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Arts

Two exhibitions connect through travel at Second Street Gallery

Maybe it’s a cheap conceit for a writer, but there are times when it’s necessary to state the obvious: One of art’s prime functions is to take you somewhere else.

In a riveting moment of contemplation, art conveys you to a deeper plane of thought, motivates you to cultivate an unexpected appreciation of the previously mundane and, in the best cases, inspires your own flight. This is how the works of Alonzo Davis and Stacey Evans succeed as noble platforms for intimate, introspective transport.

Alonzo Davis and Stacey Evans
Second Street Gallery
Through April 28

Featured in Second Street Gallery’s latest exhibition, both artists examine our innate desire to explore, and incorporate travel as a unifying theme of their distinct approaches. Davis’ mixed media pieces traverse eras as they recall the imposing challenge of crossing oceans, while Evans’ layered photographs transform landscapes ever-changed by humanity, documenting ephemeral views only glimpsed from behind the windows of a passenger train. Both artists share observations specific enough to call personal, yet still so vastly hatched that they support an inclusive array of divergent interpretations.

Consider the fused bamboo, encaustics and vibrant LED of “Navigation Series.” Alighting the walls of Second Street’s larger space, Davis’ works merge the elemental with the technological in his take on Micronesian navigation stick charts. Originally frameworks representing Marshall Islands waterways, the charts were traditionally the tools of individuals who would likely be the sole interpreters of their own skillful configurations; in Davis’ hands, the viewers must define the potential connotations. As captains of our own voyages, the natural and electrical maps tease at direction, hint at religious symbolism and glow with the gravity involved in choosing which way to go next.

"Navigation Chart #3," by Alonzo Davis. Courtesy of the artist
“Navigation Chart #3,” by Alonzo Davis. Courtesy of the artist

Davis offers imprecise guidance about the hazy meanings of his designs, saying the arrangements function as “a reminder of how we navigate through the changes being brought about in 2017.” In our newfound contentious age, his point becomes clearer in the boat shapes of “From Here to There” and “Made of Immigrants.” Crafted in a similar bamboo-LED style, the titles contextualize the pieces in shallow political waters, underscoring the significance of seeking out new lands.

The “Navigation Series” also incorporates collage paintings ornamented by bamboo and animal bone-carved hand shapes; the overlapping textures of the “Reach Out Series” unify Davis’ influences from his trips through West Africa, Brazil, Haiti and the American Southwest. Proffering a distillation of travel-influenced folk art touches refracted through the lens of his Alabama upbringing, 30 years living in Los Angeles and five in Maryland, Davis invites our self-directed excursions into his abstractions.

Like Davis, travel motivates the creations of locally based photographer Evans. Capturing images of the passing terrain from trains, she’s collected an extensive stock of engaging pictures from which to choose for her fascinating technique: Photos are edited, cut into contours suggested by the subjects and overlaid to produce fresh, impossible landscapes of profound depths and ominous heights. Second Street’s Dové Gallery houses “Ways of Seeing,” Evans’ series of 2’x2′ or 3’x2′ archival pigment-enlarged prints and a smattering of hand-sized original cut photo works aptly measured in inches.

From the bright circular chads ornamenting “Miniature Constructs #1-4” to the ocean wave-like swaths of stacked skies in “Interdependence,” the works give us views of rare, absurd geology and the undiscovered fissures of overcrowded cities. And though the show’s title alludes to the subjectivity of vision, Evans’ evocative photographic collages provide the kind of worthwhile experience that no time spent following her train treks could ever replicate; these are her novel perceptions. This manifold confluence of perspectives grows an extraordinary reinvention of our world, illuminating transient vistas without any intrusion of the fantastic or aid of the computer generated. Incredibly, the banal subject matter of the images awe with the kind of surprise we tend to reserve for the blurry products of extrasolar satellites and confusing subatomic realms of multimillion-dollar electron microscopes.

“Rubble in America” piles trash upon more trash, “American Dumpster” drops a crowded trailer lot over a desert scene, and “Artifacts Left Behind” deploys a tiered automotive graveyard amassed beneath a raised freeway overpass; all three deftly reflect Evans’ railway vantages, the umbral portions of our national corridors and the unpleasant byproducts of our wanderlust, hardly requiring commentary beyond photo and title.

