Categories
Living

Truckin’ along: Charlottesville’s food trucks lead an evolution in catering

Tracking down all the food trucks and carts trundling about Charlottesville is no easy task. Go ahead and try with your handy dandy Google. You’ll turn up a lot more people trying to find out how many food trucks there are than you will those who have actually accomplished the feat.

Why is it so difficult? First, the city keeps records only alongside all other “active peddlers,” meaning C’ville’s roving food slingers are mixed in with glass blowers, knock-off clothing merchants, musicians and security guards. Betty Graham, one of the city’s conscientious revenue officers, couldn’t think of any other way to get at the number of rolling restos—the data associated with brick and mortar dining rooms don’t take into account their transient counterparts—so we’re stuck with the unwieldy active peddlers list.

Second, there are trucks that aren’t registered with the city. How do they get away with it? They register with the county or solely with the health department, which is allowed for autonomous mobile food service units such as Renard Turner’s Vanguard Ranch truck. “It depends on the set-up,” he said. His truck amounts to a full service restaurant on wheels, which is on a “totally different level.”

Albemarle County senior permit planner Stewart Wright has access to some of the county-registered trucks and trailers, but unfortunately they’re all “lumped into one database” just as they are in city.

What about the health department’s data? Surely they have good numbers on a group of food service vehicles that are often referred to as “roach coaches.” Maybe. But as of press time, they weren’t able to provide it.

At any rate, using C-VILLE Weekly’s internal analysis of the active peddlers who happen to be slinging grub, taken together with the county’s information and other known trucks in town, we arrive at the following final number of confirmed food trucks: 30.

There are some interesting morsels within that number, but first things first: Is that a lot of food trucks? Anecdotally it seems so. The last time C-VILLE Weekly rounded up all the local food trucks, just less than two years ago, the number was about 12. Pedro Serrano, who operates Taqueria Mi Ranchito on weekends, said he’s definitely noticed an increase in competition over the last several years. While he and his partners started out operating seven days a week, these days it’s difficult to find a good spot to set up shop on weekends only.

“There are more trucks now, but we’ve been in the food business for about two years, and we’ll find a way to get it back up and running,” Serrano said.

If he’s right, Charlottesville will have to continue to outpace other food truck markets. While other cities’ numbers aren’t much easier to come by, and differing laws make an apples-to-apples comparison difficult, tracking sites in a few major areas indicate this town has more than its share of trucks. Washington, D.C., boasts 226 rambling roasters, according to FoodTruckFiesta.com, giving it one for every 2,860 people. That’s only half as many per capita as Charlottesville, which has one for every 1,478 folks. Richmond, which doesn’t have a tracking site but does have the Richmond Food Truck Association, seems to have around 36 trucks, give or take. That makes it a lean street food city indeed, with one mobile eatery for every 5,948 eaters.

This volume would seem a potentially bad thing, not only for brick and mortar stores that have to compete with the lower overhead truck market, but also for caterers, as parties more and more rely on food trucks to bring in grub. But Mark Hahn, owner of Harvest Moon Catering, doesn’t think so. Food trucks may cost less to operate, but they’re subject to the same competition as standing restaurants, and only the best, cleanest operations tend to stay on the road.

As for the catering business, Hahn said food trucks have actually been a benefit in his line of work. They offer synergies in festival settings and often win the gigs that catering outfits are priced out of, such as reunions for the younger UVA alumni and late night snacks at weddings.

“I personally love the food trucks,” he said. “A variety of choices is always a good thing.”

No, Hahn didn’t say all catering operations should feel the same way, but he emphasized the expertise of food trucks isn’t necessarily the same as caterers. Where food trucks offer a certain vibe and cool factor, catering companies offer a service beyond making and selling food.

“We’ve seen a lot of positive effects from the growth of the food truck market,” Hahn said.

Food Trucks by the Numbers

Here’s a look at how the active food trucks in town break down.

30 operating trucks

17 percent Dessert

17 percent Fast Food

13 percent Southern

10 percent Tacos

7 percent BBQ

7 percent Gourmet

29 percent All Others

Categories
News

Anticipation: Local author predicted another Harper Lee book

Charlottesville writer Charles Shields was not surprised to learn that more than 50 years after the publication of Harper Lee’s Pulitzer Prize-winning book, To Kill a Mockingbird, a second novel has been discovered and will be published this summer.

“I knew of its existence,” said Shields, who wrote Mockingbird, an unauthorized biography of Lee, in 2006. He’d come across references to Go Set a Watchman in correspondence between Lee and her agent.

Harper, an imprint of HarperCollins (and not named for the vaunted author, although it maybe should be, given the anticipation over the new Lee book) will publish Go Set a Watchman July 14. It’s Lee’s first novel, and features Scout as an adult woman.

“My editor, who was taken with the flashbacks to Scout’s childhood, persuaded me to write a novel from the point of view of a young Scout,” said Lee in a press release. “I was a first-time writer, so I did as I was told.”

Lee said she was unaware that first effort had survived, and she was “pleased and delighted” when her lawyer, Tonja Carter, discovered it in a “secure location where it had been affixed to an original typescript of To Kill a Mockingbird,” according to the release.

The title refers to Atticus Finch waiting outside the county jail for the mob to come, explained Shields. There, he represents the legal system and the Constitution, trying to protect his client from vigilante justice.

