Greenings-on about town

If my Saturday were greenly perfect, this is what it would look like:

In the morning, I’d get up and ride my bike to the Nelson Community Market (opens at 9am in the Rockfish Valley Community Center off Rt. 151). There I would partake of community pancakes, then buy a pair of earrings for my mom from the nice lady who makes earrings, and a jar of local honey for my dad.

Then I’d drive my electric car to the Habitat Store, get my picture taken with Santa (9am-noon), whisper in his ear my wish for about six more sets of glass tupperware, and make a donation so the store can keep salvaging perfectly good construction materials in 2009.

Readers: This here is, as bloggers say, the "break." Feel free, at this point, to scroll on down to "comments" and put forth your own ideal-green-Saturday ideas. Or just keep on readin’.

Then I’d take the bus out to the Waldorf School for their holiday bazaar (9am-2pm), where I’d learn to make my own wreath so I don’t have to buy one at The Wal-Mart of Evil, and then pick up a sewed-by-a-real-person handbag for my sister-in-law. Then I’d take the long walk to the holiday farmer’s market at Forest Lakes (10am-3pm in the North Recreational Poolhouse and Pavilion) where I’d buy as many jars of local jam as I could comfortably stuff in my backpack—at least six, one for each of my aunts.

Then I’d collapse into a virtuous but exhausted huddle, rejuvenate by eating the most calorie-rich thing I could find on the menu at Rev Soup, and rouse myself for one final stop: the Innisfree Village holiday open house (10am-5pm), reached via a helicopter that runs on native grasses, where I would buy some pottery and weavings for my brothers, who do not like such things, but should learn to be grateful for what they are given.

Back at home (donkey power!), I would experience a moment of regret that I had forgotten to take the trolley to the Holiday City Market on the Downtown Mall (10am-5pm), but then I’d remember that it’ll still be happening next week, and every week until Christmas.

And then I’d help myself to a big glass of Virginia Viognier and fall asleep with visions of sugarplums—local sugarplums, which I wonder if I could get at IY—dancing in my head.

What’d I forget, reader-elves?

Lewis Mountain House not for sale: it will stay in the family

No. Faux Monticello is not for sale. In fact, the property that sits atop of Lewis Mountain, which has innumerable names – "Lewis Mountain House, Kearny’s House, and the favorite Non-ticello" – will remain in the Campbell family. For those wondering if, given  its proximity to UVA, there’d be a move on it, the answer seems to be No.

On October 17, owner Julia Courtenay Campbell died at the age of 84, leaving the property, assessed at $1.94 million, to her two sons, Everett Lee Campbell and Courtenay Madison Campbell.

“We’re going to keep it in the family. Right at this moment, it’s not decided. It’s possible my daughter will be moving there,” says Everett Lee Campbell. “There are extensive repairs and things that have to be done and so we’re getting that in progress. But we plan to keep on living there and have it in the family."

Campbell says UVA hasn’t discussed anything with him.

Among many colorful chapters in its century of history, as reported by C-VILLE’s Ace Atkins, the Society of the Precious Blood grew wine grapes and trained priests there until 1950.
 

 

The famous Non-ticello was built in 1909 and has been in the Campbell family since the 1950s.

Homeless solution gets $75,000 kick-start

Yesterday, the Charlottesville Area Community Foundation (CACF) announced that it will give $75,000 to a Richmond-based nonprofit, Virginia Supportive Housing, to get the ball rolling on permanent housing for the local homeless.

As much as anything, Single Room Occupancy housing (SROs) have become hyped as the best solution to the chronic homeless problem here in Charlottesville. SROs are typically studio apartment buildings with on site support services geared toward the chronically homeless.

In May, Virginia Supportive Housing presented city leaders with an overview of their SRO facilities in Richmond and Virginia Beach. “We know how to end chronic homelessness,” said Dave Norris, executive director of the local rotating homeless shelter PACEM (as well as city mayor), at that meeting. In October, City Council included an SRO project in its strategic priorities for use of Charlottesville housing funds. According to a press release from CACF, UVA architecture students are helping Virginia Supportive Housing to review sites in the city. The group hopes to break ground in 2010.

Yet while $75,000 should get the ball rolling, it certainly isn’t enough to get a 60-unit apartment building built, much less staffed. The nonprofit will still need to line up hundreds of thousands of dollars from federal, state and local government.

