Categories
Living

LIVING Picks: Week of September 7-13

Food & Drink
Farm to Feast dinner
Sunday, September 11

Enjoy a family-style meal of locally sourced food at Blenheim Vineyards’ Farm to Feast benefit dinner, which supports Local Food Hub and Farm Aid. In addition to dinner prepared by acclaimed chefs, there will be passed canapés, a teepee “cocktail” lounge and live music from Small Town Rodeo. $125, 5- 9pm. Blenheim Vineyards, 31 Blenheim Farm. bleinheimvineyards.com

Nonprofit
Cheers for Charity
Through September

Wild Virginia and Starr Hill Brewery are partnering for the Cheers for Charity fundraiser. One dollar for every pint of beer sold at the Starr Hill Tap Room this month will go to Wild Virginia, which works to protect our state’s national forests and stop the Atlantic Coast Pipeline. Starr Hill Brewery, 5391 Three Notch’d Rd., Crozet. 823-5671.

Health & Wellness
Be Bold 5K trail race
Saturday, September 10

Enjoy panoramic mountain views during this flat-course race, registration for which includes a commemorative tasting glass and post-race party with cider samples from Bold Rock. $40, 9am. Bold Rock Cider Barn, 1020 Rockfish Valley Hwy., Nellysford. 361-1030.

Family
Cville Jr. Idol 2016
Friday, September 9

The Black Box Players and Cville Jr. Idol are celebrating 30 years of the community theater with a chorus of children, teens and adults singing and dancing to some of the most memorable songs from the last three decades. You can also vote for your favorite Idol Jr. contestant, who range in age from 8 to 14. $10, 7pm. Burnley Moran Elementary School, 1300 Long St. blackboxplayers.com

Categories
Arts

The Innocents challenges the structure of faith

Director Anne Fontaine’s The Innocents takes place in Warsaw in December 1945, when much of the world was ecstatic at the conclusion of World War II, yet those most affected were too deeply traumatized to feel anything close to relief. And for many in the occupied territory of Poland, the horrors continued long after hostilities had technically ended.

Based on a true story, The Innocents follows a young French doctor working for the Red Cross, Mathilde (Lou de Laâge), who is asked by a nearby convent to assist them through a difficult ordeal. Many of the nuns are pregnant after having been raped by Soviet troops, and to add to their torment, they must keep this fact a secret for fear of being persecuted and having their convent closed. It falls on Mathilde to fulfill her duties to the Red Cross while secretly attending to these young women, which is unfortunately made more difficult by the convent’s authoritative, paranoid abbess.

Fontaine keeps the film’s horrific events, both described and depicted, and the broader message in equal focus at all times. As a story, The Innocents is a sensitive recounting of women’s hardship that reminds us that the wounds of war never fully heal, while as a film, it’s a thoughtful investigation into places where abstract notions and material reality intersect. If one is genuine in whatever it is she believes, how necessary is it to be obedient to the structure of that belief? The convent’s abbess is something of a terror, seemingly more concerned about avoiding scandal and maintaining devotion to her authority than to the physical and mental wellbeing of those in her care.

Mathilde faces her own struggle between ideals and implementation; she is a Communist—though not a card-carrying one, she is eager to point out—yet has no love for the Soviets, who are responsible for the horror at the convent and who nearly have their way with her at a roadblock. Her respect for the health and free will of the nuns is more valuable to her than her disagreement with their faith and her constant annoyance with the abbess. As much as possible, Fontaine makes each individual nun her own fully developed character where other filmmakers may have made them one-dimensional for the purpose of evoking sympathy. Some are fully committed to their vows, others would rather return to the outside world, while some are unsure of their faith yet cherish the structure of life in the convent.

As is often the case with historical films, it could be said that the ending of The Innocents is a little too convenient and loses some of the direction that propelled it beyond similarly themed period pieces. However, the characters and their struggle are so engrossing and beyond the standard pity-me tropes, one might not mind the tonal shift. The Innocents places intelligence, ideas and emotional solidarity on equal levels. Beliefs matter, structures designed to implement them matter, but establishing human connections in unlikely places and ensuring one another’s welfare matters more.

