204 Rugby Rd./1719 Mason Ln.

Four Acres
1314 Rugby Rd.

Hawkins-Lee House
204 Seventh St. SW

Hawkins-Parker House
208 Seventh St. SW

Parker House
201 Sixth St. NW

Benjamin Tonsler House
327 Sixth St. SW

Morea
209-211 Sprigg Ln.

Huntley Hall
214 Stribling Ave.

Nicholas Lewis House
309 12th St. NE

Turner-LaRowe House
1 University Court

Enderly
603 Watson Ave.

Monticello Wine Company House
212 Wine St.

Categories
News

Tracks of my tears

Dear Ace: All of my local short cuts involve railroad tracks, but sometimes I find that I end up wasting a lot of time waiting for the trains to go by. Is there a train schedule so I can plan a way to keep my short cuts short?—Impatience Railhopper

Railhopper: To shortcut his detective work, Ace headed down to the railroad tracks. He camped out by Littlejohn’s to scope out the Corner crossing over University Avenue to suss out when the choo-choo comes through town, holding up traffic where it crosses paths with Second Street SE and Carlton Road. But he found that watching trains not go by was some seriously boring detective work. He even tried to pump a few young train-riding hobos for timetable details, but they weren’t about to talk for free. Thankfully, the afternoon was not a total waste, since Ace gleaned one useful fact in the time spent beside the rails: He found out that the trains passing through Charlottesville are owned and operated by the CSX Corporation.

   So Ace put in a call to CSX corporate headquarters. Anxious to hear CSX’s schedule for free, Ace tracked down Misty Skipper, the corporate media contact for the mid-Atlantic region.

   But before we get to Skipper, Ace wants to mention another mid-Atlantic media man, the former Director of Homeland Security, Tom Ridge. Aside from creating that dandy color-coded warning system, Ridge was also charged with the task of identifying a few possible targets for terrorist attacks. And if you recall his speeches, American shipping trains were on the Homeland Security’s sitting duck list.

   So, not surprisingly, Skipper informed Ace that CSX has to keep train schedules out of the public domain as a safety precaution. Not one to balk at matters of national security, Ace just had to accept the answer. So, in response to your question, Impatience, there is no train schedule to help you plan your short cuts. Though if you have time and some cold hard cash, you might be able to score an unofficial schedule out of an observant train-riding hobo…

Categories
News

Hide Receiver

Dear Ace: Like, where did all the pay phones go? I need to make a call, but can’t find a phone and don’t want to get a cell.
—Anita Dialtone

Good question, Anita! Even though Ace upgraded to wireless communications for his investigative calling, the dwindling numbers of local public phones have not gone unnoticed by his super-sleuth eye.

   To answer your question, Ace set off in the Acemobile to locate at least one working pay phone here in town. After considerable searching, he finally found a fully operational public phone at Dürty Nelly’s pub on Jefferson Park Avenue. The phone was provided by Davel Communications, a major telecommunications corporation based in Ohio that leases pay phones to businesses across the country. Anticipating that he who giveth is usually he who taketh away, Ace called the Davel Corporation to get to the bottom of our pay phone conundrum.

   After speaking with Dave Askeland, a Davel representative, Ace learned that with the increase of cell phone technology, pay phone usage has decreased in inverse proportion over the past four years. As a phone’s usage goes down, so too does its revenue, so installing them just isn’t worth it. With pay phones ceasing to be lucrative investments for small businesses, the industry has been forced to downsize, dramatically. Askeland said that there has been a 3:1 decrease in local pay phones over the past four years.

   But, just so you know, Charlottesville isn’t the worst city for finding a pay phone. To put our figure in context, Ace mentions the case of Bell South. Last year, Bell South, one of the nation’s biggest providers, completely eliminated its pay phone services, meaning that more than 250,000 pay phones were removed from parking lots and gas stations throughout the South. So make sure your car breaks down only above the Mason-Dixon Line.

   That made Ace wonder: What’s going to happen to all of those remaining booths? One potential industry option is to convert them into WiFi hotspots for wireless Internet access. So, just imagine, Anita: In a few years, you may not be able to call a tow truck company, but you should be able to send them an e-mail!

Categories
News

C-Ville 20

Your Starting Lineup. Some of them are well known. Others are strictly behind-the-scenes players. Some make life more livable. Some make us shout back at our TVs (and some give us more to look at on those televisions). Among them are actors, sculptors, teachers, politicians and businesspeople. They come in all shapes, sizes and ages, but they all have at least three things in common: They live here, their influence is felt here and they’re being recognized this year by C-VILLE Weekly. Ladies and gents, the C-VILLE 20, Class of 2005: The people and institutions that are shaping life as we know it right here, right now. You can’t know the players without a scorecard. Now that we’ve given you one, get out there and enjoy the game!

The Philanthropist
Boyd Tinsley
 

Generosity comes as naturally to Boyd Tinsley as does dancing a bow across the strings of his violin—something he’s doing a lot this summer on his 14th tour with Dave Matthews Band. He may be a big star now, but he’s not such a big shot that he forgets his roots. Besides the fact that he still lives here in the town where he graduated from public high school, the money Tinsley has given to local philanthropies speaks to his deep local devotion.

   Since 2003, Tinsley has sponsored three programs—a music program, a tennis program and an academic mentoring program —for area school children through the Charlottesville Area Community Foundation. For the past two years, he has donated approximately $25,000 to each program, ensuring that each of the three is not only extant, but also successful, according to Kevin O’Halloran, CACF’s director of donor relations.

   The music program helps foster musical talent in disadvantaged kids in the city schools grades six through 12. In the past school year alone, 35 students have benefited from private lessons in string instruments such as viola, cello and, of course, violin.

   The tennis program offers students at the city’s upper elementary and middle school opportunities such as participating in the Boar’s Head Winter Tennis Program and twice weekly after-school tennis lessons. (Last year, there was the added bonus for local adolescents of getting face-to-face with tennis hottie Anna Kournikova).

   The academic program offers tutoring and summer enrichment programs as part of the Scholars Program, to CHS students who demonstrate academic promise, but need a little extra encouragement.

   “[Boyd’s] been extremely generous,” says O’Halloran. “What’s more, he’s tailored his philanthropy to the problems that he saw growing up in Charlottesville and has tried to address those problems in very specific ways.”

   And that’s not even beginning to list the philanthropic undertakings Tinsley’s done as a member of DMB. Just to name one of the group’s philanthropic endeavors, for example, in 2003 DMB raised $250,000 for the Music Resource Center—also a program benefiting local kids—with a concert in Central Park.

   Two words for Tinsley? Thank you. It’s really that simple.—N.B.

 

The Party Animal
Andrew Vaughan

You’ve got to respect a man who turns a junky Downtown Mall kiosk into one of the most happening night spots in town. That’s what Andrew Vaughan accomplished this spring, and it’s that kind of vision for partying that made him Charlottesville’s King of Saturday Night.

   “I just kind of fell into it,” explains Vaughan of his nightspot empire. After successfully launching Downtown coffee cart Java Hut in 1994, the 1992 UVA grad returned to the Corner and opened Orbit Billiards in 1996. Two years later he and Barbara Shifflett (and later Mike Rodi) brought eclectic food and purple pool tables to the Mall with Rapture, which spawned its attached dance club, R2, in 2003. And last year he added burrito bar/hipster hangout Atomic Burrito in the former Liquid location on Second Street.

   Vaughan says he tried to give each of his venues a distinctly different vibe. Orbit, he says, offers town and gown a totally casual pool hall. Rapture focuses more on the food, with R2 pumping dance hits and filling the dance floor with the young and fabulous. And Atomic is more laid-back, with live bands and DJs playing in the small space and beer and liquor flowing at the bar.

   “I love Charlottesville. It’s such an interesting town,” Vaughan says. “And there are so many different [night life] places around town, all building on one another. It’s a great town to do this in.”

   If Vaughan’s success is reminiscent of another big-time restaurant owner in town, his next move might cement comparisons. He’s branching out into managing musical acts, specifically Travis Elliott, who plays an acoustic show at Atomic every Tuesday night.

   “I don’t know a thing about [music management],” he jokes. Given how well things turned out the last time he “fell into something,” we’re sure it’ll turn out just fine.—E.R.

