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News

In brief

UVA withholds report

The University of Virginia has declined to make public a completed report that details its response to last November’s fatal shooting on Grounds, despite saying the report’s findings would be made available as soon as early November.

The external review—requested by the university and its Board of Visitors—was completed on October 20 and sent to UVA. According to a press release from Attorney General Jason Miyares’ office, the independent review, conducted by outside counsel appointed by Miyares, details “the University’s response to the shooting, the efforts to assess the potential threat the shooter posed, and University safety policies and procedures.”

Both the attorney general’s office and UVA have declined several news outlets’ Freedom of Information Act requests for access to the report, citing attorney-client privilege. Additionally, the university has stated it will review the report for “factual accuracy” prior to releasing it.

Following a closed meeting by the Board of Visitors to discuss potential lawsuits and changes to safety practices on Grounds, some have speculated  that UVA may be withholding the results of the external review to prepare for potential legal action that could come from the November 13, 2022, shooting, which resulted in the deaths of D’Sean Perry, Devin Chandler, and Lavel Davis Jr., and the injury of Mike Hollins and Marlee Morgan.

As of press time, the university had not released the report to the public.

Potential plea

According to a recent court filing, Albemarle County mom Eleanor Hunton Hoppe is considering a plea deal in the federal child pornography case against her. The possibility of a deal has delayed the next hearing in Hoppe’s case to December 12.

Hoppe was arrested on March 16 at a Warrenton motel during an FBI sting, and has been charged with distribution of child pornography, coercion and enticement of a minor, and attempted transportation of a minor with intent to engage in sexual activity. She is being held without bond at the Correctional Treatment Facility in Washington, D.C.

Before her arrest, Hoppe was involved with and donated to several local child advocacy organizations, including ReadyKids and Big Brothers Big Sisters of the Central Blue Ridge.

Beyond the disturbing details of Hoppe’s alleged crimes, her case has garnered media attention due to her family’s prominent social standing (she is the scion of the family that founded Richmond’s largest law firm, Hunton Andrews Kurth). Hoppe was married to federal judge Joel Hoppe, who gained full custody of the couple’s two young children after his ex-wife’s arrest. The couple divorced in 2021.

In brief

Seeking to serve

The City of Charlottesville is looking for residents and developers to help fill some important roles and responsibilities. Until December 8, community members can apply to serve on the city’s Human Rights Commission, which will soon have four vacancies. The city describes the HRC’s work as “advocat[ing] for justice and equal opportunity,” and the commission meets every third Thursday at 6:30pm. Developers face an earlier deadline of November 15 to submit affordable housing projects to the city. 

Robbed for details  

Three female suspects have been arrested in connection with a robbery and abduction that occurred near 1000 Ridge St. on November 5. According to the Charlottesville Police Department, no serious injuries resulted from the incident and all property was returned. The three suspects and the male and female victim reportedly knew each other. At press time, CPD has not released the names of the suspects.

To the curb

It’s that time of year again! Charlottesville’s Public Works department is making the rounds collecting loose leaves for composting. Since October 30, crews have been traveling around the city with a vacuum truck, collecting piles of curbside leaves, zone by zone. If you’re in Zone A and missed the first scheduled pick up, don’t sweat it—the pick-up crew will branch out to each zone three times this season. For those wanting to leaf through more information about the collection process and pick up times, visit charlottesville.gov/leaves

File photo.
Categories
Arts Culture

Joe Lawlor in the HotSeat

There’s always a special energy in the air when musicians play their hometown stage. Guitarist Joe Lawlor is usually on the road with Dave Matthews Band, where he works behind the scenes in the audio crew. An accomplished musician in his own right, Lawlor is a founding member of several progressive funk and rock bands, like Egypt. Ahead of his duties at Dave Matthews Band’s November 10–11 John Paul Jones Arena shows, Lawlor will lead his own sets influenced by funk, blues, and classic rock at The Jefferson Theater with his band, Joe Lawlor and Friends, on November 9. The Longway, Kristen Rae Bowden, and Afro Asia are a few of the acts that’ll jam alongside Lawlor, plus a host of special suprise guests. jeffersontheater.com

Name: Joe Lawlor.

Age: 55.

Pronouns: He/him/his.

Hometown: Hard to say. I was born in Washington, D.C., and grew up in northern Virginia, Vermont, and Massachusetts. I’ve lived in Charlottesville for the past 25 years.

Job(s): Part of the touring audio crew for the Dave Matthews Band for the last 21 years. Specifically, I am the live recording engineer and archivist. I’ve been a professional guitar player for 37 years.

Coolest venue you’ve played: That’s tough. I sat in with DMB at the Hollywood Bowl and the Gorge. Both are iconic venues, but my band Egypt played at CBGB’s in NYC regularly in the ’90s. Now that was cool!

What’s something about your job that people would be surprised to learn: There are over 100 of us on the DMB crew, traveling in 10 buses and carrying 12 tractor-trailers worth of equipment.

