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News

Jetsetters: UVA admin is flying high

Another churn of the rumor mill brought forth the claim that the University of Virginia had recently purchased a shiny new aircraft—one much bigger and better than its old one. What old one, you ask? So did we.

While the truth-o-meter (and UVA spokesperson Anthony de Bruyn) has confirmed there is no new jet hauling President Teresa Sullivan to and fro her many engagements, C-VILLE did learn about the $4 million Cessna Citation Bravo that a foundation within the university purchased in 2004.

For the airplane savvy, UVA’s 2001 Cessna is a fixed-wing, multi turbofan-engine jet with a thrust of 4,000 pounds, according to FlightAware, the website on which the aircraft is registered. For the non-airplane savvy, it’s an eight-seat, seven-passenger jet with two engines and the ability to go pretty fast.

“UVA is not the only public university within the Commonwealth or the nation that owns an aircraft,” de Bruyn says (though our truth-o-meter, which has heard from 10 other public colleges in the state, has yet to find another one with a plane). “At UVA, the plane is frequently used for trips to the college at Wise and other regional locations that are best served with direct access when several personnel are traveling at the same time, rather than commercial service.”

The university’s plane policy says all flights must be for official business, and scheduling priority is given to the Office of the President. Private air transportation service must be authorized by the traveler’s dean, vice president or designee, and approved by the appropriate executive vice president.

Flown by pilot-in-command John Farmer and housed at the general aviation terminal at CHO, FlightAware’s records show that the jet was last used for a trip between the Charlottesville Albemarle Airport and the Manassas Regional Airport on October 10, though de Bruyn says those records need to be updated because it’s likely the jet has been used since then. With a flight speed of 315 miles per hour, this particular 70-mile trip took only 17 minutes.

“You don’t need a jet to get from Charlottesville to Manassas,” says Virginia Democratic State Senator Chap Petersen. “I think you can drive that in about 90 minutes.”

Petersen, a UVA Law graduate representing central and western Fairfax County, will carry several bills in next year’s General Assembly session that could further scrutinize UVA’s Board of Visitors and the university, which he says is currently “sitting on a couple billion dollars and continually increasing tuition fees and telling the General Assembly it’s broke.”

About the aircraft, Petersen doesn’t mince words: “Why does UVA need a jet? Why would any college need a jet?”

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News

In brief: Major demolition, pruning presidential grapes and more

Fate of the Republic

The 1980s Republic Plaza on West Main has been brought to its knees over the past month to make way for luxury student apartments. By Christmas, a claw had relentlessly chomped away its top two floors. In its place will be The Standard, a six-story, mixed-use structure with 189 apartments and a 499-space parking garage.

More tweetstorm fallout

Wes Bellamy. Photo: Mina Pirasteh
Photo: Mina Pirasteh

Beleaguered Bellamy resigned from his teaching job December 26 after going on leave November 29 when a  local blogger dug up vulgar tweets Bellamy made between 2009 and 2014 before being elected to City Council. Signatures are now being collected for a petition to remove Bellamy from City Council. Luckily for the vice mayor, Virginia does not make it easy to remove elected officials.

Turner turnaround

Dr. Rick Turner, president of the Albemarle-Charlottesville Chapter of the NAACP, addresses the crowd at last week’s rally in remembrance of Trayvon Martin. Photo: Annalee Grant
Dr. Rick Turner addressed the crowd at a rally in remembrance of Trayvon Martin. Photo: Annalee Grant

Little more than a month ago, Rick Turner fended off a challenge to his presidency of the Albemarle Charlottesville NAACP, a position he’s held for 12 years, and accused some white members of “deviousness.” He says he’ll resign December 31. “Now is the time for new and vibrant leadership!” he says in a December 20 release.

Trump’s migrant workers

Donald Trump has tweeted his objections about the affirmation that must be signed to vote in Virginia's March 1 Republican primary. Photo: Amanda Maglione
Photo: Amanda Maglione

BuzzFeed reports Trump Vineyard Estates applied for six H-2 visas to bring in foreign workers to prune grapevines for $10.72 an hour. Workers are provided lodging at no cost, must be able to bend over for long periods, work in weather as cold as 10 degrees and lift up to 60 pounds, according to the application.