 

The Retiree
Mitch Van Yahres

 After 24 years as Charlottesville’s liberal champion in the General Assembly, perhaps the most important thing Mitch Van Yahres did this year was call it quits.

   In bowing out, the 78-year-old Van Yahres has opened the door for a new State Delegate. As a bastion of both old-school 1960s liberalism and big money, Charlottesville could stand ready to take the reigns of the battered and bruised Virginia Democrats. Assuming that Democratic candidate David Toscano wins on November 8, Van Yahres’ exit will earn some credit in any would-be Dem comeback.

   Since Van Yahres graduated from Charlottesville City Council chambers to the State Capitol in Richmond in 1981, the New York Catholic has watched the Republican right rise to power. It’s been a big change, for Van Yahres came of age as a politician during what he calls the “good old days.” Back then Republicans and Democrats took walks and vacations together and compromised on issues over which they disagreed.

   That was then. This is now, and the game is “my way or the highway.” The Assembly is overrun with ideologues that put their faith in capital and fundamentalist Christianity. They despise the public sphere and nearly cripple it with tax cuts. “Compromise” is such a dirty word to the hard Right that during the primary season just passed, they tried to sabotage fellow Assembly Republicans who had cooperated with Democrats on tax issues last year.

   The 57th District’s new delegate will be a barometer for how Virginia Democrats aim to meet this challenge. In handing primary victory to Toscano last week, Democrats seem to say they want the new guy to be a moderate who can forge alliances with centrist Republicans. But even the Republicans appreciate the Van Yahres influence: GOP candidate Tom McCrystal calls himself a middle-of-the-road progressive.

   Perhaps the region’s most popular politician, Van Yahres has cemented voters’ expectations that no matter what, their guy in Richmond is fighting the good fight. By retiring, Van Yahres is allowing the next generation of local leaders to write a new battle plan.—J.B.

 

The Wattage
Sissy Spacek

We feel so close to her we just call her “Sissy.”

   Charlottesvillians like to think that Sissy Spacek represents the best in all of us: Nice, wholesome, self-effacing, generous, beautiful, Oscar-winning…the list could go on. And while we may pretend we don’t care about the celebrities in our midst, folks, that’s just a front. Truth is, we may not be star struck but we’re pleased as punch our town is a desirable place to call “home” among the rich and famous. Sissy is our shiny gold star of approval: She’s our wattage.

   Moreover, she doesn’t shirk from shining her light on community-minded causes. She’s lent her power to support autism, recording for the blind, historic preservation and more. One of the big stories of the past year has been the redesign of the east end of the Downtown Mall. The “free speech” wall, sponsored by the Thomas Jefferson Center for the Protection of Free Expression, is an integral part of that project and Sissy has been instrumental in fundraising to ensure it gets built.

   At the beginning of May she was the, er, star attraction at an event to kick off the public fundraising phase of the project at The Paramount Theater. That night alone, TJCPFE tallied $20,000 in donations. Josh Wheeler, TJCPFE associate director, credits Sissy with attracting attention to the event and calls her a “big reason” for its overwhelming success.

   “A lot of celebrities will lend their names to causes they support and that’s important,” says Wheeler, “but in Sissy’s case she not only talks the talk, but walks the walk.”—N.B.

 

The Good Neighbors
The Belmont Neighborhood Association

Recent studies suggest that despite rising standards of living, people are not getting any happier. Instead of more money, many would prefer a sense of community. In an era of bland suburbs and information superhighways, people want to feel rooted where they live. They want to know their neighbors.

   If living local is a small way to fight the power, then revolution is afoot in Belmont. Once a bastion for longtime been-heres, Belmont has more recently become the neighborhood of choice for up-and-coming young professionals. As but one manifestation of the change, real estate assessments have catapulted in the southeastern city neighborhood, where recently a three-bedroom, 1,919-square-foot Victorian on Levy Avenue went up for sale for $419,000. Not only that, but groovy Santa Fe-ish color schemes have flowered practically overnight where a working class stainless steel palate once ruled. In many places gentrification would lead to conflict. But it’s different in Belmont, and the Belmont Neighborhood Association has been busy building community.

   Examples: This year, Belmont residents organized a neighborhood safety meeting, attended by more than 100 people, in response to a break-in and attack. There was an effective neighborhood cleanup. And the neighborhood association helped to raise $375 for trash cans and newsletters to be distributed in Belmont thanks to a community yard sale. When a resident complained about litter at a nearby bus stop, the Neighborhood Association helped install a vandal-proof trashcan.

   Chris Gensic, president of the Belmont Neighborhood Association, says the group is full of old-timers and come-heres, and residents who are not official members also take the lead on community projects. Gensic himself is a community planner for the regional planning district and lives on Bolling Avenue in a 1920s bungalow he describes as “a very good starter home.”

   “Our role is to figure out how to turn complaints into a positive action,” he says. “People are willing to do all sorts of things, and we just try to support them. We’re a group. We’re all holding hands here.”

   Sentimentality aside, as the city seeks to attract more new residents fed up with suburban life, Belmont is a good example of what Charlottesville has to offer.—J.B.

 

The Healthy Spirit
Chris Friedman

It’s as ubiquitous a Charlottesville cliché as the coupling of The New York Times and a latté: the Downtown Saturday morning parade of women and their yoga mats.

   Around here, everyone and her sister do yoga, Nia, Pilates, T’ai Chi—the options are seemingly endless. But before there was everyone and her sister, before ACAC and Gold’s Gym jumped on the bandwagon, there was Chris Friedman.

   Friedman has taught private lessons in the Alexander Technique (a posture-based movement philosophy) since 1990, opening her yoga and dance studio, Studio 206, in September 1999. With classes in Alexander, Nia, yoga, children’s dance, T’ai Chi and belly dancing, Friedman taught Charlottesville that fitness could be more than hours clocked on the Stairmaster. In Studio 206’s first year, Friedman blazed Charlottesville’s yoga trail with 15 classes per week, eight teachers and about 25 students a day. That’s how she remembers it.

   Six years later, Studio 206 has two locations—the original on Market Street and the other on Monticello Road. Together, they offer about 60 weekly classes for all ages and experience levels in Alexander, nearly every brand of yoga, Nia, dance and more. Even more tellingly, Friedman now employs 25 teachers and counts about 75 students a day.

   Those of her students who have gone on to careers in the body arts themselves feel her influence perhaps more than most. Jeanette Payne, for one, started with Friedman seven years ago as a student of Nia, the aerobic fusion technique that combines dance, yoga and martial arts and which Friedman pioneered here. Inspired by Friedman as a teacher, she became a yoga and Alexander teacher at the studio three years ago.

   “The community that Chris creates, creates teachers,” Payne says. “She encourages those around her to believe they can share in a greater community; she sees how all the different parts of the puzzle fit together and wants to bring them together.”—N.B.

 

The Preservationists
The Thomas Jefferson Foundation 

In 1803, Thomas Jefferson made the Louisiana Purchase and doubled the size of our nascent country for $15 million.

   Two-hundred-and-one years later, the Thomas Jefferson Foundation (the official name for the organization that owns and operates Monticello), purchased the 330-acre Brown’s Mountain adjacent to Monticello and put it into environmental easement for the same price. The Foundation was certainly acting in its own best interest to protect the viewshed of the Little Mountain from salivating developers eager to pounce on the prime piece of land that looks down on Jefferson’s place, the only American home on the United Nations’ World Heritage List. But beyond that, it was undeniably also giving back to the community. The Brown’s Mountain deal will preserve that land and keep it McMansion-free for generations to come.

   While the idea of purchasing the mountain had been on the mind of Foundation President Dan Jordan for years, the deal was made in January 2004 and finalized in April 2004. The Foundation officially took over in July of that year and renamed the mountain Montalto, or High Mountain, which is what Jefferson himself dubbed the ascent that rises 400 feet above Monticello.

   With former Montalto residents out of the picture now, Monticello plans to restore an 18th-century look to the mountaintop, with the intention of recreating Montalto’s landscape as seen in Jefferson’s day, complete with appropriate vegetation. Moreover, hikers will soon be welcome to walk up the trails and look down on Monticello from above.

   Preserving Jefferson’s view is a fitting tribute by Jordan and supporters to one of our nation’s original agrarians. After all, it was Jefferson who once said, “No occupation is so delightful to me as the culture of the earth, and no culture comparable to that of the garden.”—N.B.