Favorite local restaurant: Thai Cuisine and Noodle House [and] Public Fish & Oyster.

Who is your hero: Leo Fender. He was a genius inventor and tinkerer who came up with the Stratocaster and hundreds of other tools for musicians.

Best advice you ever got: Let them dig their own graves.

Proudest accomplishment: Every good gig. Making good music always makes me feel proud.

Describe a perfect day: A cup of strong English breakfast tea. A recording session or rehearsal. A killer gig.

If you could be reincarnated as a person or thing, what would you be: My cat Zeppelin. He has a good life.

If you had three wishes, what would you wish for: Peace around the world. The end of sexism and racism and a loud tube guitar amp.

Do you have any pets: Kristen and I have two cats, Zeppelin and Janis.

Favorite movie and/or show: The Big Lebowski and anything by director Wes Anderson.

Favorite book: Jitterbug Perfume.

Favorite musician: Jeff Beck for bending strings. Eddie Van Halen for reckless abandon and energy. Chris Whitley for songwriting.

Favorite song: “Dirt Floor” by Chris Whitley.

Favorite album: Van Halen one.

What are you listening to right now: “Succession” in the background.

Go-to karaoke song: It would be an instrumental with lots of air guitar.

Who’d play you in a movie: Javier Bardem (says my girlfriend Kristen Rae Bowden).

Celebrity crush: Jessica Chastain.

Most used app on your phone: Voice memo (I record song ideas and music daily).

Last text you sent: “Of course that’s why I sent them. They are different sizes. Choose the right size for your purpose.”

Most used emoji: Thumbs up.

Subject that causes you to rant: The ways our medical system doesn’t work.

Best journey you ever went on: I’m still on it.

Next journey: South Africa with DMB.

Travel must-haves: Noise canceling headphones, a guitar, and layers.

Favorite curse word: Dang!

Hottest take: I’m a Dapper Dan man.

What have you forgotten today: I’m not sure but I’ll find out when I get off the plane.

Categories
News

Sam Sanders speaks

After an action-filled first 90 days on the job, City Manager Sam Sanders took an hour out of his (very!) busy schedule to talk with C-VILLE about a wide range of topics, including his new gig’s biggest challenges, staying calm under pressure, and making government boring again.

Sanders came to Charlottesville in July 2021 to be the deputy city manager of operations, after serving as executive director of the nonprofit Mid City Redevelopment Alliance in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The son of a Marine, he moved countless times growing up, and after his parents divorced, he bounced between his father, mother, and grandmother’s houses. Sanders eventually landed in Newport News, Virginia, where he graduated from Christopher Newport University, earning a degree in English with a focus on journalism.

In his limited personal time, he enjoys watching movies with his family and exploring the outdoors. Sanders’ two adult children live across the country, and his wife is a professor at Virginia State University.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

C-VILLE Weekly: You said you originally wanted to be a war correspondent, then you ended up in nonprofits. You were interested in public relations in the middle there. What has the transition into working in government been like?

Sam Sanders: It does feel like war at times. That’s funny. The transition has been smooth in that, because I was here for two years [as deputy city manager], I already had a good lay of the land for some of the key individuals here in town, some of the various issues that have been kind of our hot-button issues, knowing kind of who comes and goes normally, what are they usually calling and talking about. That has been helpful. 

I really formed my own relationships with as many people as I could in that deputy role. So a lot of the people that I still talk with today, I was talking with them before. So that part was easy. Coming here, I knew what it meant to do the deputy role, because I was basically in charge of the services that really impacted people on a daily basis. So I knew that meant I couldn’t just sit at my desk, I needed to be out in the community meeting people as well. Which is what I did. … I didn’t get out as much as I probably wish I could have, because there were just so many things going on. But I got out and met those folks in that old role. And that’s probably going to pay me well in this, in that I’m not making brand new relationships to be able to do the job. But coming from Baton Rouge, I was looking for a new adventure, I was looking for a new challenge. I had been in that job for 15 years, and it was an amazing opportunity. But I had probably stayed a little bit longer than I needed to. It was time to pass the baton to someone else.

What is your job like on a day-to-day or week-to-week basis?

It is madness. Not madness in a bad sense, madness in that it’s a lot. It just is. The job in itself, a normal version of a city manager job is always a lot. That I knew, that I have kind of studied on my own as I’ve tried to wrap my arms around this form of government because I didn’t come from this form of government. We had a strong mayor and council had a bigger role to play [in Baton Rouge]. So it’s been interesting. Even sitting in the deputy seat, I thought I understood. It wasn’t until I sat in this seat that I really understood. Because there are a lot more meetings, a lot more things that I’m responsible for being a part of as the city manager. I sit on the Rivanna boards, and I sit on the airport board. So those are things that you don’t just walk into that meeting and everything is okay. There’s more stuff to read, there’s more stuff to understand. I am charting the direction of each of those and the votes that I cast in those meetings, very similar to how I’m preparing council to be able to vote on their matters in a council meeting. So there’s a lot to juggle … it’s what I signed up for. Most of it is just being able to get the time.

