Categories
2024 Best of C-VILLE Staff Picks

Look inside

A personal trainer for more than 20 years, Cecil Hassell, it’s safe to say, knows how to help people feel confident about what they’re seeing on the outside. But he recently turned his attention to helping people—and more specifically, kids—feel confident about what’s on the inside, too. With his children’s book, The Adventures of the Bald-Headed Bear, he tells the story of (you might have guessed) a bear with no hair who takes a journey to learn more about self-love.

Categories
2024 Best of C-VILLE Staff Picks

Blues clues

The Charlottesville Blues Football Club, part of the United Soccer League (the largest soccer organization in North America), kicked off its first season in May. The team, whose home field is at St. Anne’s-Belfield School, is going to “build a fan base one fan at a time,” according to Brian Krow, the Blues’ co-owner. “If you’re a [soccer] lover or not, it doesn’t matter. Come down, see a match, see the men and women play … stand on the field and bleed blue.”

Categories
2024 Best of C-VILLE Staff Picks

The wheel deal

What’s an e-bike and is it right for you? Josh Carp will let you borrow one of his bikes to help you figure it out. Through his Charlottesville E-bike Lending Library, the electric bike enthusiast allows you to snag one of the eight in his collection for up to a week to see if you like it. There’s tons of benefits: E-bikes are sturdier than mechanical bikes, are designed for commuting, and are battery-powered (thus, eco-friendly). But they’re a little pricier than mechanical bikes, so Carp encourages you to try before you buy.

Categories
2024 Best of C-VILLE Staff Picks

Track meet

Running is free—running alone, that is. Finding a community of runners takes a little more effort. So, Lauren Lieske, coach and personal trainer at CrossFit Charlottesville, has been getting people to move together with a free track running series. 

Hosted each Sunday on Charlottesville High School’s athletics field, the weekly event is open to the public no matter your skill level or experience. There’s no mileage prerequisite, says Lieske, and the workouts are broken into beginner, intermediate, and advanced levels.

“As a coach, I’ve found that a lot of people can be intimidated by running, and although they might be interested in starting, they aren’t quite sure how,” she says. “Fitness shouldn’t have barriers.”

While the track series began at CrossFit Charlottesville, Lieske was determined to bring it to members and non-members alike. The trainer says she’s had up to 22 people attend any given weekend, and most folks find out about it through word of mouth. Aerobic training complements strength training, she says, and keeps your heart healthy and builds endurance.

“I enjoy watching people push themselves and do things they might not have thought they were able to do. Running alone versus running with others is a very different experience,” says Lieske. “At the end of the day, we’re just a group of people getting together to move and feel good and I want everyone to actually feel good.”

Categories
2024 Best of C-VILLE Staff Picks

Pittsburgh Steelers standout Heath Miller is back on Charlottesville football fields 

St. Anne’s-Belfield School made a splashy hire for its football program this spring, tapping one-time UVA and Pittsburgh Steelers tight end Heath Miller to replace former head coach Joe Sandoe.

Miller, whose career as a Cavalier earned him a first-round pick by Pittsburgh in 2005, was named to the NFL team’s Hall of Honor in 2022. His 11 years with the Steelers included two Pro Bowl selections, two Super Bowl championships, the most regular season games played by a tight end in team history (168), 592 receptions, 6,569 receiving yards, and 45 touchdowns.

“Heath comes from a tremendous football background, and when Joe decided to leave us, we knew we were not going to do a national search for a coach,” STAB Athletic Director Seth Kushkin says. “We wanted to hire someone that has been a part of our community.” 

Miller has four children enrolled at STAB, including a rising high-school freshman who intends to play football in the fall. Miller’s coaching experience is limited to working with his oldest son at various levels as he’s grown, so when Kushkin and his team reached out to the former UVA star, the initial conversation was far-reaching. How could Miller best support the Saints football team? 

Eventually, all parties settled on a head coaching role—with considerable support from a staff of experienced high-school-level coaches. Topping the list is Associate Head Coach Patrick Blake, son of the Saints’ head football coach immediately prior to Sandoe. John Blake coached the team for a quarter decade, going 175-75 from 1997 to 2022, winning six state titles, and sending three players to the NFL. Also on staff are Joe Hall, a former All-ACC defensive lineman for UVA, Kevin Badke, Joe Reed, Chris Peace, and Jared Passmore.

“Heath has built a tremendous staff around him, and that is really what we are excited about,” Kushkin says, adding via email that Miller “does not want the story to be about him.”