 

The Standard-Setters
Charlottesville Downtown Foundation

The Charlottesville Downtown Foundation is gone, but it is not forgotten. When the group, then known as Downtown Char-lottesville Inc., brought out the Fat Ammons Band, a lone beer truck and 800 spectators for a concert on May 27, 1988, it forever changed the city’s summer social landscape with the advent of Fridays After 5. Now when the weather’s warm, Charlottesvillians demand that their weekends kick off with lots of music and lots of people watching—all of it free. (We’ll pay for our beer, thanks!) It was CDF that fostered our expectations.

   A disastrous 2003 season marred by rainouts and an unpopular admission fee essentially crippled the struggling nonprofit, and the coming of the Coran Capshaw-run Charlottesville Pavilion finally put it down. But its legacy is clear. “We felt obligated [to carry on Fridays After 5]” says Kirby Hutto, a five-year CDF veteran and now general manager of the Pavilion. “The public loves the event and we feel strongly that it should go on.”

   So does Ray Caddell, leader of local swing/jazz band Big Ray and the Kool Kats. The band has played Fridays every year since 1995 as one of its few public gigs locally. “Fridays is important to our band because this is our town, and we love performing for the home-town folks,” Caddell says.

   Under the Pavilion’s management, Fridays currently continues at a temporary home on the corner of Garrett and Gleason streets; next year it will move to the Pavilion, which will assuredly be completed by then. None of it would have happened, however, without CDF.

   “CDF did a great job of taking that event and starting it off as this wishful idea and then nurturing it and growing it until it became this overwhelming success,” Hutto says. “And even though CDF is going out of the picture now, you have Charlottesville Pavilion stepping in to do the event…The future should be very bright for everyone.”—E.R.

 

The Last of Their Kind
David and Elizabeth Breeden

As Charlottesville yuppifies faster than you can say “Audi S4,” the hippie-artsy contingent that once defined this place gets pushed farther to the fringes.

   The Breeden family—headed by sculptor David Breeden and his wife, Art-In-Place founder Elizabeth—are perhaps the archetype of this dying Charlottesville breed. For 25 years they’ve made art (some better, some worse). But not in a garret. They’ve welcomed the public to Wednes-day night potlucks and fostered an atmosphere that has made possible community projects like Art-In-Place (some better, some worse) at their Biscuit Run Studios and Forest Lodge.

   The 1,000-acre estate is located southwest of town, on a prime piece of land on Old Lynchburg Road. David’s father, I.J. Breeden bought the land in the mid-’70s, well aware that its value would skyrocket, and planning to eventually sell. Remarkably, it’s remained a single undeveloped parcel all these years. That’s about to change.

   Goodbye, arts-colony fantasy life. Hello, prime-real-estate reality.

   In the past months, the Breedens have put their thousand acres up for sale. The bidding process is over, but negotiations are still in the works, so Elizabeth Breeden declines to disclose the selling price (who can doubt that it has many zeroes at the end?). Regardless, the sale will likely pass the property into the hands of developers who will in turn change Southern Albemarle as we know it.

   While Elizabeth points to the need for development close to Charlottesville so that people aren’t pushed farther into Albemarle, the sale is bittersweet.

   “I go for a walk in the woods and there’s a piece of me that knows that this will be over in the next five years,” she says, “and that’s kind of heartbreaking.”

   Yeah, that’s what it feels like every time a dream dies.—N.B.

 

The Power Couple
Jill Hartz and Richard Herskowitz 

“It is tricky to strike a balance between a corporate theme and an artistic enterprise,” says Paul Wagner. The Academy Award-winning director is talking about the challenge that faces his ally in cinema, Richard Herskowitz, who since 1996 has directed the Virginia Film Festival. Wagner’s words could as aptly apply to the work of Jill Hartz, too. In addition to being Herskowitz’s spouse, she is the director of the UVA Art Museum. As the film festival and the art museum have matured, Herskowitz and Hartz have deftly navigated the waters between commerce and art, recognizing that every viable cultural institution needs some of both.

   Funky figures in their own right, Herskowitz and Hartz have drafted increasing calibers of star power to their enterprises. Under Hartz, for instance, the museum has entered the modern era (a sashay that will continue when the museum’s much larger new home is constructed in coming years as part of UVA’s new arts precinct). Colleague Leah Stoddard, who runs Second Street Gallery, says Hartz’s focus “on non-North American exhibits has really represented a change in the gallery.” Further evidence of Hartz’s broad outlook: the recent exhibit of European master drawings from the museum in Besançon, France, Charlottesville’s nascent sister city. Hartz’s ambition for the new museum has a big-city, modern feel to it, too. She wants to make it a “cultural and social center,” she says, and along the way raise the profile of UVA—not a school, it should be said, about which the words “great art collection” first spring to mind.

   Hartz’s husband is well versed too in the task of broadening the appeal and raising the rep of a cultural institution. From a hometown festival that drew attendance of about 8,800 nine years ago, the Virginia Film Festival has become a favorite stop on the national movie circuit and last year had a record attendance of 12,000. Herskowitz has “put his own stamp” on VFF, Wagner says. And not just by drawing bold-faced names like Nicolas Cage, Sigourney Weaver, Sandra Bullock, Roger Ebert and Luke Wilson to the October festival and other VFF-sponsored events. By moving the VFF office to W. Main Street and involving Vinegar Hill Theatre (and soon, the Paramount) in screenings, Herskowitz has married national clout to local enterprise, truly forging the town-gown bond that gets so much lip service in other quarters.

   With Herskowitz and Hartz now in their professional prime, when national interest comes a-knockin’, theirs is likely the door that gets the rap.—K.M.

 

The Newcomers
Gray Television

True, its CBS and ABC affiliates earned only 2 percent and less than 1 percent of the viewing audience, respectively, during the last Nielsen ratings period. That doesn’t mean Gray Television Inc. is any less of a player on the local scene. Just ask anybody living without cable whose network viewing choices increased by 200 percent when Gray began broadcasting last summer. That’s right, the Katie Couric set, so ably supported by NBC 29 all these years, can now venture into the world of breakfast with Diane Sawyer on ABC, and whoever-it-is on CBS, thanks to Gray.

   More significantly, both affiliates (WCAV, the CBS station is Channel 19; WVAW, the ABC station is Channel 16) have launched their own local news shows. In the short time they’ve been operational, the principal difference they’ve made in joining the local news landscape is to add even more coverage along the lines of “There sure were a lot of happy families at the Dogwood Parade.”

   But you’ve got to start somewhere, and surely the young reporters will learn how to pronounce Stan-Tun eventually. It seems likely Gray’s honchos will give them the time to do it, too. Last year the company clocked record earnings of $41 million, and it spent $7 million on broadcast facilities off Elliott Avenue in the former Frank Ix warehouse. Not only that, but Gray has agreed to buy WADA, a PAX affiliate in Charlottesville. They’ll call that station WAHU. It’s scheduled to start broadcasting soon on Channel 27, delivering a mix of Fox and PAX programming.

   Earlier this spring, WCAV/WVAW general manager Roger Burchett laid out his goals and made it clear that slow and steady will win the ratings race, as far as he’s concerned:

   “The first thing you’ve got to have is a product that people want to watch…. We want to put a news product on the air that people say, ‘I like it because it’s accurate, it’s well presented, it’s timely and I enjoy watching it. I trust these people,’” he continued. “We’re brand new, so to get all those goals lined up, all working at the same time, it takes time.”—C.H.

 

The Players
“The Boombox”

Good gravy, is that the same 50 Cent song again? If I hear “In Da Club” one more time, I’ll go insane in the membrane!

   There’s a lot of people with perfectly good taste in music who dismiss the entire hip hop genre as trash. And how can you blame them? The music industry picks one guy, tells the suburban kids he’s “gangsta,” then plays his knucklehead song over and over until we’re ready to bust a cap in our radios. Guns, money, hoes… yawn.

   Hip hop has a lot more to offer, although you’d never know from listening to commercial radio. Here in Charlottesville, however, we have one of the few places where you can hear rap’s full spectrum—no play lists, no censors.