“I feel like Go Set a Watchman will be very familiar to readers of To Kill a Mockingbird,” said Shields. He admits he’s skeptical that the new discovery will be of the same caliber as the classic.

“This is the work of a beginning writer, an early version of To Kill a Mockingbird,” said Shields. “Most writers don’t want their apprenticeships published.” He also notes that To Kill had the benefit of Lippincott editor Tay Hohoff’s “wise counsel.”

Lee, 88, the most reclusive of writers who never gave interviews, said, “I am humbled and amazed that this will now be published after all these years.”

Shields said he sees no advantage to Lee in publishing the book at this late date, and repeated her famous quote: “When you’re at the top, there’s only one way to go.”

Said Shields, “I think it’s more than coincidence that her sister Alice died in November. Alice was always a buffer,” and he doubts she would have allowed publication. Lee suffered from a stroke in 2007, and now lives in an assisted-living facility in Monroeville, Alabama.

In the wake of the announcement and questions about whether Lee was involved in the decision to publish, HarperCollins issued a statement February 5, provided by Lee’s attorney, Carter, in which Lee said she was “happy as hell” with the response to the new book. The publisher also said it had no direct contact with Lee, and dealt with Carter and her agent, Andrew Nurnberg.

For others, the news of a new Lee brought pure joy. UVA Dean of Students Allen Groves conducts a discussion of To Kill a Mockingbird every February with a group of first-year students, and had just had a “robust” discussion the day before the new book was announced February 3.

“The students absolutely feel that the book’s message remains very relevant today,” he said in an e-mail. “I’m delighted to have the chance to now read how Harper Lee saw Scout maturing over the years. I’ll be among the first to read it.”

Groves won’t be the only one snatching up a copy. Said Shields, “This is Harper Lee summer. Every beach in America will have people reading it.”

And he offered a special wish for Lee. “May the reviewers be kind,” he said.

Updated 2/6/15 with the latest HarperCollins statement.

 

 

 

Categories
News

UVA sorority sister: Why I quit

Last week UVA’s Greeks showed up on the national news once again, this time thanks to a decision by sorority leaders to ground their UVA chapters on Boys’ Bid Night, a men’s pledging celebration and one of the biggest party nights of the year. The mandate infuriated sorority members at the University. Simmering discontent over the disparate treatment of women and men in Greek life—national rules dictate that sororities can’t host parties with alcohol, which some feel is sexist and potentially dangerous for women, who can’t party on their own turf—had reached a boiling point. There was talk of protests, of women donning khakis and bow ties and flouting the mandate that they stay home with their sisters and eat pizza.

Practically speaking, the lockdown didn’t affect fourth-year Lindsey Bond. She had just resigned from the ranks of Delta Delta Delta.

“I don’t consider myself a rabble-rouser and I think that anyone who has ever interacted with me would know that I am not one who seeks out or revels in conflict,” Bond, 22, wrote in her deactivation letter. “However, I cannot overlook something that is screaming in my face as wrong.”

What’s wrong, she said, is much bigger than a one-night party ban.

When Bond arrived at the University from out of state, rushing seemed like a good way to make friends, and the Tri Delta girls struck her as down-to-earth and humble. In the years that followed, certain aspects of Greek life frustrated and disappointed her, including the way national sorority organizations seem to hold women to a far higher standard than fraternities do men: no drinking in the houses; more serious penalties when rules are broken. The divide warps interactions between women and men on Grounds, she said, because it hands so much social control to frats. Women’s relationships with men are affected by that power dynamic.

“Girls are definitely feeling that it’s happening, but they don’t necessarily know why they’re feeling that way,” she said.

The path to resignation started when she spoke up publicly about her concerns. Bond was interviewed by C-VILLE in October for a story about the gender divide in Greek life, and the conversation went national last month when The New York Times covered the same issue. Bond ended up giving an interview to The Huffington Post just as the party ban issue started heating up. In it, she criticized national rules, and the response was swift. Bond said Tri Delta’s national leaders didn’t address her directly, but they told the UVA sorority that if members acted up again—talking to media as a member of the sorority is a violation of the rules, Bond acknowledged—they’d face sanctions.

“I’d imagined that the girls were more independent, and the type to speak out,” she said. But even as people railed against the Boys’ Bid Night restrictions, they feared rocking the boat. “Nobody wants to be a pariah for being the one who ruined it for everyone,” Bond said. So she quit.

Debates over Greeks’ role in improving campus safety are far from over, and though she’s graduating in the spring, Bond said she plans on staying in the conversation, and working to make Greek life more equal.

“Sororities, in their policies and missions statements, are all about empowering women, and I can’t see how silencing women is in any way advancing that,” said Bond. She may be out of the club, but she still plans to speak up for sisters. “I’m now advocating for the rights of people in a group I no longer belong to,” she said.—With reporting by Nicolette Gendron

Categories
Arts

February First Fridays Guide

Crozet natives Kathleen and Minal Mistry get close to nature in their duo show “Wood and Wings” at C’ville Arts Cooperative Gallery. Kathleen pairs colorful bird paintings with mixed metal jewelry such as pendants displaying miniature versions of her aviary artwork. Meanwhile, Minal’s woodwork upcycles industrial products like pallets and construction waste to become one-of-a-kind furnishings. The twosome’s works capture Virginia’s natural heritage through vibrant paints and both reclaimed and unprocessed woods.