What has been the largest challenge that you’ve encountered in your time as city manager?

Well, I would say that the recent events at Market Street Park were probably the toughest period in this—well, I hit 90 days on Wednesday [November 1]. It’s probably been the most difficult period because I think we as a community at large know that we should prioritize individuals experiencing homelessness, and do everything we can to reduce the impacts of that, and how that plays out. … The challenge of it is that we’re not all on the same page, we’re not all more or less willing to adapt to one agenda so that we can really accomplish what we probably could accomplish. And I say that because … we could do something significant here. A city this size with the resources that we have, even with the scope of the problem that we have, I believe we can make a difference in a way that other communities, other peer communities, would not because they wouldn’t necessarily make the decisions that I think we are willing to make. 

Part of my task right now is to try to help get people to that same place and focus on what … would make a difference for those that are unhoused. And for me, the number one priority today is that we need to have an operational shelter 24/7, 365 days a year. That is a minimum. It is not the finish line by any means, it’s probably not even half of the race. But I think it’s important for us to recognize that we should provide an alternative for those who are willing to come from outside, a place that they find safe and comfortable. And it can’t be a place that they have a short tenure in if it’s going to take us a minute to get them out of it and to get them on the ladder to self-sufficiency so that they can then handle things with the various supports attached. So I think that’s probably been the toughest period only because I knew it was on the list of things that I would have to tackle. I did not realize it would come so early. … I would have preferred to have been able to do a few more things to get a little more clarity before I actually started to work on it. But that’s what this job is: You don’t get to plan how it comes at you. And it just means that it became a thing for me to focus on, an important thing for me to focus on, and one that I haven’t stopped working on. I’m still working on it today, I will continue to work on it. And even though I’ve developed a work group that’s internal, that’s going to keep working on it, in the broader sense, I still have a few tasks that I’m working on personally.

Sam Sanders. Photo by Eze Amos.

At a recent City Council meeting, you presented that workgroup and short-term, medium-term, long-term priorities for addressing homelessness in Charlottesville and in the surrounding areas. Now that PACEM is open, what are your immediate next steps and the workgroup’s next steps?

They’re separate, so there’s a lot. So the workgroup itself [is] internally building a data set, they’re trying to pull the information together that is available. They’re trying to ask questions of, “What do we not know? … Are there things that we don’t know? Are there things that we need to know?” When we talk about having a shelter, first question is, how big of a shelter? I don’t know that answer yet. We’re going to have them do that work and continue to figure those things out. And one other thing they’re going to prioritize is direct contact with the unhoused, so that we can get clarity from those who are experiencing it; [they] are best for telling us how we do something about it. So we want to get that feedback as well. … I created a lane for myself. And that’s the way I described it to them. Y’all have the highway, I have a lane, I’m gonna work on … building an opportunity for us to have a relationship with the county on this matter. I would love for it to be a regional engagement. But I don’t know that all of our regional partners are going to be willing to come to the table. But I intend to ask. 

I think the best thing that I could do is pose the question, I don’t believe it’s been posed to them before, from what I understand, so I don’t have a problem with bringing that to the table. And we’re beginning to set up a meeting for us to have a regional engagement. So hopefully, something will come out of that. If it doesn’t, then I’m hoping at least Albemarle County would join me in that because we’ve had some basic conversations, but there’s still some work that they need to do. I am trying to make sure that Premier Circle stays on track. There’s a budget gap that I’m actively working to try to close, in partnership with others. And I’ve been meeting with Virginia Supportive Housing on that matter. And there’s even a chance that we might temporarily reopen Premier Circle for a short while, just to ensure that we have an option for everyone. Because that was what I wanted to prioritize … that we had the temporary lifting of the operating hours. It was to make sure that I could do what I could do to find out what other options existed. … And then, there’s still more that’ll probably begin to fall into my lane. But for right now, those are three big heavy lifts. But I think we’ll bring a lot more information to the table. And then what I’ve said to council is there will be plenty of opportunities for this city to invest in solving problems associated with homelessness. 

You faced pushback during the time that Market Street Park’s curfew was lifted. There was a wide swath of emails sent to you and city councilors. What was it like receiving those messages? How did that impact you? And were you able to take any of the input or feedback that you got and turn it into something constructive?

It’s hard when people come attacking you. It’s hard when people come very negative. And yeah, there were some times where I was angry with what people chose to say to me about whatever. Criticism comes with [the] territory. I know who I am, so I don’t take it personally. But it doesn’t mean that I’m not human and I do get mad. 