Zooming in for the “Shift in Perspective” pieces, the close-up works downplay or obscure the original subjects altogether by emphasizing the shapes of her cut photos. The resulting compositions improvise with forms and colors in an exploration of unfamiliar surfaces and kaleidoscopic atmospheres whipped up right in her studio.

Equipped with precious trophies snatched from her expeditions, Evans says that she usually starts her collage photo pieces “with a Pandora station and a pair of scissors.” Simple. But that’s all she needs to take us over the next horizon.

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News

In brief: Confederate statue for sale, special prosecutor and more

Auction block

Despite a looming lawsuit, City Council charged ahead and voted 3-2 to sell the statue of General Robert E. Lee and rename the park that bears his name. Councilor Kathy Galvin, one of the two votes against the removal, reminded the public that a move is not imminent until the litigation is resolved.

Worlds collide

saraTansey
Sara Tansey teaches bystander intervention in February, before she was accused of snatching Jason Kessler’s phone. Staff photo

After earlier assault charges were dismissed, Jason Kessler filed again, this time against Sara Tansey for allegedly snatching his phone at a February Lee Park demonstration, and he asked for a special prosecutor for the destruction of property charge. Tansey filed assault charges against Joe Draego, the man who grabbed the phone back and who sued City Council over public comment procedures. Draego’s attorney in the civil suit, Jeff Fogel, now represents Tansey.

“I don’t know anything about him except he is a crybaby.”
—Commonwealth’s attorney candidate Jeff Fogel to WINA April 17 about Lee statue supporter Jason Kessler’s latest filing of charges

Grim anniversary

It’s been 10 years since a deranged gunman killed 32 people April 16, 2007, at Virginia Tech, the nation’s worst mass murder until that record was broken last June at an Orlando nightclub.

Back to the merch

Music and real estate mogul Coran Capshaw reacquired Musictoday, the Crozet e-commerce company he founded in 2000 and sold to Live Nation in 2006, Billboard reports.


HousingGraphHousing bubbling up

In 2007, the burst housing bubble wasn’t as bad as it would get over the next few years, but local residential sales were starting to slide from the peak prices of 2005. Ten years later, some homeowners are still underwater, but others are seeing housing prices increase again. Back in ’07, it was a buyer’s market with a huge inventory of houses, and that’s the biggest difference now: “Lack of inventory,” says Anthony McGhee, president of Charlottesville Area Association of Realtors. “Price increases are based on low supply and high demand.” Now, once again, realtors are advising people not to wait to buy because prices—and mortgage rates—are only going up. Here’s what the first quarter of 2017 looks like compared to 2007.

HousingData


Power of the press

More than 500 members of the Virginia Press Association attended the awards banquet for the 2016 Annual News and Advertising Contest, held April 8, at the Hilton Richmond Hotel and Spa/Short Pump. Local media winners included the Daily Progress, which took the Grand Sweepstakes award in the Daily 1 category and the News Sweepstakes award, and Charlottesville Tomorrow, which won the Online Sweepstakes award. C-VILLE Weekly took home 11 awards in the specialty category:

First place:

  • Larry Garretson—Arts writing (“Creative sparks: The value of undeveloped spaces in Charlottesville”)
  • Lisa Provence—General news writing (Water Street parking garage coverage)
  • Jordy Yager—In depth or investigative reporting (“Searching for solutions: Why are black kids arrested more often than white kids?”)
Bronco Mendenhall loves a challenge. That means he’s in the right place as he attempts to rebuild UVA’s football program into a winning powerhouse. Hoos watching? Everyone.
Bronco Mendenhall. Photo Jackson Smith

Second place:

  • Best website
  • Tom Daly—Pictorial photo (LOOK3 Festival of the Photograph)
  • Jackson Smith—Personality or portrait photo (Bronco Mendenhall)

Third place:

  • Jessica Luck—Feature story (“Dr. Edward Wolanski has become part of the families”)
  • Max March—Specialty pages or sections (Arts picks)
  • Ron Paris—Feature photo (World Wrestling Entertainment)
  • Ron Paris—Sports news photo (Montpelier Hunt Races)
  • John Robinson—Pictorial photo (Albemarle County Fair)
Categories
News

Court costs: After winning jury trial, Eramo settles

Nearly two years after filing a more than $7.5 million defamation suit against Rolling Stone, its parent company and “A Rape on Campus” reporter Sabrina Rubin Erdely—and five months after a jury awarded her $3 million—former UVA associate dean Nicole Eramo settled her case, likely for much less.