Free, 6pm. C’ville Arts Cooperative Gallery, 118 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 972-9500.

 

First Fridays is a monthly art event featuring exhibit openings at many Downtown art galleries and additional exhibition venues. Several spaces offer receptions. Listings are compiled in collaboration with Piedmont Council for the Arts. To list an exhibit, please send information two weeks before opening to arts@c-ville.com.

First Fridays: February 6, 2015.

BON Cafe 100 W. South St., Ste. 1D. “Paintings and Collages,” featuring works by Nym Pedersen. 5-7pm.

C’ville Arts Cooperative Gallery 118 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. “Wood and Wings,” featuring paintings, jewelry, and woodwork by Kathleen and Minal Mistry. 6-8pm.

CitySpace 100 Fifth St. NE. “Vortex 2015,” featuring UVA School of Architecture student projects from an annual design-based contest. 5:30-7:30pm.

Fellini’s #9 200 Market St. “Sentiments of Mine,” featuring acrylic, watercolor and ink works by Judith Ely. 5:30-7pm.

Les Yeux du Monde 841 Wolftrap Rd. “Selections 2015,” featuring work by Pam Black, Peyton Hurt Millikan, Kris Iden, Ann Lyne, David Summers, Theo van Groll and Sanjay Vora. 5:30-7:30pm.

McGuffey Art Center 201 Second St. NW. “Figure Drawing: Theme and Variation” in the Sarah B. Smith Gallery; “Privacy in America – A Group Show” in the Lower Hall North Gallery; “Frank Riccio, 1958-2014” in the Lower Hall South Gallery; “Art Reach,” featuring children’s art and celebrating community, diversity and creative self-expression and includes over 60 paintings and mosaics in the Upper Hall Galleries. 5:30-7:30pm.

Mudhouse Downtown 213 W. Main St., Downtown Mall. “Volando el Bosque,” featuring photography by Jesus Pino. 7am-11pm.

New Dominion Bookshop 404 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. “A Decade of Drawing–Small Works,” featuring pastel drawings by Nancy Galloway. 5:30-7pm.

Second Street Gallery 115 Second St. SE. “The Conqueror,” featuring sculpture, letterpress prints and video by Yeni Mao. 5:30-7:30pm.

Vinegar Hill Cafe 233 Fourth St. NW. “Group Black & White Photo Exhibit,” featuring photography by Bill Mauzy, Brian Komatz and MB Celella. 5:30-7:30pm.

WriterHouse 508 Dale Ave. Pastel and oil paints works by Julia Lesnichy. 5:30-7:30pm.

WVTF & Radio IQ Studio Gallery 216 Water St. “Elements,” featuring encaustic works by Amanda Smith. 5-7pm.

OTHER EXHIBITS

Albemarle County Courthouse 501 Jefferson St. “Courthouse Art Exhibit,” featuring watercolor, acrylic and mixed medium works by the Central Virginia Watercolor Guild.

Chroma Projects 107 Vincennes Rd. “Books, being as buildings; Buildings, being as books,” featuring paintings by Warren Boeschenstein, Richard Crozier and Ephraim Rubenstein, with a reception on Sunday, February 8, 3:30-5:30pm.

Focus Contemporary Art 385 Valley St., Scottsville. “New work by studio artists,” featuring mixed media sculptures, works on paper and oil paintings by Michelle Gagliano, Robert Strini and Linda Wachtmeister, with a reception on Thursday, February 12, 6-8pm.

Fralin Museum of Art at the University of Virginia 155 Rugby Rd. “Lucian Freud Etchings” and “Figures for the Soul.”

Hot Cakes 1137-A Emmet St. Watercolor works by adult students of Lee Alter. February 15 – March 28.

IX Art Park 963 2nd St. SE “Cardinal on the Wall of Wishes,” featuring a wall mural by Ollie Gillard.

Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection 400 Worrell Dr. “Art and Country” and “New Narratives: Papunya Tjupi Prints with Cicada Press.”

Pigment 1229 Harris St. “Paintings by Dave Moore,” featuring mixed media works by Dave Moore, with a reception Saturday, February 14, 4-6pm.

Unitarian Church 717 Rugby Rd. “New Beginnings,” featuring works in oil, watercolor, acrylic, collage, photo, ink and graphite and pastel by members of the BozART Group.

 

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Nettles

The Kickstarter funded album Locust Avenue, by local folk group Nettles, is a rural Virginia creation through and through. The record was made in a farmhouse in Waynesboro that the band rented in exchange for a six-pack of Heineken. Led by Guion Pratt on acoustic guitar and vocals, Nettles went into seclusion for four days of recording, breaking only for an occasional dip in the river, a few hours of sleep and group efforts to liberate vehicles that had become stuck on the muddy road.

Thursday 2/5. $10, 8:30pm. The Southern Café and Music Hall, 103 S. First St. 977-5590.

Categories
Living

Long-time Greek chef Paul Boukourakis comes out of retirement to open new breakfast and lunch joint and other local restaurant news

Opah!

What’s the difference between cooking for royalty and cooking for the masses? According to Paul Boukourakis, not much.

In addition to opening restaurants on three different continents, the 77-year-old native of Greece cooked for the royal family before arriving in Charlottesville and opening Paul’s Pizza in the 1980s.