City staff swelling

Charlottesville hired its first redevelopment manager: Brenda Kelley from Clarksville, Tennessee. And at its last meeting of the year December 19, City Council discussed whether it should hire a city architect and a person dedicated to the arts community, according to Charlottesville Tomorrow.

Good look at William Taylor Plaza

On December 20, the Board of Architectural Review approved most exterior design plans for a new 120,000-square-foot plaza located at the corner of Cherry Avenue and Ridge Street and named after—you guessed it—colonial landowner William Taylor. The board did, however, ask developers to revisit paint color options for the back of the building and said the rustic-looking garden element in front isn’t in line with the rest of the design. The plaza will be built in two phases: The first will include a Fairfield Inn by Marriott, and the second will include apartments and condos.

Quote of the Week: “I’m not leaving nor am I going anywhere, just starting a new chapter. We all need to use this time to think about how we heal, how we band together as a community, and how we create solutions to the issues in this community.” —Vice-Mayor Wes Bellamy in his statement announcing his resignation Monday as a teacher at Albemarle High

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Arts

The power of photography in Matt Eich’s Carry Me Ohio

Ten years before they were blamed and credited with helping to elect Donald Trump the 45th president of the United States, the white working class in post-industrial southeastern Ohio was documented by Matt Eich. A 19-year-old student of photojournalism at Ohio University at the time, Eich, now a Charlottesville resident, had grown tired of what he calls the college bubble. “I wanted to see what lives were like outside of that bubble. I found family, love, tenderness, tenacity, all kinds of other things,” he says. And this October, just before the election, he published a collection called Carry Me Ohio. The first edition was released worldwide in a print run of 600 and sold out in a month.

Eich’s explorations in “making pictures” began at age 10. “My grandmother was dying of Alzheimer’s and my grandfather took me on a road trip and handed me a camera,” he says. His work largely consists of moving portraits of people in everyday life. In high school he was exposed to the war photography of James Nachtwey and came to an important decision as a budding artist who also dabbled in music: “Photography has the greater potential for social good, which drove me to photojournalism,” says Eich. It was this drive that compelled him to overcome his shyness.

While soft-spoken, he conveys an earnest desire to capture people as they are, without pushing an agenda. He describes sitting quietly in a trailer in Ohio, chain-smoking and waiting to earn the trust of people who arrived to pick up illegally acquired OxyContin. Because while he did find tenderness and tenacity in these small communities, he also found poverty and addiction. “It’s hard to address it without falling into tropes,” he says. And even now, after 10 years of immersing himself, he says, “I still haven’t addressed it yet to the degree I want to, given how it’s taken over the towns.”

One photo called “Duct Tape” shows a young boy and small dog looking out a duct-taped window. The boy looks as though he’s crouched against the cold, and a bare tree is reflected in the window. Eich explains that the boy is in his family’s old trailer watching as the adults prepare to bring a new trailer onto their property in Chauncey, Ohio.

Another photo, “Elvis the Zebra,” adds some whimsy and strangeness to the collection as a zebra prances in the snow, seemingly in someone’s backyard. Eich explains that he took the photo at The Wilds, a research and conservation facility in Columbus located on 10,000 acres of reclaimed strip mine. “I’m interested in photos with a sense of mystery or ambiguity, which counteracts my photojournalism upbringing where photos are supposed to deliver information,” says Eich.

But he is also very committed to the role of photojournalism. On assignment he has photographed people with whom he is “completely and utterly morally opposed.” But, he says, “The role of journalism is to put light on marginalized communities, whether they’re marginalized with good reason or without.” He uses the medium, he says, “not for further division and polarization, but to show what we share in common, things we all need as human beings and citizens of the world.” It requires compartmentalization, he says, because the alternative is “if no one’s paying attention, things can grow in the dark and spread beyond our understanding.”