Playing this week 

Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX
The Shops at Stonefield, 244-3213

Bad Moms, Ben-Hur, Don’t Breathe, Equity, Florence Foster Jenkins, Hands of Stone, Kubo and the Two Strings, Mechanic: Resurrection, Morgan, Nerve, Pete’s Dragon, Sausage Party, The Secret Life of Pets, Southside With You, Star Trek Beyond, Suicide Squad, War Dogs 

Violet Crown Cinema
200 W. Main St., Downtown Mall, 529-3000

Don’t Breathe, Don’t Think Twice, Florence Foster Jenkins, Hell or High Water, Kubo and the Two Strings, The Light Between Oceans, Pete’s Dragon, Sausage Party, Southside With You, Suicide Squad, War Dogs

Categories
Arts

PVCC’s ‘Yard Dreams’ installations take over Belmont Avenue

During the second weekend in September, members of the community will have the opportunity to view and contemplate art while enjoying the outdoors and mingling with neighbors in what local artist James Yates calls an “out of gallery” experience. “Yard Dreams” is a collective of installations in the front yards of select homes along Belmont Avenue running east of Avon Street. There will be a reception on Saturday afternoon in front of one of the homes, and a map on the “Yard Dreams” website (yarddreamspvcc.com) shows the location of each installation.

The project is the nocturnal brainchild of Yates. He describes a dream he had two years ago in which he was walking in a neighborhood and looked up to see that the artist Christo had created an installation that spanned all the yards along the street.

Yates says, “I woke up and thought, ‘That’s a great idea. I’m going to steal it.’ So ‘Yard Dreams’ is happily named.”

He shared his idea with a friend who lived in Belmont and suggested they combine the art installation with a neighborhood block party. After securing the community’s approval, “Yard Dreams” was born.

Curated by Yates and sponsored by the Piedmont Virginia Community College Art Gallery, this year’s collective showcases the work of 16 artists with installations in 13 front yards. The event has grown organically without theme or direction, and the artists have the freedom to imagine whatever they like to fill the space they have been given.

“I never ask for a proposal with any events I do,” Yates says. “I just want to see if their work is great, invite them to join and allow them to do what they feel is best for the event.”

After neighborhood families volunteer their yards for the project and Yates provides the addresses, the participating artists decide where they would like to showcase their work and they reserve their desired location on a first-come, first-served basis.

Some of the art is dependent on the environment the yard provides, such as a piece by Fenella Belle and Stacey Evans titled “Allee of Dreams,” an installation of blue silk panels strung from trees that embraces the ethereal nature of dreams. In a piece called “There’s No Place Like…” Beryl Solla, the director of PVCC’s art gallery, and collaborator Angi Curreri explore the concept of home. Other installations vary from a steel-and-twine sculpture that invokes cobwebs, a garden of tubers and beets that produces music and trees intended for planting to revitalize the city’s green canopy.

One of the most elaborate installations is a collection of eight works curated by Bill Bennett, sculptor and professor of art at UVA. One of these is a project titled “Yard Dreams UNearthED: Art/Archeology” that entails an excavation that will take place on Saturday afternoon. Neighborhood elementary school students will work with UVA archaeology students to unearth a bronze-and-concrete monument called “The Tentacle,” buried beneath a mountain of adobe bricks, each containing a small artifact. Bennett explains that it is a small version of a large public artwork that the UVA sculpture community is creating at Baker-Butler Elementary School.

Yates credits Solla’s partnership in bringing “Yard Dreams” to fruition. They also work together on PVCC’s “Let There Be Light,” a show of artists’ installations using light, now in its 10th year and drawing as many as 3,000 people.

“She goes way out of her way to make these kinds of things happen,” says Yates.