“The royal family loved eating rabbit, quail, duck, lobster, etc., and these things that [American] people don’t eat often,” Boukourakis said. “So the main difference was ingredients. However, overall it was the same goal of giving people good food, regardless of money or status.”

He may not be serving up elaborate multi-course meals to the king and queen of Greece anymore, but Boukourakis is beside himself about opening the Breakfast House, a breakfast and lunch spot with Greek classics and diner favorites on Fontaine Avenue.

The Boukourakis family has owned the building (which was previously home to Game Day, Carmello’s, Ludwig’s Schnitzelhouse and Arirang Restaurant) for years, and when Boukourakis couldn’t find a tenant that was the right fit for the space, he figured why not himself? The multi-room restaurant sandwiched between Guadalajara and Thai 99 has a homey feel to it, with warm-colored walls and a few long, family-style tables among the two- and four-tops.

“At first my sister and I were hesitant just because of his age,” Paul’s daughter Mary said, noting that her dad is not the type of person to sit around and relax in retirement. “Once we realized that he would really be happy doing this, we got behind him 100 percent.”

Paul Boukourakis introduced Charlottesville to his homemade pizza in 1983 when he opened Paul’s Pizza. His daughter described it as a local staple, where UVA students and townies alike were treated as family. He’s asked on a regular basis when he’ll return to the kitchen, so finally, after 15 years away, he’s tying his apron back on. But old school fans of Paul’s may be disappointed to hear that his pizza will not be on the menu; Mary said her mother put her foot down and said “absolutely not” to another pizza joint.

“It just requires a lot of energy. He made everything from scratch,” Mary said, adding that when her father was younger, he’d work 18-hour days in the kitchen, mixing and kneading his homemade dough starting at 5am and going until close. “My father would refuse to use anyone else’s dough for his pizza. If he’s going to commit to doing something, he’s going to fully commit to doing it.”

What the menu will offer, however, is Greek favorites like pastitsio, a layered pasta dish similar to lasagna, oblong meatballs in red wine sauce, gyros and French toast made with Greek sweet bread. Plus classic diner grub like breakfast platters, subs and burgers. Mary said the pizza may appear every now and then as a special, but she’s hoping her dad takes it a little easier this time around.

“We’re doing all the behind-the-scenes work so he can just be in the kitchen, which is where he’s happiest,” she said.

Poetic justice?

Quoth the Raven: Nevermore Poe’s.

Responding to a late 2014 legal challenge, Poe’s Public House owner Joe Fields has changed his bar’s name to Eddy’s Tavern, A Poet’s Tavern. Fields purchased No. 3 on the Corner in May and said he spent considerable time and money rebranding the restaurant.

The trademark challenge came from Poe’s Tavern in Sullivan’s Island, South Carolina, and Atlantic Beach, Florida. The elder Poe’s co-owner Riddick Lynch told C-VILLE Weekly in an e-mail that he and his partners believed Fields’ restaurant’s “name, logo, signage and concept” was “likely to cause confusion between the two restaurants.”

After receiving Lynch’s cease-and-desist letters in early November, Fields was advised by his attorney to change the name, despite the lost revenues on signage and other marketing efforts.

Love fest

Valentine’s Day falls on a Saturday this year, which only means one thing—dinner reservations are going to be even more of a pain to get. We can’t guarantee that there will still be any tables available by the time you read this, but thought we’d try to help out anyway.

Local spots offering prix fixe menus for Valentine’s Day include some downtown staples like Commonwealth Restaurant & Skybar (dance party upstairs after dinner!), Maya, and Red Pump Kitchen. There’s also Rocksalt in Stonefield, the Belmont favorite tavola, and Boar’s Head Inn.

Also check out the local wineries’ calendars; Veritas is taking reservations for a five-course wine dinner, and White Hall will offer a chocolate and wine pairing.

For something a little different, check out Blue Moon Diner’s eighth annual five-course bacon dinner—because nothing says romance like half your weight in bacon.

Categories
Arts

Film review: Black or White lacks clarity on the big screen

It’s not about black and white. It’s about right and wrong,” pleads wealthy lawyer Elliott Anderson (Kevin Costner) before a courtroom in defense of maintaining sole custody of his biracial granddaughter Eloise (Jillian Estell). Up until this moment, Black or White almost works. The entire film has been building to this moment, the linchpin of this supposed true story in which two sides of a little girl’s family, one white and one black, go to court over her future following the death of her white grandmother, Elliott’s wife. Each side has legitimate claims; Elliott has raised Eloise from birth, while matriarch Rowena (Octavia Spencer) contends that his ability to supervise her is impaired due to the loss of his wife and his drinking problem. Underneath it all is the sometimes referenced but never explicitly confronted undercurrent of racial tension that writer-director Mike Binder hoped to resolve when Elliott pleaded his case in a testimony for the ages.