Yet the work he does not only requires his attention, but his empathy as well. “While I may not agree with people personally or politically,” he says, “I have to feel empathy for them or I can’t do the work. I have to interact with them as fellow citizens, human beings.” Speaking specifically of the subjects in Carry Me Ohio, Eich says, “Their choices are made out of decades of being forgotten. …We were taught in grad school ‘listen to your work.’ I’ve been trying to put a finger on the pulse of what’s happening in America. The growing discontent. It didn’t have a name for a long time. But now it does.”

And it is evident in the way he describes the collections scheduled to follow Carry Me Ohio, that his approach to his work continues to be careful and conscientious. The next volume, Sin and Salvation in Baptist Town, is due out in 2018 and is based on a community in Mississippi where there is a glaring disparity between the living conditions of the African-American and white communities. “I had a lot of conversations with people about how they’re used to being portrayed, and how they’d like to be portrayed,” he says. “The pictures need to strike a balance between the way they see themselves and the way I see them. I don’t want to create propaganda but I also don’t want to project my own outsider perceptions on them either.”

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Butchertown Burlesque

Set to live jazz from the early 20th century, the third installment of Butchertown Burlesque is a nightlife experience from days gone by, “harkening back to yesteryear when flappers and bootleggers reigned,” featuring the Butchertown Cats Orchestra and a roster of dancing starlets from around the U.S. Hostess Deanna Danger encourages revelry and cocktail attire.

Friday, December 30. $15-25, 9pm. The Southern Café and Music Hall, 103 S. First St. 977-5590.

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Arts

ARTS Pick: Trombone Shorty

Named by OffBeat Magazine as the New Orleans musical icon for the millennial generation, Trombone Shorty’s groundbreaking fusion of jazz, funk, blues, rock and hip-hop has been compared with other Big Easy greats like Louis Armstrong, Fats Domino, Dr. John, Professor Longhair, Wynton Marsalis and The Neville Brothers. In addition to making music, in 2015 he found time to write a children’s book telling the story of his relationship with the music of NOLA. “While I want to carry the torch for that legacy, more importantly, I want to ensure this tradition continues,” he says.

Thursday, December 29. $32.50-37, 8pm. The Jefferson Theater, 110 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 245-4980.

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News

Freelance tax: County expects to rake in $11 million

Since C-VILLE wrote about Albemarle County now retroactively demanding $50 business licenses—for the past five years—from freelancers who didn’t know they were businesses, surprised writers chief among them, we’ve learned that the county expects to bring in over $11.3 million in revenue, which will more than cover the $123,000 cost to hire two auditors.

However, some glitches remain in collecting the $50 business professional occupational license.

Although freelance writer and musician Lynn Pribus grossed $7,467 in 2012, a county auditor insisted her earnings for that year were $700K, and cited the Virginia Department of Taxation’s secure records. And because the county collects on gross receipts for those businesses earning more than $100,000, that means Pribus would owe $4,060. Plus interest and penalties.

“You can ‘verify’ with the Department of Taxation until the cows come home, but I am looking at my copy of my 2012 tax return AS FILED and, believe me, there are no gross receipts of more than $700K,” she wrote in an e-mail to the auditor.

Pribus calls the exercise “time consuming and frustrating,” particularly because she says she called the county when she moved here from California in 2007 to ask if she needed a business license and was told no.

“I was not here in 2007, so I am unable to speak on why you did not need a business license during your visit to our office,” replied the auditor in an e-mail.

Musician Gabe Robey also received a letter from the county that said he may need a business license.

The only problem? Robey lives in the city.

“They said that was a mistake,” says Robey after he called the county finance office.

Some of the recipients of the letters, like Charles Feinegoff, who has been a freelance writer for the past 25 years, were surprised that the county was coming to collect for a license they didn’t know was required.

County finance director Betty Burrell clears up that mystery. “Finance has two full-time business tax auditors who have been working to identify and educate business owners who are not compliant with county business tax laws,” she writes in an e-mail. The notices are part of the auditors’ jobs and follow something called the audit work plan, she explains.

And almost anyone who files a Schedule C on their income tax is susceptible, especially since the county has access to state income tax records.

“I think the county needs to be much better about publicizing the business license and needs to come up with a more rational, coherent and fair fee system,” says Feinegoff.