The $75,000 grant from CACF is the second of three “catalyst” grants the group plans to give to address affordable housing. Last year, it gave $75,000 to the nonprofit Albemarle Housing Improvement Program for its Treesdale Park project.

Click here for C-VILLE’s latest cover story on the local homeless issue.
 

Locavores shout out to Obama

Can’t be easy to be Obama right now. Not only does he have to do all that drape-shopping (the measuring, we hear, took place before the election), he’s got to assemble a Cabinet amid a deafening roar of unsolicited advice.

That includes advice from people here in Charlottesville. This week, a discussion on the E.A.T. Local listserv centered on whether Michael Pollan could possibly be named Secretary of Agriculture. There’s even a petition going around. Mark Teuting, local farmer and blogger, has got a post about it here.

Michael Pollan, as you almost certainly know, has become the book-writin’ hero of the local food movement and has a local connection in that Shenandoah Valley farmer extraordinaire, Joel Salatin of Polyface Farms, makes a star appearance in Pollan’s bestseller The Omnivore’s Dilemma. Both Pollan and Salatin are probably way too busy fielding media requests these days to write books, raise turkeys or clip their toenails—much less hold down big jobs in Washington—and the petition-writers openly acknowledge that the chances of a Secretary Pollan are mighty slim. But still, it’s a lovely dream. Having somebody in there who was more on the side of humans than the side of corporations would have numerous environmental benefits.

Probably not organic.

(Assuming Pollan doesn’t get the job, I assume he’ll keep his speaking engagement at the Richmond Forum next April—that’s a must-see!)

And then, perhaps chasing a more realistic dream, our three local governments (city, county, and the Kingdom of University) are going to hold some climate-change events next week in hopes of convincing our soon-to-be-president to kick some stimulus dollars to local officials for the purpose of getting greener. Other localities around the country are doing the same. It’s called Local Climate Action Week and it means you can see Better World Betty in person on Monday*, watch an HBO rerun** on Saturday, or see a PV panel demo*** on Tuesday! (Among other things.)

*Lunch panel at the CCDC, 11:30-1:30, also with Doug Lowe, David Slutzky, David Neumann, David Brown.

**Screening of documentary Too Hot Not to Handle, noon-1:30, CCDC.

***Find it near the Transit Center ’round lunchtime.

And now to you, dear readers. What’s your elevator pitch for the Big O? What planetary problem should he mostly urgently tackle?

Alleged I-64 sniper asks for new lawyer

Slade Woodson, the alleged I-64 sniper, fired his attorney in court this morning. NBC29 reports that Woodson was expected to enter a guilty plea, but asked for another court appointed lawyer instead.

Public Defender Jim Hingeley has been representing Woodson since the March shootings, but, as Woodson told Judge Cheryl Higgins, he and Hingeley had disagreements on key issues in the case.

In his own defense, Hingeley told the judge that he spent valuable time going over the case. He also mentioned that Woodson had contacted another lawyer in the past week, an action that may have shaped Woodson’s decision.

The judge ultimately decided to find a new lawyer for Woodson to avoid further tension.
Woodson was sentenced to two years earlier in a Waynesboro court for six felony counts in connection with the I-64 shootings in March of this year.

For past coverage of the I-64 shootings, click here.

“Gonna Let it Shine”: R.I.P. Odetta, 1930-2008

So, Feedback unplugged and shipped out to Houston last Wednesday morning and returned late yesterday evening. (Perhaps you noticed some news to that effect—or a frothy-mouthed photo—during my absence.) More details tomorrow about what my luxurious, 70-plus degree Thanksgiving means for you, musically.

It feels proper, however, to stay mum for a night in honor of Odetta, the outsized voice of the blues who performed in Charlottesville several times (and cancelled one show for health reasons) and died on Tuesday at the age of 77.

Odetta’s music has a cumulative power, a relevance that proved itself time and again in its influence, emotional spectrum and social necessity. C-VILLE’s own Doug Nordfors caught Odetta’s performance at Gravity Lounge in January 2005 and marveled at her ability to inhabit traditional tunes with the same energy that she devoted to her own. Read his review here, then leave some love for Odetta below.

Odetta performs "House of the Rising Sun" in 2005

Categories
Living

Quiz show-off

I remember how, back in the day, at Charlottesville High School in Mrs. Ruffner’s ninth grade World History class, my favorite part of every week was our current events quiz. Whereas most everyone else would groan and make generally painful expressions, nine times out of 10 I aced those quizzes; nothing felt better to my nerdy little adolescent ego than being able to name where exactly in the world that week Pope John Paul II had accidentally insulted some significant cultural group.