It’s a promising premise with the potential to address many issues at once that is unfortunately channeled into a ready-for-Fox-News diatribe against the “bad” kind of black person who plays the “race card” that balks at the suggestion that a wealthy white guy telling black people how to earn his respect might be racist. Elliott even says that “that’s how he refers to himself” when justifying his use of the N-word at Eloise’s father. An alternate title for Black or White might as well have been I’m Not Racist But…

What’s worse is Black or White would have been salvageable had Binder attempted to see this story from Rowena’s point of view. Instead, he gives the character a few sound bites on respectability, leaving the rest of her personality to be filled in by the supremely watchable Octavia Spencer. Whatever depth Rowena has is due to her, and the same is true of every black character, from the lawyer (Anthony Mackie) who rails against stereotypes, yet is openly shown considering the charge of racism against Elliott as a tactical call (the dreaded “race card”), to an impossibly smart African immigrant (Mpho Koaho) whose sole purpose seems to be presenting the characters with a true uphill struggle worth complaining about, yet lives up to every African stereotype you can imagine.

Kevin Costner does his best with Elliott, imbuing him with the same qualities as some of his most memorable characters: a flawed yet morally sound man who knows the right thing to do with no idea how to make it happen. The attempts to draw similarities between his alcoholism and the crack addiction of Eloise’s father almost go somewhere interesting. Both of these men have massive substance abuse problems, yet only one is treated as a pariah by society. But as is the fate of every worthwhile idea in Black or White, it’s thrown to the side to make more room for reactionary melodrama.

The outcome of Black or White is not the only reason to skip it. It’s a courtroom saga that has no idea about proper courtroom procedure or what makes it tense, a meditation on race that’s happy to flesh out white characters but only leaves room for black archetypes (even the “good” ones are still one-dimensional), and a “true” story with no citation or any indication that it has any basis in reality.

Playing this week

American Sniper
Birdman
Black Sea
The Boy Next Door
The Imitation Game
Into the Woods
The Loft
Mortdecai
Paddington
Project Almanac
Selma
Strange Magic
The Wedding Ringer


Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX
244-3213

Categories
Arts

El conector: Fernando Operé celebrates 35 years of leading the Spanish Theater Group from page to stage

Born in Madrid, Fernando Operé calls himself “one of those weirdos”: a grad student who, upon receiving his Ph.D. from UVA in 1975, remained on campus as he moved up the ranks from assistant to associate and finally full professor of Spanish in 2002. But for Operé, who still speaks with the thick accent of his native Spain, his love of Thomas Jefferson’s University may only be part of the equation.

“I always loved theater, and I studied it in Madrid and Barcelona for many years before I came to the U.S. to do my Ph.D. Even though I realized I was into academia, into writing books, doing research and teaching, I missed it. So I thought, ‘What if I directed a play?’ My first production was in 1981.”

Every year for the last 34 years, the director of the Latin American studies program and UVA’s study abroad Hispanic studies program has produced and directed a play by a Spanish-speaking playwright from a Latin American country.

“For a while I had a group of music students singing songs and playing guitar. We even did presentations,” Operé said, referencing poetry recitals that stemmed from his own experience as a published poet who still gives readings throughout the country and overseas.

The small performances that began as Operé’s side project quickly became an annual event, hosted for years at The Prism Coffeehouse and more recently at Live Arts and the Helms Theater. Now dubbed the UVA Spanish Theater Group, his close-knit cadre of performers includes three faculty members, several lecturers and a handful of graduate, undergraduate and former students who live in the area.

“We have a list of people who come every year, people from the community and people from nearby universities like James Madison, Richmond and Longwood. They read the plays in literature or culture classes, and then they come so they can compare the written text to the show.”

While the shows provide ample intellectual fodder for students, Operé sees himself not only as teacher but also as a cultural connector.

“The Spanish community is growing in size. In the U.S. now there are more than 50 million Spanish-speaking people, more than in Spain or Argentina. I think those of us [in the UVA department of Spanish, Italian and Portuguese] feel that we should also serve the community in some way,” he said. “[These shows are] a link between the University, local high schools and the Spanish speaking community.”

Operé said he chooses Spanish classics by well-known writers like Federico García Lorca and Dolores Prida. He provides a summary in English so non-native Spanish speakers can better follow what happens, and each run of shows typically fills the house.

This year, the UVA Spanish Theater Group will perform La nona, a famous Argentinian play by Roberto Cossa about a 100-year-old woman in Buenos Aires who literally eats her middle-class family out of house and home.

“When the play premiered in 1977, it was sort of a critical analysis of modern life,” Operé said. “You have these typical Argentinians who never work in a typical Argentinian-Italian family. It’s funny and bitter, one where you laugh and then it leaves you with an uncomfortable feeling.”

Operé will perform alongside his students as 80-year-old Francisco, a candy shop owner whose wares are completely consumed when la nona’s family marries her off in an attempt to get rid of her.

His ability to participate in the shows he directs allows the professor to maintain his own passion for performance. “When I took classes in Barcelona, I realized it was really difficult to make it in theater,” he said. After a few years of underground performances, he decided to pursue his love of academia and moved to Virginia.

Now that Operé teaches a variety of classes in Spanish and Latin American literature, culture, poetry and theater, he uses the annual Spanish Theater Group performances as a tool for students to write their own reviews and criticism. Ultimately, though, “theater goes beyond what happens in the classroom,” he said.

“In theater class you deal with the text and only the text, but a play on the stage is many more things,” said Operé. “I tell my students, ‘Everything I tell you in class is in the library, but here, in the theater, we are going to make you cry or make you laugh. Theater is magic.’”

La nona runs February 6-8 at UVA’s Helms Theater.