He questions why the license goes up so spectacularly—to $580—for those making more than $100K, and why they’re taxed on gross rather than net income. He’s also puzzled why the county wants the business professional occupational license paid March 1, but income taxes aren’t due until April 15.

After the initial irritation of having the county insist she made $700,000, Pribus learned state code allows the county to waive the penalties and interest from her late filing.

“It was frustrating and annoying, but if it’s on the books, we have to pay,” she says. “The county needs the money and I don’t want them to raise my property taxes.”

Still, she thinks it’s unfair to tax any business on its gross income. “Even the IRS doesn’t do that,” she says.

Categories
Living

Local restaurant closings leave us feeling empty

The end of 2016 has us eating our feelings. We’ve scrambled to get one more box of Spudnuts, wolfed down our last Brookville baked egg and toast points and devoured a final bowl of Mican noodles. Here’s a look back at the restaurants we said good-bye to this year, plus a rundown of new ones to look forward to in 2017.

Although we said so long to Just Curry on the Downtown Mall, in its stead we have Draft Taphouse, a serve-yourself-style bar with 60 taps.

Mican may have closed its York Place location on the mall, but it didn’t completely disappear from our lives—it now offers a smaller menu in the Lemongrass space on the Corner.

We’re whining about Mountfair Vineyards closing to the public—only club members can sip and savor there now.

The bad news is: Belmont BBQ officially closed. The good news is: The Local Smokehouse (the team behind The Local) fired up a barbecue joint in its place.

Harrison Keevil’s Brookville restaurant served its last meal this month, but you can still enjoy Keevil’s cooking at Keevil & Keevil Grocery and Kitchen in Belmont, which opened this summer.

Keeping pace with the changing times, Tempo on the corner of Water Street and Fifth Street SE is now fittingly home to Water Street restaurant.

After 10 years of pints, Tuesday trivia nights and St. Paddy’s Day celebrations, McGrady’s Irish Pub said farewell with a final party in September. Cho’s Nachos and Beer is slated to cater to McGrady’s former regulars.

West Main Street saw some change of spaces as well: C’Ville-ian Brewing Company closed in October, and Snowing in Space nitro coffee has set up shop in its place. And the former Horse & Hound Gastropub space finally has new tenants with Los Jarochos Mexican restaurant dishing out Veracruz food.

Speaking of Mexican food, Yearbook Taco on the Downtown Mall is no more, but owner Hamooda Shami has big plans for the space: A restaurant pop-up concept called 11 Months that changes—you guessed it—every 11 months.

We’re also not ready to say au revoir to Rock Barn, which is selling its remaining inventory through the end of this month. Founder Ben Thompson says we’ll have to wait and see what his next steps will be.

And perhaps the saddest closing of all is Spudnuts, the beloved donut palace on Avon Street. The store has been run by the Fitzgerald family for close to 50 years, and current owners Mike and Lori Fitzgerald said the time had come for an end of an era. The couple still owns the building, so we’re hoping to have more good food news to report soon.

And we would be remiss not to note the departure of one of the greatest culinary masters in this town: Jose De Brito, former executive chef at The Alley Light, joined Patrick McConnell’s staff at The Inn at Little Washington in May.

Full plates in 2017

But as we lament the loss of some of our favorite spots, we’re starting to get excited for new ones that are slated to appear in 2017.

Hardywood, a Richmond-based brewery twice voted Virginia’s top brewery by ratebeer.com users, is on track to open a Charlottesville location at 1000 W. Main St. in the Uncommon building.

In other brewery news, Hunter Smith, of Champion Brewing Co., is teaming up with restaurateur mastermind Will Richey to open Brasserie Saison in the former Jean Theory spot on the mall, where Benelux cuisine will be served, along with exclusive specialty beers brewed on-site by Smith and the Champion team.

Piedmont Place, which recently opened in Crozet, has a whole bunch of food options in the Piedmont Market, inspired by NYC’s Chelsea Market: a brick-and-mortar spot for Morsel Compass’ food truck noshes; homemade, small-batch ice cream at Crozet Creamery and Smojo smoothies and juice. In addition, there’s Smoked Kitchen and Tap (an extension of offerings from the Smoked BBQ food cart that left the Downtown Mall in August) on the lower terrace, and several floors up you’ll find, The RoofTop (also run by the Smoked team), offering pizzas, flatbreads and a Blue Ridge Mountain vista feast for the eyes.

