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Tuesday, March 7

“I knew Ronald Reagan, Ronald Reagan was a friend of mine, and you, Senator, are no Ronald Reagan”

Converted Democrat James Webb, who wants to give George Allen a bus ticket home from the U.S. Senate, has even broader goals, according to an Associated Press report today, saying he wants to defeat an “extreme” Republican Party that has veered far from Ronald Reagan’s ideal. Webb, running for office for the first time, was the Secretary of the Navy under the 40th president. Webb will compete against Harris Miller for the Democratic nod in the June 13 primary. Though Webb endorsed Allen, a former Virginia governor, in the 2000 race, he now says Allen “essentially become part of the machine,” the AP reports.

 

Wednesday, March 8

Gillen ready for a Stag party?

Former UVA head basketball coach Pete Gillen would consider a post at his alma mater, Fairfield University, now that the Stags’ head coach has been 86-ed, according to a report today in the Connecticut Post Online. Gillen, 58, earned a $2 million buy-out from UVA one year ago after seven years at the helm and a losing record. The ever-affable Gillen has spent the months since then as a hoops analyst on CSTV. Now that the position is open again at the college where he played four basketball seasons in the ’60s, Gillen, who still lives in Charlottesville, is flirting with the possibility of returning north. “Whether I’ll pursue it or not, I really don’t know what is going to happen,” he told the Connecticut Post. “I’d like to coach again, but I’m not sure if I am ready again or not.” The Stags’ record would be familiar to Gillen; they finished the season 9-19.

 

Thursday, March 9

Auf Wiedersehen, “good German”

The 9-year-old online literary journal Archipelago, the labor of love of Char-lottesville editor Katherine McNamara, returns to its broadband space today at www.archipelago. org, with a new issue after a one-year hiatus. Featuring characteristically haunting pho-tography as well as writing on everything from the War on Terror to Hurricane Katrina and gun culture, Archipelago un-derwent an identity search since its last installment, McNamara writes in her “End-notes.” Provoked by the Bush Doctrine of preventive war, McNamara responded, “I will not be a good German,” purposely invoking the specter of a compliant Nazi-era citizen. Archipelago, she decided, “would become…a point of opposition, however small this literary journal was.”

 

Friday, March 10

What would TJ pay at the pump?

Mid-Atlantic AAA reports today that gas prices have jumped an average of 10 cents per gallon in the past 10 days. Ever a leader, Charlottesville heads the pack with the state’s highest self-serve average, $2.28 per gallon. Looking for a bargain? Fill ’er up in Roanoke and save 7 cents per gallon.

 

Saturday, March 11

Gentlemen, start your four-tops!

With temperatures hovering near 80 degrees, the scene was set today for TV crews to hit the Downtown Mall for that perennial story, “the weather is so nice, look how many people are out.” WCAV, the local CBS affiliate, discovered the little-known drag strip mentality that apparently overtakes restaurateurs like spring fever when it comes to their outdoor seating. “It’s always kind of a race to see who’s gonna open their patio first on the Downtown Mall, and this year we got it out nice and early, so I’m really happy with the weather,” Giles Flowers, the manager at Rapture, told the TV crew.

 

Sunday, March 12

Ethicist says, “Give it a shot”

While the front cover of today’s New York Times Magazine was bursting with the eerily overdentifriced image of former Virginia governor Mark Warner, the so-called anti-Hillary, meaning a middle-of-the-road Democrat free from the disadvantages of being an ambitious woman, a regular columnist was handling the more immediate concerns of one Albemarle resident. County dweller Henry Davis McHenry Jr. wanted Randy Cohen, a.k.a. “The Ethicist,” to help him figure out if it’s O.K. for him to pursue a second career in nursing, given the competition for spots in R.N. programs. Cohen’s response? “Your sensitivity to the economic needs of others is estimable, but it need not preclude your career change. Nursing-school spots should go to those who can most ably serve patients someday, a determination best made by experienced admissions officers.”