Categories
News

Richmond rundown: Fariss votes against his own hemp bill, local DNA collection bill moves ahead

As the Virginia General Assembly enters its fourth week, we’ve got a look at how a few hot-button issues with local sponsors are faring.

Hemp bill moves ahead without sponsor’s nod

Delegate Matt Fariss (R-59th), who represents southern Albemarle, voted against a bill of which he was co-patron that would allow the production of industrial hemp.  In a House agriculture committee meeting January 28, the measure passed 17-5 and moves to the House floor.

Fariss said he still supports the bill, but voted against it because it needed to be amended. “We were blindsided in committee by the Commonwealth’s attorneys association,” he said, “and they raised serious objections that could have done damage to the bill’s chance of passing on the House floor.”

According to Fariss, police feared that people with pot would claim they had hemp, and to calm those fears, the bill will be amended to shift burden of proof that one is a licensed hemp grower from police to the grower. “I promised law enforcement we’d get this right,” he said, “that we were not trying to legalize marijuana, and not trying to make it hard on law enforcement.”

Jason Amatucci, founder and executive director of the Virginia Industrial Hemp Coalition, said that prosecutors and law enforcement were watering down a bill that could be an economic boon for farmers. The original bill allowed licensed cultivation of cannabis sativa with a THC level of no more than 0.3 percent. Recreational pot has a THC level of 5 percent or much higher, and Amatucci scoffs at the idea that hemp growers who are registered with the state would be trying to grow marijuana, particularly since cross-pollination ruins both hemp and pot.

“We’ve got to get rid of the fear factor,” he said. “It’s time for the reefer madness to end. It’s very frustrating.”

Amatucci said he’d been contacted by a German company that wanted to open a plant making auto parts from hemp. “We just lost a plant,” he said. The plant will go to Kentucky, where senators Rand Paul and Mitch McConnell support hemp, Amatucci said.

Currently federal law allows hemp production for research purposes only. Said Fariss, “When the feds say it’s O.K. to grow, we’ll be ready to roll.”

Another bill to decriminalize pot did not get out of a Senate committee, although a recent Christopher Newport University survey shows that 71 percent of Virginians support decriminalization and 69 percent support medical marijuana.

Fariss explained the General Assembly’s reluctance to decriminalize. “I think a lot of us have a problem telling our children it’s O.K. to use mind-altering drugs,” said Fariss, “even though we know it’s clogging up the legal system.”

Along with the bill’s chief patron, Delegate Joseph Yost, and chief co-patron Fariss, the bill picked up another 33 co-patrons, including House Minority Leader David Toscano. Before the session, Toscano said he didn’t think the bill would make it out of subcommittee.

Toscano said he signed onto the bill out of respect for the legacy of Mitch Van Yahres, the former Charlottesville delegate who carried hemp bills for years. “It may be the time is right to pass a bill like this that would allow industry to pop up in southwest Virginia and create more diversification and opportunity for that region of the Commonwealth,” he said.

The Senate passed a similar hemp bill January 29, and Fariss said odds are good for the bill becoming law. “I would be willing to bet large sums of money it will pass in the House,” he predicted. “I don’t think it will have trouble in the Senate.”

DNA collection for misdemeanors still alive

Several bills to expand the types of convictions that require the collection of DNA samples are moving forward in the General Assembly. Delegates David Toscano and Rob Bell both carried bills to add Class 1 misdemeanor convictions to those crimes that require DNA analysis. Toscano’s bill has been incorporated into Bell’s bill, which passed the House Criminal Law subcommittee February 2, and moves on to the House Committee on Appropriations.

Over in the Senate, a similar bill carried by Mark Obenshain (R-26th) passed the Courts of Justice committee January 28 and it, too, moves to finance February 4. Unclear at this point are which Class 1 misdemeanors will be in the bills that must be reconciled between the House and Senate, and whether the cost of expansion will kill them.

Bill by bill

Here is a look at what measures are still kicking in Richmond, and what’s been killed in committee or on the floor of the House and Senate.

Fail: The House Committee on Commerce and Labor kills a proposal January 27 to raise the state’s minimum wage from $7.25 an hour to $10 over several years.

Fail: The same committee nixes a bill to ban pay discrimination based on gender.

Pass: Senate bill requiring universities to report sexual assault within 24 hours. The bill, carried by Senator Richard Black (R-Leesburg), passes the Senate’s Health and Education subcommittee January 26 and next goes to the Senate’s Courts and Justice committee.

Pass: A Senate bill that would keep convicted domestic abusers and stalkers from owning a gun for a year makes it out of the Courts of Justice committee January 28.

Fail: Deadbeat dads can keep buying guns because SB1108, which would have made that a no-no, doesn’t make it out of committee.

Pass: SB1349, which weakens oversight of Dominion Virginia Power by banning the State Corporation Commission from biennial review of rates through 2023, unanimously passes a Senate subcommittee January 29.

Pass: That same committee passes a measure January 29 that would allow possession of two marijuana derivatives to treat epilepsy if recommended by a doctor. The bill goes to the Senate Courts of Justice committee.

Pass: Protection from criminal charges for those reporting a drug overdose passes the Senate unanimously January 29.

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Running the gauntlet: Two survivors on UVA’s sexual assault trial system

This story is part of a feature examining UVA’s sexual assault policies. Read a companion piece about the legal reviews of those policies here.