We’re crossing our fingers that James Beard semi-finalist Melissa Close-Hart will finally open Junction, her much-anticipated “Mexican meets Old West” Southwestern saloon/steakhouse-style restaurant in Belmont.

We’re also eager to experience the perks of an expanded Shenandoah Joe on Preston Avenue and a larger Three Notch’d Brewing Co. location at IX Art Park, scheduled to open in November 2017.

And to end the column on a sweet note, we’ve heard Charlottesville is getting a Sugar Shack Donuts and that Sweethaus is moving to a bigger location.

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News

Co-ed controversy: Women’s college operating at a loss

Mary Baldwin University, a historic women’s college in Staunton, will start accepting applications to the University College Program, the school’s first residential program to accept men, its president announced November 28.

While some alumnae have scorned the decision, one man who’s already enrolled in a graduate program at the school supports the administration’s decision.

“I’m happy they’re going co-ed. Every time I walk on campus, I feel out of place,” says Garrett Schwalbach, a student in the Shakespeare and Performance program, one of several programs that is already co-educational. Wading through the university’s swells of women often makes him feel like a “wounded gazelle on the Serengeti,” he adds.

Jokes aside, Schwalbach points to Sweet Briar—another private women’s college in the state—which abruptly announced it would be closing its doors for good because of “insurmountable financial challenges” in March 2015.

Similarly, Mary Baldwin’s website says the students enrolled in the women’s college—the university has a number of other programs—provide about a quarter of its total tuition income, though it accounts for 60 percent of its total costs, and that it “operates at a growing and significant loss.”

At Sweet Briar, alumnae banded together, fundraised and saved the school from closing. Many Mary Baldwin alums now say it’s time for them to take the same steps.

Erin Cartwright, who graduated from the Staunton school in 2005, is an active member of an alumnae group called Boldly Baldwin. Members of her organization met at their alma mater December 3 to address current students’ concerns about the news.

“We discovered that the students were just as surprised and disheartened by the announcement as the alumnae were,” she says. “We feel that single-sex education is extremely valuable. …It helps to create an environment where women can feel empowered, where they have many opportunities to experience leadership positions that, at a co-ed institution, might not be as readily available to them.”

What has been even more disappointing to alumnae is the lack of transparency from the university, following what Cartwright says was a very transparent process of rebranding from a college to a university earlier this year.

“We have a lot to offer,” she says. “We could have helped prior to them making that decision. We were trained to be critical thinkers at Mary Baldwin, so to see our leaders disregarding that ability on our part is worrisome to us.”

In a December 8 letter, President Pamela Fox addressed concerns: “Recent declines in enrollment in the College for Women elevate the need to add additional programs quickly,” she wrote. “We strongly believe there continues to be a need for all women’s learning environments, which is why we are fighting to maintain ours. But those who choose to attend are making a choice that only 3 percent of women will even entertain.”

And where does the university need help most?

“The emphasis in starting the University College Program was that they’re hoping to increase their revenue sources to improve the overall solvency of the university,” says alumna Cartwright. “Basically, the university is in dire need of funds.”

Amongst structural issues and mold damage, she says, “Some of the students shared with us that there were bugs in their dorm rooms. That doesn’t seem especially hygienic.”

Crista Cabe, the vice president of university relations, says administration is working to address those issues. “Historic buildings and the challenges with them are something that many colleges and universities experience and deal with on a yearly basis.”

She says the university hopes to enroll 100 students in new programs (including the University College Program) next year, which should generate an additional $1.3 million in revenue. To date, 1,136 prospective students have applied for those spots.

Currently, 656 undergraduate women are enrolled in the Mary Baldwin College for Women, 577 men and women take graduate school classes and 528 men and women are involved in the university’s online and adult programs.