Will Miller’s success as a player translate to success as a head coach? Kushkin says the first step is to define success. Sure, it would be nice for the Saints to reascend to the highest level of Division 2 Virginia football and win more state titles. At the end of Blake’s tenure, the team suffered through some lean years. COVID essentially canceled the team’s 2020-2021 season, and Blake’s final season saw the team at 2-7. In Sandoe’s first year, the Saints won only one game, but a resurgent 6-3 record followed before Sandoe was attracted back to his home in Atlanta for another coaching job.

The other way to define success, according to Kushkin, is by the experiences of STAB’s student-athletes.

“Heath wants to provide the opportunity for young men who play football to learn all of the pieces: the hard work, the leadership, the growth opportunities that come from competing in this game,” Kushkin says. “He loves being a dad and being a part of this community, and he wants to impact and help young men through football in the same way that he was.”

Categories
News Real Estate

A dangerous Charlottesville intersection could become more crowded

If implemented as planners hope, Charlottesville’s new development rules will provide more places for people to live by making it easier for builders to navigate the process. Less certain is what will happen when more of those homes are constructed on a road network with known areas of concern. 

Perhaps one of the most dangerous intersections in Charlottesville is at Fifth Street SW and Harris Road, which has seen at least three fatalities since 2016 and many more just to the north on a stretch of roadway designed to be a highway. Thousands of vehicles pass through this junction every weekday. 

To the west is the city’s Fry’s Spring neighborhood and the Willoughby Shopping Center and to the east and up a hill is the Willoughby neighborhood, which has several dozen homes with city addresses until the roadway passes into Albemarle County. 

Moores Creek LLC, a company associated with Woodard Properties, has plans pending before the city to build a development called Willoughby Place with 84 two-bedroom apartments in two buildings on 4.8 acres. The driveway to this by-right development would be 350′ from the Harris Road intersection. That’s one reason the Willoughby Property Owners Association is opposed to the development. 

“Line of sight expressed by [Moores Creek LLC’s] plans from Harris Road to [the Willoughby Place] entrance is two-dimensional and doesn’t take into account the hill,” reads an August 7 letter from the association to the city requesting a denial of a preliminary site plan. 

The Willoughby Place plans also show a connection to a parcel in Albemarle County, but correspondence between the city and the firm Shimp Engineering indicates there are no efforts to develop that land at this time. There was an effort to do so in 2014 that did not meet with the favor of the county’s planning commission. 

The plans for 610 Harris Rd. were filed under the city’s previous rules, which means that none of the units have to be rented at below-market rates to satisfy affordability requirements, known in the new code as “inclusionary zoning.” Plans filed now require 10 percent of the units to be affordable. 

The northwest quadrant of the Fifth and Harris intersection is a 46-unit townhouse community built by Southern Development in the mid-2000s. The future of the southwest quadrant is wide open with a new owner.

On August 5, an entity based in Staunton called TAP Investments LLC purchased 1113 Fifth St. SW for $1.375 million, slightly above the 2024 assessment. The new zoning code is Commercial Mixed Use 8, which would allow for an eight-story building with unlimited residential density as well as many commercial possibilities. 

A bank operated on the 0.9-acre property for many years and in the fall of 2022, City Council denied a special use permit allowing for Green Clean Albemarle LLC to operate a car wash on the property. 

So far, there are no applications to develop the property.

No matter what gets built, the city is working to make the roadway safer with plans for a “road diet” between Harris Road and Cherry Avenue. 

“We’re expecting to bring those conceptual plans to the public for review this fall,” says Afton Schneider, the city’s director of communications and public engagement. 

Categories
News

City Council to consider ranked-choice voting ordinance

Charlottesville City Council will formally consider a draft ranked-choice voting ordinance at its August 19 meeting. If approved, Charlottesville would become the second locality in Virginia to adopt ranked-choice voting, and the new voting system will be used on a trial basis in the city’s 2025 election.

Under a ranked-choice system, voters can rank candidates in order of preference. If no candidate receives 50 percent of the first preference vote, the candidate with the fewest votes is then eliminated. Voters who selected the eliminated candidate as their first choice then have their second preference candidate votes tallied and added to the vote totals. The process continues until a candidate has earned a simple majority of votes.

“The beauty of ranked-choice voting is it ensures that we elect leaders who actually build coalitions from the breadth of their community, rather than just rallying an extreme minority,” says former delegate Sally Hudson. “It lets voters vote for who they really like no matter how many candidates run.”

During her time in the Virginia General Assembly, Hudson introduced a bill allowing cities to adopt ranked-choice voting. She went on to found Ranked Choice Virginia in 2021 and continues to advocate for the adoption of the voting system across the commonwealth.

