Peter Benedetti’s “Solve et Coagula” is on display alongside Paul Brainard’s “My Body is a Grave” (above) at Second Street Gallery, now through November 17. Courtesy of the artist
Peter Benedetti never planned to make a deck of tarot cards. Instead, you might argue, the cards found him.
“It’s not something I would normally do,” says the Brooklyn-based artist, who points to the abstract expressionist influence on the style of his inventive drawings and paintings.
But a few years ago, during his daily research and quest for inspiration, he came across a tarot card.
“I only expected to do one, but I wound up putting it out into the world and people responded,” he says. “I got obsessed and did the whole deck.”
“A normal deck has 78 cards, and mine has 80 cards. Those extra two are wild cards that don’t mean anything. They just throw the viewer off,” he says. “People have described them as dark but whimsical.”
Allowing subconscious impulse to drive is a hallmark of Benedetti’s work. “I create a lot of different things. It’s fluid, stream of consciousness work,” he says. “When you’re doing this kind of art, you’re reacting. You react to what’s happening on the canvas and the paper. You may have an idea but it evolves into something else.”
For example, he came across a trove of drawings done by his girlfriend when she was just a child. She planned to throw them away.
“I thought they were amazing and wanted to collaborate with them,” he explains. “The innocence but evolved-ness [of child drawings] speak to me in the same way abstract expression does.”
Using construction paper and child’s scrawl as a canvas, he springboarded off oversized flowers, geometric houses and floating heads with stick arms, layering on detailed drawings of devils, deities and disturbing words in red and black and blue. (Think: “Brutal Fucking Murder” and “A Message to a Sick Society.”)
“I’m generally interested in the darker side of things,” says Benedetti, whose collaborative child drawings—as well as his Divine Will tarot project and assorted paintings and drawings—are currently on display at Second Street Gallery, along with artist Paul Brainard’s “My Body is a Grave.” (In a statement about his show, Brainard describes his intentional juxtaposition of puritan gravestones against pornography and homogenized culture as a means to illustrate “the void of substance in everyday life.”)
“Solve et Coagula,” the title of Benedetti’s exhibition, means “dissolve and concentrate.” It’s a motto, drawn from alchemy, that underscores Benedetti’s process: the collaborative interplay of the artist’s own subconscious with references to horror movies, the occult and stuff that “makes people uncomfortable”—like tarot.
“In my mind, there’s a stigma surrounding [tarot], like it’s some kind of voodoo that goes on. I envision it as something that scares people,” he says—and that appealed to him.
Benedetti spent two years creating his Divine Will tarot project, designing the cards one at a time on his computer using a limited palette: black, white and red.
“As I was designing the deck, I took a trip to Prague, which is an amazing place with gothic architecture and sculpture and dark-looking statues,” he says. “The King of Swords was inspired by a sculpture that I saw there.”
Others riff on Benedetti’s art history studies, referencing modern prints and Renaissance paintings, including Michelangelo’s “The Last Judgment.” The King of Wands card was inspired by a horror movie poster featuring a portrait of Christopher Lee.
The artist’s interpretation of tarot has deepened considerably since he began the project. “Now I know about the history of [the tarot] and what it actually means,” he says. “In general, the first card in the deck is the fool. Most people would describe it as the fool’s journey. It’s the cycle of life. You start off not knowing anything, and as you get older and travel on your path, you learn things as you go. Depending on how the cards fall, it may or may not tell you something about yourself and what you should or shouldn’t be doing.”
Now that he’s finished his first deck, Benedetti plans to create another one.
Small wonder, given his affinity for following streams of personal experience and exploring whatever consciousness might arise. In the end, tarot cards might not be so unexpected a subject after all.
You might say it was always in the cards.
Magick man
The title for Peter Benedetti’s tarot deck, Divine Will, sprang from his discovery of Aleister Crowley, a 20th-century occultist who formed a religious philosophy called Thelema.
“The premise [of Thelema] was to follow your will in life,” Benedetti says. “You are your own god, and you decide your own destiny. I thought of the phrase divine will because the divine in yourself is basically your will, and it’s how you create your own future.” The Beatles, David Bowie, Led Zeppelin and Ozzy Osbourne have all made references to Crowley on their albums.
In Hellmouth, a new interactive choose-your-own-horror-adventure story app, participants are special agents called back early from vacation for a pressing assignment.
Halloween is right around the corner, and, for some of us, candy corn, costumes, haunted houses, horror movie marathons and monster mashing is celebration enough. But for those who like a little extra treat in their bag of Halloween tricks, two Charlottesvillians have developed Hellmouth, an interactive choose-your-own-horror-adventure audio tour.
Head to the Downtown Mall, open up the Hellmouth app and either turn up the volume on your phone or pop in some earbuds to step into the story.
You’re a special agent called back early from vacation for a pressing assignment. Your boss explains: “We have reason to believe that Satanists are converging on a small town in Virginia named Charlottesville to open what is known as a Hellmouth,” a portal to another dimension that, if opened, will release chaos and evil into the town. Paranormal abnormalities have been recorded all over the downtown area and you must visit and investigate those sites, then report back. Your mission is to stop the Hellmouth from opening. Remember one thing, your boss insists: “Fix your heart or die.”
A map built into the app and tracked by GPS is pre-marked with all of the sites where paranormal abnormalities have been identified. A series of original stories and vignettes—written by Hellmouth creators Drew Bergman and Sam Patteson and featuring 14 actors playing nearly two dozen roles—play along the way.
Investigate all the sites in sequence, or check them out one at a time. It’s up to you, special agent—this is your adventure to choose.
“We were looking for a good venue to tell non-linear stories, set in areas where they might have the most impact,” says Patteson, and when the pair couldn’t find a good avenue to do so, they decided to write their own app.
Bergman says that he and Patteson worked on the storyline over the summer, and after the white supremacist torch-lit rally of August 11 and the deadly rally and car attack of August 12, they were compelled to change the course of the story. The original stories “became adrift and confused in the aftermath of [that] weekend,” says Bergman.
They started thinking about what prompts a person to join a hate organization, how hate groups attract new/young members and why hateful behavior is so seemingly normalized, Patteson says, adding, “it’s become almost a farce here. First, the KKK came to town, then the alt-right. Can literal Satanists summoning the devil be that far behind?”
Hellmouth then “became an outlet for the two of us to focus disgust, rage, hopelessness and our knee-jerk penchant for gallows humor into something at least a little more productive,” says Bergman.
Patteson knows it’s something that requires a dark sense of humor and a certain tolerance for satire, adult themes and some gore, and Hellmouth special agents are invited to convene at Champion Brewing Co. on Halloween night for a party with music, art, projections and more. But will they have fixed their hearts? We’ll have to wait and see.
