Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at UVA expands to Staunton

The Osher Lifelong Learning Institute (OLLI) at the University of Virginia will offer courses in Staunton this fall, reports Newsleader.com. Classes begin in September at the R.R. Smith Center for History and Art.

OLLI is a national not for profit organization that replaced the Jefferson Institute for Lifelong Learning at UVA in 2001. The institute offers classes covering topics from "History of Opera" and "Prisons in America: An Insider’s View" and targets retirees. Class sizes range from 20 to 80 students.

Formerly, many seniors made the trek from Waynesboro to Charlottesville in order to take classes, explained Joan Kammire, the director of OLLI’s Charlottesville office operations, but these students will now be able to attend classes closer to home.

The Valley location has already attracted many more members for the Institute—50 as of June. OLLI instructors work on a volunteer basis.

New Green Scene writer: Meet the menagerie!

Welcome to Flea Circus Farm!

It’s a bit mangy with a healthy dose of playfulness. We’ve got stripes and polka dots alongside hay and chickens. There’s an ever-expanding garden chock full of veggies and other edibles. Our hardy kiwi vine supports could double as massive tent poles. There is a friendly mutt lazing about and small children giggling and digging in the sand. The ringmasters (my husband and I) are busy scurrying up ladders and under the fruit trees trying to herd everyone back to where they belong. The flock of tiny chickens is squawking, the bees are humming and the family cat is sunning on a chair. 

My son, Judah, wearing the dog bowl for a hat and showing you a bit of Flea Circus Farm!
 
Allow me to introduce myself: my name is Christy and I will be filling in for Erika while she begins the grand adventure of parenting. Congratulations, Earth mama!

Our home is a tiny 1940s fixer-upper in Belmont with a big backyard (by city standards). And speaking of standards, we try to hold ourselves to being conscientious about our lifestyle choices: recognizing the impact and consequences for our consumption and behavior. 

Over the last few years we have been hungrily ripping out quack grass and amending the red clay that makes up our yard. As the compost and manure have spread their magic in the earth and new trees and plants have replaced the spiky rhizomes, I have been amazed by the diversity of life that now exists in our backyard! Birds have nested and returned and nested again, honeybees abound, and the earthworms seem to thank us with their sheer number. 

Our backyard when we first moved in…
Our backyard after the green took over!

All in all, whether naming the backyard chickens or knowing the names of my neighbors’ children, whether soothing a cold with elderberry syrup from home-grown berries to having our family doctor make a house call, whether visiting the farm or getting my hands dirty in the garden–it’s all about the relationships.

I am thrilled to have the opportunity to share some of my latest “green” projects and ideas as well as hear from you, dear reader, about your eco-adventures. My hope from this little platform is to start a conversation and maybe get you asking some questions of your own.

What is your latest project?

 
 

 

New plays at the Hamner; new Birdlips vids; Willie Nelson; a local craft fair

Art everywhere!

  • It was pure wanderlust that took Birdlips from Charlottesville to San Francisco, but a new project called "DRIFT" will take them everywhere else. Behold this early entry in the duo’s wandering musical project, of last year’s "High on Yourself." (The duo returns to the Southern next month.)

A new video from Birdlips. More below.

  • All weekend: Lookie-lookie! Hamner Theater has a snazzy new website, where you can  check out the dates for VPSI Readings—that’s the Virginia Playwrights and Screenwriters Initiative. Enjoy (for free!) original new works by some distinguished locals, including Peter Coy and Clinton Johnston.
  • Tim Burton gave this old tale a breath of fresh air in this year’s film rendition, but delve into Lewis Carroll’s off-kilter kids’ classic Alice in Wonderland at Four County Players, opening this weekend, to learn the true meaning of strange.

The 1903 film adaptation of Alice in Wonderland is just about as scary as Tim Burton’s. How will Four County Players’ compete?

  • The red-headed stranger himself returns to the Charlottesville Pavilion tomorrow night. Have a look at this video: Looks like ol’ Uncle Willie‘s has spent as much time in his life singin’ as he has talkin’.

Willie’s cover of Jimmy Cliff’s "The Harder They Come" from his infamous 2005 reggae album. What’s not to love about Willie Nelson?