Benefits to ranked-choice voting are numerous, according to Hudson. Key positives include empowering voters to select their preferred candidate and reducing, if not completely eliminating, the risk of splitting the vote among like-minded candidates.

“If it turns out that your favorite candidate is not among the most popular picks, you still get a voice in who the final selection is from your community, from the last candidates,” she says. “Once candidates don’t have to worry about splitting the vote and accidentally tipping the scales toward someone they don’t support, we see more candidates who are willing to throw their hat in the ring, and that means that voters get more options.”

Locally, Hudson says one of the races that could most benefit from ranked-choice voting is city council elections.

“We now have the virtue of having wide fields run for just a handful of city council seats each year, and that’s exactly when you can see vote splitting,” she says. “Somebody [can] get elected to council with a relatively small share of the vote, maybe only 20 or 30 percent … a ranked choice election can ensure that you find the winners who really do have broad support in the community and don’t just have a super vocal slice that is out of step with the rest.”

Though Charlottesville City Council will formally consider the adoption of ranked-choice voting for the first time on August 19, preparations have already begun behind the scenes for the possibility of using the voting system in local elections in 2025. A number of logistical steps have been taken (namely, finding ranked-choice-capable software for voting machines), but the largest hurdle is still to come: voter education.

“It’s a switch for people,” says Hudson. “Once voters have a chance to see it in action, they consistently report that they understand the new system and that they like it. … You do have to do voter education, but if you do it and you do it well, then voters get it. They like it. They want to do it again.”

Categories
News

New CHS Principal Justin Malone on the 2024-25 school year

Charlottesville High School is kicking off the 2024-25 school year with a new principal, Justin Malone. Since starting on July 1, Malone has worked to get CHS ready for students to return.

“I was ordered a new desk when I came on board and then went on vacation,” says Malone. “When I came back, not only was my old desk removed, but the new desk hadn’t arrived … So I have been here since July 1 without a desk.”

While waiting on his desk to arrive, Malone has been working out of a conference room by the main office. Three of the four walls to the room are glass, allowing the new principal to stay engaged with the school community—something he plans to keep up during the school year.

“I’m constantly navigating and going through this building to be a presence so that people can see me,” says Malone. Getting to know the school community, both new and returning faces, is key for the principal and something he hopes to foster among the incoming freshman class through the Link Crew program.

As CHS’ main initiative for helping freshmen with the transition into high school, the Link Crew program comprises roughly 70 juniors and seniors selected to mentor the incoming freshman class. Link Crew leaders will check in on the ninth graders throughout the year, helping the underclassmen settle in academically and socially.

“The structure of it is meant to sort of demystify what high school could be like or areas that might be just on a freshman’s mind about what to do when,” says Malone. “We have a full day of training helping workshop some activities that [the Link Crew mentors] will then lead with our freshmen.”

Beyond the peer mentoring program, Malone has also highlighted staffing and community-building as top priorities.

Staffing shortages were a major factor in the unexpected closure of CHS last November, when several instructors called out following student fights. Longtime local instructor Kenneth Leatherwood stepped up as interim principal in the wake of the closure and unexpected departure of former principal Rashaad Pitt.

The school is now fully staffed outside of some additional needs in the science department, according to Malone.

“I’m really proud of our staff,” he says. “They know this community well, and they embrace the experiences and the students that are a part of Charlottesville High School in a way that helps to express our students’ talents, our students’ capacity, our students’ identity. Our staff sees that and welcomes it and helps champion that.”

To help foster community and accountability, CHS has also implemented a new digital hall pass system this year. Through the digital system, instructors will be able to not only set an expected duration and location for student passes, but monitor the number of students school-wide sent to an area at one time. Limiting the number of students outside of class in a given location allows instructors and administrators to prevent large groups from meeting or coordinating fights in the hallways. With 1,430 students—the highest enrollment in the school’s history—set to attend CHS this fall, this is especially vital.

“We’re thoughtful about when we’re sending students to [other] spaces,” says Malone. “We’re thoughtful about the number of students that we’re sending to certain locations, and in doing so, we’re all able to prioritize the time that students are in their classes.”

“Coming into this year, we know that Charlottesville High School is a very special place, and we have prepared for the expectation that students are going to be where they need to be,” says Malone. “We have a staff that is ready to engage them in meaningful, engaging experiences in the classroom, and our administrative team and our [Care and Safety Assistants] are in a position to help make sure that the students are [not] in unauthorized spaces when they shouldn’t be.”

Since returning from virtual learning during the COVID-19 pandemic, engaging with students and the community has been an ongoing effort in Charlottesville City Schools. At the core of that effort is a return to regular community-building activities, including school sports and dances.