Updated Tuesday, October 24 at 3pm with a second story about court appearances on Monday, October 23.
Even months prior to August 12, the community was up to its figurative elbows in lawsuits stemming from the emergence of Unite the Right organizer Jason Kessler into the local spotlight and the people who’ve made it their goal to publicly confront him.
At the end of last week and the beginning of this one, several familiar faces from the alt-right, as well as its rejectors, were in Charlottesville General District court to learn their fate from Judge Robert Downer.
Wearing a hot pink wig and carrying a Donald Trump mask as a purse, Black Lives Matter activist Veronica Fitzhugh was found not guilty October 20 of obstructing free passage at the summer’s Ku Klux Klan rally in Justice Park.
An arresting officer with the Charlottesville Police Department testified that Fitzhugh refused to leave a passageway police had secured to safely usher the KKK into the park for its permitted demonstration July 8.
The Klan was in town to protest the removal of the city’s General Robert E. Lee statue, and Fitzhugh and about 10 other counterprotesters locked arms in front of a gate into the park, delaying the white supremacist rally for about an hour, according to the CPD officer’s testimony.
When Fitzhugh was instructed to step away from the gate, she laid down in front of it and was carried out by four officers.
“No one was allowed in there except for the people authorized by the police, so this was not a public passageway,” argued her attorney, Jeff Fogel, who noted that the CPD officer’s body cam footage showed a cameraman was also standing in front of the gate that officers later corralled the Klan through. “I don’t know how they could claim Ms. Fitzhugh was obstructing the gate and that gentleman wasn’t.”
The following Monday, in the same courtroom, her attorney had several wins and losses—for additional clients and himself.
On June 1, Kessler’s own video evidence shows he and his buddy, Caleb Norris, approached Fogel outside Miller’s on the Downtown Mall. They were surrounded by members of activist group Showing Up for Racial Justice, as its members shouted “Nazi, go home” at the alleged alt-righters.
The video shows Kessler chastising Fogel for calling him a “crybaby” in April, and Norris can be heard calling the attorney a “communist piece of shit.” Fogel replies, “What did you say?” and is seen putting his hands toward Norris.
“Oh my God, this guy just assaulted my friend,” an elated Kessler says, and urges his friend to press charges against the lawyer who was running for commonwealth’s attorney at the time.
Back in the courtroom, Fogel, represented by his law partner Steve Rosenfield, said Norris leaned over at him and put his hands up to keep Norris from coming any closer. In the video, it was unclear whether Norris leaned into Fogel, but Downer cited Fogel’s unaggressive disposition when Kessler was lambasting him earlier in the clip, and said he couldn’t find Fogel guilty.
Fogel also represented Sara Tansey October 16, who was charged with destruction of property for snatching Kessler’s phone while he was live-streaming a February 11 Corey Stewart rally in Emancipation Park.
Joe Draego, best known for suing the city for being dragged out of a City Council meeting in June 2016 (after he called Muslims “monstrous maniacs” and lay down on the floor), testified that he took the phone out of Tansey’s hand and gave it back to Kessler.
While Tansey was found guilty for nabbing Kessler’s cell phone, Draego was also found guilty of assault and battery of Tansey when he took the phone back.
The judge waived Tansey’s $50 fine, and Draego was ordered to fork over $100.
Fitzhugh was also charged May 31 with assault and disorderly conduct stemming from an encounter with Kessler, in which she allegedly screamed in his face and told him to “fucking go home” as he was sitting at a table on the Downtown Mall.
The activist, known for her outlandish wardrobe, will go to trial for the assault and disorderly conduct charges November 20. What will she wear next?
Among the familiar faces in court this week was Veronica Fitzhugh, wearing a hot pink wig and carrying a purse that resembled Donald Trump’s head.
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Original story:
Wearing a hot pink wig and carrying the head of Donald Trump as a purse, activist Veronica Fitzhugh was found not guilty of obstructing free passage at the summer’s Ku Klux Klan rally in Justice Park.
An arresting officer with the Charlottesville Police Department testified in the city’s general district court October 20 that Fitzhugh refused to leave a passageway police had secured to safely usher the KKK into the park for their permitted demonstration July 8.
The Klan had dropped by to protest the tearing down of the city’s General Robert E. Lee statue, and Fitzhugh and about 10 other counterprotesters locked arms in front of a gate into the park, delaying the white supremacist rally for about an hour, according to the CPD officer’s testimony.
Police warned the crowd that they would be arrested if they did not clear the pathway for the North Carolina group called the Loyal White Knights, and as some counterprotesters began to disperse, Fitzhugh laid down in front of the gate, the officer said. He and three Virginia State Police troopers then carried her out of the vicinity, and she was charged with obstruction of free passage.
“No one was allowed in there except for the people authorized by the police, so this was not a public passageway,” argued her attorney, Jeff Fogel, who noted in the CPD officer’s body cam footage that a cameraman was also standing in front of the gate that officers later corralled the Klan through. “I don’t’ know how they could claim Ms. Fitzhugh was obstructing the gate and that gentleman wasn’t.”
Commonwealth’s Attorney Dave Chapman, who prosecuted the case, said she was arrested for “admirable reasons” and “she simply took it too far.”
Judge Robert Downer found her not guilty, and Fitzhugh and Fogel emerged from the courthouse to a crowd of about 30 supporters, who cheered and clapped and lined up to hug the activist who wore a hot pink, rhinestone handcuff necklace that matched her bodacious wig.
Fitzhugh was was also charged May 31 with assault and disorderly conduct stemming from an encounter with homegrown white nationalist Jason Kessler on the Downtown Mall, in which she allegedly screamed in his face for him to “fucking go home.” Her attorney was charged with assault after a confrontation with an associate of Kessler’s June 1.
The activist, known for her outlandish wardrobe, will go to trial for the assault and disorderly conduct charges November 20. What will she wear next?
Veronica Fitzhugh knows how to accessorize. Staff photo
Six candidates vie for two open seats on City Council.
Every year is an election year in Virginia, and in anticipation of your trip to the voting booth November 7, we bring you our election guide with overviews of all 19 local and state races as well as candidate profiles. The six City Council contenders weighed in on the current councilors’ handling of the events of August 12 and decisionsmade before and after. And we asked the big question: Will our sitting delegates in the Republican-led General Assembly vote to give localities power to remove Confederate monuments?
Seeking council
Can an independent breach Dem domination?
City Council has been publicly castigated about its handling of the white supremacist influx this summer, and it’s had public meetings break into near riots as an irate citizenry voiced its displeasure.