The November 19, 2014, Rolling Stone article shook UVA to its core and became a national sensation—until the story told by alleged gang-rape victim Jackie began to unravel. By December 5, 2014, Rolling Stone announced it no longer had faith in Jackie’s tale, and in April 2015, following a lacerating analysis by Columbia Journalism Review, the magazine retracted the story.

A month later, Eramo, the university’s go-to sexual assault administrator, filed suit. Among her complaints were that the article made her the “chief villain” in a tale of institutional indifference to rape, damaged her reputation and caused her emotional distress.

The jury trial lasted 17 days last fall in the U.S. District courthouse, culminating in the jury’s November 7 $3 million award.

Libel attorney Alice Neff Lucan says it’s not that uncommon to settle defamation cases after a jury verdict.

“One reason for a plaintiff to settle is to avoid more legal fees,” she says. “Any libel case is ripe for appeal.”

And indeed, the same day the jury made its award, Rolling Stone attorney Elizabeth McNamara said the magazine would appeal.

In February, Rolling Stone asked a federal judge to set aside the jury’s verdict, arguing that Rolling Stone’s December 2014 publication of the story with an editor’s note expressing lack of confidence in Jackie’s story did not constitute republication with actual malice. Judge Glen Conrad had not ruled on the motion when the case was settled.

Filing such a motion is “standard operating procedure,” says Lucan, who said she hadn’t followed the trial. “I’m assuming without knowing that the settlement is less than the award.”

A crowdsourcing website to help pay Eramo’s legal fees raised $31,086 of its $500,000 goal from 178 donors. “Nicole’s lawyers have agreed to discount their legal fees, but lawsuits are expensive and Nicole needs our help to cover the costs of litigation,” says the CrowdRise fundraiser page created by True Hoos.

And the cost of a trial that ran more than three weeks? “You could buy a couple of houses with what that cost,” says Lucan.

In January, Eramo’s attorneys at Clare Locke filed with the court a bill of costs incurred for the trial for $144,673, including more than $90,000 for transcripts.

Besides the expense of fighting an appeal, Lucan says there are other reasons to settle. “Being involved in a lawsuit is so draining,” she says. Emotionally it’s very difficult, and there’s the “personal wear and tear that really is part of the costs,” she says.

In a statement, the magazine says, “Rolling Stone, Sabrina Rubin Erdely and Nicole Eramo have come to an amicable resolution. The terms are confidential.”

And Eramo’s attorney, Libby Locke, says, “We are delighted that this dispute is now behind us, as it allows Nicole to move on and focus on doing what she does best, which is supporting victims of sexual assault.”

The settlement gives both sides control and it also ends it, says Lucan. “Maybe vindication for Dean Eramo means more than the dollar award.”

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News

Daily Progress and Newsplex lay off staff

The same week the Daily Progress won a whopping 42 awards at the April 8 Virginia Press Association banquet, including 13 first-place plaques, the paper, which is owned by a subsidiary of Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway, laid off three employees.

The Progress, like many other former Media General-owned newspapers, thought it had been thrown a life raft when Buffett bought Media General’s print operations in 2012.

And while national newspapers like the New York Times and the Washington Post have seen a surge in subscriptions since the 2016 election, that growth hasn’t trickled down to local levels. The Daily Progress had a circulation of 21,274 in 2012, but by 2016 it was down to 14,693, the Columbia Journalism Review reports, a nearly 31 percent drop.

BH Media Group, which owns 31 daily newspapers, including the Richmond Times-Dispatch and Roanoke Times, handed out pink slips April 3 to 181 employees and another 108 vacant positions were slashed because of declining advertising revenue and circulation, according to BH Media CEO Terry Kroeger in a memo. The particularly hard hit RTD axed 33 employees, including 13 in the newsroom.

