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News

Dominion sues landowners for pipeline survey access

Dominion has filed suit against holdout landowners in Nelson and Augusta counties who since May have refused to let the energy company survey their land for its proposed 550-mile natural gas pipeline.

According to Dominion spokesman Jim Norvelle, the company filed 20 suits in Nelson County and 27 more in Augusta County last Thursday and Friday. The legal action cites a Virginia statute that allows gas companies to conduct surveys without landowner permission in order to satisfy regulatory requirements.

“We anticipate the courts notifying the affected landowners during the first week of the year,” Norvelle said in an e-mail Wednesday. “They then will have 21 days to respond. Court dates, if necessary, will be set later. We would welcome any of the landowners who will be notified to grant us permission and forego the court date.”

There are more lawsuits to come in both counties. Norvelle confirmed that the company intends to file suit against a total of 122 people in Nelson and 56 in Augusta.

“This is a lot of paperwork to process; hence, the stages,” Norvelle said.

Dominion intends to sue a total of 245 landowners for access along the proposed Atlantic Coast Pipeline route, which stretches from fracked shale fields in West Virginia to southern North Carolina. There are no planned suits in West Virginia and only five in North Carolina, said Norvelle. That means more than 70 percent of the total number of lawsuits Dominion is filing will involve landowners in Nelson and Augusta.

“In other words, the vast majority of landowners along the route understand the importance of meeting with us and allowing us to survey so that we can understand their property,” Norvelle said. “The only person who knows the property the best is the landowner who can help us plan the best route with the least impact to the environment, historic and cultural resources.”

Categories
Living

Tucker Yoder checks out of Clifton Inn, Slice abruptly shuts down and more local restaurant news

Inn and out

Tis the season for accoladed executive chefs to make some big changes, apparently. Not long after Melissa Close-Hart left her 14-year gig at Palladio to strike out on her own in Belmont, her culinary school classmate Tucker Yoder announced his plan to step down from his post as executive chef at Clifton Inn on Christmas day.

“I’ve been here for four years, and I think it was just time to go,” Yoder said. “All the folks that have been working with me will still be there, so it’ll be the same kitchen, just without me.”

Yoder, who honeymooned at Clifton Inn with his wife “many years ago,” came back to work as a sous chef under the now executive chef of Maya Christian Kelly, and stepped up as executive chef four years ago. Other predecessors as head of the kitchen include The Barbeque Exchange’s Craig Hartman and C&O’s Dean Maupin. The restaurant has maintained its fine dining identity through all iterations, and Yoder put heavy emphasis on the property’s expansive garden.

“They gave me a lot of freedom to do what I wanted,” he said. “I got to expand the existing vegetable garden, make it bigger, with more interesting things. I discovered all the crazy things that already grow on the property that they weren’t utilizing before.”

Yoder said he’s not sure what Clifton Inn’s plan is in terms of replacing him permanently, but in the meantime, sous chef Jared Adams is taking over. Clifton management did not return our call for comment.

As for Yoder’s next endeavor? He said he’s still working on that.

“I’ll more than likely stay in Charlottesville,” he said. “I’m doing some holiday parties for friends, and I’m fielding all offers.”

Cut out

Slice owner Chris Herring alluded to some rent pressure at the Barracks Road Shopping Center in an October interview, but the pizza joint’s closure announcement in early December was still abrupt. The store was completely empty within two weeks, and neighboring businesses reported they were surprised by Slice’s swift departure.

Herring and his wife Cassie did not respond to a message requesting comment, but according to the Slice website and Facebook page, the pizzeria closed “due to circumstances beyond our control,” and the husband and wife team “plan to open at a new location as soon as possible.” Slice isn’t the first mom-and-pop to depart Barracks Road in recent memory. Locally owned Lloyd’s Hallmark, Peace Frogs, Shenanigans, Lynne Goldman Studio and Blue Ridge Mountain Sports all have left the center in the past several years.