Despite that, six people still want to sit in the two open seats on the city’s governing body.
Two of them—Amy Laufer and Heather Hill—are the Democratic nominees who edged out incumbent Bob Fenwick in the June primary after Kristin Szakos decided not to run again.
A non-Democrat has not been elected to council since 2002, when Republican Rob Schilling won a seat. This year? “I think history will continue itself and Democrats will win handily,” he says. “The odds are stacked so hard against independents.”
Others think this could be the year an independent—Nikuyah Walker—breaks through the Democratic wall to get a seat at the dais.
Former mayor Dave Norris handicaps the race with Laufer as a likely winner. “She checksmany of the boxes for success”—she’s held elected office with two terms on the School Board, she can raise money and she has a history in the community, he says.
“She follows the traditional path for electoral success in Charlottesville,” says Norris. “The real question is who the second one will be.”
Conventional wisdom says winner No. 2 will be Hill, who checks many of the same boxes and “she has that D behind her name,” says Norris.
But he likes the odds for Walker and thinks at this point it’s a three-way battle between the two Dems and Walker.
“Nikuyah Walker is putting in a strong effort,” with a motivated group of volunteers and an “impressive infrastructure in place,” says Norris, a former board member of EPIC, which endorsed Walker.
While Laufer and Hill have raised more money—around $24,000 each—in the last campaign reporting period, says Norris, Walker raised more money than other candidates: $4,000 compared to second-highest fundraiser Jackson, who reported more than $2,500.
And that was before Sonjia Smith wrote a $10,000 check September 25. “I know some donors who only give to Democrats who are giving to Nikuyah,” says Norris. “She’s certainly eating into the Democratic base.”
Independent Paul Long also has a feeling an independent will win, “and it’s not me.” He gives an edge to Walker.
Says Long, “I’m hearing a lot of anger over the way the city handled events this summer. Even the two Democratic ladies are taking a critical stance.”
Independent candidate Kenny Jackson is not deterred by the daunting odds facing independents and says about doubters, “When I win this, they’ll be surprised.”
Anyone who’s watched city politics for a while knows that the only way an independent—or a Republican—is going to get elected in the overwhelmingly Democratic city is by single shotting. That means only casting one vote, because using the other vote for a Democrat only adds to the tally for an already majority candidate.
Long says he’s heard some Walker and Jackson supporters say they’ll single shot.
“I don’t know if that’s a formal strategy,” says Norris, “but anyone who wants [Walker] to win will do that. That’s the most strategic path for her voters, to just vote for her, but a lot of people don’t like to waste a vote.”
Walker herself says she’s not pushing single-shot voting. “I’m telling people to be informed and vote for the people who are most aligned with where they want to go.”
An independent hasn’t won election to City Council since the 1930s, says political consultant Paul Wright, who researched that by looking at microfilms of Daily Progress issues until he had motion sickness.
He doesn’t see that 80-year trend changing this year.
“There is nothing more powerful than watching local Democrats turn out for the governor’s race, and independents will be swept away,” he says, based upon his own experience sitting at the polls four years ago. “Their turnout machine is an awesome thing to watch—unless you’re a Republican.”
The election is November 7.
The candidates
John Edward Hall-I
Photo by Eze Amos
66, Retired industrial designer
Biggest issue: Lack of street lights, sidewalks.
First action if elected: Listen carefully to the issues and be a team member, install a change machine in the Transit Center.
Do differently from current council: Not take a vote on the monuments.
Disadvantage: Was banned from City Hall in the early aughts by then-city manager Gary O’Connell because of behavior stemming from a mental disability, but he says current City Manager Maurice Jones has given him the all-clear to come to council. He’s been diagnosed as bipolar and has spent time in Western State Hospital. “I’ll always be honest. Some of these things are embarrassing. There’s a stigma.”
Rap sheet: Charged with trespassing three times, found guilty in 2007 and 2012.
Lesson learned from campaign: Have a team to help.
Monuments: At first favored relocation, but after a poll showed most people don’t want them moved, he changed his stance.
Heather Hill-D
Photo by Eze Amos
40, Independent consultant, operational engineer
Biggest issue: Affordability of living in Charlottesville.
First action if elected: Building trust. “Currently council is seen as a set of individuals pursuing their own agendas. Staff is getting direction from too many sources.”
Skill set: Good at processes. “That’s the industrial engineer in me.”
Do differently from current council: Its approval of a special permit for East Jefferson Place apartments.
Monuments: “They have become symbols of hate and violence and need to be removed.” And they prevent focusing on the city’s “real priorities.”
Slogan: Listen. Engage. Act.
Kenneth Jackson-I
Photo by Eze Amos
50
Previous political experience: Ran as a Republican for City Council in 2004
Why run? “We’ve got to get some decorum back.”
Biggest issue: Freedom of speech and lost decorum. “We want to conduct the city’s business. Your free speech stops if you’re threatening me.”
First action if elected: Bring back etiquette to council meetings. “You will not scream out. You will not use hand gestures.”
Do differently from current council: Renovate City Council chambers, do away with public comment lottery.
Disadvantage: His campaign overdrew its bank account 21 times and accrued $672 in fees, according to the Daily Progress, most of which have been paid back.
Latest on rap sheet since last run for office: In 2004, Jackson attributed four assault convictions—three of which involved stabbings—to youthful indiscretions. But in 2007, he was again convicted of assault. He says he’s now great friends with the woman who filed the charge, and if elected to City Council, he won’t be assaulting anyone.
Monuments: Leave them. “Stick to basics like transportation and jobs.”
Amy Laufer-D
Photo by Eze Amos
45, Charlottesville School Board former chair, former teacher
Biggest issue: Transparency and whether City Council has overstepped its bounds. “That’s totally changed since February.”
First action if elected: Establish trust among council and staff, have a retreat, have protocols in place and offer counseling to staff. “It’s been traumatic.”
Do differently from current council: Stop the lawsuit about the bike trails at Ragged Mountain Natural Area and work with Albemarle County.
Monuments: “I don’t want to revisit all that again.” It’s symbolism of white supremacy and Nazis, and a judge is going to have to make a ruling. “Let’s have different monuments.”
Initiative: Piedmont Promise to pay PVCC tuition to CHS grads with GPAs of 2.5 or better and family income under $63K.
Slogan: Move Charlottesville forward
Paul Long-I
Photo by Eze Amos
68, Retired
Previous political experience: Perennial council candidate
Biggest issues: Permanent homeless housing, a regional transit authority for more frequent buses and more extensive routes.
First action if elected: Vote against Mike Signer as mayor.