The presentation of my work plan and strategy on the second of October is an example of me being mad because I felt like I had to get some things off my chest so that I could process in a healthy way. It was disappointing at times, because I heard people who told me not to prioritize the unhoused individuals in the park. And I found that very hard to accept. I am a caring person, I am not one who just simply gives, gives, gives and does not expect that people do anything, I’m not that person. I’ve seen too much of the struggle in life for those who haven’t had, but yet, they still found a way to do things and they were able to change their own trajectory. And I want to be a part of that as much as I can. But I’m also willing to reach down and lift up someone who cannot get up on their own, and do whatever needs to be done. So to hear I shouldn’t focus on them was a little hard to accept and appreciate. Because if I don’t, then who will? I mean that just as a very simple statement, and a very basic concept there. And I was not really inclined to spend a whole lot of time thinking about anyone who said that to me. … I welcomed every chance that I got to see something else about someone else thinking about it in a different way. Because I don’t know everything. And I don’t pretend to know everything. But yeah, it’s hard when “give us our park back”—well, the park belongs to everyone. And I found myself defending the right for anyone else to be in the park. 

There are three parks downtown. So options exist. … I did a lot of—stay cool. Don’t go there and do that. Because people are angry, they’re angry for different reasons. It’s not for me to try to make them not be angry, it’s for them to worry about it. But for me, I just wanted to make sure that I was doing what I thought was right. I will always strive to do what I think is right. And I will trust that when I do it, I’m doing it for the right reason. So anything that I do in this job, I’m going to always try to look at it that way. … And the moment that I gave those individuals was an opportunity to know that they could be there and it was okay to be there. And then, temporarily, we would allow that while we figured out some other things, and then there will be an alternative. And for those that chose not to go there, I am still thinking about them. I’m still working towards a resolution for them. And I will continue to do so.

Has your inbox calmed down a bit?

What I see is, things come in cycles. That kind of went away. I think a lot of people, when they heard me reinstate the operating hours, they were angry about that. So of course I had another wave of emails that came, “How dare you do that, you really shouldn’t do this, you shouldn’t do that.” And I said it was temporary, I did not hesitate when I said that in the beginning, I always felt that that’s what it was. This was not about hurting anyone. I recognize that people had opinions about what the park had become. But I also recognize that in the meantime, I have been working to secure additional beds for shelter services and to bring them online earlier than normal. And we did that. … I thought I was doing what I thought was right. And I continue to hold to that. I think we planned the best transition that I could have ever dreamed. I was worried that evening thinking that something was gonna go wrong. … But I think that the various people who worked in the park throughout the week, we know that some of the case managers were there on a regular basis, talking and offering options and trying to find out what people needed and what they were going to do. Our police chief did a great job, in my opinion, of demonstrating that he was serious about wanting to help make the transition go smoothly. And we were able to accomplish that. So, I’m not celebrating it in the way that some people think that I might have. I believe they probably think I’m running around the office doing a high five. That’s not me. I did not do that, because people are still homeless. And that is not a reason for me to high five anyone.

You mentioned earlier, and I believe it was at the press conference where you first accepted the position, before you even officially started the job, that you would like to make government boring again. Where do you think you are in that process? And is that still something you’re aiming for?

People have questioned me on what does that mean, and they’ve said it in a negative light. So I want to clear that up. And I would love for you to print this. So when I mentioned boring, I meant boring in the sense of what it feels like inside the organization. That when we come to work, we actually can plan to sit down at our desks and do the work that we need to do. Not be bombarded with many, many different distractions and things that don’t necessarily get us to helping people, serving people, solving problems. It’s the many, many things, the distractions, the things that take you off your course. That’s what we mean when we reference boring government. It is not what people have sometimes thought that means, that it’s safe, and you’re not really trying to do anything special, you live in the status quo. I am not a status quo individual. … It’s meant to be the ability to come in and do the work. And you want to come in and do the work with the right perspective.  

But boring government means that you come in and you punch a clock and you get work done in the course of that day. And it’s a predictable enough day that you can anticipate what you’re going to be dealing with, you’re going to get those things done, and you’re going to actually move the needle to this place, and you’ll come back and you’ll do it again and you’ll do it again and you’ll do it again. That’s really what is meant by boring, it is not in any way an indication that we don’t want criticisms or questions or challenges or anything like that. 

In the national media, the international media, the mention of our city’s name has become a shorthand for the events of August 12, 2017. How have you grappled with that? How do you think about that in your role as city manager?

Well, so as the city manager, of course, along with council, I am a champion of this city. And it is my responsibility to make sure that I bring positive attention to it at all times. So that gets me in trouble at times, because I’m going to say that Charlottesville is a beautiful place, when it is. But it’s a place that has challenges just like anywhere else. And there is a long history here. So even though the recent history is what people think about and talk about, there’s a rich history, a rich, complicated history, that goes back to its founding. And that in itself has caused people to feel various things. And I don’t know that we have necessarily reconciled all of that. I think we’ve touched on it at times, and maybe talked about it here or there. And eventually, I think we probably could find a way to get there, some consistency. And this work that I’m in might actually lend itself to being able to see how I might be in that conversation.  