Yates began curating at a young age. “It started when I was a kid and me and neighborhood kids would get together and just make stuff,” he says. “We made a miniature golf course. We made a big cart that was just a weird contraption with wheels. We were always doing stuff and making stuff together. We dug a hole deep under my house. We made a spook house and a magic show. I have a history of doing events involving people, interactive events, since I was a kid. Then I went to art school and kept doing it.”

After living in Charlottesville for more than 15 years, he is still drawn to the collaborative aspect, in sharing performance space and organizing interactive installations that bring the community together—in Belmont and beyond.

Categories
News

Homestay hullabaloo: State legislation could bring big change locally

While only about one-third of more than 500 homestays operating in town are compliant with local rules and regulations, the city’s commissioner of revenue, Todd Divers, says proposed state legislation is slowing the process of tracking down offenders and demanding they pay up.

The limited residential lodging act introduced by Virginia Delegate Chris Peace, R-97th, if adopted, would restrict local jurisdictions from imposing their own regulations on limited residential lodging—think Airbnbs, inns and bed and breakfasts—and enable the state to collect and remit lodging taxes, rather than the locality. The state would keep a cut of the revenue as an administrative fee.

“Localities are concerned about a local revenue source being sent to Richmond before making its way home,” Divers says. “Thereby, subjecting it to the whims of a state government facing regular revenue shortfalls.”

In Charlottesville, regulations require those operating homestays to have a special-use permit and a business license. They must also pay a 7 percent transient occupancy tax to the city each time someone rents a room in their home, which they are required to live in.

“Those familiar with how the process works for sales tax are extremely leery of having the state involved in local tax collections,” Divers says. “There is little to no accountability. Localities have a very difficult time obtaining information on a timely basis to allow enforcement against businesses that fail to collect, or fail to timely remit, sales taxes, and the state doesn’t have the time or funding to engage in audits and enforcement on behalf of each locality.”

Divers says it’s important to remember that lodging taxes aren’t taxing local businesses, but essentially taxing visitors. And local homestay operators are allowed to impose an administrative fee to cover the cost of them.

“Most everyone involved would like all of these revenues to remain local,” he says.

Carolyn McGee, the president of the Bed & Breakfast Association of Virginia and owner of The Inn at 400 West High, is one of those people. But aside from doubting the state would responsibly collect, remit and report these taxes, she is most concerned with the number of homestay operators—namely the ones renting on Airbnb—who don’t follow mandatory regulations and the city’s failure to reprehend them.

“I fully support the entrepreneurship that Airbnb can provide,” she says. “However, it has to be fair competition.”

While regulations from the health department mandate minute details such as what time McGee must bake the cookies at her inn, she says she’s aware of numerous Airbnb operators who leave wine and snacks for their guests without any special permits. And they don’t have to follow the same parking and lighting rules that she’s subjected to.

“They’re doing exactly what I’m doing without all the extra finances involved,” she says. “Renting out rooms is the only way I can afford to own this historic home in the city.”

And though the rules for Airbnbers are much less stringent, she says the number of people who don’t follow them could cause trouble.

“I just really believe that smart, common sense, short-term rental rules are needed for everybody and [all homestays] need to be legal to protect Charlottesville from this really rapid growth of illegal properties,” McGee says. “I’m afraid it’s going to take a horrible tragedy in an Airbnb for everyone to get it.”

But Divers says any progress made by the city in regulating these operations has temporarily been halted.

“Right now, we’re not really going at people with a stick,” he says. “Eventually, we will.”

He adds that the city doesn’t want to enact new ordinances that could be nullified by the pending legislation, which will be reintroduced at the next General Assembly session.

Another major concern with the bill introduced by Peace is that it would allow homestays to operate without adhering to local zoning ordinances.

Charlottesville’s zoning ordinance was designed to protect the character of low-density residential areas, according to the city attorney’s office. While people are allowed to conduct “home occupations,” as they call them, they are subject to “reasonable” regulations designed to minimize impacts such as noise, traffic and the visual impacts of commercial use.