The Progress had to do some “belt-tightening” to adjust for revenue declines, says publisher Rob Jiranek, who was a C-VILLE Weekly owner from 1995-2006. That affected three people in advertising, he says in an email, and other positions won’t be filled immediately.

“Newsroom remains strong, like bull,” he writes.

Jiranek echoes Buffett’s earlier belief in local papers when he told the CJR there’s “certainly a strong instinct and faith that we need to maintain the fundamental strength of our newsrooms and the core competency of great, local journalism. And I underscore ‘local’ in the phrase like three times.”

A couple of weeks ago, a report circulated that the Newsplex was cutting its weekend news broadcast in a cost-saving move and would simulcast news from WHSV in Harrisonburg.

That option had been discussed, and then discarded, says Jay Barton, Newsplex general manager. One technical position has been cut, he says.

The Newplex’s Charlottesville CBS, Fox and ABC stations are owned by Atlanta-based Gray Television, and Barton says the operating cuts were based on individual local station needs and were not company wide.

“Our company is as strong as it has ever been, and only growing,” says Barton in an email. “When I joined the company in 2012, we served 31 markets and Gray now serves 56 markets with a market cap of just under $1 billion.”

Updated 11am April 18 with Jiranek’s C-VILLE ownership.

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News

Charges certified: Victim testifies in forcible sodomy case against ex-officer

 

A 35-year-old former cop made an April 13 appearance in the courthouse attached to the Charlottesville Police Department, where he was employed as a patrol officer when he allegedly pressured a woman to her knees, unzipped his pants and forced her to perform oral sex while on the job.

In a lengthy testimony, the victim described the events that took place in the early morning hours of November 18, when Christopher Seymore responded to a drunk driving incident on her street and entered her Shamrock Road apartment to ask about what she saw.

C-VILLE does not release the names of sexual assault victims.

The victim testified that she sat on her couch with the officer while he waited for a truck to tow the abandoned and damaged vehicle from the scene. He said she was beautiful and he recognized her from a bar on The Corner that she used to manage. When the tow truck finally arrived, he left some of his equipment in her living room and said he’d be back to get it, she said.

He then left the apartment.

Exhausted, she approached him near the tow truck and asked if he could come in and get it because she wanted to go to bed. He told her he’d be back soon, the woman said.

About five minutes later, she said Seymore returned with his badge covered and his body camera removed from his vest.

“He was just very different this time,” she said, adding that he was looking around her apartment in a “weird fashion” and told her he suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder. “He kept saying how pretty I was and then he shut the front door.”

She then described his “dry, thin lips” kissing her.

“I guess I didn’t push him away,” she said. “It was very clear to me that I had no choice.”

She described the way he lifted her shirt, fondled her breasts and with his hand on her shoulder, he pushed her down to her knees. “His penis was in my face and that gun [on his hip] was staring at me,” she said. When it was over, she rushed to the bathroom to clean up, she testified.

Becoming emotional in the courtroom, the victim said Seymore immediately started to apologize and did so over and over and asked her not to tell anyone. When he stepped out of the house, he came back to the door several times before he finally left.

“I was just in shock,” she said. “I wanted to feel safe. I would’ve said anything to get him out of there.”

The victim testified that she took ZzzQuil to help her sleep that night, and around 7am, she heard knocking on her bedroom window. Then the kitchen door. It was him.

“I should have never opened the door,” she said. Seymore entered her house in plain clothes, made small talk about the drunk driver from the night before, began apologizing profusely, again, for what happened between them, started kissing her and led her to her bedroom where he took off his jacket, pulled down his pants and “sprawled himself on my bed as if he owned my house.”

Testified the victim, “He kept saying, ‘Do you like what you see?’ and motioned for her to perform oral sex on him again. After ejaculating “in 2.5 seconds,” he got himself together and before he left, he said, “Next time I would like to fuck,” she told the judge.

She said she agreed not to tell anyone what happened. “I was embarrassed. I was ashamed. I didn’t think anybody would believe me over a cop.” But after two weeks of no sleep, she called another CPD officer she trusted to ask for the name of his colleague who signed for the tow truck on November 18—because Seymore covered his badge, and when she asked for his name, he said, “Chris, that’s all you need to know.”

The officer convinced her to tell him what happened, she said, and once she did, he said he had no choice but to report it.