Do differently from current council: Vote against giving John Dewberry a million-dollar tax break, “especially since he has a reputation of buying a site and taking his sweet time doing it.”
Monuments: Remove them. “I was born in Philadelphia and I believe the war was against the legitimate government of the United States and an act of treason.”
Nikuyah Walker-I
Photo by Eze Amos
37, Parks & Rec employee
Biggest issue: Being a “very assertive” black female and whether voters are comfortable with that.
First action if elected: Change the rules in City Council, promote engagement through social media to draw in people who never set foot in council unless there’s a major issue.
Do differently from current council: The decision to allow two permits for downtown parks August 12 while trying to move the Unite the Right rally, and the response to citizens. “I would have said, ‘I think I could have done things differently.’ No one’s said that.”
Controversy: Some have been offended by Walker’s use of the f-bomb at the August 21 council meeting. “I do know curse words. What about the events leading up to that? Someone died and it could have been a lot worse. And you’re worried about a curse word?”
Monuments: Remove ’em.
Slogan: Unmasking the illusion
Charlottesville School Board
Three candidates are running for three open seats.
Lisa Larson-Torres
52, Home care physical therapist
Experience: “Parent advocate for the past eight or nine years for my daughter,participated in the Special Education Advisory Committee for the last six years.”
Why run? “Realized being an advocate for my daughter that this is something I can continue to do for other kids and families.”
Biggest issue facing schools: “Making sure that each individual student is supported in their path to educational success, teacher support and compensation.”
What would you like to change about the school system? “Decrease anxieties and pressures on our kids, whether with fewer assessments and/or fewer pressures to take more AP or DE (dual enrollment) classes, and be careful about pushing and expecting more and more from our kids at an earlier age.”
Juandiego Wade
51, Career counselor
Seeking fourth term, president of the Virginia School Boards Association (2015)
What would you like to change about the school system? Complete elimination of bullying.
Most valuable lesson you can’t learn in the classroom? Internships
Leah Puryear
64, Director of Upward Bound at the University of Virginia
Seeking fourth term
Why run? I would like to continue to see our students excel in our Spanish program, our three-year old program and our after school reading program.
Biggest issue facing schools: The growth of our division and continuing to encourage equity for all students.
What would you like to change about the school system? “For everyone to develop culture sensitivity. We all come from different cultures and backgrounds and must learn to appreciate and accept our differences. This does not mean however, that we must be disagreeable.”
Most valuable lesson you can’t learn in the classroom? “Experience is extremely important, in addition to reading on a regular basis. Reading things of interest or not expands your knowledge base.”
Uncontested
Commonwealth’s Attorney: Joseph Platania
Platania defeated Jeff Fogel in the June primary to succeed Dave Chapman, who is stepping down after 24 years.
Sheriff: James Brown
Charlottesville native Brown is seeking his third term and brought hybrid vehicles to the sheriff’s office.
Commissioner of Revenue: Todd Divers
During his first term, Divers worked to reduce business license fees for small businesses, and he’s unopposed for his second run.
Treasurer: Jason Vandever
Vandever won a special election in April 2013, then cruised unchallenged in the regular November 2013 election, much as he’s doing this year.
Albemarle County Board of Supervisors
County races are usually much quieter than those in the city, and this year is no exception. Of the three open seats on the all-Dem Board of Supervisors, only one—the Samuel Miller District—is contested.
In the Rio District, Brad Sheffield decided not to seek re-election, and former School Board member Ned Gallaway will coast unopposed to the board in his first run for the seat.
The county’s only contested race between incumbent Liz Palmer and Republican challenger John Lowry appears to be close—at least according to Lowry, who says he hears from a lot of people who say they’re going to vote for him because there’s only one party currently represented on the BOS.
The Samuel Miller District, which includes Ivy and North Garden, has been purple the past few races, with Democrat Palmer upsetting Republican incumbent Duane Snow in 2013—and Snow had scored retiring independent four-termer Sally Thomas’ seat before that in 2009.
“I wouldn’t be surprised if Lowry wins,” says former mayor Dave Norris, because the board is solidly blue. “Anytime you have one party with a monopoly and have a candidate who’s sensible and well-funded saying he’s ‘bringing balance,’” that could do it for voters, says Norris.
Samuel Miller District: The environmentalist v. the economic developer
Liz Palmer-D
Veterinarian
Big issue: Internet service in rural Albemarle, improving recycling services and creating safe bike and pedestrian pathways in the urban ring.
Controversy: Voting no to expand the growth area to bring Deschutes Brewery here.
Endorsement: Albemarle Education Association
Signature look: Toe shoes
John Lowry-R
Retired Wachovia exec
Big issue: “The national exposure our community has gotten. Some people are saying they’re not going to Charlottesville and would rather go to Waynesboro.”
Platform: Economic development in growth area, having revenue that doesn’t come from raising real estate taxes.
Endorsement: CAAR
Special skill: Plays bagpipes
Uncontested
Jack Jouett District: Diantha McKeel
BOS chair seeks second term.
Rio District: Ned Gallaway
Unopposed for first term.
Albemarle School Board
The county has contested races in the Rio and Samuel Miller districts—and it has the youngest candidate. (Candidates’ answers edited for space.)
Jack Jouett District: Kate Acuff
66, Health policy consultant
Seeking second term, in second year as chair.
What would you like to change about the school system? “Opportunity gaps remain for some of our students—particularly low-income students. This year we launched a three-year pilot initiative—All Means All—aimed at enhancing their performance.”
Most valuable lesson you can’t learn in the classroom? “Real world applications of the lessons you learn in the classroom, which is why we require all high school juniors and seniors to do internships, job shadowing and other community projects.”
Rio District
Katrina Callsen
31, Former middle school math teacher
Experience: Mother, teacher, bachelor’s degree from Yale, UVA Law degree with a focus on child advocacy, Teach for America
Why run? “I am passionate about educational equity. It is why I became a teacher and why I have dedicated my career and education to children. On a personal level, I want to make sure my sons, my family and my community have access to a top-notch education.”
Biggest issue facing schools? “Meeting the diverse needs of our student population. Over half entering our urban ring elementary schools are economically disadvantaged and that number is expected to grow. I don’t want demographics to be destiny.”
Most valuable lesson you can’t learn in the classroom? “Hard work, even great work, does not always result in a good grade or praise. However, it is still vital to commit yourself to work and causes that matter to you because, in the long run, your efforts can be a force for good.”
Mary McIntyre
38, Teacher
Experience: A bachelor’s and two master’s degrees in education. “I have worked in five different school systems and am the mother of two children in elementary school.”