Mark Kavit, former North Downtown Residents Association president and current board member, says homestays have the ability to quickly change the appearance of neighborhoods if those zoning ordinances no longer existed.

“You could have a place next door to you, where you have people coming and going and you have no idea who they are,” he says, adding that two realtors have approached him and asked to buy his downtown home to turn it into an Airbnb. “People need to be aware that it’s having a dramatic effect on neighborhoods.”

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Atlas Gray

Was rock band Atlas Gray really formed as an effort to ward off an elephant stampede with a wall of sound? Despite the myth, Hartford, Connecticut’s power-soul five-piece deftly leads listeners on a fantastic exploration marked by signposts of jazz and funk, while navigating what the band deems an “emotional safari.” Since 2014, the group has blazed a unique musical trail on tour, amassing fans up and down the East Coast.

Free, 5pm Saturday, September 10. Jefferson Vineyards, 1353 Thomas Jefferson Pkwy. jeffersonvineyards.com.

Categories
Living

The many causes of animal ear problems

I’m sure we’d all agree that animal ears are absolutely adorable. Unlike our inert curls of skin that only seem weirder the more you think about them, cats and dogs have delightfully expressive ears. They perk up when we talk to them and flop all over the place, and are generally just fuzzy and fun to play with. But all those lovely perks do come with a price. For some animals, those things can be a nightmare to take care of.

For one thing, pets can have horrible creatures living in their ears. If your cat is furiously scratching at the sides of her head, there’s a solid chance she’s harboring ear mites. These little arachnids—basically microscopic spiders—chow down on ear wax and reproduce quickly, causing ample misery in the process.

Luckily, they aren’t that hard to treat if you do it right. There are plenty of over-the-counter products that kill ear mites, but they don’t always kill the eggs, allowing the infestation to return if you don’t treat for weeks on end. And if you have multiple pets, they may keep bouncing the bugs around unless you treat everybody at the exact same time. Newer prescription options work much faster, and keep you from wasting time and money trying to solve an otherwise simple problem with obsolete tools.

The other frustration with over-the-counter ear mite treatments is that you’re apt to find yourself treating the wrong thing. This is especially true in dogs, where ear mites are comparatively uncommon. I see frustrated owners come in all the time after blowing through three or four different ear mite remedies to no avail. The truth is that dogs are far more likely to have an infection caused by yeast or bacteria (or both). It’s really important to have your veterinarian diagnose the problem before attempting to treat it.

Ear infections can be pretty nasty business. Unchecked, the opening of the ear swells up while the canal fills with foul-smelling discharge. They hurt and itch, often resulting in additional injury as the animal fusses with it. Apart from self-inflicted abrasions, overzealous shaking and scratching can rupture blood vessels within the flap of the ear, causing a hematoma—the whole thing puffs up like a blood-filled balloon. If it reaches this point, surgery may be the only way to get back to normal again.

Most infections are luckily caught early, and can be managed simply enough with a quick course of drops squirted in the ears, but that’s not always the end of the story. Even after multiple rounds of treatment, ear infections have a frustrating habit of returning. This isn’t because your dog is infected with some kind of superbug. In most cases, it’s the same run-of-the-mill bacteria and yeast as usual. It’s because most ear infections piggyback on top of another underlying problem.

Unfortunately, those problems aren’t necessarily the easy ones to solve. Some breeds have an inherent predisposition due to quirks (and outright defects) in the form and structure of their ears. (Owners of cocker spaniels and bulldogs are reflexively sighing.) Cats can have recurring infections because of polyps growing deep within the ear. And lots of animals deal with ear infections resulting from underlying allergies. A full list would go on for pages, but the short version is that ear infections can be unfixable until the underlying cause is identified and eliminated.

I’m often asked about preventing ear infections, and the answer varies case by case. If needed, you can gently wipe away ear wax with a cotton ball once or twice a week. But never go in with a Q-tip —you’re likely to just pack the wax in deeper. Having the ear canals plucked free of hair can be useful in animals with unusually dense fur, but it also introduces bleeding and inflammation that can foster bacterial growth, so I don’t advise it without good reason. By and large, if your pet has healthy ears, my preference is to leave well enough alone. Unnecessary intervention may cause trouble where none existed before.