 

Monday, March 13

Daily Progress thinks global…and rejects the idea

Though neither the City nor County public schools offer the International Baccalaure-ate course of study, The Daily Progress takes a stand on the “issue” in its editorial pages today, ultimately suggesting the curriculum, regarded in some quarters as a more rigorous alternative to Advanced Placement courses, is not in the national interest: “By definition, if education takes a global perspective, it cannot simultaneously take a national perspective—much less a nationalistic one.”

 

 

Development News

Flip-flopper

CRAIG PLANS TO FLIP BISCUIT RUN

Developer will take land through approval process, then sell

 

Word on the street is that developer Hunter Craig plans to sell the 920-acre Biscuit Run property after he wins the necessary zoning permits from Albemarle County.

   “It’s true,” says Steven Blaine, the veteran real estate attorney representing Craig, who is developing the project under the name Forest Lodge, LLC. “They’re going to create the community and the vision, establish the constraints and standards, but they’re not builders.”

   Because it can take years to shepherd a project through the planning process, it’s not unusual for developers to secure all the required building permits, then sell the property for a sweet profit. Blaine says it is likely that multiple builders will work on Biscuit Run.

   Before the bulldozers can rumble in, though, Blaine needs to get Biscuit Run’s public relations machine up and running.

   The selling of Biscuit Run to a public concerned about growth began on Tuesday, March 8, when the County Planning Commission took the unusual step of holding an information meeting on the development that could bring nearly 5,000 homes to the countryside between Old Lynchburg Road and Route 20S.

   Blaine came armed with promotional materials highlighting all the right buzzwords: “pe-destrian orientation,” “neigh-borhood friendly,” “stewardship of the land.” About 200 people showed up to hear the presentation and make comments that generally reflected both worry and resignation that the project is inevitable. The most pressing concerns are how Biscuit Run will affect the water supply and traffic—particularly on the narrow, winding Old Lynchburg Road that will link the neighborhood to UVA.

   “People think they’re go-ing to see 5,000 new homes come up overnight. That’s not going to happen. If we do 200 homes a year, we’ll be knocking the socks off the competition,” Blaine says. “We have to do a better job of educating people.”

   His next chance will come at a work session on March 17.—John Borgmeyer

 

 

Building boom

COUNTY LOOKS TO SPEED NEW CONSTRUCTION

Task force seeks to streamline project approvals

 

It seems nobody is happy with Albemarle County’s growth management. Devel-opers complain the County’s approval process takes too long, leaving projects in limbo for years. Meanwhile, County planners have been getting an earful from angry citizens lately—developments such as Old Trail in Crozet, North Pointe on Route 29N, Rivanna Village near Glen-more and Biscuit Run on Old Lynchburg Road have prompted outcry about the County’s planning process.

   “I was concerned that the community isn’t getting what they’d hoped for,” says County Supervisor Ken Boyd, who has proposed a review committee to consider how to speed up the approval process.

   Boyd says the central problem is that it sometimes takes three or four years to approve big projects, and delays can add to the cost that is passed on to buyers. Moreover, the delays can make it difficult for citizens to keep informed about projects in their neighborhoods, says Boyd.

   “My intent is not to change the policy, but re-view the process” of ap-proving projects, Boyd says.

   Albemarle County is currently considering applications to a development review task force, which would include two developers and three private citizens as well as County officials and a business expert from UVA. Boyd expects the task force to begin meeting in April, and the group will have a six-month deadline to make recommendations to the Board.—John Borgmeyer

 

Down by the river

IF YOU BUILD IT GREEN, WHO WILL COME?

RiverBluff development aims to attract crunchy crowd

  In Charlottesville, tree-hugging consumers have plenty of choices: organic veggies at City Market, nontoxic soaps from Integral Yoga and recycled construction materials at the Habitat Store. When it’s time for these good citizens to make the biggest purchase of all—a house—they have a growing number of earth-friendly options.

   With the RiverBluff community in the Woolen Mills neighborhood, PS2 Prop-erties will add 22 lots to the green housing market in the next two to three years. The development is billed as a community-minded village that encourages residents to care for the natural surroundings. Nine lots have already sold.

