Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Christone “Kingfish” Ingram

Breakout blues: At 20 years old, blues artist Christone “Kingfish” Ingram wanted to do what no one else was doing. While most of his music-making peers turned to rap, Ingram embraced the rich tradition of the Mississippi Delta where he was raised. His crossover appeal is apparent in the range of musicians who consider themselves fans—from funk legend Bootsy Collins and rock star Dave Grohl to rapper The Game and blues forebearer Buddy Guy. While known for his covers, his debut album, Kingfish, features many originals.

Saturday, August 31. $12-15, 8:30pm. The Southern Café & Music Hall, 103 S. First St. 977-5590.

Categories
2019 Best of C-VILLE Editor’s Pick

Because the night: A summer evening at a local winery is the best way to beat the heat

By Laura Longhine

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Mipso

Off the grass: They got their start as a folk duo playing campus events, but today, Mipso’s blend of Americana, bluegrass, and indie pop is filling music halls rather than lecture halls. Since graduating from UNC-Chapel Hill in 2013, the band has grown, and toured in Japan, played with the former chancellor of their alma mater, and performed on the KFC float during the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade—not to mention having two No. 1 albums on the Billboard bluegrass chart. Their new album, Edges Run, is a move toward rock and pop music, with drums and electric guitars, that’s sure to expand Mipso’s audience.

Friday, August 30. $15, 8pm. The Jefferson Theater, 110 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 245-4980.

Categories
News

Clothes call: Local gym demands gender-specific attire for kids

Julia Lapan’s 3-year-old daughter was excited to take her first gymnastics class at Classics Gymnastics. “She ran onto the floor,”—only to be sent back because she was wearing a T-shirt and shorts.

“I bristled at that because she was wearing what the boys were,” says Lapan, who asked that her daughter’s name not be used. “The coaches gave me quite a bit of pushback.”

At another class, the little girl, now 4, was wearing a leotard with shorts when the coach sent her back off the floor because the shorts weren’t approved, says Lapan. “This time she was crying.”

The mother says she’s frustrated and finds the dress code sexist, especially for kids whose young whose bodies look pretty much the same.

Spencer Watkins, the owner of Classics Gymnastics, says there are good reasons for the attire policy, which mandates leotards with footless tights or bike tights for girls and T-shirts with gym shorts for boys.

“The biggest issue is accidental nudity,” he says. “They spend a lot of time upside down.”

The other is that with coaches catching kids, there can be a lot of hands-on. Coaches don’t want to touch kids “in places where they’d be uncomfortable,” says Watkins. “That’s something we don’t want.”

He also notes that competitive teams compete in leotards.

Other programs for kids offer more leeway in attire. The Little Gym, for instance, is a noncompetitive facility, and children can wear shorts or leotards, says owner Sarah Oliva. “The only thing we require is that kids go barefoot.”

At the Ballet School of Charlottesville, Atsuko Nakamoto says students wear different colored leotards so she can tell which class she’s teaching. Are there exceptions? “Naturally,” she answers.

Students can wear shorts or a scarf so they can be more comfortable, she says. “I ask them to wear fitted clothes so I can see the body line so I can correct it,” she says. “If a kid wants to wear shorts, I’m fine with it as long as there are no pockets, because they want to put their hands in them.”

Lapan says Watkins has offered to give her a refund, but except for the dress code, she likes the gym.

“I see how society treats girls and boys differently,” she says. “I just want them to play by the same rules. Girls feel like they can’t speak up.”

The worst, she says, is “for toddlers to be subjected to different dress codes and for them to be humiliated and sent off the floor.” And she worries about children who are gender nonconforming.

During the era of #MeToo and the USA Gymnastics sexual abuse scandal, Lapan says, “It’s time to shine a spotlight on sexist policies that create false dichotomies between boys and girls, not to mention being totally tone deaf to the needs of trans and gender-nonconforming children.”