  • Tomorrow afternoon, Craft Work delivers exactly what it sounds like it would: Local Handmade, and Vintage Wares. Drop dosh on duds, or get goods for the new digs at the BridgePAI—whatever you do, watch this live Kraftwerk video: 

Gift bags, cheap decor, and other baby needs

As I said in my last post, the material side of oncoming parenthood has been a challenge for me. What does one really need in order to properly care for a baby? And how much of it needs to be purchased brand-new?

Where possible, we’ve found ways to avoid the big-box route. We bought a secondhand bookshelf for baby books, and a secondhand dresser that will double as a changing table. Instead of decorating with conventional baby stuff, I spent $1 on a used coffee table book, cut out pages with images I think a baby might like, and hung them on the wall.

And we’re very lucky that much of the clothes and gear—stroller, carseat, bouncy chair—has been handed down to us by family and friends. I scored a co-sleeper on freecycle, and when our baby’s ready for a crib he or she will sleep in the same one my husband used as a child. My cousin sent boxes of onesies and blankets, and our friends sent dozens of cloth diapers.

Which is greener–the hand-me-down jammies on the left, or the new organic-cotton onesie on the right? I don’t know, but they both make me giggle.

Still, a certain amount of consumption has seemed to unstoppably follow the announcement that we’re expecting. I was wary when my mom wanted to throw me a baby shower, knowing that some of the gifts would likely go unused, and that all the gifts would be surrounded by layers of tissue and glossy gift bags. Loading the registry with stuff made of organic cotton and wool was the best solution I could come up with, though this meant sending guests to shop online rather than in their local stores. (Alas, nobody went for my “used baby monitor” suggestion.)

I myself have ended up in places like Target and Bed Bath & Beyond a bit more frequently in recent months, as though strip-mall shopping were another symptom of pregnancy. But I’ve also gotten more familiar with local places like Sugar Snap Consignment and the Blue Ridge Eco Shop. And I’ve learned that Charlottesville’s full of eco-minded parents—a community that will no doubt be a huge resource for me as the questions inevitably arise.

Parents, how do you keep your kid-related shopping to a minimum? 

FBI looking into Jim Baldi case?

From former clients of his Virginia Payroll & Tax business to the Virginia Department of Taxation, more than a few folks would like to know the whereabouts of Jim Baldi. Baldi, who also owns Belmont club Bel Rio, now shuttered, slipped out of Charlottesville during the last few weeks without a trace, apparently. Other published reports say Baldi left town with former Bel Rio server Kristian Throckmorton, 25. According to some of Baldi’s former coworkers and clients, the Federal Bureau of Investigation may want to know where he is, too.

“He’s left a trail of disaster,” says Ryan Martin, owner of Martin’s Grill on Route 29. Martin says he hired Baldi to handle his restaurant’s taxes and payroll, but changed services after he noticed that Baldi stopped submitting copies of receipts from tax payments.

Martin claims he was contacted by someone who had passed Martin’s contact information to the FBI, in case the FBI wanted to ask about his involvement with Baldi. A former Baldi coworker, who asked to remain anonymous for fear of reprisal within the local restaurant scene, received a similar call. FBI spokesperson Dee Rybiski told C-VILLE that “[i]t’s against FBI policy to say whether or not we do have any cases on anything.” Read more after the photo.

Jim Baldi (left), tending bar at Bel Rio

Tony Jorge, owner of Café Cubano, a Downtown Mall restaurant, says that Baldi handled his payroll and accounting for roughly four years—a job he’d held until recently. Jorge says he was interested in a more accessible accounting firm, and began looking for one after Baldi’s Downtown office for Virginia Payroll, located in the 200 block of West Main Street, closed.

“There has been maybe a little bit of late filing,” says Jorge of Baldi’s accounting work. However, he says any penalty for late filings was typically picked up by Baldi.

Another local restaurant manager who previously worked with Baldi at Bel Rio says he began to doubt Baldi’s business methods when he “realized how much Jim was doing outside of [Bel Rio.]
“He was doing payroll for over 50 different businesses here in Charlottesville,” estimates the source, “and still running that place. The thing that caught me off guard was how somebody that involved with an outside source of work could bartend at their own restaurant on the busiest nights during the week.”