   “We’re looking at creating a real, meaningful link between homeowners and nature,” says architect Richard Price of PS2. Residents can participate in riparian-area restoration and native plant landscaping; houses are designed for energy efficiency. A large common area will offset the closely spaced houses.

   Ecotopia ain’t cheap: These lots, the smallest of which measure less than half an acre, start at $110,000. Residents can choose from three house models, starting in the $400s, or they can hire their own architect.

   “We’ve done a little bit of advertising in the real estate press, but not much,” says Price. To get the word out, PS2 will throw an opening celebration timed to coincide with (what else?) Earth Day on April 22.—Erika Howsare

 

Heart of stone

ROCK HOUSE MAKES STATE LANDMARKS REGISTER

From rubble to rehab in less than two years

  The C.B. Holt Rock House, an 80-year- old Preston Avenue property owned by the Legal Aid Justice Center that only two years ago was facing possible demolition, was approved by the State Depart-ment of Historic Resources Board for listing on the Virginia Landmarks Register last week.

   The Arts and Crafts bungalow, a rare example in this area, was hand-built by Charles Holt, an African-American furniture repairman. It has been the subject of intense research and a $230,000 fundraising drive to restore it since researchers first uncovered its significance in 2004. In short, Holt constructed his home against the considerable odds of the Jim Crow era.

   Legal Aid Executive Director Alex Gulotta says the State awarded the designation both for “its historic value from an architectural point of view and its social history.”   With $130,000 left to raise by December, Gulotta says, the State nod could mean Legal Aid will get “some of the momentum we need” to reach that goal before deadline. The National Park Service will consider the Rock House for a place on the National Register by the end of April.

   On Tuesday, April 18, Legal Aid will dedicate the house formally and NAACP Chairman and UVA history professor Julian Bond will be the guest speaker.—Cathy Harding

 

UVA News

Well endowed

UVA GAMBLES, AND WINS, ON HEDGE FUNDS

That’s millions with a “B”

  UVA officials checked their year-end bank statement recently and found that 2005 was a very good year: With just under $2.89 billion in the school’s “endowment” accounts, UVA was about $376 million richer than the year before. That’s a sweet 14.8 percent return on UVA’s investments last year.

   They did it largely through the use of “hedge funds,” those popular but secretive investment pools available only to rich individuals and “institutional” investors (like universities). The endowment ended the year with 49.8 percent of its money (or $1.44 billion) in hedge funds, according to documents posted on the website of the UVA Investment Management Company (UVIMCO).

   The latest survey of endowments conducted by the Chronicle of Higher Education showed that UVA ended its fiscal year 2004 with the largest hedge fund allocation—56 percent at the time—of any university in the nation. (Neither UVIMCO CEO Christopher J. Brightman nor head UVA flak Carol Wood would return calls for this story; Wood e-mailed that UVA has a policy “not to go into any detail on our investment strategies.”)

   Hedge funds may specialize in trading currencies, or making bets on bankrupt companies, but they are perhaps best known for the practice of “going short”—that is, borrowing shares of a company whose stock price they think is going down, then replacing their borrowed shares with shares purchased at a then-lower price, and pocketing the difference. Critics maintain that a lack of reporting requirements leave investors in the dark about investment practices, and are pushing for greater oversight of hedge funds from the federal Securities and Exchange Commission.

   Parking half (or more) of the endowment in hedge funds may sound risky to those who remember Long-Term Capital Management, the Connecticut-based fund that, acting on the advice of some Nobel Prize-winning economists, lost $4.6 billion when their exotic bets went awry during a bad few months of 1998. In 2002, the Art Institute of Chicago took one fund manager to court after one of its funds lost 90 percent of its value.

   But Alice Handy, former president of UVIMCO and UVA treasurer who now runs a South Street–based consulting business serving endowments, says hedge funds can be “less risky” than plain stocks and bonds. “If you can find the best managers, and the best manager is a hedge fund, that is better” than just buying plain stocks, she says.

   On average, higher education endowments had a 9.6 percent return in fiscal year 2005.—Bill Chapman

 

Revving the engine

UVA KEEPS THE CITY WORKING

Charlottesville is state’s fastest-growing job market

  Charlottesville’s job market grew by 3.7 percent last year, edging out Northern Virginia as the state’s fastest-growing area, according to stats from the Virginia Employment Commission.