Categories
News

Crossed off: Petition to close Fourth Street withdrawn

The woman collecting signatures to close the Fourth Street Downtown Mall crossing has withdrawn her petition and deleted her Twitter account. “There was so much outcry, so much hatred,” says petitioner Aileen Bartels.

Safety was her primary concern, and she wanted people to be able to visit the mall without worrying about cars. Although her petition never made it to City Council, the issue was a hot topic among those making public comments at the August 19 meeting, many of them mall business owners, all of them opposed to closing Fourth Street.

Hedge owner Karen Walker says her business doubled when she moved from the mall to the cross street, and she hired two more employees.

Derriere de Soie owner Megan Giltner moved her business to Fourth Street for the access, and says her customers can often park across the street from her store. “My concern [is] if they close it, people will keep driving around the mall.”

The Downtown Mall opened as a pedestrian-only space in 1976. There was resistance to the first mall crossing, which came in 1995. Developer Lee Danielson built the then-Regal Cinema only on the condition the city would open Second Street to cross traffic. Danielson, who also built the ice rink, is credited with revitalizing the mall, which was often dark and deserted after 5pm.

In 2005, mall merchants asked City Council to consider a second permanent crossing on the east end of the mall because construction of the Pavilion and transit center had closed Sixth and Seventh streets to traffic.

“We lobbied for three years to get Fourth Street open,” says Downtown Business Association of Charlottesville chair Joan Fenton, citing the need for deliveries, trash pick up, and disabled parking and drop off.

The DBA started their own petition to keep Fourth Street open, which had 352 signatures online as of August 23 (Fenton says there are hundreds more on paper petitions). She says every successful pedestrian mall has cross streets, which makes them more visible and vibrant. “We’ve learned they’re essential.”

Fourth Street will always be a tragic memorial of August 12, 2017, in Charlottesville. That’s what City Councilor Wes Bellamy noted at the August 19 meeting. “For many people, the big issue is Heather Heyer was killed on that street,” he said. “It’s a commemorative space honoring someone who lost her life and [the] dozens [who] were injured.”

But business owners say that doesn’t mean the street needs to be closed to traffic. Blair Williamson told council, “Closing this street would be the nuclear option, like Trump’s wall.” And Heyer’s mother, Susan Bro, has said she didn’t think the street should be closed.

As far as general safety is concerned, in the past five years, there have been a total of 10 crashes on both Fourth and Second streets, says Charlottesville police spokesman Tyler Hawn. Six of those were non-reportable, which means no one was injured and the damage was less than $1,500. None occurred on the mall itself, and none involved pedestrians, except for that glaring August 12 exception, when the street was supposed to be closed.

Local Kevin Cox calls the cross streets the safest pedestrian crossings in Charlottesville. His concern is the perplexed tourists who drive onto the mall itself. “It happens all the time,” he told City Council. Cox would like to see bollards at the crossings to deter wrong turns. “I think this is a terrible oversight,” he said.

Bartels had gathered 365 signatures on her petition, which disappeared when she tried to make it inactive. She says she got the message from many: “I want to drive my car where I want.”

Says Bartels, “I don’t want to engage with this community.”

Categories
News

Where’s Denver?: Riggleman refutes claims he hasn’t been accessible

Amid complaints from local residents that he hasn’t made himself available to constituents, Congressman Denver Riggleman has scheduled his first in-person town hall meeting for August 28—in Danville.

The Republican representative of Virginia’s 5th District in the U.S. House of Representatives took office in January, when he published a pledge that said he would “conduct town halls throughout the district” once he was settled in. Seven months into his term, Riggleman has only held one town hall, by phone, but says he’s met with constituents in other ways.

“I don’t know if you want to call them town halls, but we certainly have been doing listening tours with every type of constituency we have, so I think the town halls, listening tours, roundtables, all those are pretty much the same thing,” Riggleman says. He says he plans to hold a town hall in Charlottesville “in the next four to five months.”