   “The Boombox” is the most listened-to show on WNRN (91.9 FM). Six days a week, from 10pm to midnight (with a four-hour show on Saturday nights), “The Boombox” ranges far and wide across the hip hop landscape. You can hear the socially conscious poetry of the underground scene, self-produced tracks from locals like the Beetnix, or a cut from the latest mix tape floating out of New York or Los Angeles.

   And, yes, they spin the gangsta club anthems, but they emphasize variety. After all, the DJs who host “The Boombox” each night are actual hip hop aficionados playing music they like or they think somebody else might like, not just cynically spinning the latest hit. So when they spin 50 Cent, it’s likely to be a brand new track or a deep cut off the album.

   There’s something about a freewheeling, uncensored hip hop show that doesn’t fit with the Charlottesville stereotype. That’s just what we love about it.—J.B.

 

The Brand Labels
Susan Payne and Lisa Ross

Last year Payne Ross & Associates, the advertising firm owned and operated by Susan Payne and Lisa Ross, developed an image ad for Norcross Station, the new apartment complex crafted from a converted warehouse right behind the railroad tracks on Fourth Street SE. Wisely, the ad made no allusion whatsoever to midnight-train-to-Georgia rumblings that jostle the building. Instead the sleek ad featured a Manolo Blahnik slingback with a kitten heel. With a single pair of shoes, Payne and Ross heralded Charlottesville’s official arrival as “The Little Town that Could.” Here was Charlottesville’s new self-definition for the metropolitan age: “We’re in the big leagues now, baby. If you can’t buy Manolos here, at least live like you can.”

   It worked. With monthly rents ranging from $950 to $1,550 per month, Norcross Station was totally full in its first year on the Downtown rental scene.

   The ad agency’s success was no fluke, however. They’ve got the Downtown identity thing down cold: They also designed the urban-spirited “Where Else But Downtown” ads and the Virginia National Bank logo, to name a few. Yet Payne Ross’ stamp on Charlottesville’s changing sense of self is not limited to one neighborhood. The Virginia Film Festival, the SPCA, Legal Aid and the regional airport also boast Payne Ross’ campaign handiwork.

   Susan Payne and Lisa Ross started the company 20 years ago with a single brochure for a construction company. Word spread and over the years, Payne Ross expanded to 12 employees and into everything that could possibly be considered advertising, marketing or public relations. They’re still making brochures, but now you can add TV, radio, books, corporate branding, trade show displays and special events to the menu.

   They’re a local success story to be sure, but not because everything they touch turns to gold. Rather, Payne and Ross are blessed with the Charlottesville touch.—N.B.

 

The Promise
Dave Leitao

Dave Leitao: Enjoy this moment while it lasts.

   Right now, UVA’s new head basketball coach is The Man. The Savior. Of course, he hasn’t had his first game yet.

   Which makes it the perfect time to be the new head coach of a team that’s desperate for a turnaround. Now, when UVA fans see Leitao on the street, they probably high-five him and say things like “Get ’em, Dave!”

   Leitao’s predecessor Pete Gillen heard things like that back when UVA hired him to save the team in the spring of 1998. He was a nice guy, but what did that matter when Gillen could take the ‘Hoos to the NCAA Tournament only once in seven seasons? He got the axe in March, after racking up an overall season record of 14-15 and a dismal 4-12 record in the ACC.

   Wishful fans fantasized about UVA hiring Tubby Smith away from Kentucky. Yeah, right.

   Leitao, 44, is no slouch. He’s young, he’s African-American (a first for UVA Athletics) and he led DePaul University to a 58-34 record over three seasons. In 2004-05, he went 20-11. There’s no small amount of pressure on at UVA, however, because the $150 million, 15,000-seat John Paul Jones Arena is set to open next fall. The school—and its donors—don’t want a bunch of losers getting their butts kicked all over the brand new hardwood.

   If that happens, Leitao might find out how fast Charlottesville’s Southern hospitality turns sour. But now, for Leitao and UVA, hope springs eternal.—J.B.

 

The Caretaker
Erika Viccellio

As executive director of the Charlottesville Free Clinic, Erika Viccellio commands the front line, maintaining the 13-year-old organization’s mission to provide free medical care to the working uninsured. Earlier this year, payoff came in the form of a grant from the Virginia Health Care Foundation that enables the clinic to pay for its first full-time nurse practitioner, thereby boosting its patient load by 40 percent.

   Viccellio came to her work by way of a seven-year stint at the Virginia Institute of Autism, where she eventually became executive director. Her current challenge is making sure people in need of health care know where they can find it. “We’ve never had daytime appointments before,” she says of the clinic’s expanded hours. “We’re reaching out to smaller employers and
letting them know that they can
send employees to us when they never could before.”

   Three hundred community volunteers and 150 medical volunteers staff the clinic and last year attended to more than 1,300 patients. That adds up to 3,600 appointments and countless free prescriptions in one year alone. But given that Viccellio conservatively estimates that as many as 10,000 people in Charlottesville and Albemarle are without health care and qualify for Free Clinic services, that means there’s still more work to be done.

   “It’s a pleasure for me to work with these people,” Viccellio says. “But it’s about the community coming together to care for one another. It’s something everyone can relate to—we all deserve access to health care. We’re here to ensure that that happens.”—E.R.

 

The Rainmaker
Michael Gaffney

Michael Gaffney has his hands on Charlottesville’s hottest commodities.

   You want it? Gaffney’s probably got it. In a region where real estate is more valuable than bubblin’ crude, Gaffney Homes builds custom high-end houses in places like Sunrise Farms in Earlysville and Old Ballard Farm in Ivy. The unassuming Gaffney has transposed his business success into political clout—he’s a past president of the National Homebuilders Association, one of the country’s most influential industry groups.

   How about water? Everyone needs water, and Gaffney’s got his hand on that tap, too. Since 2003 he has served as chairman of the Rivanna Water and Sewer Authority, the quasi-public body that manages the city and county’s water supply and sells water to Charlottesville and Albemarle. Gaffney is shepherding the organization through one of the most important stages of its 30-year history, as the Authority seeks a major new expansion of the local water supply.

   Finally, Gaffney is getting a grip on the hottest commodity of all—money. He is a  major investor in Sonabank, which will hold its grand opening here in Charlottesville on June 23 at its primary branch in the Forest Lakes shopping center. Gaffney sits on the bank’s board of directors. Sonabank already has raised $35 million in capital and will soon open a branch in Manassas, says bank Vice President Devon Porter. “Mike is tapped in completely,” says Porter. “He has an extensive amount of contacts in Charlottesville.” That may be his most valuable asset of all.—J.B.

 

The Advocate
Claire Kaplan 

Talk about your uphill battles—Claire Kaplan is one of the foremost gay-rights activists in the most anti-gay state in the nation.

   Virginia earned that distinction over the past several years as hard-right politicians in the General Assembly have built their careers on stoking animosity against homosexuals. The result has been bills like Del. Bob Marshall’s “Affirmation of Marriage Act,” which not only bans gay civil unions but also outlaws any legal contract between members of the same sex that resemble marriage benefits; in the most recent General Assembly session, the House and Senate voted to take the first step toward making an anti-gay amendment part of the Virginia Constitution. Other legislation is even dumber—ranging from bills to prevent gay couples from adopting children to bills promoting “Traditional Marriage” license plates.

   In this climate, Kaplan fights hard. “She is your model local activist,” says Joseph Price, an attorney for the state gay-rights group Equality Virginia. “Claire is down in the trenches talking to legislators, rallying her friends and neighbors, talking to local officials. She’s tireless.”

   Kaplan, a member of the gay rights group UVA Pride, must measure her success in small victories. In the fall she helped persuade City Council to formally oppose the Affirmation of Marriage Act, and she has helped focus media attention on the General Assembly. She is currently working to convince UVA to extend domestic partner benefits—which can include health insurance, tuition assistance and gym memberships—to gay employees. According to The Cavalier Daily, UVA is one of only three of the top 25 universities to deny partnership benefits to faculty. (The other two—Notre Dame and Georgetown—are Catholic.) Given the animosity toward gays even at Virginia’s premier university, it’s a good thing Kaplan has so much energy. Given the track
record in Virginia at large, she’s going to need it.—J.B.