Sabrina Rubin Erdely’s now-discredited Rolling Stone story of a rape at UVA was written to shock and horrify. What it failed to do was show what it’s like to submit a formal complaint of sexual assault at the University of Virginia. An internal adjudication process is required under the gender equity statute known as Title IX, and UVA’s is being overhauled in the midst of investigation by the Department of Education into how the school handles complaints.

As administrators consider public comments on policy adjustments and legislators debate new laws that would force further changes, we bring you two accounts from UVA women. Two stories of assault. Two victories in name only. Two very different takeaways.

Caitlin’s story

When Caitlin Mahoney decided to take action against the man she said sexually assaulted her in a fraternity house bedroom in November of 2005—her first year at UVA—she told deans she wanted to pursue a formal complaint. She saw it through to the end, and after a trial in front of what was then called the Sexual Assault Board (SAB), she won.

It still wrecked her, and she said she fully understands why the number of women who press for action in the wake of their own sexual assaults at UVA and schools around the country is so low.

“It’s because of the gauntlet you have to run,” she said. “I can’t describe the process in any other way than, ‘Prepare to have your life ruined.’”

Caitlin describes what happened to her as horrifying, traumatic and disturbingly common. She went to a fraternity party with friends, met up with a couple of older fraternity members she’d gotten to know and drank with them in an upstairs bedroom. One of them plied her with vodka doubles, and while she felt uncomfortable, she drank them anyway. That’s the last thing she remembers. She woke up alone in his bed too sick to move, her underwear missing. She could hear men’s voices in the hall, joking about the guy who had been giving her drinks: “He likes to fuck dead girls,” she remembers one of them saying.

The guy told her they’d hooked up—he later admitted he’d fingered her—and that he’d been worried about her when she got sick and passed out. He said they’d had a good time, though. Then he dropped her off at her dorm.

“I reported it to the police within 48 hours,” Caitlin said. But ultimately, she decided against pressing charges. She knew she wasn’t a “perfect victim”: dazed, she’d taken a shower before she got a rape kit. She also didn’t want to go through telling her parents. But once friends told her more about what had happened that night—someone had seen her being carried nearly unconscious to an upstairs bedroom, and friends said they’d tried to find her, but were turned away by fraternity brothers—she decided to seek some remedy through the school.

“Somebody had told me about the Title IX option, that there was a lower standard of evidence, and it was confidential,” she said. “I could still be a private person instead of a public figure at a time when I was not capable of doing that. And I thought there was no way I could lose, knowing what I knew about what happened.”

Technically, she didn’t lose. The man she accused was found responsible and was suspended for three years, according to documentation of the formal resolution she provided to C-VILLE. Caitlin was able to graduate without having to worry about seeing him on campus. But she said she went through hell to get there.

“I knew there were things that were wrong with my trial,” she said. “But I thought that’s the way it was and I had to suck it up and deal, even though I knew deep down that what happened was wrong.”

For starters, it took 10 months for her case to make it in front of the SAB. She reported the incident in December 2005, she said, and the investigation was finished in March 2006. She didn’t get a trial until September of that year, because, she was told, UVA couldn’t muster the required number of students for the panel. In the meantime, she suffered through being called a liar by former friends who knew the accused.

Then came the actual trial. The first questions she was asked were invasive ones about her sex life, she said—Was she gay? Had she ever had sex with more than one person at a time? Such questions would have been inadmissible in a criminal proceeding. She said the panel also used the wrong evidentiary standard in deciding her case: For at least a decade, the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights has said that schools should use the “preponderance of the evidence” standard, meaning they’re to find in favor of survivors if they’re more than 50 percent sure they’re telling the truth; Caitlin said the panel used the “clear and convincing” standard required in criminal cases, which demands a much higher level of certainty.

Caitlin said even though the panel ultimately found her assailant guilty of “sexual misconduct” because he’d gotten her drunk past the point of consent, the trial was traumatizing in ways it should never have been. For a long time, she tried to forget about it.

“I had to wait so long and fight so hard to get through the process that once it was over, I was just done,” she said. “I could not do more at that time. I just sort of pushed it to the back of my mind, because I had to focus on my life, school, everything else.”

Amy’s story

Amy’s first months dating Mike were uneventful. Fellow students in the same UVA grad school program, they’d connected in mid-2011 through classes and shared mutual friends, but by early 2012, the relationship was troubled. “Early on there were a lot of controlling features—he’d put me down, tell me he could call up any girl at any time,” she recalled. Soon, the verbal abuse expanded to physical abuse. Although she would ultimately win a verdict against Mike through the SAB (the body was renamed the Sexual Misconduct Board later that year), Amy asked that pseudonyms be used in her case and that her department not be identified because she is still a student at the school and fears retribution. She also provided C-VILLE with documentation of the trial and the ruling in her case.

One evening, the couple had gone out for a friend’s birthday. Back at Mike’s off-campus apartment, they began arguing. “Things got verbally scary,” Amy recalled of the February 2012 incident that would become the subject of a SAB trial. “I wanted to leave, so I tried to pack my bags up in the bathroom. He picked the lock, took my stuff, and that included everything, my wallet and ID.”