Despite Herring’s concerns about rent and foodstuffs pricing in October, he was upbeat about his restaurant’s prospects. Slice had recently expanded its hours to offer frittatas and breakfast pizza in the morning and was planning to launch a line of sweet and savory pies to widen the notion of a “slice.” Herring suggested at the time there might be another Slice in the works but was reluctant to offer details. Perhaps the new location will be coming sooner than anyone expected.

Fell flat?

Some local parents may be pleased to find out that there is one less frozen yogurt option in town. Less than a year after CUPS Frozen Yogurt made its Charlottesville debut next to Zinburger Wine & Burger Bar, the vibrantly decorated self-serve ice cream shop that’s been compared in the media to Hooters quietly closed its Barracks Road Shopping Center location.

Representatives from The Briad Group, the New Jersey-based company that operates CUPS and its Barracks Road neighbor Zinburger, didn’t return call for comment. But Tom Beyer from The Briad Group’s PR firm DFPR kept it short and sweet.

“They made a business decision to shut down that location,” Beyer said, declining to offer any more details.

Build-your-own froyo sundae spots have been our jam for several years now, so we all know the drill. CUPS stores feature a row of soft-serve frozen yogurt in flavors ranging from classic chocolate and vanilla to seasonal options like eggnog and salted caramel popcorn, plus more than 40 toppings, like chocolate chip cookie dough bites, jelly beans and fresh fruit.

With your dessert, though, comes what some parents consider an unhealthy helping of sexual innuendo. Catch-phrases like “Size matters…fill up your cup” and “Don’t go topless…sprinkle on your favorite toppings” are posted on the walls alongside 1960s-style beach posters featuring men and women in skimpy bathing suits. Teenage and young adult girls with plunging pink and purple necklines work behind the counter, and top 40 music thumps from the speakers. Parents who contacted C-VILLE earlier this year were “disgusted that Barracks Road would consider opening such a shop,” and said the “combination of the sexual innuendo and ice cream” was not something they wanted to explain to their kids.

Beyer declined to respond when asked if the media-hyped portrayal of the froyo shop as a dessert version of Hooters has contributed to the closing of CUPS. According to Yelp reviews and local news reporters, CUPS locations in Bridgewater and Morristown, New Jersey, have also closed since 2013.

Categories
Arts

Art lessons: Advice for living a more creative life

Every week for the last 10 months, I’ve interviewed area artists for this column.

Over coffee and phone lines I’ve been privileged to speak with writers, painters, sculptors, musicians, dancers, actors and mixed media creators. We’d talk for an hour, I’d write for three more, and in the process I’ve found a few themes that cause ordinary people with recognizable lives to wake up every day and slip on the artist’s mantle because they feel they must.

They make art for no money (or very little) and range from wide-eyed hopefuls to seasoned vets. They are full-timers and freelancers, parents and children, teenage students and octogenarians, and they measure the meaning of life not by profit or social approval but by something else entirely.

The new year is a time when most of us resolve to improve our lives. If your best life includes viewing your world through an artistic lens, here are 13 of my favorite suggestions for becoming an artist in 2015.

1. Pay extraordinary attention to ordinary things.

“These aren’t just people sharing their stories but what connects us in those stories. Even when these [nonfiction essays] are about a man with alcoholism or a breakup, they’re about me on some level. There’s something to me about paying attention to our experiences and allowing them to be meaningful. Mundane things that happen to us can be transformed if we really notice them.”—Susan McCulley, contributor to the online literary journal Full Grown People, on essay writing

2. Chase experiences, not beauty.

“If people describe my work as pretty, I feel insulted on some level because all it means is that I was present for something beautiful. A picture is what it is, it’s accurate, but the truth of a picture is extremely subjective. I’m trying to harness some sort of visceral experience.”—Photojournalist Philip de Jong on creating beautiful photography

3. Be prolific, not perfect.

“Think about humans versus dandelions. We gestate our young, these singular creatures, and take care of them for years. Some artists work that way, but there’s another way of looking at it. Dandelions release thousands of seeds. The majority don’t survive, but everywhere there can be a dandelion, there will be a dandelion.”—Artist Warren Craghead on his rapid production of mixed media works