Dr. Mike Fietz is a small-animal veterinarian at Georgetown Veterinary Hospital. He received his veterinary degree from Cornell University in 2003 and has lived in Charlottesville since.


Clockwise from top left: Brad Pitt, Darcy, Calliope and Lima
Clockwise from top left: Brad Pitt, Darcy, Calliope and Lima. Courtesy Charlottesville Albemarle SPCA

Charlottesville Albemarle SPCA: Pets of the month

You can meet us at the Charlottesville-Albemarle SPCA, where we’re all available for adoption.
3355 Berkmar Dr. 973-5959, caspca.org, noon-6pm, daily  

Darcy

It was kind of a blow to my confidence when my owner left me at the shelter after hours, but I’m working on my trust issues and am ready to find my forever home (for real this time).

Brad Pitt

As my name suggests, I’m cool, confident and enviably handsome. Not to boast, but I’ve been named “Sexiest Tomcat Alive” three times, which is more than the human Brad Pitt can say.

Lima

Like the capital of Peru, my personality climate can be cool to mild—
I play hard to get at first, but warm up quickly (with treats). Unlike Peru, loud sounds and fast motion irk me.

Calliope

Greek muse Calliope is often portrayed wearing a crown, which is fitting for my personality, as I prefer to observe from my throne. (But if you offer a head rub, I won’t turn it down.)

Categories
News

Heartbreak hotel: An unwanted vision of West Main?

C-VILLE took an in-depth look at the 3,700 hotel rooms for rent in Charlottesville and Albemarle in May, but with the August 29 announcement of a $26 million loan secured for another hotel on West Main Street, those looking for a place to stay in town can now count on another 150 chances to do so.

As part of Marriott’s Autograph Collection Hotels, this 10-story luxury boutique hotel will be adjacent to the University of Virginia Medical Center, and will include a “premium” restaurant, as well as 3,000 square feet of meeting space and a gym, according to the Washington, D.C.-based developers Carr City Centers. It will offer 70 full-time jobs to people in the area.

The name of the hotel has not yet been announced, but it was previously referred to as the Sycamore House Hotel by the city and developer, and will be built where the current Sycamore House Studio Art Shop, which has closed, sat at 1108 W. Main St.

In May, the owner of the art shop, John Bartelt, told C-VILLE that he refused to sell his property to UVA for years, for fear that West Main would become pedestrian unfriendly, with deserted office buildings every evening after 5pm. But when the hotel developers closed on his property for $4 million, he said, “having a hotel there is better than what it could have been.”

Last summer he said that although altering the West Main streetscape from its historic roots isn’t preferred, it’s inevitable. He’s not alone in thinking that.

City Councilor Bob Fenwick says he doesn’t oppose development, especially when it’s by-right and council has no say over it. But for structures like those popping up on West Main, which require a special use permit issued by the city, he says it’s a different story.

“They’re no longer special,” he says, and tries to put a number on the many e-mails he receives from locals complaining about the “ugly boxes” with “punch-out windows” being constructed around town. “We just want good architecture,” Fenwick says, and uses the UVA Child Development and Rehabilitation Center as an example of good work. “I don’t think we’re doing the best we can do.”

But Carr City Centers President Austin Flajser says the luxury hotel will provide a positive financial impact for Charlottesville, and it “enhances the city’s vision of creating a more vibrant West Main Street.”

And West Main’s newest digs are bound to silence some squawkers because the boutique hotel will have plenty of its own parking—three out of 10 floors, to be exact.

Construction is slated to begin this fall, and the hotel is expected to open in the last quarter of 2017.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Mighty Joshua

Through a fast-flowing, modern take on reggae, Richmond’s Mighty Joshua makes magical connections with his audience. The uplifting performer uses his art to fight HIV/AIDS and support children’s programs in Africa with a passion that’s resulted in garnering the official title of Virginia Reggae Ambassador. Vibe Riot opens.