I do think that one day, I’m going to be able to mention to someone that I am from Charlottesville, Virginia, and they’re not going to basically cringe or “Oh…”—that kind of reaction. Because I have gotten that reaction. … I don’t want that. … I don’t think that event is what this city is all about. Do we have real issues here? Absolutely, we do. … I’m from the South. I was born in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, I lived in different parts of the state, lived in Louisiana, but I also lived in South Carolina, California, and Hawaii. And I knew racism everywhere that I went. I understood what it felt like in many places. I knew exactly what it looked like. And it was real. So being here where it is discussed a lot is different for me. But I recognize that means there’s more to it, and I can’t dismiss it. 

What are your hopes for Charlottesville?

I do hear people at times say that Charlottesville doesn’t know what it wants to be. I think that’s an important question. What is it that Charlottesville wants to be? I think we need to make sure that we are thinking about the answer to that question. Because that would be what I would want to be working on. Council just created a new vision that says, “A place where everyone thrives.” That says a lot, that means a lot. I think I need to make sure that we are doing everything that we can to ensure that we can live up to that one day. … Tell me where you want to go, and I’ll lay that path and we will get there. And I think that’s what the team that is the city organization should really be focused on, is that, “How do we get the city where we want it to be?”

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News

In brief

Crowning new owners

After eight years in downtown Charlottesville, the Violet Crown theater will soon be under new ownership. The news comes at the end of the Virginia Film Festival, which showed several movies in the theater.

Violet Crown opened on the Downtown Mall in 2015, following the closure of a Regal cinema at the same location. The name of the theater will remain, but it will be operated by the Austin, Texas-based Elevate Entertainment Group.

EEG will acquire all four of Violet Crown’s U.S. theaters—which are located in Charlottesville, Santa Fe, Austin, and Dallas—in December of this year. Bringing on the four theaters allows the company to add 30 new screens.

EEG plans to improve the Downtown Mall location, including changes to the first-floor dining space, and hire more employees.

“Our journey with Violet Crown has been extraordinary,” said Violet Crown founder and CEO Bill Banowsky in a statement about the acquisition. “We’ve cultivated a unique moviegoing experience that caters to film-lovers, and that remains unchanged. I am confident that this acquisition will continue to bring the best film experience to the community, and am grateful that we found a team with the resources, passion, and vision to take Violet Crown to the next level.”

Student walkout at UVA

Tensions were high at the University of Virginia on October 25, when students staging a walkout in support of Palestine met counterprotesters on the steps of the Rotunda.

Organized by 15 student organizations—including Students for Justice in Palestine, Divest UVA, Arab Student Organization, and the Queer Student Union—the walkout called for the university to respond to the siege on Gaza. Since the October 7 Hamas attack on Israel that killed more than 1,400 civilians, Gaza has been under siege by Israel. Amid steadily worsening humanitarian conditions and Israeli airstrikes, more than 8,000 people have been killed in Gaza, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.

In an informational post about the walkout, students demanded that UVA call for an end to the attack on Gaza, acknowledge the “ongoing genocide” in Gaza, and “divest from weapons manufacturers” arming Israel.

Hundreds of students attended the walkout. While the event was peaceful,  a small group of counterprotesters tried to sing over the walkout chants, and held up the Israeli flag.

Pro-Israel students referred to the walkout as ignorant, and said that protesters were supporting a terrorist organization.

In brief

Punkin chuckin’

Halloween has come and gone, but your jack-o-lanterns, soon to rot, are probably still sitting around. Never fear, the Rivanna Solid Waste Authority is bringing back its Great Pumpkin Smash, where you can dispose of your decorative gourds. Take your pumpkins to the McIntire Recycling Center by November 7, drop them into a large container, and they’ll be shipped off to a composting facility. The service is free and open to the Charlottesville and Albemarle communities. 

Good’s gratitude  

Congressman Bob Good congratulated Rep. Mike Johnson on being elected Speaker of the House of Representatives. Good wrote on Twitter/X that Johnson “brings new hope for the American people. I look forward to working with him to fight back against the radical Biden agenda.” Good was one of eight House Republicans who joined Democrats in voting to oust previous speaker Kevin McCarthy on October 3.

Speaker of the House of Representatives Mike Johnson. Supplied photo.

Darden donation

David and Kathleen LaCross have upped their multi-million dollar gift to the University of Virginia’s Darden School of Business to a total of more than $100 million, the largest gift in the school’s history. The LaCross family’s initial gift last year reached $50 million after being matched by UVA. The massive donation will go toward pioneering artificial intelligence and a new residential college, according to UVAToday. David LaCross is a Darden alumnus, while his wife graduated from the UVA College of Arts & Science.

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News

Green for green

Kindlewood residents and local affordable housing leaders are celebrating after a $6 million check was presented to the Piedmont Housing Alliance and National Housing Trust by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. The check closes a major funding gap in the Kindlewood redevelopment project, and will help cover the cost of solar installation and other energy-efficiency efforts in the neighborhood.  

Presented to PHA and NHT on October 26, the large check was awarded as part of the Biden administration’s Green and Resilient Retrofit Program. Kindlewood is one of 16 properties to receive funding through the program, which aims to fund otherwise cost-prohibitive energy efficiency improvements in affordable housing communities.