 

The Agitator
M. Rick Turner

During the controversy that engulfed Charlottesville public schools this year, few speakers roused as much passion as Rick Turner, UVA’s Dean of African-American Affairs and the head of the local branch of the NAACP. While some citizens appealed to the School Board to justify the proliferation of standardized tests
or pleaded for better communication between Central Office and the city’s principals, Turner took a decidedly more antagonistic approach. You who oppose the new superintendent are all a bunch of racists, was his charge. White parents don’t care about how African-American kids do in school.

   Two months after Scottie Griffin resigned her post as superintendent, Turner remains steadfast in his analysis without regard for how his words might have further strained race relations. “I think I’ve made a lot of people aware of issues they weren’t aware of because very few African-American folks talk about these issues,” he says with no trace of apology.

   Indeed, why would he express regret? Since arriving at his UVA post in 1988, Turner’s sense of destiny has grown increasingly intense: “I feel as though I’ve been chosen to be a strong and honest and forthright advocate regardless of those who criticize my brand of advocacy. It has nothing to do with Rick Turner. It has something to do with being chosen.”

   Without a doubt, Turner’s inflammatory rhetoric helped to focus attention on the disparities among students in Charlottesville’s public schools. People who hadn’t talked about the achievement gap before had plenty to talk about once Turner’s words were broadcast or printed—though whether those conversations always pointed toward a solution is a question still unresolved.

   A father of four grown children, three of whom attended city schools, Turner has been quieter in the past couple of months, but that’s just timing. No question, he’ll be stirring it up again. Maybe soon.

   “In Charlottesville I am [living] among a group of frightened and afraid Negroes that are reluctant to stand up for African-American issues,” he says, “particularly African-American children who continue to die in Charlottesville.”—C.H.

 

The Horticulturist
Gabriele Rausse

Despite TJ’s best efforts, Central Virginia’s dense, clay soil just wasn’t cut out to grow grapes. At least, it wasn’t until Gabriele Rausse came along.

   Back in the 1970s Rausse flew in the face of convention by grafting wine-friendly European vines with the roots of disease-tolerant native grapes. His successes at Barboursville Winery, Jefferson Vineyard and others among the region’s 21 vineyards played a big part in the Commonwealth becoming the No. 5 wine-producing state in the country. And with the recent Supreme Court decision legalizing interstate wine sales, expect Virginia’s $50 million vino industry to grow even larger.

   Sizable credit goes to Rausse, considered by many the patron saint of Virginia wine after planting hundreds of thousands of vines around the area. “I enjoyed every graft,” he told C-VILLE in April. “I have been a loser all my life. So the idea of coming here and doing something which
‘didn’t work’ was very attractive to me.”

   Rausse’s expertise is very attractive to local vintners, including High Meadows Vineyard and Inn co-owner Rose Farber. In 1984 Rausse planted the Scottsville inn’s modest acre-and-a-half vineyard and remains a consultant, crafting the inn’s pinot noir.

   “He’s a good all-around guy. He has an ability to teach, so that he takes all that wonderful knowledge, and he has a wonderful magic to pass it on,” Farber says. “It’s not that he does what he does, it’s that he teaches all of us how to do it.”—E.R.

 

The Entrepreneurs
Jessica Nagle and Reid Nagle

Even if their financial database company, SNL Financial, didn’t pump 275 gainfully employed people into the Downtown economy, Jessica and Reid Nagle would deserve commendation simply for the makeover they accomplished a couple of years ago. They took the hulking monolith formerly known as the Spy Building (and officially dubbed the National Ground Intelligence Center) and transformed it into something approximating a sleek, city-centric pillar of white-collar industry.

   It wasn’t an impulse born of aesthetics that prompted them to relocate to 90,000 square feet on Seventh Street from their chunky brick building on Fourth Street. No doubt the deal they brokered with the City of Charlottesville to rent the Spy Building at rates far below market sweetened their interest in remaining Downtown. But what was the bottom line? Their company had outgrown its home. Again.

   The Nagles relocated SNL and a handful of employees to Charlottesville from Hoboken, New Jersey, in 1989. Certain that they wanted to be in a college town where new graduates could supply fresh blood for their fledgling company, they narrowed it down to Charlottesville and Williamsburg with the help of Barron’s. “Charlottesville seemed like a little more of a real town,” Jessica says. Sort of. “The Chamber of Commerce had a video,” she recalls. “The highlight was that the Coffee Exchange had a cappuccino maker! It was a big adjustment coming from New York.”

   Indeed their first corporate headquarters was a “suite” of offices above the Men & Boys Shop on the Mall. (These days SNL also has offices in Denver, Arlington and London, as well as in India and Pakistan for a total of 400 employees worldwide.)

   Back in 1989, they might have found themselves in Mayberry, but that didn’t keep the Nagles from committing to local life. Sixteen years later, their company continues its employee-guided philanthropy program, which has benefited everything from Live Arts to MACAA and the African-American Festival.

   Somewhat self-effacing about their roles (indeed, Reid begged off the photo session for this story), the Nagles now emphasize that they’ve passed the management torch to “the new guard.”

   “For me personally it’s gratifying to see some of the people who we hired at 22 and where they are now,” Jessica says.—C.H.

Categories
The Editor's Desk

Mailbag

Clinical diagnosis

 I really appreciate the article on Addiction Recovery Services’ Pantops Clinic in your June 7 issue [“Road to recovery”]. I am writing to ask if you could note two corrections.

   1) On page 22, the article states that the methadone program costs $500 per month (it should be $320 per month), but later on page 23 it is correct with the figure of $80 per week. I am concerned that addicts may be deterred from seeking treatment, or others may not make referrals to the clinic due to the high cost.

   2) On page 21 it is noted that a starting dose “is so low (usually starting around 80mg…).” By State and federal law we start out at only 30mg. My concern here is that someone may read this and believe that 80mg is a low dose—that is a very high and potentially lethal dose for most people. Addicts, of course, have developed a tolerance to opioids and need the higher doses for maintenance. The initial dose of 30mg (or a total of 40mg on the first day) is enough to stop the progression of the withdrawal symptoms, but we will gradually increase the dose in increments of 10mg to achieve a maintenance dose. Our maintenance doses range from about 60mg to 220mg, but can be more or less.

   Finally, although John Borgmeyer did a very good job of pulling a lot of material together, some of the information on methadone was misleading in that it does not produce a “high,” because of its slow onset of action. Methadone is an effective medication for opioid dependence because it stops the craving, stops the continued need for higher and higher doses, and allows the patients to function normally, by stabilizing the physical need for an opioid drug.

 

Mary Lynn Mathre

Executive Director

ARS Pantops Clinic

Charlottesville

 

Special delivery

After reading your recent article “Road to recovery,” about the use of methadone (which I fully support), I was disappointed to discover that you failed to mention in your list of conditions that release endorphins one of the very most important: laboring and lactating women!

   Natural childbirth leaves regulation to the body’s own painkillers, endorphins. These natural hormone levels rise during active labor contractions and reach their highest peak immediately following delivery. Simultaneously, oxytocin, another hormone commonly referred to as the “love drug,” also aids the stimulation of the milk ducts and boosts bonding and interaction between the mother and child.

   Unlike the narcotics often administered to women in pain, endorphins present during childbirth grant a more natural ebb and flow of feelings and original painkillers that the body has to offer. They are a perfect example of the human body taking care of itself. The release of endorphins during childbirth has long been studied among humans. The new data we have has radically changed the basis of debates, which were commonplace 40 years ago: Is pain during labor and delivery physiological, or is it the result of cultural conditioning?

   Considering that the epidural rate in the United States is between 70 percent and 80 percent, and that our C-section rate is heading up to one-third of all births, and that we rank 27th in infant mortality, we ought to take notice of other countries and most of Europe, which have better infant mortality rates than the United States. Doctors are becoming more wary of being sued and really aren’t asking (or telling) anymore why they do things. They do things a certain way because “they have always been done that way.” Unfortunately, childbirth has become an illness that needs to be managed.

   Finally, endorphins create no harm to mother or baby! Women ought to know the truth about this magnificent hormone that is intelligently built into our design. But this information regarding a women’s ability to manage birth normally is not made known in our mainstream culture. As a former drug addict myself, I cannot tell you enough how incredible the high was following the natural birth of my own daughter, in which I discovered a very valuable secret. To quote the writer Laura Stavoe Harm, “We have a secret in our culture, and it’s not that birth is painful. It’s that women are strong.” All said, nothing compares to my own personal meth lab.