A lieutenant with the CPD testified that Seymore, who lives in Goochland, admitted on December 1 to receiving oral sex from her on two occasions, but said they were consensual.

In Charlottesville General District Court, Judge Robert Downer certified Seymore’s charges to the grand jury, which will hear his case in June.

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Arts

ARTS Pick: Porchella

Tom Tom Founders Festival saves one of its highlights for last in Porchella, a free music event that turns the expansive front porches of the Belmont neighborhood into stages for local players, including University of Whales, Michael Coleman and Gina Sobel. Pull up a lawn chair or stroll the streets of Goodman and Graves and Monticello Avenue and let the music move you along.

Sunday, April 16. Free, 7pm. Belmont. tomtomfest.com

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Arts

ARTS Pick: Sallie Ford

By nature, musicians draw from their emotional lives, consciously or not, to commune and titillate. Sallie Ford puts it all on her sleeve unabashedly on her new album, Soul Sick, a confessional that deals with vulnerability and rebuilding, offered through a British Invasion-meets-girl group doo-wop melding of garage rock. Opener Molly Burch left a Hollywood insider upbringing (with parents in the film biz) to attend University of North Carolina, where she studied jazz vocals before breaking
into the singer/songwriter scene in Austin, Texas.

Saturday, April 15 $12-15, 9pm. The Southern Café and Music Hall, 103 S. First St. 977-5590.

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Arts

ARTS Pick: Nine Pillars Hip-Hop Cultural Festival

The weeklong Nine Pillars Hip-Hop Cultural Festival is evidence that Charlottesville’s scene is thriving. The fest kicks off April 17 with a youth showcase and features events such as the Build-a-Bar lyrics workshop and the Black Rhymes Matter seminar on rap as social activism. Poets, singers, dancers and emcees perform at a Verbs and Vibes open mic, and hip-hop heads can nod to local beats at a Rugged Arts showcase. Charlottesville and Richmond emcees will compete in a No Filter rap battle before the week culminates in an old-school block party in the parking lot under the Belmont Bridge, where local legends The Beetnix reunite for the first time in years.

Through April 23. Price, time and locations vary. (703) 851-1062. cvillehiphop.com

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Arts

Album reviews: Sneaks, All Them Witches and Marty Stuart and His Fabulous Superlatives

Sneaks

It’s a Myth (Merge)

Sneaks is 19-year-old Eva Moolchan. She’s from Washington, D.C., but don’t look for political rage or go-go on It’s a Myth. It’s sinewy, minimal pop you can dance to, albeit briefly—there are 10 songs in 19 minutes. And Moolchan doesn’t sound too bothered about anything—she sounds like ESG doing warm-up exercises. She sounds like M.I.A. waking up from a nap. She sounds blasé and maybe sometimes too cool for school, but she sounds cool.

It’s a Myth has three main ingredients: Moolchan’s drony intonations, drum machine and bass. None of them get that busy, and when a synth layers in on the penultimate “With a Cherry on Top,” it sounds positively ornate. It also sounds kinda grating, as does the closer, “Future.” Is this a 19-minute album with 15 minutes of inspiration? Maybe—anyway, there seem to be zero minutes of perspiration. Is songcraft not on the table, or is this artful artlessness? In any case, the 15 minutes are digable. Why should a song as monotonous as the one-chord “Look Like That” be so swinging and catchy? Because it is, so there.

https://sneaks.bandcamp.com/album/its-a- myth

All Them Witches

Sleeping Through the War (New West)

Nashville stoner rockers All Them Witches formed in 2012 and have built a fan base through steady touring ever since. I saw a fantastic show in Charlottesville—guitar tones were dialed in for maximum sonic drenching, and many horns were thrown. Sleeping Through the War sounds like a solid attempt to bring the live show to record; there are pounding grooves along with a prodigious amount of riffing. But the guitars often create a textureless wall while the drums jump out needlessly. Charles Michael Parks Jr.’s guttural voice also stands out, sounding apt and grungy while spouting hobgoblin blather like “I know the puppeteer’s face / I know the shining light calling me back to alabaster / But I lost sight of the mountain.” An exception is the concluding “Internet” and the refrain “If I can’t live here / Guess I’ll go live on the Internet,” which is amusing at first but gets repeated over and over. Luckily, dank solos come to the rescue, including stellar harmonica, courtesy of Mickey Raphael from Willie Nelson’s band. Could be the natural habitat for All Them Witches and these songs is the sweltering stage.