“So much of what we heard over and over again last year from teachers and students was that, really, the issues that came up in the fall were still kind of post-COVID, post-being away from school for such a long time,” says CCS Community Relations Coordinator Amanda Korman. “By that point none of these kids have been to a pep rally, none of these kids have had a normal dance or a prom. … All those normal cultural, positive things that keep a high school together.”

“To a large extent, it’s super important and we’re going to keep building out beyond Link Crew, creating experiences for students,” says Malone. “Our work will always continue to be, ‘How do we create and connect students with meaningful experiences that are part of the high school experience?’”

Categories
News

In brief

Home court

Former University of Virginia basketball star Kyle Guy is returning to Charlottesville as Athlete Development Mentor/Special Assistant for the Hoos.

“We are thrilled to welcome Kyle and his family back to Charlottesville,” said UVA men’s basketball Head Coach Tony Bennett in an August 7 release announcing Guy’s return. “Kyle is not only one of the best players I’ve ever coached, but also one of the finest young men I’ve met. He will make an immediate impact on our program, working with our players and sharing the expertise and competitive fire he’s gained throughout his collegiate and professional [careers].”

During his time as a player at Virginia, Guy was a member of the 2019 National Collegiate Athletic Association Championship winning team, making several key plays during the March Madness tournament. He went on to play professionally for five seasons, with three years in the NBA and two seasons playing abroad in Spain.

Guy’s return to Charlottesville marks the official end of his professional career and his transition into coaching.

“I want to sincerely thank Coach Bennett and Carla Williams for trusting me with the opportunity to come back and begin this next chapter of my life,” said Guy in the release. “I’m beyond excited to help this team and the University in any way needed. I’m also excited for my kids to see the work never stops! Fail harder!”

Rain check

Image via EOSDIS Worldview.

Several people and animals were evacuated from Misty Mountain Camp Resort in Albemarle County in the middle of the night on August 9, when rain from Hurricane Debby caused flash flooding around 3:30am.

Water from the storm rushed in and out of the campground, resulting in no injuries but partially submerging multiple RVs.

“I saw a car … floating on down the road,” camper Keith Hebert told CBS19. “We just weren’t planning on this; this about ruined our weekend.”

Charlottesville is almost 200 miles inland, but the city and surrounding areas are still at risk for dangerous conditions from hurricane remnants. As we approach the peak of the Atlantic hurricane season, the City of Charlottesville is reminding residents to stock up on supplies, ensure outdoor furniture is secured, monitor weather conditions, and avoid flooded areas.

The Atlantic hurricane season runs from June 1 to November 30.

Burning questions

The Albemarle County Fire Marshal’s Office is currently investigating a suspicious fire that occurred on August 11, resulting in an estimated $30,000 of damage to Vocelli Pizza. Albemarle County Fire Rescue units were dispatched to the scene at approximately 1:45am, where they discovered the front of the pizzeria and two trash cans ablaze. Anyone in the area near the time of the fire or with information should contact the Albemarle Fire Marshal’s Office at 296-5833.

Park plans

The Charlottesville Department of Parks & Recreation will present its key findings from months of public comments at 6pm on August 20 at Carver Recreation Center. The findings will inform the city and PROS Consulting as they develop a master plan for the department, which will guide Parks & Recreation for at least the next 10 years.

Cause for celebration

After weeks of fundraising efforts, Habitat for Humanity of Greater Charlottesville’s offer to purchase Carlton Mobile Home Park has been accepted. The offer—which was put together in record time following notification that an anonymous buyer offered $7 million for the property in early June—is a joint effort between Habitat, Piedmont Housing Alliance, Legal Aid Justice Center, and the City of Charlottesville. “[We] are thrilled and relieved to know that the Bolton family has accepted the offer we put before them on behalf of the residents who live in the community,” posted Habitat on Facebook on August 8. “We are humbled to know that the residents of the Carlton community were willing to take this leap of faith with us. We look forward to working closely with the residents in the months and years to come.”

Categories
Arts Culture

Soul of Cville Festival

The fourth annual Soul of Cville Festival is a celebration of Black excellence across disciplines. Dance? You know it. Fashion show? For sure. DJ sets? Yup. Live music? Hell yeah. Beyond the performances, dozens of vendors and community partners will be on site. There’s awesome apparel, creative arts and crafts, meaningful mentorship, and a wide range of other products and services available for your discovery. Hungry? Sample sweet treats, soul food staples, and delicious Caribbean cuisine among other offerings. The family-friendly fest also provides free art-making opportunities, plus community access to Ix’s Looking Glass Immersive Art Experience.

Saturday 8/17. Free, 3-8pm. Ix Art Park, 522 Second St. SE. ixartpark.org