 

Michele Wheaton

Afton

 

CLARIFICATION

 

In last week’s Government story [“Big hole to fill”], City Council was reported to be concerned about the escalating price tag for the bus transfer center, now $4 million over budget. We did not mean to imply that the Pavilion, a project that adjoins the bus transfer center, is over budget.

 

CORRECTION

 

We misidentified the subject of last week’s Big Picture. It was actually Evan Smith who was testing the voting machines at City Hall.

Categories
Uncategorized

News in review

Tuesday, June 14
Major grant for AIDS service

Today Charlottesville’s AIDS/HIV Services Group (ASG) announced that they re-ceived a $180,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). The money will provide housing assistance to six of ASG’s 90-some clients, says Meredith Richards, president of ASG’s board. Richards—a former City Councilor who has chaired the ASG board since January—says many new AIDS/HIV patients in Central Virginia are young, straight and poor, and that one of ASG’s missions is helping them bear the cost of treatment. “The war against HIV will not be won by pills alone,” says Richards.

 

Three men in custody stemming from attempted rape by coal tower

Police arrested three men today in connection to an attempted rape. According to Charlottesville Police Captain Chip Harding, the attack reportedly happened on Monday, around 10:30pm, on the train tracks between the coal tower and Douglas Avenue. Police say Howard Gail Edman, Jeremie Shane Williams and Corey David Turner allegedly approached and attacked the victim as she was walking to meet friends. A nearby pedestrian heard the commotion and called 911. When police arrived Williams was cradling the victim’s head; he was taken into custody at the scene. After the victim regained consciousness, she named her attackers by first name—alluding to an acquaintance with them, says Harding, and leading to the two other arrests.

 

Wednesday, June 15
Trey Anastasio opening for the Rolling Stones

Trey Anastasio and his band, 70 Volt Parade, will open for the Rolling Stones at Scott Stadium on October 6. Anastasio is the former leader of Phish, the legendary jam band whose fans have so far responded lukewarmly to 70 Volt Parade. Today chatter on JamBase (www.jambase.com) reflected the mixed emotions fans feel about their hero. “What’s it really about for you, Trey?” raged one fan. “Selling records? Being the man? Making money? Clinging to youth?” Others told the Trey-haters to step off. “Gotta say, this will probably be the best show of the Stones’ tour,” wrote a more optimistic fan. “Like any of you bastards would say no to an opening spot with the Stones.”

 

Thursday, June 16
Superintendent mania: Charlottesville vs. Albemarle

Tonight the Charlottesville City School Board appointed Bobby Thompson as acting superintendent as the City embarks on yet another search for a new leader. During a meeting tonight, the Board also revealed it paid former superintendent Scottie Griffin more than $291,000 to leave the school system three years before her contract officially expired, according to a report in
The Daily Progress. Also on Thursday, Albemarle County embarked on its own search for a new superintendent to replace Kevin Castner, who announced his retirement on Wednesday after leading the county schools for 10 years. Castner’s retirement may not be good news for the City. In recent years the City failed to hire a superintendent after a protracted search, then endured Griffin’s controversial 11-month tenure. Now, in addition to that baggage, the city schools must compete with Albemarle as they both search for a new superintendent.

 

Friday, June 17
Something fishy about Lake Anna nukes

Today local anti-nuclear activists celebrated news that a challenge to Dominion Power will be allowed to go forward. On Thursday, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission denied Do-minion’s motion to dismiss a contention related to striped bass in Lake Anna. Three groups—Public Citizen, the Nuclear Information and Resource Service, and the Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League —argue that Dominion has not properly studied the impact of new reactors on striped bass in Lake Anna and the North Anna River.

   

Saturday, June 18
Covesville’s history
recognized nationally

Covesville residents strolling through the town today could take pleasure that Covesville’s history has been officially recognized. The National Park Service has announced that the village, which was settled by Scotch-Irish and German immigrants in the 1740s, would be added to the National Register of Historic Places.

 

Sunday, June 19
Lots of interest in Habitat’s
plan for trailer park

Today The Daily Progress reported that Habitat for Humanity of Greater Char-lottesville has solicited more than 400 groups, asking for ideas on how to redevelop a trailer park in Woolen Mills into an eco-friendly, mixed-use, mixed-income housing development. Contestants must submit plans for 36 affordable units, 72 market-rate condominiums and 10,000 square feet of commercial space by July 1.

 

Monday, June 20
RWSA to consult with Corps of Engineers

At press time City Council was scheduled to hear a report from the Rivanna Water and Sewer Authority regarding the community water supply plan. The RWSA announced that on Wednesday, June 22, water officials will meet with the Army Corps of Engineers to discuss the details of the Authority’s four options for enlarging the local water supply—expanding the South Fork Rivanna Reservoir; expanding the Ragged Mountain Reservoir; building a pipeline from the James River; or dredging sediment from the South Fork Rivanna. The Authority has also applied for an extension on its operating permit for the Ragged Mountain Dam. The Authority is trying to decide whether to repair the existing dam or build a new, bigger dam on the reservoir.

 

Written by John Borgmeyer from staff reports and news sources.

 

 

Out of the blue
Toscano’s win begs the question: How do you like your liberals?

On Tuesday, June 14, David Toscano’s victory party at the Charlottesville Ice Park resembled a high school dance. You remember the scene—adults standing around, trying to talk over the booming music, while the cool kids are off somewhere else getting wasted.

In this case, the kids were up at Wolfie’s on Rio Road, eating barbecue with Richard Collins. Tuesday’s primary vote proved there is something of a generation gap among Charlottesville Democrats, as the party sought a candidate to run for the 57th District seat in the Virginia House of Delegates. Toscano won the three-way race handily, taking home 2,242 votes, with Collins taking second place with 980 votes. Toscano is heavily favored to beat Republican Tom McCrystal in the November 8 election.

Even though Toscano’s party offered bottles of Starr Hill beer chilling in plastic buckets, Collins captured the younger, Greener, leftier-wing of the Charlottesville Democratic party—youthful former City Council candidates Waldo Jaquith, Stratton Salidis and Alexandria Searls, for example, all supported his campaign.

Collins might have given Toscano a closer race, but homebuilder Kim Tingley collected 930 votes with his “more liberal than thou” platform. It was an incongruous message, perhaps, for a past president of the Republican-dominated Virginia Homebuilders Association. Tingley, in fact, performed best in Albemarle County (generally considered more conservative than the city) where he got 363 votes to Collins’ 248 in the eight precincts included in the 57th District. Alas, we couldn’t make it to Tingley’s party at his headquarters on W. Main Street. (“It was fun,” says Mike Pudhorodsky, Tingley’s press secretary. “We had food and music.”)

Toscano, however, won every precinct except Clark, where Collins won by five votes with a total of 84. Toscano’s victory wasn’t exactly a surprise, since the former mayor had obviously been garnering support for his campaign for a while. When Mitch Van Yahres announced his retirement from state politics earlier this year, Toscano immediately published a long list of City and County public officials who supported his campaign. He also scored endorsements from the Virginia League of Conservation Voters, the Virginia Education Association, the Charlottesville Area Association of Realtors and The Daily Progress. He led all the candidates in fundraising with a total of $76,692 from 348 contributors as of May 31.

“When you’ve been in politics for 20 years, and people have voted for you before, that’s a huge advantage,” says Lloyd Snook, a Toscano supporter and former City Dem chair. “I was doing some work on the phone bank, and I talked to someone who said ‘David’s doing a great job. We should keep him where he is.’ They thought he was the incumbent!”

As a City Councilor between 1990 and 2002, Toscano always made nice with Albemarle County, which also helped, says Snook. “He was never in a flaming war with the County,” Snook says. “There was really no group that was mad at David,” he says.

Van Yahres, who stopped by Toscano’s party, said that if Toscano wins in November, as he is expected to, his toughest challenge will be negotiating a General Assembly where right-wing Republicans hold a lot of sway. “He’ll have to deal with the Christian Right,” says Van Yahres, who has cited bitter partisanship in Richmond as a reason for his retirement. “That’s not going to be any fun.”

In Toscano, area Dems seem to be saying they prefer a moderate liberal who will take a more compromising tone with Republicans, in the style of Virginia’s Democratic Governor Mark Warner.