4. Tell your truth.

“[Writing is] an act of translating what’s in your head to what someone who’s not in your head can understand. I’m always a little suspicious if there’s a book that everyone loves because it’s probably safer somehow—more eager to please. I don’t think fiction should be likable. I only care if a story is complex and compelling and feels real.”—Elliott Holt, author, on what she’s learned since winning the Pushcart Prize

5. Trust your instincts.

“So much of the work I’m doing now, from teaching to coaching to writing, has been created because of people who knew Dirty Barbie and either wanted to see it again or see more of my work. The biggest lesson has been to be true to my roots, my storytelling and my personality. I hadn’t trusted myself like that before.”Denise Stewart, writer and actor, on the success of her blog- based, one-woman play Dirty Barbie and Other Girlhood Tales

6. Embrace change.

“Even in real life, we don’t know how much we’re embellishing in our heads. When I try to fact check my memory, I’m shocked by how much it morphs. Art morphs too.”Writer Araxe Hajian on collaborative non-fiction

7. Create a connection.

“Art has a unique role in claiming what matters, of saying, ‘this is meaningful,’ and bringing the next layer of wonder to those experiences. Whether that’s setting a table or arranging a house—even how I stack the wood I use to heat my home feels like the art of the everyday to me. For all our differences as people, the similarities are what I come to. Human beings want to connect to themselves and each other and plants and something higher than themselves. And growing food and eating it on Sunday nights with my neighbors is one of the most profound experiences I can create.”—Farmer and artist Kate Daughdrill on social sculpture

8. Share your practice with others.

“It’s difficult to make a living wage in this mass-produced society, and I think it’s important to support people who want to make a living from a craft or [art] that they make with their hands. It’s a very human desire to want a tribe, to feel like you’re not alone. I think letting other people see you doing something [creative] can be really comforting. We want people to come up to us and talk to us. That’s the root of why community can be an asset, because you connect with people who can guide you through the good and the bad.” —Amber Karnes on performance knitting

9. Do whatever you want.

“The mediums themselves are nothing but tools, like you’d choose a paintbrush or pencil. Painting is a tool, photography is a tool and the English language is a tool for me to use at my discretion. If I need to write a story, I’ll write a story. Any artist can do anything they want to do at any given time. The art world that I see is just a celebration of that idea.”—Comic artist, musician and writer Andy Friedman on creating through multiple art forms

10. Change your perspective.

“When you focus in on this really small scale your eyes have to adjust. Now, if I brush up against a wall with moss on it, I see a whole microcosm is destroyed. Even while we’re drilling offshore, barnacles are attaching to the ship. Salt is corroding the hull even while we’re destroying the bedrock.”—Sculptor Justin Poe on micro- and macro-landscapes

11. Believe in magic.

“In nonfiction, the truth defies belief with much greater regularity than even the most imaginative fiction does. So many of my stories, I’ve thought to myself while writing, ‘There is no way anyone would believe this if I were writing a novel. It doesn’t pass the smell test.’ And yet it happened, and I can prove it.” —Earl Swift, longtime reporter and novelist, on the nature of reality

12. Make your mark.

“I have a pile of stuff. In the end, I know they’re gonna pull a dumpster up, and there goes the stuff. When the apocalypse comes, this will outlast everything. You know what most artists do? They fill up space. It’s how they say, ‘I was here.’”—Saul Kaplan, fine artist and poet, on switching to ceramic canvases after 65 years of drawing

13. Enjoy the process.

“Everyone is doing it for the love, not the money. I think artists get caught up in making art with a capital A, but I’d rather create an experience where people feel relaxed and engaged and invited in, and they can walk away saying ‘That made me think, but I also had some laughs.’ You want the end product to be good, but in the meantime you want to have fun.” —Miller Murray Susen, writer, actor and director, on her work in volunteer theater

Categories
Arts

Illustrating the revolution: Locally connected artists to watch in 2015

As the year draws to a close, we may opt to wrap ourselves in nostalgia for the past 12 months, making lists of what was great about 2014. Or we can choose to face forward with racing hearts, speculating on what will make the next year more interesting than the last. I’ll take the latter.