Free, 5pm Saturday, September 10. IX Art Park, 955 Second St. SE. 924-0885.

Categories
Living

Food cart owner to open restaurants in Crozet

On Thursday, August 25, Smoked BBQ Co. served its last bite of barbecue to a long queue of hungry lunch-goers.

At least for the time being.

Smoked fans can pencil in late October for when they’ll be able to dig in to a plate of barbecue and other Southern comfort food made by Smoked owner Justin van der Linde and his sous chef, Kent Morris.

They’ll have to head to Crozet to get their fix, but the drive is as long as the wait in line to get lunch from the food cart used to be—about 20 minutes.

Smoked Kitchen and Tap will open on the ground floor of the Piedmont Place building in downtown Crozet and will offer Smoked BBQ’s signature dishes—brisket, ribs, pulled pork (dry-rubbed and sauced) and some new items, such as fried chicken, burgers, sandwiches and salads. They’ll also serve hush puppies and fries, and will have 10 local beers in rotation on tap, all highlighting the 151 trail, van der Linde says.

“It’s a massive scale-up…and I hope it’s big enough,” he says, his blue eyes wide beneath the brim of his hat. “The crowd made it happen,” he says, noting that with lines 30 to 50 people deep, the Smoked cart ran out of food almost every day by 1pm; it was a late day when they were still serving at 1:15.

The Smoked duo will also have a space on the fourth floor of the building, to be called The Rooftop, which will open a few weeks after the ground-floor restaurant and offer items like wood-fired pizzas topped with house-cured meats, plus local beers and craft cocktails well-suited to Southern food. No word yet on who will be behind the bar.

Van der Linde says they’ll get a little more experimental with The Rooftop (which has spectacular views of the mountains) but you won’t see any avocado foam here. “I like simple food,” he says. He believes there’s a movement toward simple food on the horizon, and he’s excited about it. Van der Linde plans on continuing Smoked BBQ Co. as a catering arm of the new restaurant. It’ll be a lot to manage, he says, but he’ll still wake up in the wee hours of the morning to light the coals and cook with the same motivation he’s always had—that everybody deserves good food.

Fellini’s reopens

After just more than a year away, Jacie Dunkle is back at the helm of Fellini’s #9.

Fellini’s was closed for about 10 days at the end of August while Dunkle and her husband, Gary, scrubbed tables, rehung the mirrors and pendant lamps they took down not long ago and applied for ABC and business licenses, which cannot be transferred between owners.

“I’m excited to give it back to the community the way we all remember it,” Dunkle says of the restaurant she ran for more than 10 years and sold to another family in June 2015. Former co-owner Melissa Ragland says the hand-off back to Dunkle was due to her wanting to spend more time with her family.

Fellini’s re-opened on Wednesday, August 31, but there’s still work to be done to return that former Fellini’s flair, Dunkle says. She plans on painting the walls a darker color to reintroduce a soft-lit, romantic atmosphere to the restaurant. She’s also looking for a new executive chef to add fresh, seasonal dishes to the menu. Right now is the perfect time to have a caprese salad with fresh heirloom tomatoes, and a pasta-free lasagna, where grilled squash and zucchini take the place of the wide, flat lasagna noodles, Dunkle says.

Fellini’s will continue to have its signature piano music, plus live music late on Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays. Dunkle also plans to host First Fridays art openings, likely starting in October.

Dunkle, who also owns Tin Whistle Irish Pub, has plans to open her third restaurant on Market Street—The Salad Maker—this fall. It’ll be a grab-n-go place with a few tables, open six days a week for lunch and early dinner, so stay tuned for more on that.

But, for now, Dunkle promises that even though she’ll be zipping up and down Market Street, running Fellini’s and Tin Whistle while opening The Salad Maker, Fellini’s is “in good hands. It’ll be fine.”