Why run? “In all of the places where I have taught, I discovered that nearly all of our school board members have little to no experience in education, and Albemarle County is no exception.”
What would you like to change about the school system? “Develop longer term solutions to the frequent redistricting used to balance school capacity.”
Most valuable lesson you can’t learn in the classroom? “The journey actually is the destination. Make sure to fill your life with things you love to do and people you love to be with, and then no matter where your journey ends, it was successful.”
Samuel Miller District
Graham Paige
Retired, seeking second term
Experience: Taught 30 years in Virginia’s public schools, 25 of which were in Albemarle. After retirement, appointed to the Long-Range Planning Committee.
Why run? “I ran in a special school board election in 2015 because I feared funding cuts or elimination of several important programs, namely pre-K, foreign language programs in elementary schools and computer usage in classrooms. I also was concerned with parity issues with some of our facilities, student achievement and the achievement gap within racial and socio-economic groups.”
What would you like to change? “The practice of using SOL results as the major method of evaluating the effectiveness of our schools.”
Most valuable lesson you can’t learn in the classroom? “When you go out in the world, watch out for traffic, hold hands and stick together.” (From “All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten,” a poem by Robert Fulghum)
Julian Waters
18, Student and part-time deli worker
Experience: Thirteen years as a student in Albemarle County Public Schools, three years as a student advocate and adviser to county schools
Why run? “I think that we need someone on the school board who can speak accurately to current issues from personal experience. As a recent graduate of Western Albemarle High School, I know that I can bring fresh and relevant perspective to the board.”
Biggest issue facing schools? Lack of equity.
What would you like to change about the school system? “Transportation. The vast majority of bus routes do not run at or near capacity, and we don’t currently provide transportation to any of the three high school academies for students as is done for students enrolled at CATEC.”
Most valuable lesson you can’t learn in the classroom? “Friends can be the most impactful people in your life, and making friends isn’t something that you can learn in the classroom: It’s something you learn from trying yourself in the real world.”
The stakes statewide
Trump popularity contest could determine GOP domination
Even though the long and arduous 2016 election cycle is behind us, in Virginia, every year is an election year, and it’s almost time to head to the polls again. And because this is the first gubernatorial race in a post-Trumpian world, the stakes are high for both Democrats and Republicans.
For the GOP, “it’s an opportunity to push back at the narrative that President Trump can’t win in competitive states like Virginia,” says Geoffrey Skelley at UVA’s Center for Politics.
And for Democrats, whether or not this is a referendum on Trump, says Skelley, “It’s a way to prevent Republicans from having complete control of the state,” where they already hold sway in the General Assembly.
Both Lieutenant Governor Ralph Northam (D) and Ed Gillespie (R) had to fend off challengers in the June primaries. And not only is the governor’s mansion up for grabs, the lieutenant governor and attorney general seats are also in play.
“The conventional wisdom is that Northam will win,” says Skelley. But the race is close enough that “Gillespie could prove doubters wrong.” An early October poll put Northam up by 13 points, but others have given him a single digit lead.
Trump is unpopular and “the White House is less energized,” Skelley points out. “That’s something Gillespie is running against,” he says. On the other hand, “Ed Gillespie is not a Trump doppelgänger.”
Traditionally, the party out of power is more dissatisfied, says Skelley. Governor Terry McAuliffe, who is limited to one term, broke a 40-year streak in 2013 by winning as a Dem under a Democratic president.
Another trend: The party of the president always does worse than the presidential candidate did before. “If that pattern holds, Gillespie won’t do as well as Trump did—and he lost by 5 points [in Virginia],” says Skelley.
Turnout—always lower in a non-presidential year—will be another factor. The presidential election brought out 72 percent of voters in 2016, compared with 43 percent in 2013, the last gubernatorial election, says Skelley. Voters showing up at the polls will “likely be whiter and older, and that’s good for Gillespie,” he says. They also tend to be better educated, and “that might be better for Democrats,” he adds.
“The person who is elected governor will be sitting in that seat when redistricting occurs,” says House Minority Leader David Toscano. “That is supremely important for Virginia.”
The last time the lines were redrawn, a Republican was governor, and while the state was pretty evenly split, “the House of Delegates went 60-40 Republican because of gerrymandering,” says Toscano.
He ties Gillespie to REDMAP, the successful GOP strategy he led to fill state legislatures with Republicans and redraw electoral lines, flipping 30 state chambers that had previously been Democratic. “It was a very concerted and targeted effort,” says Toscano.
And if Gillespie wins, warns Toscano, he’d likely sign the 100-plus bills McAuliffe vetoed, many of which affect social issues such as LGBTQ rights.
Money, of course, could be another factor in the race. While Northam has more cash on hand—$5.6 million to Gillespie’s $2.6 million—“the Republican Governors Association has more money than God,” says Skelley, “and it’s not going to spend it in New Jersey,” the other 2017 governor’s race that’s already been ceded to the Democrats.
Skelley believes that as goes the top of the ticket, so goes the lieutenant governor and attorney general races.
For lieutenant governor, a traditional stepping stone to governor, if elected, Democrat Justin Fairfax would become the second African-American to hold statewide office in Virginia, while Republican state Senator Jill Vogel would be the first woman to hold the LG seat.
“If the race at the top of the ticket has Northam by 5 points, Vogel could win by 1 point,” suggests Skelley.
In the attorney general race, he puts Democrat Mark Herring’s odds higher because he’s the incumbent, “and we don’t see many incumbents in state races,” he says. Republican challenger John Adams says Herring is politicizing the AG office, which is what Herring said about his predecessor, Ken Cuccinelli, notes Skelley.
Governor’s race
The Republican: Ed Gillespie
56, Former counselor to President George W. Bush, former chair Republican National Committee
Close races: Nearly upset Senator Mark Warner in 2014, nearly lost to monument-loving Corey Stewart in June primary
Endorsed by: President Donald Trump
Confederate monuments: Those decisions should be left to localities—but statues should stay up and be placed in historical context, according to campaign spokesman Dave Abrams.
Mass shootings: Not the time for policy pronouncements and political statements, and instead for information gathering.
The Democrat: Ralph Northam
58, Lieutenant governor, pediatric neurologist
Not-so-close race: Fended off local Tom Perriello in June primary
Endorsed by: Governor Terry McAuliffe
Confederate monuments: Decisions best left to localities, and he would sign legislation authorizing that.
Mass shootings: As a former Army doctor, he says assault weapons don’t belong in the streets.
The Libertarian: Cliff Hyra
35, Intellectual property lawyer
Confederate monuments: Local residents should decide whether to keep them. “It doesn’t make any sense for it to be decided by people in Richmond.”