Charlottesville native Lily Erb recently returned to town and proceeded to take it by storm as a sculptor and printmaker. Her brightly colored, steel sculptures make for eye-catching wall art but she also positions them as outdoor installation pieces where the sculptural lines find commonality in the patterns of the natural environment. Indeed, the cascading waves of Erb’s work belies the rigidity of the steel from which it is shaped. Her prints share a similar feel: part sea anemone, part jellyfish and part vine. All are imbued with a shared grace and movement. In 2014, Erb exhibited her work at Mudhouse and was selected to participate in the 2014 Community Supported Artist (CSA) program at The Bridge PAI. She currently has work on display at Spring Street and it will be exciting to see what 2015 holds for this emerging artist.

As an illustrator for the best-selling Redwall series, Sean Rubin has the privilege of spending his days drawing plucky forest creatures and their revolutionary adventures, among other things. A Charlottesville transplant, Rubin is originally from Brooklyn, attended Princeton and became an English teacher before making the switch to illustrating, writing and other creative endeavors. In September, he joined the New City Arts’ artist residency program at The Haven. The upcoming year will bring the release of his children’s book Bolivar, about a dinosaur living discreetly in New York City, and the development of the story into a feature film by Warner Bros. In his free time, Rubin will work with guests at The Haven and host open studios in the new year.

Beth Macy is a writer who lives in Roanoke, but her talents easily transcend the two-hour drive from C’ville. Her new book, Factory Man, is an outgrowth of years of work and countless awards as a journalist. Though it is Macy’s first book, it’s included on The New York Times’ 100 Notable Books of 2014 as well as Publishers Weekly’s Best Books of 2014. Further, Tom Hanks is developing it into an HBO miniseries, and Charlottesville will get to know Macy as she helps kick off the 2015 Festival of the Book with its leadership breakfast in March.

Victoria Long and Roger Williams are local artists working on a project in partnership with the Charlottesville Sister Cities Commission. With funding from the commission’s grant program and extra help from a Kickstarter campaign, the two made the trek to Pleven, Bulgaria (one of Charlottesville’s four sister cities) to serve as short-term cultural ambassadors. They traveled there to explore the city and record their experiences, eventually developing them into a small book and a cassette collection of field recordings. The pair will exhibit this work at The Garage in January, and it includes Super 8 film footage of Pleven. On a related note, for those interested in pursuing a project with our sister cities, the next round of grant applications for the Sister Cities Commission is due in January.

Lord Nelson formed in 2012, released its first recordings in 2013 and played an extensive number of local shows to support the release of a new single in 2014, so it’s exciting to consider what the group will do in 2015. As a band, there are two things you should know about Lord Nelson: It plays music that can easily be described as Southern rock and it has a trombone player. In spite of that, Lord Nelson puts on a damn fine show. Joking aside, this is a talented group, with an energizing stage presence and friendly banter that will win you over by the end of the first song. The current line-up features brothers Kai and Bram Crowe-Getty, Henry Jones, Robert Word and Trevor Pietsch. And since the group is scheduled to perform at The Whiskey Jar on the second night of the new year, Lord Nelson could be the first band you see live in 2015.

One more musician to keep an eye on in the new year is Betsy Wright. Though she no longer lives in town, many will remember her from the Charlottesville band, The Fire Tapes. She leapt seamlessly from that project into her current role as the bassist for the D.C.-based rock band, Ex Hex. Sharing the stage with indie rock legend Mary Timony (perhaps best known for her time in the band Helium) and drummer Laura Harris, Wright proves her chops as part of this cocksure trio. Already earning national attention in 2014 for its debut album Rips, Wright and Ex Hex will surely continue to be worth watching in the new year.

Which artists are you excited to see in 2015? Tell us in the comments.

Categories
Living

Come and gone: The year in food in rhyme

Food is love. Food is happiness. And, once a year, food inspires us to conjure our inner poet and present to you a list of the year’s openings and closings—entirely in rhyme.

It wasn’t a great year for restaurants downtown: Five Guys, El Puerto and Song Song’s, all down. Plus, we said bye to Peking and Holy Cow. South Street closed too (but it’s reopened now!).