   William Mezger, Chief Eco-nomist for the VEC, says UVA can claim credit. “I always say that the University and the hospital are the main things increasing employment,” he says.

   For 2004-05, total jobs at UVA grew by 2.7 percent. UVA now employs 12,990 peo-ple, according to the school’s Office of Institutional Assess-ment and Studies. The hospital is growing even faster. Employment jumped 12 percent in that period and now accounts for 5,925, or 46 percent, of UVA’s jobs.

   Moreover, all that traffic also supports the local service industry. The student population is a “baseline index” for how the economy will grow, says local Chamber of Commerce Pres-ident Timothy Hulbert, since “there’s increasing demand on the economy here to provide the whole range of things, from housing and automobiles to pizza and lawnmowers.” There are currently about 19,200 UVA students, with plans to increase enrollment to 19,655 in 2007.

   UVA’s special events help, too. When the Rolling Stones hit town last fall, the Chamber of Commerce estimated a $3 million impact on the local economy from fans’ related expenditures.

   Mezger also notes the types of non-University businesses bolstered by UVA, like consulting firms and private medi- cal practices. Manufacturers of orange polo shirts must be doing quite well, too.—Meg McEvoy

 

Keep it coming, Casteen

NEW UVA RAISES NOT GOOD ENOUGH

Living Wage campaign vows to continue action

 Last week the newly energized Living Wage campaign at UVA made some gains when UVA President John Casteen an-nounced a wage increase.

   UVA’s lowest pay bracket will climb to $9.37 per hour from $8.88. The federal minimum wage is $5.15, while Virginia’s minimum wage for State employees is $6.83.

   “It’s an important first step, but it’s not enough,” says Benjamin Van Dyne, a junior at UVA and a student organizer of the Living Wage Campaign. “The UVA administration should know that we’re not going to be satisfied with half-measures.”

   In a statement, Casteen said that fringe benefits, including health insurance and retirement, add $3.29 per hour to the wage. Casteen contends that benefits bring the total wages to $12.82, more than the $11.80 that has been pegged as a “living wage” based on federal statistics.

   “That’s misleading,” says Van Dyne. “You can’t buy groceries with benefits.”

   Casteen also responded to Living Wage activists’ claims that UVA should do more to demand their contractors also pay a living wage. “The University, as a State agency, does not have the legal authority to impose its will on private vendors and contractors,” Casteen said in his statement.

   In a press release, the Living Wage-ers point out that both Charlottesville and Alexandria have mandated living wages for their contractors.

   Van Dyne says the campaign will continue. “We’re heartened,” he says. “So far, we’ve been doing very well by trying to be persuasive with moral arguments and economic facts.”—John Borgmeyer

 

Don’t leave us, Sean!

SINGLETARY NAMED TO ALL-ACC TEAM

Sophomore point guard will play a huge role next year

  Though the UVA men’s basketball team is now relegated to the NIT, there is arguably no better point guard in the ACC than UVA’s Sean Singletary. The Philly native was named to the first team All-ACC last week, having led the Cavs to a seventh-place finish in the 12-team conference after most preseason polls picked UVA to finish last. As a sophomore, Singletary’s 17.8 points per game was the fifth highest in the ACC while his 4.3 assists per game was fourth highest.

   Expectations for Singletary and the team will be even higher next year, as the team moves into the new $130 million John Paul Jones Arena, scheduled to open this summer. For ’06-’07, UVA will keep all its starters and add several big freshman forwards, taking scoring pressure off Singletary, who this year absorbed most opponents’ defensive pressure.

   If he sticks around, that is.