Split into four phases, the redevelopment of Kindlewood is both resident led and zero displacement. People began moving into new buildings this summer, and once PHA has finished the move-in of phase-one residents (by December or January), it will begin demolition and construction for phase two.

“We have had a commitment to the residents to start construction of phase two, as soon as phase one was complete,” said Sunshine Mathon, executive director at Piedmont Housing Alliance, following the check presentation. “We had a remaining gap in the financing until this $6 million came through. This closes our gap and allows us to stay on track and hold that commitment to the residents.”

Solar panels will be installed across the Kindlewood community as part of the upcoming construction. 

“This funding allows us not only to finish the goal on phase two funding, but to do so with a deep commitment to some of the most energy-efficient housing in the commonwealth,” said Mathon. “The roofs will be 100 percent covered in solar, and that will provide direct benefit directly to the residents.”

For community leaders and residents, the most exciting benefit of the project is the expected reduction in energy costs that comes with solar installation. “You can build housing, but if the cost of the housing utilities are high, you really haven’t accomplished that much,” says Myrtle Houchens, former resident and current member of the Kindlewood Advisory Committee. “This will really, really, really allow the sustainability of the housing piece, [through] low-cost, energy-efficient homes.”

Brooks Wellmon, director of development and communications for PHA, says Kindlewood’s focus on sustainability marks an important shift in the conversation around affordable housing. 

“Often when we’re developing housing, affordable housing for low-income individuals, cost is the primary factor, and so things like environmental sustainability, efficiency, green features often fall to the wayside,” she says. “This program, this project, is really a model of how we can combine something that’s good for the planet, that saves our residents money, and is still in a safe, affordable housing development.

Phase two of construction at Kindlewood is expected to begin in early 2024. Plans for the housing development include early learning and community centers, the former of which will be open to all of Charlottesville. Other elements include the creation of an additional park, which will eventually be deeded to the city.

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News

Calling the shots

With less than a week to go before Election Day, voters have either already cast their ballots or are preparing to head to the polls. Ahead of November 7, we take a look at local and legislative races, party control of the state legislature, and what different outcomes could mean for the Charlottesville area.

After an exciting primary season, local legislative elections are expected to be relatively routine. “Both of our legislative chambers are pretty safely Democratic,” says Miles Coleman from the University of Virginia Center for Politics’ Crystal Ball.

While Crystal Ball focuses on national races, Coleman offered his personal insight into the upcoming elections. He says those to watch include the 55th District House of Delegates race and the Albemarle County School Board at-large election.

Around Charlottesville, voters will cast their ballots in either the 54th or 55th House of Delegates District. Katrina Callsen is running unopposed in the 54th, while in the 55th, Democrat Amy Laufer is heavily favored against Republican Steve Harvey.

“Maybe the Republicans are looking to make a play at District 55,” says Coleman. “But to me, that is a seat that Youngkin got 44 percent of the vote … that’s probably your Republican ceiling. And if they do any better than that, that may catch my attention.”

In Albemarle County, voters will decide between Allison Spillman and Meg Bryce for the Albemarle County School Board at-large seat, a race where both candidates have spent unusually large amounts of money: Spillman and Bryce respectively raised $111,462 and $106,559 as of September 30, 2023, according to the Virginia Public Access Project.

Beyond spending, the contest interests Coleman because of its quasi-partisan nature. “It’s technically a non-partisan race, but it’s sort of caught my attention that it’s almost become a partisan race,” he says. Throughout her campaign, Spillman has aligned herself with Democratic values, and framed Bryce as a conservative due to both her platform and father, late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia. “Even in a non-partisan race, it’s a very steep climb for a candidate who’s been sort of labeled as a conservative, fairly or not,” he says.

He doesn’t have a prediction for the ACPS school board at-large election, but Coleman says, “I think the general trend of the area has sort of hurt [Bryce]. I think just 10 years ago or so Albemarle County was more of a marginal political area. … Now it’s more like a 65 [to] 70 percent Democratic area.”

In the state Senate, Coleman expects incumbent Creigh Deeds to easily beat his Republican challenger Philip Hamilton in the newly drawn 11th District.

While both chambers of the state legislature are up for grabs, Coleman predicts the Democrats will likely retain control of the state Senate. “If you look at the 2021 governor breakdown, Youngkin, even though he won in 2021, would have only carried 20 of the 40 seats in the state Senate,” he says. “All Democrats have to do, assuming they win all of the [former governor] McAuliffe districts, which I think they’re in decent shape to pull along … [is] pull off one of those close Youngkin seats.”

In the Virginia House of Delegates, party control is more of a toss up. Republicans currently hold a slim majority in the chamber, but that could change if competitive legislative races fall in Democrats’ favor.

“One dynamic I would look for on election night is if it’s sort of a wave election for one party or the other, a lot of the toss-up seats will break just one way or the other,” says Coleman. “I will say generally, that the kind of sources we talk to, it seems like the Democrats are sort of cautiously optimistic that they’ll take both chambers, while the Republicans keep emphasizing that there are just a lot of close races.”