Categories
Arts

Movie review: Jackie explores a new point of view

The myth of the Kennedys and Camelot is so interwoven in the fabric of American history and identity that we often forget how intentionally it was constructed to be just that. The style, the dinners, the decorations, everything was carefully planned to project a particular image that would inspire Americans and survive long after the administration ended. But the intentionality of it all makes it no less genuine; people need a national mythology to remind them of who they are, what they value and where they’ve been.

Jackie
R, 91 minutes
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX, Violet Crown Cinema

This is the subject of Jackie, Pablo Larraín’s new film that is being advertised as a biopic but is much closer to a meditation on a theme or a visual essay. Natalie Portman plays First Lady Jacqueline “Jackie” Kennedy, a composed and confident character with a constant eye toward how Americans of today and future generations view their leaders and, by extension, themselves. The film begins with Jackie speaking with Theodore H. White (Billy Crudup) of Life magazine after she’s left the White House. Larraín then brings us on a journey through Jackie’s time in the public imagination, switching between her famous televised tour of the White House, the fateful day in Dallas, the period of time that followed in which she was responsible for Jack’s funeral and, therefore, legacy, interwoven with her dialogue with White.

Larraín is primarily concerned with exploring Jackie and her point of view, with the facts of her biography taking a backseat to the person she chose to be. She is surrounded by handlers and powerful men looking out for her well-being, including Bobby Kennedy (Peter Sarsgaard), all of whom are interested in the immediate practicality of transition and stability. These issues are no doubt important, but Jackie knows that these are not what people will remember when they think of this hectic time. They’ll remember grace, they’ll remember powerful symbols, and they’ll remember feelings more deeply than the sequence of events. The events of our lives are often out of our control, but our legacy is of our own making.

Larraín’s camera frequently floats behind Jackie as she walks through the halls, capturing as much of the scenery as possible with her low in the frame, depicting her in her chosen context as was her wont. The wonderful score by Mica Levi (Under the Skin) feels modern yet timeless, amplifying the film’s themes of legacy and memory. Portman’s performance is studious and captivating, as attentive to both appearance and depth as the first lady herself.

Despite its intelligence, good intentions and a career-defining performance by Portman, it would be difficult to recommend Jackie to anyone but the devoted. The lack of a narrative center is its greatest artistic strength, but Larraín often circles back to the same point with nothing in particular to say that hasn’t already been said several times. And though Levi’s score is one of the year’s best, it is too often placed at random and becomes unfortunately distracting.

None of this is enough to ruin Jackie, however. Observant, philosophical and unforgettable for its examination of intentional myth-making, Jackie is a template for a new kind of biopic and a revelation for the already beloved Portman.


Playing this week

Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX
The Shops at Stonefield, 244-3213
Assassin’s Creed, Collateral Beauty, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, Fences, Lion, Manchester by the Sea, Moana, Office Christmas Party, Passengers, Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, Sing, Why Him?

Violet Crown Cinema
200 W. Main St., Downtown Mall, 529-3000
Assassin’s Creed, Collateral Beauty, Fences, La La Land, Manchester by the Sea, Passengers, Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, Sing

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: New Year’s Eve events

New Year’s Eve Pajama Dance Party featuring Lauren Hoffman’s Secret Storm, Shagwüf, Synthetic Division, Ships in the Night, Just Sex and DJ Cadybug. $15-20, 8:30pm. The Southern Café and Music Hall, 103 S. First St. 977-5590.

Irish New Year with King Golden Banshee and a live broadcast from Dublin. No cover, 7pm. Tin Whistle Irish Pub, 609 E. Market St. 202-8387.

Love Canon, The Stray Birds and DJ Dave Moore. VIPs get a tiki happy hour with tacos, champagne and a signed poster. $32-60, 8pm. The Jefferson Theater, 110 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 245-4980.

New Year, New Sexy: Ouuuuuu Edition with DJ Flatline and DJ SoFly. Hosted by Black Market. $20, 10pm. 21-plus. The Ante Room, 219 W. Water St. 284-8561.

C-VILLE’s Big Night. Drinks, hors d’oeuvres, casino games and dancing. Proceeds benefit Live Arts. $75, 8pm. 21-plus. Live Arts, 123 Water St. cvillesbignight.eventbrite.com.