   It seems UVA fans can rest easy. While NBAdraft.net lists Singletary as the seventh-best point guard in the class of ’08, it doesn’t predict him being drafted next year, nor does ESPN.com list him as a Top 100 draft prospect.—Will Goldsmith

 

Courts&Crime News

Try, try again

MISTRIAL DECLARED IN 2004 MURDER

Conflicting testimonies split jurors 5-7

  Late Monday, March 6, 12 jurors in the trial of Billy Marshall emerged from 12 hours of deliberation in Charlottesville Circuit Court to declare they were unable to agree on a verdict. Five wanted to convict, seven wanted to acquit, attributing their differences to conflicting testimony. Judge Edward Hogshire declared a mistrial, meaning the case will be retried at a later, as-yet-undecided date.

   Marshall is accused of strangling 18-year- old Azlee Hickman, who was found dead in the early morning of March 13, 2004, in the Carlton Avenue trailer she shared with her 38-year-old boyfriend, Ronnie Powell.

   Charlottesville Common-wealth’s Attorney Dave Chap-man argued that Marshall had strangled Hickman after she threatened to call police on him for a probation violation.

   Defense lawyer Charles Weber countered—apparently to some success—that statements made to police by Marshall, Powell and Powell’s daughter, were too inconsistent to determine whodunit. Inconsistencies in Ronnie Powell’s testimony fueled that assertion. Weber also insinuated that Powell was perhaps the guilty party, since he had wanted to break up with Hickman.

   According to jury foreman David Ran-dle, every juror agreed “that someone went back there and strangled [Hick-man].” The disagreements, however, arose over who and what to believe.

   “Everybody had concerns about the truthfulness of all three,” says Randle. “Trying to reconstruct what happened [was impossible] given we think everyone wasn’t always as accurate or truthful as they could or should have been.”—Nell Boeschenstein

 

Every move we make

CAMERAS, CAMERAS, EVERYWHERE?

Settling that debate, for once and for all, of whether we’re being watched as we walk down the Mall

  Given the climate fostered by the Bush Administration, nu-merous inquiries have arrived in C-VILLE’s in-boxes as to where the spy cameras are in Charlottesville and who’s behind them. Are they on the Mall? At stoplights? In my bedroom?

   C-VILLE can’t speak definitively as to the presence of cameras in bedrooms. How-ever, according to City spokesperson Ric Barrick, the only cameras the City has right now are at a few select intersections: Emmet/Wise; Emmet/Angus; Preston/10th; Belmont Bridge; Ridge/West Main; West Main/JPA.

   But even these cameras aren’t operational. Moreover, says Bar-rick, when they do get turned on they’ll be used for monitoring traffic patterns, particularly during storms, not individuals. He also assured C-VILLE that there are no red-light cameras in the city. It’s a good thing, too, since the cameras are illegal thanks to a vote last week in the Virginia House of Delegates.

   While there are no City-operated cameras on the Downtown Mall, there has been talk of getting a camera outside the police station on Market Street, but no movement has been made on that front lately.—Nell Boeschenstein

 

Kids these days

16-YEAR-OLD PLEADS GUILTY TO CONSPIRACY IN BOMBING CASE

Three other teens accused of plotting to blow up high schools still await adjudication

  At his adjudication hearing in Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court on March 8, a 16-year-old Albemarle County student accused of conspiring—with three other teens—to commit murder and use explosives on a schoolhouse pleaded guilty to both charges. The four were arrested in February and are suspected of planning to blow up either or both Albemarle and Western Albemarle high schools by year’s end. A third charge against the 16-year-old—entreating others to commit a felony—was dropped. His sentencing is set for April 5.

   As for the other three—a 15-year-old and two 13-year-olds—Judge Susan Whitlock deemed there was not enough time on March 8 to try them. Their next court date is set for March 17. Albemarle Commonwealth’s Attorney Jim Camblos, whose office is prosecuting the case, says he is pleased with the guilty plea and hopes to convict the other three teens “with the evidence we have.” He de- clined to comment as to whether the 16-year-old would testify against the others.

   The courtroom on March 8 was packed with friends and family. Before proceedings be-gan, however, the prosecution moved to try all the cases together. This, according to Camblos, was to save time given there are “more than a dozen” witnesses, and re-sources. The defense attorneys for the 13-year-olds then moved to close the case to the public out of privacy concerns. Judge Whitlock agreed.