“Charlottesville is not that much more liberal than the rest of the world,” says Snook. “And the way things are
in the General Assembly, no Democrat
is going to be able to do anything without the help of about 15 Republicans.”
John Borgmeyer

 

Ready to rumble
UVA alum pens a unique history of pro wrestling

Local author Steven Johnson has an impressive resumé. He has a PhD from UVA in government and foreign affairs. He wrote about politics for The Daily Progress for many years. And he’s interviewed corporate heavyweight Jack Welsh, religious conservative Jerry Falwell, former Secretary of State Alexander Haig and…Abdula the Butcher.

   Johnson, like a true “smart mark,” makes a perfect “call” in mentioning his last interviewee so nonchalantly. A call in pro wrestling parlance is a hidden gesture or muttered comment that a wrestler uses to tell his opponent what kind of move he’s about to make. This keeps the match from appearing scripted. A smart mark is a fan who views wrestling from more of an inside perspective than a regular fan’s perspective. Johnson is letting me know that he considers pro wrestling a legitimate subject to write about, but a humorous one as well.

   “People always ask me, ‘How can you lower your standards like that?’,” Johnson says. “‘You wrote about politics and got your PhD. Now you go and write a book about tag team wrestling?’”

   The book is The Pro Wrestling Hall of Fame: The Tag Teams, written by Johnson and co-author Greg Oliver, a Canadian journalist who has written about pro wresting for more than 20 years. It is an exhaustive history of tag-team wrestling from the 1950s to the 1990s that delves into every facet of the “kayfabe” or “work” of pro wrestling, terms used to describe the set of rules and codes that pro wrestlers have lived by for decades. In wrestling terms, of which there are so many that the sport has a kind of language all its own, Johnson and Oliver have broken kayfabe by revealing the trade secrets of a sport that has managed so successfully to blur the line between truth and fiction for so long.

   Indeed, there is a faint hint of Tom Wolfe’s The Right Stuff here (without the airplanes, of course) in that it tells the story of a small, elite group of men whom the general public previously knew little or nothing about. As Johnson puts it, “The reporter in me believed that there was a real piece of Americana here that needed to be preserved.”

   If you’re looking for in-depth, glossy bios of The Rock or Stone Cold Steve Austin, you won’t find them here. Tag Teams is more concerned with the history and origins of pro wrestling. For instance, there is plenty of evidence in Tag Teams that pro wrestling wasn’t always as noticeably fake as it is today.

   For example, a 1957 bout in New York’s Madison Square Garden that pitted Dr. Jerry Graham and Dick the Bruiser against Edouard Carpentier and Antonino Rocca ended in a fan riot that made national news. “I’ll never forget this—it happened right over me,” wrote a sports writer for The New York Times. “Rocca…put his (Graham’s) head in a lock…and he ran him all the way across the ring and slammed the top of his skull into the ringpost…he got up…but he was bleeding like a stuck pig. There was blood all over the place, blood on me…blood everywhere.” At the sight of the blood—called “hardway juice” by the biz—fans rushed the ring and began throwing bottles, wooden chairs, umbrellas, anything they could get their hands on. The wrestlers were forced to throw fans out of the ring. It finally took about 30 New York City cops and the Garden’s security detail to restore order.

   Tag Teams also shows that wrestling in the early days was practiced as much for love as money. For example, 1940s wrestling legend Jackie Fargo used to ride a Greyhound bus all night from North Carolina to Atlanta, living like a homeless person along the way just to make $7.50 a bout. But he loved the spotlight. “I had long blond hair and wore a bone in my hair and would do anything goofy,” says Fargo. “[I’d] pick up a big black lady, and sit in her lap and kiss her, stuff like that. Just a wild man.”

   What’s interesting about Tag Teams is the way Johnson and Oliver have presented a scholarly history of the wrestling game without passing judgment on its legitimacy as a sport. Part violence, part harmless vaudeville, part skilled athleticism, and part real-life comic strip, pro wrestling in Johnson and Oliver’s hands becomes a kind of living American folktale.

   So how did a political journalist end up writing a book about tag team duos like The Fabulous Kangaroos, Rip Hawk & Swede Hanson, The Love Brothers and The Dusek Riot Squad?

   “There’s a lot of similarities between pro wrestling and politics,” says Johnson. “There’s a lot of hyperbole. Everything is painted in black and white, the good guys against the bad guys. I’ve seen speeches on the floor of Congress that would be perfect for a crowd of screaming fans. Likewise, I’ve seen wrestling promos that would play well at political conventions.”

   Johnson agrees that it’s no accident that former pro wrestler Jesse Ventura and muscle man (though not a pro wrestler) Arnold Schwarzenegger made successful transitions into politics. Like NASCAR, pro wrestling is a cultural phenomenon born in the 1950s and its popularity grew under the radar of “educated” middle-class Americans, becoming a multimillion-dollar per year business whose audiences are now catered to by major corporations and political parties alike.

   However, Johnson’s motives for writing Tag Teams run deeper than mere scholarly interest. Like a sophisticated theater critic admitting he likes to watch “SpongeBob SquarePants,” Johnson says he’s always had a child-like interest in pro wrestling.

   “When I was 17, the first byline I had as a writer,” Johnson admits, “was a piece about pro wrestler Killer Tim Brooks.

   “People are always surprised when I tell them I learned to write by reading wrestling magazines in the early ’60s and late ’70s,” Johnson explains. “They mixed truth and fiction in ways that were very sophisticated and entertaining at the same time. I learned how to set a scene from reading those magazines.”—Dave McNair

 

Mountain steering
How do retirees at Westminster Canterbury cope with Pantops’ rapid development?

The late afternoon sun fills the living room of a third-storey apartment, and a breeze blows in through the screened French doors off the balcony. The vista from the couch looks out to the west, across the Blue Ridge Mountains. Aside from the conversation inside and the occasional motor of a lawnmower outside, the apartment is perfectly peaceful. Idyllic, even.

But this million-dollar westward view won’t stay that way long. Pantops is a designated growth area for Albemarle County and it’s going to develop regardless of compromised viewsheds.

   Jane and George (pseudonyms, because the couple would only talk on condition of anonymity) moved to their third-floor apart-ment in Westminster Canterbury early in 2003. For the most part, they love it.

   But the 66-acre retirement community located atop Pantops Mountain off Route 250E, is now within a half-mile of a proliferation of car dealerships, big box pharmacies and chain restaurants. It’s a stark contrast to the Pantops of 32 years ago, when Jane and George lived in Keswick and there was nothing along Route 250 save a grocery store and pharmacy.

   “We don’t know what’s going to happen down here,” says George, waving his hand toward the window.

   “There are condos going up,” says Jane, referring to a plans for a new subdivision called Ashcroft West. “They’re not supposed to spoil our view, but they will change the view, certainly.”

   With 450 Westminster Canterbury residents paying entrance fees anywhere from $200,000 to $600,000, with additional monthly fees ranging from $2,500 to $5,500, according to figures from officials at the retirement community, there’s an expectation of quality. But high price tags don’t save views or insulate residents from construction and traffic along Route 250.

   “[Westminster Canterbury residents] are definitely concerned about the traffic,” says George. “Things are growing like topsy out here!”

   Ken Boyd, who represents the Rivanna District on the County Board of Super-visors and is vice chair of that body, agrees that traffic is the big-gest problem out there…aside, that is, from funding the solutions to that problem.

   On the broader scale, however, says Boyd, Pantops development might lack direction, but it has not gotten out of control. Nonetheless he allows that, “We in the County should have done a better job of master planning sooner.”

   Though Pantops is seemingly built out, the master planning is only in its nascent stages. The County held three community meetings between October 2004 and January 2005 to field public input. Feedback focused on the need for more pedestrian- and bike-friendly areas, green space and, in general, a more manageable scale.

   The master planning process has stagnated a bit due to internal staffing issues, but David Benish, chief planner in the County’s Department of Community Development, hopes to have a preliminary plan to present to the community by the end of the summer. That plan will be based on the “neighborhood” model, which plans residential communities around neighborhood centers like shopping malls or churches.

   While strip malls and car dealerships may not be scenic, Scott Hillis, vice president of Westminster Canterbury, is quick to point out the obvious advantages for elderly residents of having pharmacies, grocery stores, health care, cleaners and so forth within a stone’s throw. Moreover, he also points out that Westminster Canterbury plants vegetation screens to protect viewsheds and minimize construction noise.