Fellini’s Speakeasy said its final farewell, and, hey, Caffe Bocce? We thought you were swell. Cubano changed hands and its name is now Grit. There’ll be four locations, to fuel a true coffee fit.

The Box played its last tune and we drank our last drink, but Jack Brown’s will serve burgers in that space in a blink.

Moving off the Mall now, to West Main and on down… We lost No. 3 and Toro’s Tacos skipped town. Now l’étoile only caters after years by the tracks. We’ll miss its French-Southern cuisine, but, hey, them’s the facts.

Ariana Kabob served up its last skewer, and without Dragon Lady, we’re one Chinese food spot fewer.

Brazos Tacos popped in and then out again, but the word on the street is its food was a win. The Farm Cville is gone and Anderson Carriage is too, but the latter still caters—it’ll bring the seafood to you.

Savour moved south to Prospect Hill Plantation, and Woolly Mammoth closed down—no more food or libations. At Barracks Road, we said “yowza!” to Cups, but here at year’s end, they’ve closed down and packed up.

And that about does it for spots that we’ve tossed, but, c’mon, let’s not dwell on all that we’ve lost. Let’s look at some reasons to keep wagging our tongues, and next year the “lost” list won’t be quite as long.

Let’s start with the booze; we’ll try not to get sloppy. C’ville-ian Brewing and World of Beer get quite hoppy. In Afton, Silverback makes a right tasty liquor, but don’t drink beer beforehand or you’ll feel much sicker.

Downtown, Tin Whistle serves beer fit for a paddy. Try the nosh, too. We won’t call you a fatty.

If you’re off the sauce or just want something tame, the JusBaar and Stonefield’s Capital Teas win the game.

Is it Asian you want? Then get out your chopsticks: Osaka, Kokoro and Kuma are top picks. Thai Fresh and Thai Cuisine & Noodle House came here, too. And we’re going back for seconds of Zzaam’s Korean BBQ.

Wait, wait, wait! Barbeque, did you say? PastureQ can do that, in a really great way.

Also in Stonefield, Rocksalt’s raw bar delighted, and on West Main, Public’s oysters excited. Staying in midtown, hello to Threepenny. We like its take on a crab cake eggs Benny. Across the street, a family-style joint. Oakhart Social’s its name, community its point.

If you like to eat stuff you can hold in your hand, Yearbook’s tacos and MarieBette’s pastries are grand. In Nelson County, Giddy’s Good Fortune is fun. Service is fast; get your takeout and run.

Getting fancy downtown? Try Red Pump or Alley Light. Burgers at Barracks, perhaps? Zinburger’s just right.

When it comes to our food, we don’t like to play games. But at “barcade” Firefly, they’re one in the same.

Of course we can’t forget the new tasty sweets: Bloop at Mill Creek, for instance, brings the frozen treats. At My Chocolate Shoppe, it’s one truffle after another. They’re made in-house; bring one to your mother.

Need merlot with your sweets? Hey, here’s a thought. Visit Wine Loves Chocolate—you’ll love it a lot.

Speaking of Italy, here’s one to try: Benny Deluca’s pizza, where each slice is supersized.

Last on our list are three more places anew: Zoës Kitchen, Poe’s Public House, and Oakhurst Café are getting good reviews.

Now go forth and eat; there’s still plenty to devour. We’ll see you next year around dinner hour.

Rocksalt owner Travis Croxton brought his instantly popular raw bar to Stonefield in October.

The folks behind Blue Mountain bought South Street Brewery and reopened it in November with a new look and menu.

Categories
News

Delegate Jailbird: Joe Morrissey attempts to make history

Odd Dominion is an unabashedly liberal, bi-monthly op-ed column covering Virginia politics.

We are not normally overflowing with good cheer this time of year, for one simple reason: Nothing ever freakin’ happens! We’re usually stuck covering something indescribably dull, like Governor Terry McAuliffe’s latest budget proposal. (Did you know that he’s still in favor of expanding Medicaid?) Luckily for us, this year the political scandal fairy decided to put a little something extra in our Yuletide stocking: the ongoing trials (and conviction, and subsequent shenanigans) of Democratic Delegate Joe Morrissey.