   According to Legal Aid at-torney and juvenile justice advocate Andrew Block, there is an ongoing legal debate over the pros and cons of closed trials for juveniles. On the one hand, their privacy is important, especially when trying not to permanently scar the kids. On the other hand, open trials are often a way to provide accountability and ensure the government is doing its job.

   In July, the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges issued a resolution that they supported juvenile and family courts being open to the public except when the judge “determines that the hearing should be closed in order to serve the best interests of the child and/or family members.”—Nell Boeschenstein

 

 

Sexual assault alert

WOMAN REPORTS BEING RAPED NEAR DICE STREET

Victim was returning home from late night at work

  A woman who lives at the Salvation Army reported to City police on Wednesday, March 8, that she was raped while walking home from work around 3am that morning. The woman reported that the man called her name, although she did not recognize him, and came from behind, pulling her into the woods near Dice Street. He then hit her and pushed her to the ground, telling her he had a gun. After the assault, the victim returned to the Salvation Army and staff took her to UVA Hospital. The results of a DNA test had not returned by press time and no suspect had been arrested. The victim described her attacker as being a black male, about 6’2" and 250 pounds.—Nell Boeschenstein

 

 

Now, a very special C-VILLE P.S.A.

OLD CAR DECALS COULD GET YOU TICKETED

Charlottesville cops don’t want to be seeing no decals

  Ooops, the City forgot to tell us, but car decals have been obsolete since the end January! Not only obsolete, but illegal, too.

   For two and a half months, innocent citizens have been vulnerable to getting stopped and ticketed by City police for still having decals stuck on their windshields. The $15 fee is now just part of a general vehicle registration fee, so the only stickers that belong on your windshields are inspections stickers. And they best be up to date.

   While City police are holding off on ticketing naughty decal flaunters for another couple months in deference to spreading the word, should you get pulled over in April for an old decal, don’t say we never told you so.—Nell Boeschenstein

 

 

Government News

No dirty laundry

VAN YAHRES CLEARED IN FUNDRAISING PROBE

Republican complaints have “no merit,” says prosecutor

  A special prosecutor cleared former Charlottesville Delegate Mitch Van Yahres of any wrongdoing in a probe requested by local Republicans.

   In a press conference on Thursday, March 8, Van Yahres read a letter written by William Neely, the Commonwealth’s Attorney for Spotsylvania County that said the criminal complaint had “no merit.”

   The investigation concerned a February 8, 2005, fundraiser at Starr Hill Restaurant. City Republican Chair Bob Hodous complained that the fundraiser violated State election laws prohibiting delegates from fundraising while the General Assembly is in session.

   While Van Yahres protested that the charges were purely political, local GOP Delegates Steven Landes and Rob Bell endorsed the investigation. City Common-wealth’s Attorney Dave Chapman recused himself because he is a Democrat who has contributed to Van Yahres.

   In a March 2 letter to Chapman, Neely found that Van Yahres was an ex officio member of the PAC, meaning he did not participate except to give advice. Van Yahres never received any funds from the PAC, and he received confirmation from the State Board of Elections that the February 8 fundraiser was legal before the event took place.

   “I’m sorry they had to drag me through the mud to make a political point,” Van Yahres said. The investigation was a waste of money, he said, and what bothered him the most is that “I’ve been friends with Bob, Rob and Steve. They could have cleared this up in five minutes if they just talked to me first.”

   Hodous, who says he leaving the chairmanship after this spring’s City Council elections, had no comment.

   “We’re still friends,” Van Yahres says of his Republican antagonizers. “I’ll still have a beer with them. They should send me a six-pack of Starr Hill.”—John Borgmeyer

 

Assembly Watch

LEGISLATORS BRACE FOR OVERTIME

Some delegates pledge loyalty to right-wing loon

 

We’ve had a good, wonky run here at Assembly Watch. But with the 2006 General Assembly session set to end on Saturday, March 11, we thought this column would be full of tearful goodbyes to our favorite subcommittees.

   But wait! Those wacky public servants love crafting public policy so much that they just can’t stop!