   Jane and George concur with this assessment, although Jane says she dreams of an upscale restaurant setting up shop someplace nearby.

   “Let me clarify,” laughs George. “She means an upscale Italian restaurant. She’s an Italianophile.”

   Planning Commission, take note.—Nell Boeschenstein

 

Pantops development might lack direction, says County Supervisor Ken Boyd, but it has not gotten out of control. Nonetheless, he says, “We in the County should have done a better job of master planning sooner.”

 

Money matters
What are the City and County spending on our police departments?

Ah, money. As Pink Floyd says, “It’s a gas. Grab that cash with both hands and make a stash…”

Each year the City and County, whose fiscal years begin on July 1, divvy up their annual budgets. Given the important role law and order plays in our society, it’s worth a look at how much the City and County allocate for police administration from the general fund.

While the charts below show the City spends approximately twice as much per capita on its police department than does the County, the numbers might be a tad misleading, according to Lee Catlin, spokesperson for Albemarle County.

That’s because the County’s Police Department gets ad-ditional funds from federal and state-wide sources such as Homeland Security and criminal justice program grants. Catlin also points out that the capital budget provides funds for technology like video cameras in the patrol cars and radios.

As for Charlottesville, Police Chief Timothy Longo notes that as a result of a 2002 salary survey, Charlottes-ville found it rank-ed in the bottom third of police departments surveyed when it came to starting salaries. Thus, Longo’s energies have been directed at improving that ranking in order to recruit and retain the best officers.

In two years, he has budgeted for
a starting pay increase for officers,
going to $32,000 from around $27,000, and moving

Charlottesville’s ranking to the “high-middle” of the pack, according to Longo.

“We’re making progress,” he says, “but we still have a ways to go and need to concentrate on making [salaries] a
priority.”

Nell Boeschenstein

 

Nature’s new calling
After seven years, art gallery says goodbye

Many a First Friday goer schedules his evening around what openings are when. McGuffey is always first, because its cheese and grape fest is early in the evening. Then it’s onto the Community Design Center, Les Yeux du Monde, Second Street and others. Nature Visionary Art is the final stop on the First Friday train—it stays open late, even if the hors d’oeuvres are picked over by the time you get there.

But come the middle of July, you can cross Nature off the art-walk circuit. Gallery owners and newlyweds 32-year-old John Lancaster and 27-year-old Laurel Hausler plan to officially close the doors to their 7-year-old gallery within the next month. The couple, who wed in September, are packing their bags and moving to Beaufort, South Carolina, where they plan to pursue their own art which, according to Hausler, is taking off.

“We both love the gallery and love having the gallery so it wasn’t something we wanted to give up easily. It’s just little things that slowly make it apparent you’re going in a different direction,” she says.

They chose Beaufort, a town much like Charlottesville in terms of size and artsy-fartsy-ness, as their destination for two reasons: First, because Lancaster, who grew up in Virginia Beach, wants to live by the ocean. Second, both wanted a home base that was more “deep South” than Char-lottesville. Hausler in particular stresses her attraction to the Southern mystique—the Spanish moss, the history, the mystery.

Since first opening behind the Jefferson Theater in 1998, Na-ture has blossomed along with the rest of Downtown’s art gallery scene. In its early years it was both gallery and scene of many a wild night. It was the marriage of art and social space that Lancaster describes as “a festive atmosphere,” and that many still remember fondly.

By 2002, the space itself had gone from raw to polished, and the attitude of the gallery mirrored that transformation: Nature was ready for its close-up as an official gallery space. Moreover, Hausler, who had moved to Charlottesville in 2001, joined forces with Lancaster and the two decided to narrow the gallery’s focus to outsider art.

Both Lancaster and Hausler are self-taught artists themselves, so the decision was the result of “where our hearts and allegiances lie, and it’s amazing art in general,” says Lancaster.

Lancaster and Hausler moved the gallery to its current space on Fourth Street SE in September 2003, and Nature’s redefinition as an outsider art gallery filled a niche that no other Downtown gallery offered. Since opening on Fourth Street, the gallery has represented upwards of 30 artists and has sold about four or five major pieces a month, says Lancaster.

While both have enjoyed running the gallery, all good things must come to an end, and it looks like nature has run its course with Nature. The space will continue as creative grounds of sorts when an Irish arts and crafts store moves in.

Bigger and better things may await Lancaster and Hausler, but we’ll miss them. Good luck, guys.—Nell Boeschenstein

Categories
News

The kids all write

Click here to read the story at sfweekly.com

Categories
The Editor's Desk

Mailbag

Drawing a line

Was this poor taste or simply poor judgment? On page 9 of the June 7 edition you debased the article about Dr. Jonathan Moreno [“Dr. Moreno’s House call,” The Week] with the quote of the week from a heroin addict. That quote would have been fine in the article about heroin [“Road to recovery”] but if I were Dr. Moreno (and I don’t even know the man) I would have been really offended to see that quote above my picture. I think many of your readers feel the same. 

Gail Raymaker

Charlottesville

 

The party that likes to party

Your last issue noted how well food and politics go together under the headline “How to join a political party” [How To, June 7]. We libertarians, given how adverse we are to most politics, feel that the addition of beer to any political discussion is also very helpful. I would greatly appreciate you mentioning to your readers that if they would like to meet other area libertarians, they can join us at the Mellow Mushroom on the second Thursday of each month from about 5:30pm to 7pm for beer and pizza. They can also visit www.JALibertarians.org for exact dates of our next happy hour.

Arin Sime

Crozet

 

The road and the race

Interesting parallels can be made between your recent coverage of the June 14 Democrat primary race for the 57th District Delegate seat [“Primary colors,” The Week, May 31] in which you note David Toscano’s largest donor is the real estate/construction sector, and something printed in the C-VILLE a couple of months ago. In the earlier article, City Councilor Blake Caravati complained he would “raise hell” when co-Councilors Kevin Lynch and Kendra Hamilton insisted on sticking to their promise to not support the Meadowcreek Parkway if it doesn’t come with an interchange, suitable replacement parkland, and some more roads in the county [“Hell hath no fury,” The Week, March 29].

   Who is Caravati kidding? This whole Meadowcreek Parkway fiasco could have been over in 2000 when Lynch and Maurice Cox were elected on a strong anti-Parkway platform—as was Caravati in 1998. But instead Blake flaked and flip-flopped and is now raving that we should build the road at any cost. What could account for this strange behavior?

   Politicians like Caravati, Meredith Richards and Toscano use the city as a springboard while pandering to the Albemarle suburbs and development interests with this cherry of a sprawl subsidy in hopes of securing votes and campaign contributions toward future runs for higher office. They cultivate an image of being progressive Democrats while seeking to spend the bulk of Charlottesville’s share of State transportation funds that we have stored up (and funds for years to come) on a road that would actually increase traffic within the city by making a cut-though out of our downtown and central park.

   These millions should be spent on a convenient transit system to meet the needs of Charlottesville residents, not gifted away by ambitious politicians looking for favors.

   During their campaigns, Councilors Lynch and Hamilton indicated they would consider voting to cancel the Parkway if the public demonstrates we’d rather have the money spent on public transportation. Well, the official VDOT count showed more than two-thirds of those responding during the public hearing last spring were opposed to the road in any form. Now would be a great time for Lynch and Hamilton to ask Caravati to return to his original position and join them in setting up a conservation easement for McIntire Park, which would effectively kill the road.

   If those voting June 14 want a State legislator who will work for his constituency instead of sprawl developer dollars, Rich Collins, a dedicated, life-long activist
for ecological health and social justice, is the one.

Stratton Salidis

Charlottesville

 

Fear factor

To all whom may live in Charlottesville and fear Westhaven, let me be the myth buster [“Rebuilding Westhaven,” April 5]. Westhaven may not be as bad as reported. There is crime in every part of the city but the microscope is always focused on Westhaven. I do not get upset any more or defensive when talking to others about where I live. I know for a fact that Westhaven folks are loveable, fun to be around and love their neighborhood. So, if the people of Charlottesville do not realize that Westhaven is an all right neighborhood to visit, you are welcome to visit.

 

Harold Folley Jr.

Westhaven Association President

Charlottesville