Morrissey, you might recall, is the feisty lawyer-legislator from Henrico with a long history of antagonistic behavior (he once, for instance, punched a defense attorney in the face during a drug trial). His boorishness, however, went from irritating to criminal last August, when police were called to his home around midnight and found the 56-year-old lawmaker alone with a 17-year-old girl who worked as a receptionist at his legal firm.

The fallout from that fateful evening has been long and convoluted, with both Morrissey and his former employee (now pregnant, according to one of her sisters) insisting that nothing untoward happened, and that the copious pieces of evidence found on their respective cell phones (including texts describing at least one sexual encounter and, according to detectives, 15 nude photos of the underage girl) were planted by a malicious hacker.

The legal case came to a close on December 12, just days before Morrissey was scheduled to go on trial for taking indecent liberties with a minor and possession of child pornography. Morrissey entered a so-called “Alford plea,” which requires him to admit that there is enough evidence to convict him on a misdemeanor charge of contributing to the delinquency of a minor, while not actually acknowledging that he broke the law. The presiding judge sentenced him to one year in jail, with six months suspended, and granted him a work-release provision that would allow Morrissey to continue legislating even as he wore a tracking bracelet on his ankle and spent his nights in a prison cell.

As you might imagine, this set off a firestorm in Richmond, with politicians from both parties (including McAuliffe) calling loudly for Morrissey’s resignation. He initially refused. Then, in a brilliantly devious bit of political jujitsu, Morrissey held a press conference in which he revealed that he had just submitted his resignation, to take effect on January 13, the same day that a special election would be held to replace him. And oh, by the way, he would also be running in that special election.

“Right now there is a bit of a cloud or a taint over my seat,” he told reporters, immediately winning the unintentional double entendre of the year award. “Folks from the governor’s office on down have called for my resignation. And I have given and done everything that my detractors have said.”

Henrico County Sheriff Michael Wade has since revoked Morrissey’s work-release privileges, and Dems say they’ll pick a nominee to replace him in the special election. Morrissey could still run as an independent.

If he does that, he’ll be betting that he can win a low-turnout election on name recognition alone, at which point his colleagues in the General Assembly will be faced with the distasteful task of expelling a House member over a misdemeanor—something that has not happened once in Virginia’s long political history.

Have we mentioned that this might just be the best holiday gift ever?

Categories
News

New evidence: Police build timeline of accused killer Gene Washington

In the days after the early December slayings of a mother and daughter on Rugby Avenue, the man charged with their murders attempted to sell their stolen car, and a television belonging to the victims was found inside his Barracks West apartment, according to information provided to C-VILLE by sources close to the case and confirmed by the lead investigator, Charlottesville Police Detective Sergeant Jim Mooney.

The bodies of 58-year-old Robin Aldridge, an Albemarle County special education teacher, and her 17-year-old daughter Mani, a junior at Charlottesville High School, were found inside their burned home at 1627 Rugby Avenue after a neighbor called 911 to report their house was on fire shortly before midnight on Friday, December 5. Three days later, Charlottesville Police arrested 30-year-old Gene Everett Washington and charged him with two counts of first-degree murder. At a press conference before the arrest was announced, Charlottesville Police Chief Tim Longo shared evidence including the discovery of Robin Aldridge’s blue Toyota Matrix in the Barracks West Apartments parking lot and a black, white and orange high top basketball sneaker police believe was worn by the killer. A source who spoke on condition of anonymity said Washington owned the same shoes. Additional evidence was recovered from a dumpster at the apartment complex, said Longo.

While the medical examiner has not yet released an official cause of death for mother or daughter, investigators have said both suffered obvious blunt force trauma in what seasoned law enforcement officials have described as a crime of shocking brutality.

“It was the worst I’ve ever seen in 21 years,” said Mooney.