If Baldi were juggling several professional obligations, a few seemed to drop during the last six months. On February 2, the Charlottesville General District Court ordered Baldi evicted from his Downtown Mall office, for failure to pay more than $2,200 in rent to landlord Joe Gieck. Calls to Gieck were not immediately returned.

On March 15, the Internal Revenue Service filed notice of a tax lien in Charlottesville Circuit Court against Bel Rio, LLC—originally formed by Baldi and former business partners Dave Simpson and Gareth Weldon—in the amount of $12,989.93. The lien is for a quarterly tax return, for the period of March 31 to June 29, 2009.

On July 16—the day after Bel Rio landlord Jeff Easter voluntarily surrendered the club’s liquor license—the state Department of Taxation filed a $5,111.88 lien for sales and withholding taxes. (Withholding tax, explains the department, is “the amount of tax to be withheld from each of your employees’ wages.”) The taxes date from November 2008 to March 2009.

The Federal lien notice lists the address of Bel Rio, LLC as that of the club, on Monticello Road. The recent state lien, also filed against the LLC, gives the address of Baldi’s home—a two-story pink house with the tallest wooden fence on its block of Elliott Avenue. The home, purchased for $95,000 in June 2000, has been on the market since January, and is currently listed at $189,000.

A neighbor commented that she doesn’t know Baldi, but has not experienced any trouble with noise or raucous parties—issues that led to heightened scrutiny by City officials and neighbors during Bel Rio’s existence.

Jorge, who says he hopes to reclaim Café Cubano’s tax return and profit-and-loss statements from Baldi, calls the man’s sudden departure and recent inaccessibility “uncharacteristic.”

“It’s unsettling,” says Jorge. “It’s very unsettling.”

UCARE wraps up public meetings for new slavery memorial at UVA

After the Virginia General Assembly released the expression of regret for Virginia’s involvement in slavery in February 2007, the UVA Board of Visitors initiated the installment of a black slate marker to acknowledge the history of slavery at the University. The memorial marker is located on the brick walkway on the West side of the Rotunda, and bears a short inscription. The founding of UCARE, or University and Community Action for Racial Equity, followed suit in response to the call for reconciliation.

“Ishraga Eltahir, a rising fourth year and UCARE intern who pushed for this proposal, distributed a UVA-wide survey asking students if they knew the marker existed and if they thought it was enough,” explained Jessie Ray, the Project Director for UCARE, during a recent public input meeting at the Haven Downtown shelter. “After gathering 800-something survey responses, the outcome was ‘No, we don’t know it’s there, and, yes, we think there needs to be something more visible.’”

Since the spring, UCARE has hosted focus-groups for the student-initiated proposal, seeking feedback from the University and the community on the purpose, location and aesthetic of a new memorial. From conception to construction, the project is expected to take five years, said Ray. In August, an advisory board will assemble to withhold the integrity of the proposal. The board will also organize idea competitions and design competitions among students and the community.

Flo King, a rising fourth year and UCARE intern, spoke of the history each UVA student inherits. “I still know UVA students who don’t know there were slaves here or that there’s a slavery memorial on Grounds and what the significance of stepping over it is,” she explained. “You don’t have to apologize, you can take it or leave it, but I think it’s important to have some kind of aspect that would take their learning and education further, and wouldn’t just end at the memorial.”

Frank Dukes, the Director of the Institute for Environmental Negotiation at UVA (and a facilitator of Quality Community Council’s "Race and Repair" course), affirmed the need for a more adequate memorial. “If this ‘expression of regret’ is taken seriously, what would it really look like?” he asked the group.

The attendees stressed that the memorial be educational and have an ongoing presence within UVA and the community, and Dukes summarized the participants’ ideas. “The memorial should welcome people, move people, educate people, and empower people, to compel change or recognize changes,” he said.

What should a new memorial look like? Leave your thoughts below.
 

Wisconsin guard/forward Paul Jesperson is Tony Bennett’s first 2011 commit

Virginia’s Tony Bennett has struck 2011 recruiting gold in his home state of Wisconsin. Wednesday night, Paul Jesperson, a guard/small forward out of Merrill, Wisconsin has committed to the Hoos.