Mass shootings: Keep firearms away from criminals and the mentally ill, prevent Second Amendment encroachment with ineffective restrictions such as those on magazine size.
Lieutenant governor
The Republican: Jill Vogel
47, State senator, attorney
Endorsement: former U.S. Senator John Warner
Claim to fame: Carried the transvaginal ultrasound bill in 2012, and primary opponent Bryce Reeves is threatening Vogel and her husband with a defamation lawsuit.
The Democrat: Justin Fairfax
38, Attorney, former assistant U.S. attorney
Endorsement: Planned Parenthood
Claim to fame: The Duke/Columbia Law grad was told by opponent Vogel in an October 5 debate he’s “not informed enough” on transvag issues “to talk intelligently” about them.
Attorney general
The Republican: John Adams
43, Attorney at McGuireWoods, former federal prosecutor
Endorsement: Virginia Fraternal Order of Police
Claim to fame: Related to second U.S. president, clerked for Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas
The Democrat: Mark Herring
Incumbent AG, former state senator
Endorsement: Virginia Professional Fire Fighters
Claim to fame: Refused to defend Virginia’s constitutional amendment banning gay marriage
General Assembly
If it’s an odd-numbered year, it must be time to elect Charlottesville and Albemarle’s four—count ’em four—delegates to the General Assembly, thank you gerrymandering. Because as liberal as some claim this locale is, Republicans have a chokehold on three of its four districts.
What’s different this year? Republican incumbents Rob Bell, Matt Fariss and Steve Landes all have challengers.
House Minority Leader David Toscano, himself unchallenged, is heartened by the number of Dems willing to take on GOP incumbents in districts drawn to keep them red. “Most would say these lines were drawn to protect Steve and Rob,” says Toscano.
“A lot of people decided the day after the election they’re not going to take it anymore,” he says. And he thinks President Trump will be a big drag on Republicans, who hold 66 of the House of Delegates seats, especially in Northern Virginia, “where his unfavorables are even worse.”
Despite the groundswell of challengers for GOP incumbents, Skelley is dubious that the Dems will wrest control of the House of Delegates from Republicans. “Some Democrats think the House is in play,” he says. “That’s a complete pipe dream.”
However, there are Republican-held districts where Hillary Clinton beat out Trump, and that’s where Democrats have the best chance to make inroads, he says.
Skelley thinks a best-case scenario for the GOP is to only lose two or three seats, while the Dems’ best case will be to win seats in “the high single digits.”
In the local races, he’s skeptical about an upset of incumbents. “Rob Bell has a ton of money from the attorney general race,” says Skelley. “He was going to run and decided not to.” And the way the district is drawn, “it’s pretty tough for a Democrat.”
Landes’ 25th District, most of which is in the Shenandoah Valley, “is even redder,” says Skelley. As of August 31, he had $100,000 to opponent Angela Lynn’s $14,000. “Landes is almost surely safe,” says Skelley.
And the 59th District, which stretches south past Lynchburg to incumbent Fariss’ Rustburg residence, “is even redder than Landes’ district,” says Skelley.
25th District
Delegate Steve Landes-R
57, Community liaison with Home Instead Senior Care of Staunton
Seeking 12th term
Why run again: A high school redesign that allows students in their last two years to do apprenticeships or get certifications is the “most exciting.” And that, he says, plays into economic development.
Big issue: What happened here in August, education, health care.
Monuments: Removal is a slippery slope.
Angela Lynn-D
62, Educator, FEMA liaison, community organizer
Why run again against Landes? Perseverance is an honored quality in people who want to serve. “I’ve gained trust and I’m opening doors for progressive voters. I don’t intend to make a career out of this like my opponent.”
Big issue: Corruption, public schools.
Legislation you’d carry after August 12: When a state of emergency has been declared, you have to disarm.
Monuments: Let local governments decide.
Do differently from your opponent: Stop defunding public schools for charter schools.
57th District
Delegate David Toscano-D
67, Attorney
Seeking seventh term
House minority leader
“I’m not uncontested. I’m running against 66 Republicans.”
Monuments: Localities should decide what works best for them.
58th District
Delegate Rob Bell-R
50, Attorney
Seeking eighth term
Why run again? To continue work on mental health reform with state Senator Creigh Deeds. “We’ll have a new governor,” maybe one who won’t veto bills like Bell’s criminal restitution bill for victims.
Big issue: Economic slowdown from cuts in federal spending.
Controversy: REDMAP, the redistricting plan that led to today’s Republican majorities in the House. “We all voted for it.”
Monuments: Stay
Logo: A cracked bell
Kellen Squire-D
32, Emergency room nurse at UVA
Why run: Donald Trump’s election inspired abandoning his “slacktivism.” “I felt like I needed to do something rather than complain.”
Big issue: Gerrymandering. “And Mr. Bell took an active part in Mr. Gillespie’s Operation REDMAP.”
Monuments: “If Charlottesville wants to take them down, it should be up to the city of Charlottesville.”
Political strategy: “I just tell people what I feel.”
Motto: People Before Party
59th District
Delegate Matt Fariss-R
49, Co-owner Lynchburg Livestock Market, farmer
Seeking fourth term
Big issues: Jobs, lack of volunteers for rescue squads
Pipeline: “A big one crosses my farm and my dad’s farm. We don’t have any issue with that. I feel like we can put them in safely.”
Signature legislation: Industrial hemp, which he thinks will be a boon to Southside farmers as soon as federal restrictions on it are lifted.
Latest conviction: Pleaded guilty to a hit-and-run charge in March 2016 for plowing into a Campbell County fence. Found not guilty of breach of the peace in a separate matter.
War chest of $35K as of August 31: “All that money came from inside my district. It shows people like what I’m doing.”
Monuments: Statues don’t kill people.
Tracy Carver-D
50, Lives in southern Albemarle, Self-employed mechanic, Navy vet
Why run? Anti-pipeline activist
Big issue: “Are you one of those politicians who don’t listen and don’t do anything?”
Response: “I’m asking people for problems and solutions. I’m not thinking I have the answer to everything.”
Dealing with August 12 rally: Pick up Virginia Code and look at intimidation by mob. Charlottesville needs “to get off their asses and enforce the law.”
Monuments: “Richmond telling localities what to do is government overreach 101.”
Special skill: Fluent in German and Korean
Quote: “I’m an activist first and I’ll be a politician second.”
David Ball-I
60, Lives in Dillwyn, Licensed contractor
Why run: Not happy with how the Republican Party has “degraded down to a lower standard of ethics.” And Fariss is “not fit to serve.”