Tasty Tidbits

Goes together like beer and cookies…Taste for yourself at Jack Brown’s Beer & Burger Joint on Thursday, September 8. After 6pm, buy a flight of Allagash brews and get four small bite-sized cookies to pair with each beer. Revamped happy hour…Red Pump Kitchen is changing up its happy hour specials at the bar and alfresco café from 5-7pm Wednesday through Sunday. Look for beer, select wine and cocktail specials ($4-8) and small plates such as blistered shishito peppers with spicy aioli, antipasto and flatbread, for $7 or less. Trading places…Chef John Shanesy, most recently of Parallel 38, has taken over the kitchen at Petit Pois. Extra shot… This fall, Grit Café will open a fourth location at The Shops at Stonefield, in the former Press Coffee space. Mucho Mexican…Like free guac? You’re in luck. Last week, Qdoba Mexican Eats, which serves free guacamole with its entrées, opened on Lenox Avenue, near Costco and behind The Shops at Stonefield. The fast-casual chain also features loaded tortilla soup, queso nachos, burritos, burrito bowls and more.

Categories
News

Sign of the times: Supes don’t take kindly to city plaque

An item on the Albemarle Board of Supervisors consent agenda August 3 was to allow the city to put up a historic plaque in Court Square in front of the county’s courthouses. Only instead of rubberstamping the request, one supervisor took issue with the content, and others complained it was yet another missed opportunity for the city and county to work together.

Supervisor Rick Randolph asked for the resolution to be pulled from the agenda because he objected to a statement that the residents of Court Square often owned one or two slaves.

“Many moved to the outskirts of Charlottesville to Albemarle County,” he said at the meeting. “I felt like the narrative ended with slaves being slaves in the antebellum period, but where did they go after the Civil War? That’s a story that needs to be told.”

Some of the former slaves moved in the 1870s to communities just being discovered, like Hydraulic Mills or Lambs Road, Supervisor Ann Mallek pointed out.

Another wondered why a historical marker would go up while the city has a blue ribbon commission looking at race in memorials and public spaces.

And Supervisor Diantha McKeel wanted to know the backstory on whether any county staff had been involved with the text and if the city had even asked if it was okay to put the sign on county property. “I’m a little frustrated,” she said, “because time after time we have these missed opportunities when we ought to be working together instead of being blindsided.”

Note to city: The supes were also miffed they weren’t invited to the Hillsdale Drive meeting, according to a recording of the BOS meeting.

On the county side, assistant county exec Lee Catlin and deputy county exec Bill Letteri didn’t know how the issue got on the board’s agenda.

City preservation planner Mary Joy Scala shines light on the project and says at least one county staffer was involved from the county attorney’s office.

The Charlottesville Historic Resources Committee designed nine new markers to create a walking tour of Court Square to tell a more complete story of the history there, she says in an e-mail.

The markers will replace granite ones currently there with faded gold text, but the older slate markers “that everyone seems to like” will remain, she says. All the new signs will be 11″ x 17″, except for the one the city wants to plant on county property, which will be roughly 4′ x 5′.

The big sign replaces one that was put in front of the courthouses when Court Square was renovated in 2003, says Scala, and that marker replaced a large wooden one that was moved to the Albemarle Charlottesville Historical Society.

Because there’s no legal agreement between the city and county about such signage, that’s why it was on the county’s agenda, says Scala, a veteran of many City Council meetings, who did not attend the county meeting.

The city will pick up the tab for the new walking tour markers, which will likely exceed $5,000, Scala estimates.

Another controversial Court Square plaque is the one at the site of the slave auction block, which has come under fire for being on the ground and not terribly visible. The city’s historic resources committee was asked to replace an older slate one that had gone missing in 2013. “I know the Blue Ribbon Commission has been discussing the interpretation of this location as part of their agenda,” says Scala.

Meanwhile, the county still wants to have a say in how the history of Albemarle is told.

Says Letteri, “It may have been simply an oversight on the city’s part. They may not have thought about the county being involved.”