   An argument over whether to raise taxes to pay for transportation improvements has pushed the General Assembly into overtime. Governor Tim Kaine wants to raise $1 billion in new taxes to pay for road construction and maintenance.

   Much of the resistance to Democrat Kaine’s proposal comes from a group of right-wing delegates—the same folks who fought Mark Warner’s tax increases and nearly prompted a government shutdown in 2004.

   Eight State senators and 28 delegates (including Albemarle’s own Rob Bell) have signed a “taxpayer protection pledge” vowing to oppose “any and all” efforts to raise taxes. The pledge is crafted by Americans for Tax Reform, a group led by true believer Grover Norquist—a self-described right-wing radical whose goal is to cut government in half in 25 years, “to get it down to the size where we can drown it in the bathtub,” as he’s famous for saying.

   It’s all part of the right-wing vision for an America run by Big Business (taxophobic cigarette and alcohol companies are Norquists’ biggest funders), unburdened by annoying ideas like the “public good” that could drag down their profit margins. Kaine is hoping to follow in Warner’s footsteps by bringing Democrats and moderate Republicans together to marginalize Norquists’ disciples.—John Borgmeyer

 

 

Gluttons for punishment

MEET THE SCHOOL BOARD CANDIDATES

Getting ready for the City’s first School Board race

 

Geeked up about the first City School Board election? Then take a peek at the slate for the May 2 ballot. The following six folks met the requirements for candidacy by last week’s deadline. We spoke briefly to each candidate to compose the following profiles.—Will Goldsmith

 

sCandidate: Vance High

Age: 48

Occupation: Semi-retired (small business owner)

Qualifying experience: Worked 10 years in schools from middle school to college level

Reason running: Believes in participating in democracy; inspired by death of a former student in Iraq

Children attend(ed) City schools: No

 

Candidate: Charles (Charlie) Kollmansperger

Age: 38

Occupation: Owns technology solutions business for patient-care management

Qualifying experience: Five years as City teacher

Reason running: Frustrated by the Scottie Griffin situation; wants to see a better school system

Children attend(ed) City schools: No

 

Candidate: Sue Lewis

Age: 69

Occupation: Retired financial advisor

Qualifying experience: Served on policy-making boards, including City Planning Commission and Housing Authority

Reason running: Believes City schools should be excellent

Children attend(ed) City schools: Yes

 

Candidate: Edmund (Ned) Michie

Age: 46

Occupation: Attorney

Qualifying experience: Current School Board member

Reason running: Wants to finish his term and oversee start of new superintendent’s tenure

Children attend(ed) City schools: Yes

 

Candidate: Leah Puryear

Age: 52

Occupation: UVA Upward Bound director

Qualifying experience: 26 years of experience at Upward Bound

Reason running: Believes in the Charlottesville City schools

Children attend(ed) City schools: Yes

 

Candidate: Juan Diego Wade

Age: 40

Occupation: Albemarle County transportation planner

Qualifications: Mentored and tutored youth for past 20 years

Reason running: Considers it the right time to effect change, given new superintendent

Children attend(ed) City schools: No (child only 3)

 

Say what?

LANGUAGES ABOUND IN LOCAL SCHOOLS

Forty-eight percent of city’s foreign students are political refugees

  No Child Left Behind mandates that all “subgroups” make adequate yearly progress in improvement on certain tests—even if that subgroup is a potpourari called “Limited English Proficient” or LEP. For local schools, that group is an ever-fluctuating student population, largely children of migrant workers and refugees placed in Albemarle County by the International Rescue Committee.

   “Research suggests that learning an academic language requires five to seven years, but No Child Left Behind demands we do it much faster,” says Courtney Stewart, instructional coordinator for English for Speakers of Other Languages (EOSL) in Albemarle County Schools. Despite such pressures, she is positive about the County’s efforts to teach LEP students.

   Strategies to teach these children vary from school to school. Generally they involve inclusion—when LEP students remain in classes with other students—with variable degrees of “pull-out,” when specific LEP instructors trained take these students out of the general classroom. According to non-English language coordinators in both school systems, more work needs to be done to train general instructors to teach those with limited English proficiency.—Will Goldsmith

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