Big issue: Lack of high-speed internet in rural areas.
Monuments: Not in favor of tearing them down.
Previous political experience: Two terms on Soil and Water Conservation District, lost third term. Unsuccessful run for Tom Garrett’s 22nd District Senateseat.
Education: Five associate degrees from Northern Virginia Community College. “I’m the best-educated candidate. I bring a lot more to the table than the current incumbent has done.”
War chest as of August 31: $38
Marcus Sutphin-Green Party
43, Lives in Campbell County, Home improvement contractor
Strategy: Grassroots organization. Run from the bottom up. “We believe in government that serves the public.”
Education: Earned a bachelor’s degree at 34
Big issues: Government corruption, public education, health care
Pipeline: No
Pledge: Clean money. Won’t accept donations from power companies, lobbyists. Raised $1,277 in donations less than $100.
Monuments: Localities should decide. “I’d like to focus on living people.”
Slogan: A voice of reason for Virginia.
Monuments men
After the deadly August 12 weekend when white nationalists came to town to protest the removal of the statue of General Robert E. Lee, Mayor Mike Signer called upon the General Assembly to hold a special session and repeal the statute that prohibits chucking war memorials.
That’s not going to happen.
In checking with our current four delegates, the three Republicans all oppose allowing localities to decide the fate of Confederate monuments. The GOP-controlled General Assembly passed a bill this session clarifying that localities did not have that ability, and Governor Terry McAuliffe vetoed it.
“Those of us that think the statues should stay are unlikely to change,” says Delegate Rob Bell.
Delegate Matt Fariss, who represents southern Albemarle, says, “The statues, in my opinion, are not the problem. The people are. It wasn’t a statue that drove that car” that killed Heather Heyer.
Three of Fariss’ ancestors, who were sharecroppers, fought for the Confederacy and died. “It wasn’t about slavery,” he says. “It was about tariffs.”
Delegate Steve Landes, who lives in Weyers Cave, says the General Assembly won’t try to revise the statute while it’s being challenged in court. “Given the current makeup of the General Assembly, I don’t know that there would be consensus about changing the law,” he says.
Landes describes himself as a “history buff,” and worries that if Civil War statues came down, founding fathers like Thomas Jefferson and George Washington would be next because they were slave owners. “Let’s tell the good, the bad and the ugly,” he suggests.
Democrat David Toscano says localities should be able to determine what works best for them as far as statues. “Government works best close to the people,” he says.
McAuliffe has called for a commission to look at how to deal with racist rallies like the one that made Charlottesville a hashtag for hate, and Bell says he wants to see what legislation is recommended.
He advocates pursuing prosecutions when there’s evidence of acts of violence, and he wonders what happened with the police. “We had lawless anarchy in the streets where ultimately Heather Heyer was killed,” he says. With the presence of “explicitly racist” groups in town, “the average citizen could not safely walk down the street.”
Fariss believes arrests should have been made August 11 when torch-carrying neo-Nazis paraded through UVA’s grounds and fights broke out, and he thinks arrests would have set the tone for the next day.
He’d support legislation that would restrict carrying shields and clubs at demonstrations—but not guns. “I would be against restricting guns,” he says. “That runs up against the Second Amendment.”
Toscano would support a prohibition on carrying weapons into public demonstrations. “It’s about free speech, not intimidation,” he says.
Landes predicts legislation will come out of the governor’s task force—and not just dealing with racist instigators.
“One of my questions is, we’ve talked about Nazis and white supremacists,” he says. “The antifa groups are just as violent and combative.”
Potter’s Craft Cider will offer 10 ciders on tap as well as a hot, spiced, fortified cider at its wassail event.
Health & Wellness Working Woods Walk Saturday, October 21
Hike through Montpelier Demonstration Forest to learn about forest conservation and its many perks, today and historically. $5, 2-4 pm. James Madison’s Montpelier, 11350 Constitution Hwy., Montpelier Station. (540) 672-2728.
Family Apple festival Saturday, October 21, and Sunday, October 22
This fall festival includes food vendors and crafts, hayrides, apple sling shot, corn maze, apple butter, cider, bouncy houses, a kids corner and live music. Free admission, 9am- 5pm. Drumheller’s Orchard, 1130 Drumheller Orchard Ln., Lovingston. drumhellersorchard.com
Food & Drink Wine Down Wednesday Wednesday, October 18
Wind down midweek with live music from Chamomile & Whiskey and wine tasting at Keswick Vineyards’ last Wine Down Wednesdayof the season. Admission is free, 5:30-8:30pm. Keswick Vineyards, 1575 Keswick Winery Dr., Keswick. 244-3341.
Nonprofit Pancakes for Parkinson’s Saturday, October 21
Enjoy pancakes while supporting a good cause at UVA’s 14th annual Pancakes for Parkinson’s event. Admission is free but donations are welcome, 9am-1pm. UVA South Lawn. p4patuva.com
On his new album, Birds, Seth Glier confronts heavy topics and wrestles them into the daylight. Publicity photo
On Seth Glier’s new album, Birds, he processes grief through songcraft, touching on themes such as a broken criminal justice system, capitalism through fracking and the fragility of life. The Grammy-nominated artist, who’s been compared to Bruce Springsteen and Billy Joel, made the record in a revamped textile mill in western Massachusetts following the death of his brother, and drew inspiration from the autumnal change of season. “The air is full of honesty, the sky is full of geese, and there is bright gorgeousness woven into the dying of things,” he says. “It all seeped into the textures of this record.”
Friday, October 20. $22, 7:30pm. Wayne Theater, 521 W. Main St., Waynesboro. (540) 943-9999.
The first installment of Think & Drink, a new series from the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities, features NPR reporter Lulu Miller reading from her upcoming book, Why Fish Don’t Exist. Staff photo
The first installment of Think & Drink, a new series from the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities, features NPR reporter Lulu Miller reading from her upcoming book, Why Fish Don’t Exist. Wes Swing accompanies her with his original compositions on the cello, followed by a Q&A on “the dangers of miscategorization, the infallibility of the human mind to make sense of the world, and how and why to loop a cello.”
Sunday, October 22. Free, 6pm. The Bridge PAI, 209 Monticello Rd. 984-5669.
Adam Ostrar, né Busch, former Charlottesville resident and WTJU DJ, was also a main mover behind Curious Digit, Manishevitz and SONOI. On Brawls in the Briar, Ostrar is joined by members of Califone and White Rabbits, and combines characteristics of all those bands. The tracks gently stir, rooted in acoustic guitar and Ostrar’s genial croon, adorned with countless touches—early-Floyd organ, triangle, borderline Frippertronics guitar, etc. Ostrar issues plenty of enigmatic lines, but also achieves emotional liftoff, as on the coda of “Another Room”: “The day is ending / the sun is setting in the spoon / I don’t want another room / I want yours, dear.” Understated and beguiling, Brawls in the Briar feels like a secret album that people share and bond over. Ostrar returns to Charlottesville, appearing at Low Records on October 23.