According to police, Mani Aldridge and Washington “were known to each other” and they had previously been in contact by text and phone, Mooney said. The last known contact between the two was in late October, and Mooney said police do not have the content of those communications, nor have they determined how or where they met. Mani was friendly with some young, local rap musicians and Washington had posted multiple videos of himself rapping online, Mooney said, but police have not established that the two met through common music connections, and Mani’s friends have told police they did not know Washington. Mooney said Washington has no connection to the Music Resource Center, where Mani was a regular.

According to Mooney, police are working to determine a motive and establish whether someone else could have been involved in the crime. “We haven’t ruled that out yet,” he said.

The investigative effort is now focused on building a timeline for Washington’s whereabouts earlier in the day. “He was on Prospect Avenue around lunchtime,” said Mooney. “The biggest question is how he got from Prospect to Rugby Avenue.”

The Aldridges’ car was stolen from the driveway sometime before the fire, and Mooney said two witnesses have identified Washington as the man who tried to sell them the stolen vehicle the day after the slayings.

While some friends of Washington have come to his defense, expressing doubt that he could be capable of such violence and describing him as a man determined to turn his life around for his newborn son, they have also said that he had some connection to the Bloods gang during his time in prison, where he served six years for a variety of nonviolent felonies committed from 2003 to 2005 in Charlottesville and Albemarle County. Mooney said he did not believe the crime was gang-related.

More recently, in September 2013, Washington was arrested in Avery County, North Carolina and charged with attempted rape. He was convicted of a lesser charge, misdemeanor assault on a female, and was ordered to serve 15 days. That conviction landed him back in court in both Charlottesville and Albemarle on probation violations, and although he had more than two decades of suspended sentences hanging over him for crimes including larceny, breaking and entering, and drug possession, he was given an active jail sentence of 30 days and served 24.

Mooney said additional charges against Washington are likely as the investigation progresses. Washington’s attorney Lloyd Snook declined to comment.

Anyone with information in the case should call Charlottesville Police at 970-3280.

Categories
News

FOIAed UVA/Rolling Stone e-mails released

The University of Virginia released more than 100 pages of correspondence with Rolling Stone on December 19, and the name “Jackie,” the source for an alleged gang rape at a fraternity, was never mentioned by Sabrina Rubin Erdely or Rolling Stone fact-checker Elisabeth Garber-Paul.

UVA spokesperson Anthony de Bruyn warns Garber-Paul that Erdely’s story of a woman called “Stacy” who was assaulted in spring 2014 and learned that her assailant had done the same to two other women, is incorrect.

“It has been brought to our attention by a few students that Sabrina has spoken to that she is referencing an incident where a male student raped three different women and received a one-year suspension,” wrote de Bruyn. “That is in fact objectively false.”

When Erdely asked what is incorrect, de Bruyn responded, “Due to privacy concerns, we are unable to be more specific about the spring 2014 case.”

The e-mails also show how UVA gagged two people who are perhaps most knowledgeable about sexual assault at the University—Dean Nicole Eramo and Women’s Center Gender Violence Director Claire Kaplan. UVA’s McGregor McCance wrote to Erdely September 11 that they would be unavailable, but the issue was important enough that she could interview UVA President Teresa Sullivan as the “institutional voice.” McCance also apologized for “the change in direction” in canceling an interview that had been scheduled with Eramo.

Categories
News

As Dominion makes the case for its pipeline to feds, locals say they’ll keep fighting it

Dominion’s plans for a 550-mile natural gas pipeline through Virginia are marching ahead, and with the release of the company’s first reports to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), anti-pipeline activists in Nelson County are finding more reasons to rally opposition to the multi-billion-dollar project.

The federal approval process requires companies to file a dozen “resource reports” with the FERC detailing everything from impacts on wildlife and air quality to project safety, and the first two of those reports for Dominion’s Atlantic Coast Pipeline project were due earlier this month. One is an overall project description that includes a lot of information already made public: the length, the route, a detailed timeline. The other, known as the Route Alternatives report, essentially makes a start-to-finish argument for the project’s existence and the planned pipeline path.

“The FERC wants to know your thought process,” said Dominion spokesman Jim Norvelle.