Ever since those current events quizzes, I have been an admitted trivia geek. (My sister likes to refer to me as “Nellanerd.”) And the Internet has made being this particular brand nerd so much easier because the most random, useless facts are available now, quicker than ever (and in high definition!). One of the most nerd-enabling sites out there is without a doubt Damn Interesting, and it is, yes, damn interesting. Basically, the site publishes about two articles a week on pretty much any topic out there—past, present, or the anticipate future—that strikes the editors’ fancy. You can read articles in the order in which they are posted, chronologically, or by searching a particular word. (Example: I typed in “fingernail” and got an article entitled “Mutant Killer Seaweed of Doom.”)

Plus, nerds are the new sexy. Trust me—there was even a New York Times article chronicling the trend last spring. Just imagine it: foreplay of sweet nothings that could go a little something like, “Ooo, yeah, baby, tell me more about Herman Sörgel and his plan for hydroelectric dams across the Mediterranean! Or what about that freshwater lake underneath Antarctica? That’s hot. So, so hot…” Or so I wish.

 

Categories
Living

Devil in the details

When master brewer Jason Oliver uncrated all the brewing equipment purchased for Devil’s Backbone, a new brewery located in Nelson County at the base of Wintergreen Ski Resort, he discovered it was all in Japanese—literally, the instructions and dials to the thousands of pieces and parts were in Japanese with no English translation. The equipment

Say ja: Jason Oliver, master brewer of Devil’s Backbone, has a particular affinity for German-style brewing.

is state-of-the-art stuff—a German-designed Ziemmann 10HL 4-vessel decoction or infusion brewery—but the system originally was built in Japan for a Tokyo-based brewery and purchased from an international purveyor of used brewery equipment, hence all the Kanji characters.

“It was an interesting experience,” says Oliver of the several weeks it took for him to put the Godzilla of a brewing puzzle together. Though he can’t read Japanese, Oliver is an experienced brewer with over 10 years in the industry, a master brewing degree from University of California-Davis and a particular affinity for German-style brewing. Most recently, Oliver was a regional brewing supervisor for Gordon Biersch and spent six and a half years with that outfit.

Foreign language issues aside, Oliver says the equipment is top-notch. By contrast to the more English-style brewing equipment you’ll typically find at many U.S. small-batch breweries, Oliver says these high-end, German-style brewing tanks, tubes, dials and such “allow me to use more technique.”

“I have more control and can fine-tune the process,” he says.

Currently, Oliver has five beers on tap. Once the brewery reaches full capacity, Oliver says he’ll have seven different beers at any one time, with four core house brews—Wintergreen Weiss (a Bavarian-style Hefeweizen), Eight Point IPA (an American-style pale ale), Helles Golden Lager and a Viennese-style amber lager—always available.

Now, it’s fitting that the brewhouse has such an interesting history, because the  walls of the lodge-y-looking brewery and restaurant building itself could tell us many stories of their formers lives—if they could talk, that is, in English. The timbers and basic structure are newly engineered by Lindal Cedar Homes; however, the rusty tin roofing on the walls came from an old dairy barn in Maryland; the wood flooring is recycled from a tobacco barn in Pennsylvania; the tables, banquet seating and booths are all made of recycled wood from a horse farm in Uppersville, Virginia; and the stonework is made of local river rock. Oh, and the place is decorated with lots of mounted animal heads from owner Steve Crandall and fellow local hunters’ pursuits—so, you know, another form of repurposing.

Crandall, who owns Tectonics Customs Homes (the builder of the brewery, incidentally), together with his partners, plans to develop a large tract of land there at the base of Wintergreen into a “green” and pedestrian-friendly residential and retail community called Glen Mary. Devil’s Backbone Brewing Company is the flagship business and the first to be built. Devil’s’ General Manager Chris Trotter tells us that Crandall and friends granted a portion of the site back to Nelson County for the possible purpose of building a skate park. “The plan is to make this area the Virginia Jackson Hole,” says Trotter, who is referring, of course, to über cool resort town Jackson Hole, Wyoming, which is beloved almost as much for its dining, entertaining and non-skiing recreations as it is for its amazing slopes and powder.

So speaking of having something for everyone, the brewery also serves a guest micro-brew on tap at all times as well as your weenie beer drinkers’ favs (Bud Light, etc.) There’s also a wine list that includes several selections from nearby Nelson County wineries.