Jesperson is a rising senior, and is the first recruit of the 2011 freshman class to officially commit to the Wahoos. He’s rated a 4-star recruit by several college hoops recruiting experts. Rivals.com ranks Jesperson in the top-150 recruits nationally, and rates him a 3-star talent.

Bennett’s 6-player 2010 recruiting class is ranked among the top-20 classes in the nation. That’s sure something not seen in many years by Virginia hoops fans!

Also, on a personal note, my lovely wife Harmony gave birth to our own 5-star recruit at 4:11 a.m. on Tuesday morning. Our son is named Myles Cooper Thurston. Cooper was born at Martha Jefferson and weighed 7 pounds 9 ounces. Both mom and baby are doing great. Click on the link if you’d like to see some photos.

Go Hoos! www.benjaminhernandez.net/-/benjaminhernandez/galleryindex.asp

Oliver Kuttner’s Edison2: Last road warrior in Automotive X-Prize race

"Chances are, if you’re a green car blogs reader, you’ve heard of the Automotive X-Prize," writes Christopher DeMorro, a blogger for Gas 2.0. And if you’ve heard of the Automotive X-Prize, chances are you’ve heard of the sole competitor left with a shot at the competition’s $5 million prize—former Charlottesville developer Oliver Kuttner.

Three "Very Light Car" designs (explained) from Kuttner’s Edison2 design team remain in the X-Prize challenge, which encourages teams of researchers "to build a car that gets at least 100 MPGe [miles per gallon equivalent] in real world driving and is safe, affordable and desirable." While the competition still has a few weeks of tests remaining, Kuttner’s squad is the last group with a shot at the win, having posted some fine results in the June 29 knockout (here, in PDF).

Kuttner’s Chief of Design, Ron Mathis, recently spoke with design blog Inhabitat about the three Edison2 designs remaining in the challenge. And, to hear AutoBlog.com tell it, one of them seems ready and able to crack the 100MPGe barrier. Or, hear a bit more from Kuttner himself:

UVA, INOVA Fairfax Hospital get $2.5 million to study elderly drivers

From some of the researchers who brought you studies of booster seats in the International Journal of Crashworthiness, and some of the collaborators involved in the Network for Cardiothoracic Surgical Investigations in Cardiovascular Medicine

UVA and INOVA Fairfax Hospital—the collaborators mentioned above—received a $2.5 million grant from the National Highway and Traffic Safety Administration, to be put towards a Crash Injury Research and Engineering Network (CIREN) center. The CIREN center will study injuries among elderly drivers and passengers involved in automobile accidents.

"The center will provide engineering and medical expertise in test subject enrollment, crash investigation, analysis of automobile crash data, impact biomechanics and research and community outreach," according to a press release from UVA.

The institute will report to Thomas Skalak, Vice President for Research at UVA. Principal investigators for the center’s studies are UVA’s Jeff Crandall, a professor of mechanical engineering, and Dr. Mark Sochor, an associate professor of emergency medicine.

Attempted sexual assault reported on Roosevelt Brown Blvd

According to an e-mail from UVA Chief of Police Michael Gibson sent to the University community, city police responded to a report of an attempted sexual assault on Monday at 11:30pm on Roosevelt Brown Boulevard, off of West Main Street.

Gibson says that as a female UVA student walked along the road, a man approached her from behind and pushed her into the bushes, then fled after a struggle. The assailant is described as a Hispanic male in his early 30s, approximately 5’7’’, and 150 to 160 pounds. Anyone with information concerning this incident should contact the Charlottesville Police at 970-3280, or CrimeStoppers at 977-4000.

Gibson also shares a few safety tips:

– Trust your instincts about a person or situation. If you feel uncomfortable, immediately report your concerns to police by calling 911.
– If you find yourself in a similar situation, turn over material belongings to the suspect and focus on his or her physical characteristics—i.e., clothing, description, height and weight, and last known direction of travel.
– Be aware of your surroundings. Do not let a cell phone conversation or listening to music distract you when walking or in a situation that calls for your full attention.
– Avoid isolated areas when walking alone at night. Use SafeRide (434-242-1122), walk with friends, or take the late-night weekend bus.
– Report suspicious activity or people immediately by calling 911.