With several legislators retiring, Deeds will soon be the second-most senior member of his caucus. If Democrats retain control of the state Senate, this puts Deeds in a powerful position to advocate for the region.

Charlottesville will have two new representatives in the House of Delegates, which could make getting funding more difficult. “I’m interested to see if those new members are gonna be able to look out for the area and bring home bacon as opposed to some of the more senior members,” says Coleman. “It’s always better to be in the majority, just in terms of passing your agenda. So if the Democrats take the majority, I’ll say broadly, that that would probably be … in favor of the Charlottesville-Albemarle area.”

For more information on polling locations and hours, visit elections.virginia.gov/casting-a-ballot/polling-place-lookup/

Categories
News Real Estate

Navigating northern Albemarle

For over four decades, Albemarle County has designated areas close to Charlottesville where intense growth is allowed to occur. As this year comes closer to an end, there’s a lot happening in what’s known to planners as Places 29-North. 

“We are reviewing an application for about 1,500 homes in the North Fork area,” says Deputy Director of Planning Kevin McDermott. “Directly across U.S. 29 from there is a development called North Pointe.”

But that’s just some of what’s coming. Albemarle’s development dashboard currently shows nearly 4,000 units approved but not yet built in the Hollymead area, with another 2,916 under review as of October 1. That’s the most of any of the county’s growth areas, but one with limited public transportation options. 

To change that, Albemarle and Charlottesville Area Transit launched a new microtransit service on October 30.

“It offers people an opportunity to take a different way to get into their work and their school and their play, wherever they need to get to,” McDermott says. “It’s not going to take a major amount of cars off the road but it does offer people another choice.” 

McDermott said the one-year pilot program will provide data that can be used to plan future fixed-route buses where there is currently no service. Albemarle County’s urban ring is about 30 square miles compared to just over 10 for the entire City of Charlottesville. Albemarle Board of Supervisors Chair Donna Price says that’s too large an area for hourly bus service, but the on-demand MicroCAT is seen as a first step. 

“The county’s Pantops and U.S. 29 North areas do have sufficient increased density which, while too small to support that fixed-route system, is sufficient to support this on-demand service,” Price says. 

To use the fare-free service, download the MicroCAT app on an Android or Apple iOS device. Or you can call 442-2466 to book a ride. The service operates Monday through Saturday from 6:30am to 9:30pm. 

One of the drivers is Peter Lafford, who told reporters on a ride along that he is glad to be doing the work. He’s a member of IMPACT, a congregation-led group advocating for solutions in the community. 

“They are pointing out issues concerning affordable housing, underserved public transport systems, and after-school programs,” Lafford says. “I was supportive of those efforts, and so now it’s exciting to find I’m a part of a program solving some of those issues.” 

The service will depend on existing roads and streets. 

Over the past several years, Albemarle and the Virginia Department of Transportation have invested in the road network, with projects such as the extension of Berkmar Drive Extended. The UVA Foundation paid $7 million to extend Lewis and Clark Drive to Airport Road, and has offered around $4 million in improvements connected to the North Fork rezoning. 

Meanwhile, the county seeks to purchase 462 acres around the Rivanna Station military base for economic development purposes. Supervisors are seeking state assistance to help cover the $58 million cost to buy the land from developer Wendell Wood, but the deal is expected to close soon. 

Categories
Arts Culture

The bad old days

Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon is nearly three and a half hours long, but its length just means the great filmmaker did justice to this sweeping, fascinating story. Flower Moon moves like a long fuse tensely burning down to an inevitable explosion. It’s a hypnotic, gorgeous, grand work and Scorsese’s best in years.

Based on David Grann’s non-fiction book, the movie documents a series of murders and other crimes committed against the Osage Nation a century ago. Fresh from World War I, the dull-witted Ernest Burkhart (Leonardo DiCaprio) goes to work for his powerful uncle, William King Hale (Robert De Niro), in Oklahoma’s Osage Territory. The Osage Tribe is wealthy from the oil-rich land, but the locals—especially the glad-handing sociopath Hale—swindle them at every opportunity. 

Hale’s vile schemes extend to coaxing his nephew into marrying an Osage woman, Mollie (Lily Gladstone), with the intention of inheriting a claim on her family’s wealth. As mysterious deaths build up, Mollie complains to the federal government, who make this the first major case for their budding Bureau of Investigation.

Flower Moon pursues elements that run throughout Scorsese’s oeuvre: a self-destructive, criminal protagonist; religion; terminally fractured romances; and organized crime. At 80, Scorsese is as cinematically gifted as ever, but he’s more contemplative now. This is an intense and enormously visually inventive film, but not as feverishly so as his youthful works like Taxi Driver or Raging Bull.

Part of Flower Moon’s overall effectiveness derives from how subtly Scorsese documents insidious, cold-hearted evil. He lets hellish events unfold without bludgeoning the audience with self-righteous lectures. For instance, the period’s casual, ingrained racism is just another facet of the terrifying landscape, like when the Ku Klux Klan march behind the Osage Nation in a local parade. Underlying the vicious crimes being perpetrated onscreen is a profound sympathy for the tribe’s violated humanity.