Jagjaguwar makes magnificent use of that Bon Iver money by giving wider release to Jamila Woods’ assured debut HEAVN, an R&B album that should have wide appeal (it makes sense that she’s playing the Austin City Limits and Afropunk festivals back-to-back this month). Woods came through Chicago’s youth arts program, where she met Vic Mensa and Chance the Rapper (who shows up on “LSD” here). Race ruminations dominate HEAVN, and rather than gloss the relative privilege I have no business glossing, I’ll just say that Woods carries a lot of baggage from Southside Chicago to Northside Prep School to Brown University and back, with what sounds like strength and grace. Her voice isn’t on the level of Erykah or Solange, but it’s charismatic and flexible, lighthearted on the title track and cathartic on “Way Up.”
L.A.’s twangy-shambly Gun Outfit has been around for about a decade now; I’ve always liked them but have never gorged on their albums or found an unforgettable song. Nothing changes on Out of Range, and my previous good will is tested by the promo copy: “St. Augustine rides with John Ford and Wallace Stevens on a Orphic-Gnostic suicide drive toward the hallucinatory vanishing points of the Southwestern desert, debating the denouement of the decaying American dream.” Barf. Hard to say if the lyrics live up to the pretention, because Dylan Sharp mumbles—then again, the unassuming voices are part of the charm, as are the (predominately) breezy grooves and the whining, intertwining guitar work. And they sound like they’d light up the stage on songs like the stomping “Sally Rose” (!) and the hazy but driving “Strange Insistence.”
Soundspecies & Ache Meyi
Soundspecies & Ache Meyi (Manana)
English label Manana debuted this year with a trio of releases, all collaborations between folkloric Cuban and international electronic artists. Manana has admirably navigated the pitfalls of this highly suspect mission, and the resulting albums are blessedly worthy of the label “vigorous hybrid,” as opposed to “lightweight pap” or “godawful train wreck.” Here, Soundspecies sublimates compositional urges, primarily providing atmosphere to the oceanic polyrhythms of Santiago bembe group Ache Meyi, led by mononymous brothers Hector and Rafael. This decision comes partially from practicality—the vocal melodies often switch keys, making harmonic accompaniment a cluttering prospect—but also from righteous respect for Ache Meyi, which pays off. The results are mesmerizing but kinetic, the percussive layers emerging and receding hypnotically.
Avid hiker Marit Anderson thinks
Charlottesville should capitalize on its natural resources by offering hikers an affordable place to stay. Submitted photo
Marit Anderson signs her emails “Moonwalker,” her trail name. She completed the 2,178 miles of the Appalachian Trail in 2009, a portion of which is easily accessible, via Skyline Drive and the Blue Ridge Parkway, from the place she calls home—Charlottesville.
As the vice president and hike leader of Charlottesville’s chapter of the Potomac Appalachian Trail Club, Anderson is a strong believer in “tourism as a natural resource.” She thinks Charlottesville could better capitalize on its natural assets by appealing to an international outdoors community. Step one? A hostel.
“My inspiration to start a hostel began with my experience as a thru-hiker on the Appalachian Trail and Pacific Crest Trail, but expanded as I bicycled across America on the Southern Tier route from San Diego to St. Augustine,” she says. When a person does a long-distance trek, keeping costs down is often imperative, and hostels provide lodging at a reduced rate, as well as bring people together in common space while making a meal or resting, she adds.
Anderson believes the majority of tourists who descend on the gateway city to Shenandoah National Park are visiting the university, are history buffs or are touring the plethora of wineries and breweries in the area, and not so much here to partake of the rich natural resources.
“It’s disconcerting,” says Anderson. “Every winery is packed when I drive up to Skyline on a weekend. Did these people go and take a hike before?”
Anderson recognizes that many of the city’s tourists are not necessarily looking for an affordable housing option, but that doesn’t mean there isn’t a need for a hostel.
“Experiential travel has become so much more popular, “ says Kurt Burkhart, executive director of the Charlottesville Albemarle Convention and Visitors Bureau. “Instead of going to one resort, people want to live like a local and make global friendships. Hostels offer that. They are an affordable travel option that often have stunning rooms and, most importantly, a common gathering area.”
Each year, 5,000 people set out to hike the Appalachian Trail from various starting points. Thru-hikers deeply committed to their trail timeline—or vacationers who enjoy hiking but are on a budget—often avoid Charlottesville and opt for a trail town where they can easily find a cheap meal, place to sleep, laundromat and grocery store.
“As a whole, everything is spread out in Charlottesville, but the downtown area is perfect,” Anderson says. “I recently looked at a property that could serve as a hostel on [West] Main Street, near the bus station and train station, but it would have cost me a million dollars to buy the property.”
Downtown is not the only area in Charlottesville considered prime real estate. Crozet, just 12 miles west, is an approved tourism district with close proximity to the Blue Ridge Parkway, which intersects with the Appalachian Trail.
“Crozet would be a perfect place for a hostel,” says Burkhart. “It is good for hikers and nature seekers. There has been talk about having a hotel built out there, which is a sign of where the industry is going. I say you go where the fish are biting.”
So far, Anderson has spoken with local accommodation owners about their experiences; the Charlottesville Albemarle Convention and Visitors Bureau is next on her list. She also wants to gauge city government’s interest in an area hostel. Government backing would help expedite the process of locating a property and meeting local ordinances, and help alleviate concerns about it serving as a low-income housing option.
She points to the hostel in Richmond, HI USA, which is a part of an international hostel network and, therefore, receives better funding and visibility. “Perhaps the city of Charlottesville will see the viability of having a hostel in its downtown area to meet the growing lodging needs of tourists, students, visiting professors?” she says.
Will and Whit stars Mia Buckley as the title character. Publicity photo
Laura Lee Gulledge wrote her young adult graphic novel Will and Whit as a show of gratitude to Charlottesville, a place that helped her pursue her ambitions. Four years later, the story is coming to life in the form of a musical in the very town where it began. Using live drawing and shadow puppetry, Wilhelmina “Will” Huckstep, a teen with a fear of the dark, faces her anxiety through a journey of friendship.
Through October 22. Pay what you like, times vary. Belmont Arts Collaborative, 221 Carlton Rd., Ste. 3. dmradventures.com.