As for the food, Chef Shawn Goodwin calls it “Nuevo Cowboy” cuisine. Think hardy, beer-battered and Southwest influences. Goodwin is using lots of local goodies, such as local beef from Black Eagle Farm in Piney River. The cattle are grass fed but finished off with, get this, the spent grains from the brewery’s brewing process. How’s that for symbiosis?

Categories
News

The upside of the downturn

If you’re like me, you’ve spent the last six months in the glow of computer screens that shine slumping graphs onto your bewildered face, mumbling the day’s TED spread in your sleep and generally trying not to freak out as we ride out our sputtering economy as Amelia Earhart surely rode out her Lockheed Electra.

The national unemployment rate hit 6.5 percent in October, while retail sales fell 2.8 percent. Even UVA, that last bastion of steady-handed investment in these shaky times, saw its endowment drop $600 million.

Let’s face it. Worrying is not going to fix this economic mess. Truth is, we don’t know how to fix it. This thing may not be fixable.

The finance people who broke our economy don’t even know exactly how they did it. The details of this crash seem almost magical, even to the detail people. It’s a little like letting a Wall Street guy borrow your car, except that he comes back not only without your car but also without a firm grasp on the concept of cars.

In short: We’re screwed.

Slumps beget downturns beget recessions, on and on, until we find ourselves much like our grandparents, waking up to a daggone Great Depression. But not the ’30s-style, fedora-wearing Depression that we’ve seen in WPA photographs. Oh no. This will be a new Great Depression.

But like our grandparents, who scraped out of their hardship with ramrod backbones and enough steely-eyed determination to fill the burlap sack that they unfortunately ended up wearing a week later, we will overcome. In fact, the coming Great Depression has the potential to be The Greatest Depression Ever™.

If there’s one thing this country has left, it’s optimism…because, really, with no auto or steel industries left, optimism’s the one thing we got going for us. Yup, blind, religious-like optimism.

It’s this optimism that allows us to see the upsides of the economic downturn. And not just the obvious ones. Sure, the price of oil is dropping, allowing us to drive a block to buy a bottle of water again, and house prices are now affordable—sort of. And yes, soon we’ll probably see another stimulus check which will go straight to MasterCard.
But there is a positive underbelly to this slug of an economy. I’m talking far-reaching, life-changing upsides. Take that MasterCard bill. Maybe by the time it comes due, we’ll all

be out from underneath the boot of credit card companies.

Maybe, just maybe, The Greatest Depression Ever will see us, as a people, grow more healthy, more educated, working fulfilling jobs and listening to better music. Maybe this downturn is just the thing we need to move forward as a nation, to grow some grit and steady our nerves.

We the people might even emerge from this as a stronger, wiser generation, the kind our grandparents became.
There is a chance, by God, that this is our crucible, our moment of definition, and from it will come a better world filled with a richer populous, in both body and soul.
 
Optimism! Yes! We will follow its light through this dark, worst time because, let’s face it, rationalism is just too dang scary at this point. Vowing this, here are 13 upsides to the downturn.

No more credit card debt.

Remember the movie Fight Club, where Brad Pitt and his co-stars—Brad Pitt’s Gleaming Eyes and Brad Pitt’s Rippling Abdominals—try to blow up the headquarters of every credit card company and thereby free consumers around the world from a lifetime trapped in the samsara of $2.14 coffee purchases carrying 27 percent interest?

No? Well, it’s the movie in which he bleeds a lot.

Something similar might be brewing, albeit without vintage shirts and nitroglycerin. Credit card companies have been quietly packaging credit card debt into securities, then selling those securities to investors.

If this sounds familiar, it should. It’s called securitization, the practice that got the mortgage industry into so much trouble. Everything was (supposedly) fine in Mortgage Land until housing prices finally dropped and people started going delinquent and defaulting on their loans. Defaults then caused a wave of foreclosures that—not to put too fine a point on it—put not only the mortgage industry but high finance in the crapper.

According to USA Today, credit card delinquencies are at their highest point in six years, with default rising rapidly. Enough defaults, and suddenly you’ve got even more toxic securities floating around, wreaking havoc and potentially doing what even Mr. Cheekbones himself couldn’t—bringing down credit card companies.