The great production designer Jack Fisk does a stellar job of recreating this bygone world, packing every shot densely with rich period details. Cinematographer Rodrigo Prieto’s vast canvas practically demands that Flower Moon be seen on the big screen. Costume designer Jacqueline West’s contributions are also superb.

As with all Scorsese pictures, music is integral. This was the final film score by his longtime friend and collaborator Robbie Robertson, who created a tense, insistent, often low-key score that adds immeasurably to the film’s unsettling tone.

DiCaprio resorts to a lot of brow-knitting and jaw-clenching. De Niro is decent, but is most effective in his silent moments, and both he and DiCaprio handle their regional accents unsurely. Gladstone’s fine, restrained performance as Molly seems doubly strong alongside DiCaprio’s excesses. Jesse Plemons is first-rate and natural as Federal Agent Tom White. The supporting cast is fantastic overall, including venerable actors like Barry Corbin and John Lithgow. Scorsese loves distinctive faces and Flower Moon is full of them, devoid of slick, Hollywood prettiness. 

There is much more that could be said about Flower Moon, but in a nutshell, it is likely the best American film of 2023—far superior to the overrated Oppenheimer. It’s a disturbing, artistically rewarding journey through an ugly chapter in American history that’s worth seeing multiple times.

Killers of the Flower Moon

R, 206 minutes | Alamo Drafthouse Cinema, Regal Stonefield Cinema, Violet Crown Cinema

Categories
Arts Culture

Following a Southern Star

Brent Cobb has written hit songs for Nashville heavyweights like Luke Bryan, Little Big Town, and Miranda Lambert, to name a few. But throughout the handful of records he’s released under his own name, he’s always carried himself with a laidback ease, projecting backroads’ casualness instead of polished Music City ambition. He sings with a loose and languid drawl, often sounding like a passive narrator a few tokes deep on a rural front porch, telling cautionary tales or pining for simple pleasures. Even as he’s found plenty of success (he recently opened stadium gigs for Luke Combs), he always seems to be longing for a more relaxed setting. As he puts it in “Country Bound,” from his Grammy-nominated 2016 album Shine on Rainy Day: “There’s many people all around me. / But the feeling’s not here I’m trying to find.”

So Cobb, one of the chillest dudes in Americana, decided it was time to get back to his roots. Just ahead of recording his latest album, the October-released Southern Star, Cobb left Nashville for good and moved back to his native Georgia. Accordingly, his new effort is a heartfelt homecoming statement that finds him deep in his comfort zone. 

To make the self-produced LP, Cobb went to Macon and recorded at Capricorn Sound Studios, the historic spot where the Allman Brothers Band, Charlie Daniels, and Percy Sledge made landmark works in the lineage of Southern rock and soul. To hone the vibe, Cobb assembled a cast of Georgia-based musicians, who helped him effortlessly move between gritty country-funk and vintage ‘70s folk-rock sounds. The result is a collection of songs with easy-going grooves and throwback influences about the relief of returning to the familiar.

“Livin’ the Dream” is a greasy, deep-in-the-pocket jam that extols the virtues of kicking it in the countryside when the world at large is overwhelming. In between wailing harmonica fills, Cobb nonchalantly sings, “There’s no phone line, so I make conversation with the warm sunshine.” The wonders of nature are also praised in “Shade Tree,” a breezy acoustic tune Cobb wrote with his wife and sister.

Cobb doesn’t spend the entire album with his head in the clouds—he also uses his cosmic pondering to process grief. In 2021, one of his best friends, Jason “Rowdy” Cope, a guitarist in the edgy country-rock band The Steel Woods, died at the age of 42. Southern Star is partially named after a bar where Cobb and Cope used to hang out, and in the album’s title track, a soulfully reflective song with gentle keyboard vamps, Cobb sweetly recalls his partying days as a “temporary treat,” before once again letting his mind drift towards home.

Being a musician—even an in-demand songwriter—is a relentless hustle. It seems from now on that if Cobb has anything more to say, it’ll come from an anonymous stretch of highway. As he sings in the swaying country ballad “Patina”: “If we get to rolling too fast, life will downshift on us.”

Categories
Arts Culture

Suzie True, Gnawing, and Work Wear

The taps are flowing and the speakers are booming at the long-awaited Superfly Brewing Co. Rock outfits Suzie True, Gnawing, and Work Wear headline the brewery’s first ever live show. LA-based trio Suzie True blends slice-of-life lyricism with indie rock instrumentals to explore the modern femme experience. From Richmond, Gnawing likes its rock ‘n’ roll loud with country influences. Charlottesville’s Work Wear wrap up the evening with its signature ’80s-inflected garage rock, piercing guitar solos, and psych influences.

Thursday 11/2. Free, 7pm. Superfly Brewing Co., 943 Preston Ave.
@superfly_brewing_co