The report offers a first look at a completely different path for the project Dominion once considered, one that would have entered Virginia further west of the current route, skirted Roanoke, exited the state near Danville, and run through Chapel Hill on its way to southern North Carolina. That so-called “western alternative” was initially drawn up as one of two rough drafts of the project’s possible route, said Norvelle, and was abandoned early on. The rejected route would have been almost 70 miles longer than the adopted eastern path, and would have crossed 86 more miles of forested land and 63 more waterways—though the eastern route crosses more wetlands and slightly more historic land.

Norvelle made it clear that including the details of the western option in the FERC report is merely a mandatory show-your-cards rule, and that Dominion doesn’t consider the route a viable option.

“We are doing no work whatsoever on the western alternative,” he said.

The report discusses many other decisions on route alternatives, including a major one just west of Charlottesville, where the pipeline path cuts through the George Washington National Forest. An original baseline route would have sliced through several sensitive areas within Forest Service lands, including the Eliot Knob and Big Levels Special Biological Areas and the Saint Mary’s Wilderness Area. Three alternatives were proposed, and the one Dominion chose brings the pipeline north, much closer to Staunton and Waynesboro.

That didn’t sit well with officials in Augusta County, who protested when they realized the pipeline would come within half a mile of three Stuarts Draft public schools. Supervisors there suggested alternatives that would have allowed for a bigger buffer, but Dominion rejected that proposal, according to a report in The News Virginian.

Some activists in Nelson County, where opposition to the project has been especially vocal, said the reports reinforce their view that Dominion is unwilling to listen to local input.

“I think they’ve always known the route they wanted to take,” said Marion Kanour, an Episcopal rector and co-leader of pipeline protest group Free Nelson. “FERC required them to discuss other alternatives, and they put them all in the worst possible way.”

Seven Nelson County residents recently got some face time with one official whose opinion on Dominion’s planning process will matter a great deal in the months to come. The group, which included anti-pipeline organizer Charlotte Rea and Nelson County Supervisor Connie Brennan, presented a briefing to FERC Commissioner Norman Bay earlier in December, Rea said. Their choice was strategic: Bay is a relative newcomer to the four-member commission, and he’s the odd one out, as his background is not in energy but the law—he’s a former U.S. Attorney—and regulatory enforcement. He’s also slated to be the chairman of the FERC starting next spring.

Their briefing hit on some major reasons Nelson is the wrong place for a pipeline, said Rea, including the fact that numerous Monacan Indian and African-
American cultural sites lie in the way of the project and that its shallow soils on top of mountain granite bedrock are a recipe for disastrous erosion.

“The pipeline is going right through the area devastated by Camille,” said Rea, referring to the remains of the 1969 hurricane that killed 153 people in the county, many of whom died in massive landslides.

The residents’ point about unstable soils is backed up by a December 5 letter to FERC from the Thomas Jefferson Soil and Water Conservation District, which warned that the deforestation required to clear the route for the pipeline would make the ground unstable and increase runoff. The Conservation District called for an alternative path that would “avoid the sensitive landscapes, geology and terrain that are characteristic of the proposed route.”

Bay did not respond to a request for comment by presstime.

Back home in Nelson, activists are getting ready for what they expect will be a doubling down by Dominion in the early part of 2015. The county has been an island of relatively stubborn resistance along the route, with approximately 70 percent of landowners approached by the company saying “no” to requests to survey their properties.

“Our guess is that they’ll begin to hit Nelson pretty hard, and go landowner to landowner to try to convince folks to make deals with them,” said Kanour. “That’s why we’re trying to ramp up our message.”

Dominion’s next Nelson County open house on the Atlantic Coast Pipeline is scheduled for Wednesday, January 14 at Nelson County High School in Lovingston.

Categories
Living

LIVING To Do: Lantern Tours at the Frontier Culture Museum

Explore pioneer life with a variety of multicultural vignettes, a Mummer’s play by the museum’s traditional Irish forge and a horsedrawn carriage ride. Refreshments and live music follow this lantern-lit tour.

Through 12/23. $8-15, 6pm. Frontier Culture Museum, 1290 Richmond Rd., Staunton. (540) 332-7850.