Craig DuBose is a Charlottesville resident who grew disgruntled with Riggleman’s lack of town hall meetings. The carpenter, who similarly pursued Riggleman’s predecessor, Tom Garrett, decided to organize a “constituent day” with other voters on August 26 at Riggleman’s office.

The event was promoted by Indivisible Charlottesville—an anti-Trump group that advocates for holding public officials accountable—with the idea that residents could visit Riggleman’s local office to voice their concerns about what’s going on in the district. The congressman says he wasn’t aware of the constituent day prior to it happening.

“How many times do we have to show and ask you to respond to this before you either respond to it or tell us you’re not going to?” DuBose says. He started making regular visits to the office in July with a group of fellow residents to try and speak with Riggleman, with no success.

Fourteen people marked on Facebook that they stopped by the office Monday, and 37 said they were interested. A Riggleman staffer confirmed multiple people had visited that morning but wouldn’t disclose a number.

As it turns out, the congressman was in fact in Charlottesville on Monday, meeting with local farmers and lawmakers at Roslyn Farm. He also attended a roundtable at the crop processing company Nutrien Ag Solutions in South Hill. Richard Fox, the owner of Roslyn Farm, says local farmers feel like their voices are heard by Riggleman, who co-owns a distillery with his wife Christine in Afton.

“Over the last couple years, building those relationships with local farmers has definitely helped him just hit the ground running,” Fox says. “At the end of the day, you can talk with Denver and he actually knows what you’re saying. He can talk some farm stuff and he gets it just because he’s at least had to be on the other end of the commodity industry.”

In his weekly newsletter sent to subscribers July 26, Riggleman wrote that he was “excited to visit with constituents” during Congress’ yearly August recess. He spent a majority of the first two weeks of the month visiting facilities at the U.S.-Mexico border and taking a congressional delegation trip to Israel before making a business tour across the district.

“It’s just not true, I mean that’s ridiculous,” Riggleman says of those claiming their voices aren’t being heard. “Instead of screaming all the time, just maybe look at what I’m doing…I think most of the people complaining are just specifically in Charlottesville with a certain group of people, and that’s fine. But don’t be disingenuous. That’s just absurd.”

Paul Bostrom is a Charlottesville resident who visited Riggleman’s office as part of the constituent day. He hoped to ask Riggleman about his stance on some of President Trump’s recent comments. Although he can’t attend Riggleman’s town hall in Danville on Wednesday, because it’s two hours away, Bostrom wants to hear from Riggleman directly about Trump and some of the issues pertinent to the district.

“I want to hear more from his mouth about what’s going on in the district and what’s going on in Congress,” he says.

With no firm date set for a town hall in Charlottesville, Riggleman invites city residents to follow him on social media and subscribe to his newsletter in order to stay informed on what he’s doing in Congress. DuBose, who is an active commenter on Riggleman’s Facebook page, claims some of his comments have disappeared from the congressman’s official Facebook page, an allegation Riggleman denies. He stresses that constituents can schedule meetings with him at his local offices, but that representing such a large district pulls him in many different directions.

“I think what people need to understand is we have a district that’s 10,000 square miles, 21 counties, and Charlottesville specifically is 1/1,000th of the district geographically,” Riggleman says. “So it’s great that they’re planning a constituent day, but I’m meeting with constituents in multiple counties every month. It’s a challenge with a district bigger than New Jersey [and] hopefully people understand that.”

Categories
2019 Best of C-VILLE Editor’s Pick

New to you: The beauty of secondhand style

By Jennifer MacAdam-Miller

Categories
2019 Best of C-VILLE Editor’s Pick

For the record: Let us now praise our local vinyl shops

By Jake Mooney

Categories
2019 Best of C-VILLE Editor’s Pick

Haven on earth: Homeless shelter welcomes public for lunch—and feeds your soul, too.

By Jake Mooney

Categories
2019 Best of C-VILLE Editor’s Pick

Words for the wise: The wonders of our public libraries

By Susan Sorensen