https://allthemwitches.bandcamp.com/album/sleeping-through- the-war

Marty Stuart and His Fabulous Superlatives

Way Out West (Superlatone)

With Way Out West, country superstar Marty Stuart may not have made the country album of the year, but he’s probably made the guitar album of the year. The proceedings begin inauspiciously, with Native American ritual music projected onto a spacy background in “Desert Prayer–Part I.” But the Chet-Atkins-meets-Dick-Dale instrumental “Mojave” sets things right, and the album does not falter.

Don’t get me wrong, there’s plenty of country here—from the dusty Bakersfield twang of “Lost on the Desert” to the slide showcase of “El Fantasma Del Toro” to the electrified bluegrass of “Air Mail Special.” But Stuart and the Superlatives add the Byrdsy rock of “Time Don’t Wait,” the Link Wray tribute “Quicksand” and the heady psychedelia of the title track. It’s all fantastic. Mike Campbell, of Tom Petty’s Heartbreakers, deserves props for his dry and crispy, unobtrusive production—which really just means that the players are terrific, especially “second” guitarist Kenny Vaughan—he and Stuart’s interplay is divine. Way Out West is as majestic and sweeping as the land that inspired it. Let’s get lost. —Nick Rubin

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News

Two more independents join City Council race

So far, seven people seem eager to devote their Monday nights to City Council meetings. The race for two open seats now held by Bob Fenwick and Kristin Szakos, who is not seeking another term, has drawn three Democrats—Fenwick, Heather Hill and Amy Laufer—for the June 13 primary. Traditionally the primary winners are shoo-ins for the November election in the Dem-heavy Charlottesville.

But this year the city teems with activist groups, as well as a new political group. EPIC—Equity and Progress in Charlottesville—has been recruiting candidates outside the Democratic machine, and already Nikuyah Walker, who was encouraged to run by the late Holly Edwards, an EPIC founder, has announced a run as an independent, joining Dale Woodson. Also jumping on the November ballot are Nancy Carpenter and Paul Long. Will the independents be able to break the Dem stranglehold on City Council?

Nancy Carpenter

It’s not surprising that The Haven’s homeless prevention coordinator would list housing as her first priority in her council campaign. “It’s basic to everything,” says Carpenter. “It’s a right, not
a privilege.”

Carpenter was on the EPIC steering committee up until the time she filed her council paperwork, and her independent run was inspired by presidential candidate Bernie Sanders, who carried Charlottesville, and the Occupy movement.

She’s calling for open and accountable government, and uses last year’s changes in public comment as an example of council acting without public input. And she wants mindful growth that’s aware of gentrification and the impact upon historic neighborhoods a proposed development makes.

Carpenter is a native Virginian who spent most of her adult life in Culpeper before moving here in 2008.

“It was a perfect storm,” she says. “It was time to step up and do public service.” Carpenter cites her “old-fashioned” belief that “the highest thing one can do in a democracy is to do things for the public good.”

Paul Long

Former UVA Medical Center patient transporter Long retired in 2015, but he’s still focused on transportation, and thinks public conveyance should
be expanded in the city. Long is making his third run for council as an independent after an unsuccessful attempt in 2009 and dropping out of the race in 2011 because he thought then-candidate Brandon Collins was voicing his concerns.

“I’ve listened to the candidates throwing their hats into the ring,” he says. “None are talking about the issues I’m concerned about.” Top of the list is homelessness.

And Long has long advocated for decriminalization of drug possession, even though that’s not an issue local government legislates. “City Council could be influential on state and federal levels,” he says. “It’s a public health issue. And enforcement of those laws is under their purview.”

Long has not made a formal announcement—and when he contacted C-VILLE, he was still about 15 valid signatures short of the 125 he needs to get on the ballot, but he has until June 13 to get them. He plans a rally at 3pm April 24 at the Landmark on the Downtown Mall, because he objects to giving developer John Dewberry $1 million to finish the long-derelict project.