Mike demanded that she leave without her belongings, and Amy said when she tried to go and retrieve her things, “he started pushing and tried to bear hug me out of the apartment.” He didn’t stop with the bear hug, Amy said. “He pushed me and I fell over. Then he dragged me by my hair across the floor.” Amy, who was wearing a pair of Mike’s sweatpants, said she saw her phone and her keys on the table, and when he let go of her, she grabbed them and ran out the door. Mike pursued her. “He comes out after me, says I’m wearing his sweatpants, then he pulls my pants down, trying to get them off of me,” she recalls. “He punched me from behind.”

Stunned, and having dropped her keys, Amy fled to a friend’s apartment, where she spent the night. The next day, she had a male friend accompany her to Mike’s apartment to get her things, then she left.

“I wanted to call the cops but didn’t know what I should do,” she said. “I was in a state of disbelief.” Mike was getting ready to graduate, and that contributed to her hesitance. “I didn’t go to police because of the impact it would have had on his career,” she said. In addition, “we had mutual friends. When you do these things, you also think about how other people are going to react to it.”

Instead, about a week later she filed a complaint against him with the school, hoping there would be some sanction against him and that he would receive help. The incident occurred less than two years after the death of Yeardley Love, and Amy said for that reason, she believed the administration would go to great lengths to support her and keep her safe. She now says she was mistaken.

Amy said that despite obtaining a school issued no-contact order, which prohibited Mike from interacting with her while on Grounds, she endured weeks of Mike’s friends making antagonizing comments to her, and she tried and failed to get a court-recognized restraining order against him. In April, the case went to trial through the SAB. It was a grueling process that Amy now feels victimized her further.

The hearing began at 8am, and Amy said she didn’t leave until 8 or 9 that night after a day of testimony.

“The craziest part of the whole trial was they started nitpicking at my story because I kept switching the order of him taking my stuff and me going to the bathroom,” she said. “I was distraught.”

Ultimately, the board did issue a ruling of guilt against Mike, based on his attempt to remove the sweatpants she had been wearing, according to the letter issued explaining the verdict. He was ordered to attend anger management treatment, but there was no oversight or enforcement of that treatment, Amy said, and he graduated and left Charlottesville with no marks on his record.

“The only way it would ever go on his record is if he was suspended or expelled,” she said.

The way forward 

UVA has made some changes in the way it resolves sexual misconduct claims in recent years; in 2011, after a mandate was issued by the DOE, the University adopted the less-strict preponderance standard. More adjustments have been proposed in a new policy draft released last November. Those proposed rules would require the University attempt to resolve complaints within 60 days. They would also remove a lot of power from the Sexual Misconduct Board; an investigator alone would be in charge of producing finding, and the Board’s responsibility would be limited to leveling sanctions. The new rules also put greater emphasis on those sanctions, demanding that the board consider suspension or expulsion in every case.

That’s good, said Caitlin, but it’s not enough. The new policy doesn’t lay out a route for appealing a ruling, which she said is critical. She also wants to see the school adopt a student bill of rights that emphasizes Title IX rights, and she wants to see the Sexual Misconduct Board publish its decisions at the end of each semester—with names redacted —the same way the Honor Committee does. And she thinks a basic gender studies class should be a requirement for graduation.

“The everyday situation where you get drunk and your friend has sex with your unconscious body—the fundamental issue is that a lot of these people don’t think they’ve done anything wrong,” she said. “They don’t understand consent. They see sex as something they can take.” Schools need to take a more active role in changing that mindset, she said.

Her biggest complaint, though, is that UVA hasn’t done enough to curb underage drinking, even as few deny that it’s a huge contributing problem. The school could put far more pressure than it does on student organizations, including frats, she said.

“I will never take the University seriously about wanting to fix the problems until they ban alcohol from fraternity houses, period,” she said.

Amy is so disillusioned with UVA’s system that she wants to pull it up by the roots. She thinks Title IX should be changed so that schools don’t adjudicate sexual assault cases at all.

“By going through the University you have a false sense or expectation of retribution that never happens,” she said. “You have law enforcers for a reason.”

She acknowledges that eliminating bodies like UVA’s Sexual Misconduct Board might decrease reporting. “But looking back, would I go through this again? No,” she said. “I would have rather not done it at all. If I had known how much energy and effort and mental anguish it took to go through this, I would wholeheartedly not do this again. You don’t get anything.”

Her advice to other students experiencing similar issues: Go straight to police and report abuse or assault as a crime, not only for yourself but for potential future victims.

So what role does she think a university should play? A supportive one, by providing a more direct link to psychological services for victims, who currently are referred to the school’s Counseling and Psychological Services center (CAPS), which offers short term crisis counseling and then refers students for longer term treatment with clinicians in the community.

“Skip that step, and get an immediate response to the problem,” she said, noting that she’d like to see students put directly in touch with counselors who are experts in domestic abuse or sexual violence and she’d like to see support groups widely publicized.

However differently the two women view what needs to change to stop violence against women from becoming so commonplace in college, they agree: Something’s got to give.

Caitlin wishes the impetus for the conversation was something other than tragedy and trauma.

“It took a gang rape article to get people mad about this issue,” she said. “It was the same thing with dating violence. It took Yeardley Love being murdered for people to give a shit about it.” But she believes things will change, especially if people speak up. What happened to her was traumatic, but it doesn’t define her, she said. She wants other women to hear that message.

“I have to maintain hope, because if I don’t have that, I don’t know,” she said. “That would be bad for me.”—With reporting by Courteney Stuart