In a perfect world, all companies would collapse, leaving us with no more debt and several handy windshield scrapers. Must likely, though, we’ll have to settle for the schedenfreude that comes from watching the Feds lend money to Visa, only to jack up interest rates without reason or warning and provide shitty customer service over the phone.

Better public health.

Ever see those photographs from the original Great Depression? People looked good, huh? Standing in long lines, resting on porches after 18-hour days of sharecropping that put them even further in the hole, those folks were just working the look.

They were slim, trim, lounging about like they had discovered the secret to the perfect body. They had—Poverty!
Some researchers have found that as the economy tanks, our collective health improves. Why? Well, we could throw a lot of fancy numbers at you, with variables, control groups and cosigns, but let’s put it simply: When we don’t have any money, we can no longer afford to buy the everyday shit that is slowly killing us.

The L.A. Times reported that Christopher J. Ruhm, professor of economics at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, found that deaths decrease as unemployment goes up. Most people drink less, smoke less and cut down on eating out, instead opting for cheaper, more healthful food. They also drive less, which translates to fewer traffic-related deaths. And people get more exercise—no more sitting at a desk for nine or 10 hours, surrounded by packaged balls of polysyllabic chemicals that pass for food. No sir, the unemployed get some goddamn exercise, what with the pounding the pavement, the frantic searching for a job beneath your dignity and the constant worrying.

An hour of worrying burns 278 calories! It’s true!

And don’t forget the fresh air. The Downtown Mall will be the new ACAC when our whole stupid economy sounds its death rattle and collapses into a Milton Friedman-induced black economic hole. With no jobs or gym memberships, we’ll have nothing to do but sweat out laps on the bricks.

Bonus for rich people.

The treadmills, rowing machines, and Stairmasters will now be clear of hoi polloi who have lost their “jobs” that allowed them to pay for membership, leaving the select few to pursue their gerbil-like exercises without waiting for a machine.

Easier coffee orders.

With disposable income, much like health insurance, rapidly become a thing of our prosperous past, no longer will we have to stand in line at Mudhouse behind business-

suited nitwits and professional mothers, their charges in SUV strollers, while each orders “coffee drinks,” stringing together no fewer than 18 words for over a minute and a half while we, the hard-working people—the backbone of the economy, dammit!—stand behind them, waiting to order a simple cup of coffee, black if you please.

We don’t want to overstate the importance of this. But this may be the single greatest benefit of our economic downturn: the melting of the $4, iced mocha-halfcaff-skinny-soy-doubleshot-lightwhip-latte at the headwaters of coffee lines around the town—nay, around the world!

Even more Horatio Alger stories.

You can’t go from rags to riches if you don’t have some rags. And a 6.5 percent unemployment rate will get you some goddamn rags.

Banks pay you more.

The Wall Street Journal recently reported that banks large and small are trying to lure more customers with increased interest rates on deposits. Of course, deposits require money, which none of us will have, but we can take solace in knowing that if we had some cash, we’d be getting paid handsomely for not spending it, right?

A better-educated workforce.

It’s a dynamic that is as sure as tomorrow’s slumping market numbers: When the economy tanks, enrollment for community colleges increase. The job market gets leaner, wages stagnate, and people see an opportunity to pump up their resumes and make themselves more marketable. Folks around these parts are no different.

Piedmont Virginia Community College has seen enrollment increase 17 percent since fall 2005. Anita Showers, manager of marketing and relations at PVCC, says that the economic downturn is “one of the dynamics” driving the bounce in enrollment.

If it takes a total collapse of the economy to get a better-educated workforce, so be it. Eggs and omelets and all of that, right?

Of course, this is presuming that there will be jobs for all of us well-skilled, whip-smart workers. It also assumes we don’t all turn into English majors, we suppose. But don’t worry about job creation, because …

Our new Corporate Masters will emerge.

What do Intel, Microsoft, Apple, and HP have in common? Other than having their advertising campaigns skillfully burned into our collective hypothalamus, each was founded during the beary-ist of bear markets.

So which new Corporate Giants will emerge from these Hard Times? Is there a Spicy Bear IPO in the near future?

The New WPA.

When the original Great Depression hit, New Deal economists seized on the loony idea of putting unemployed people to work on the Fed’s dime by having them do jobs essential to the nation’s well-being. Instead of, you know, pumping billion after billion directly into the industries that precipitated the entire crisis by using the wrong Excel spreadsheet to assess risk.

The creation of the Works Progress Administration turned us all into socialists, of course. But nobody seemed to care because redistribution of wealth isn’t that big a deal when there are no more bankers, on account of them all jumping out of windows, this fact according to our most reliable historic cartoons. So we fixed bridges and built roads and documented our society, a society that was quickly, it surely must have seemed, going none-too-gently into that good night.

As the The Greatest Depression begins to take hold, socialism will inevitably make a comeback, due to us recently electing one of those socialist guys. And this could mean big things for not only the nation, but for Charlottesville as well.

We may finally be able to fix all those bridges and sewer mainlines and the crumbling Interstate system, those things that are too boring to pay attention to when we’re all rich and throwing around multiple credit cards at fancy bars and then sweating out day-old whiskey stink on gold-plated treadmills.

But now…. We will know what work is.

Perhaps cities like San Francisco, Philadelphia and—who knows?—even Charlottesville can complete what has been, up until the housing market dissolved and the credit markets gave us the finger, our three-year boondoggle of bringing broadband Internet to every corner of this great land. So we can all, in one great patriotic push, ruthlessly scour Craigslist for a job.  And then decades later, we will explain to our clueless young children, with a touch of by-the-bootstraps pride, how we used to have to schlep actual “laptops” to “coffee shops” for the Internet.

In Charlottesville, under the Brand New Deal™, buskers will surely be paid a living wage by the government under the new and improved WPA, since none of us will have a dollar to spare to hear that one really cool Radiohead song yet again. Ditto graffiti artists, electronic musicians, and any other person whose art holds the promise of obscure poverty, if not full-on starvation.

This will not apply to area poets whose names include the words “Charles,” “Wright,” “Rita,” or “Dove.” Sorry suckers—you’re on your own.

Better music.

Look. We like 23-year-olds in snap-button flannel singing Depression-era songs as much as the next Charlottesville resident, really. But sometimes enough is enough. As the markets crash and bread lines form, the New Greatest Depression will hopefully usher in our own Depression-era music. A music that is formed out of our rough times, not our grandparents’. The New Greatest Depression will ring of our stories, told by our best musicians, and hopefully not another teenager who downloaded “Tom Joad” lyrics to his iPhone.

Don’t get it twisted, the Great Depression gave us the Carter Family, which gave us “No Depression” which gave us Uncle Tupelo, which gave us Jeff Tweedy, who gives my girlfriend the hots, from which I reap benefits. But now is our time to birth a new kind of blues and quit riding coattails, albeit heavily patched and dirty ones.

It is a sad fact that the best music comes from the worst times. The Great Depression gave us Woody. Reaganomics gave us Public Enemy. The Cold War, Metallica. And who came out of those heady, Internet Boom days? The biting genius of the Backstreet Boys, LeAnn Rimes and post-Biggie Puff Daddy doing that silly dance during the breakdown of seemingly every song on the damn radio.

These new days will belong to innovators and poets. In short, long live the Beetnix.

The demise of Linens ‘n Things.

Enough said on this, really. Thanks to this depot of uselessness filing for bankruptcy, there will be far fewer grown men having temper tantrums in the home decor sections of our nation. A quiet national dignity will assuredly return.

No more flip-flops.

As jobs become fewer and ever more precious, sartorial consideration will become increasingly important.

No more rolling into the office—assuming you still have an office—looking like the poster boy for Gamma Delta Papasmoney. And no more goddamn grown men wearing flip-flops.

Take a look at those photos from the original Great Depression. Even the unemployed had style. And not a single flip nor flop among them.

Furloughs.

After the 10- and 12-hour workdays brought by a booming economy, who doesn’t need a break? Well, employees at large companies like HP are about to get one, without pay, of course. As big-name businesses and government agencies grow more desperate in their fight against red ink, they will increasingly turn to a time-honored tactic of saving money—not giving their employees any. HP and Micro, two tech heavy hitters, recently announced holiday furloughs. And Fairfax County has also furloughed employees for at least a day.

Which leave workers plenty of time to relax, watch what little savings they have dwindle, and generally enjoy life as it ever so gently flutters to a collapse around them.

Categories
Living

December 08: Hot house

 

We think this place in the Rugby neighborhood looks just perfect for entertaining. No idea whether there’s an open floor plan inside, allowing hostess to chat while fixing cocktails—it’s more that the front porch looks so nicely sheltered for summer afternoons, and the house’s solid form and lovely trees are as inviting as could be on a winter’s eve. We’d accept an invitation anytime.