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Opinion The Editor's Desk

This week, 4/8

On a recent gorgeous spring afternoon,I took my daughter along in the car on the way to pick up an order at the bakery. Our windows were down. WNRN was playing a community connection ad that clearly hadn’t been revised post stay-at-home order, promoting an upcoming dance performance. The dogwoods were in bloom. For a few seconds, everything felt normal.

It’s an odd moment we’re in. While the number of confirmed cases of COVID-19 has been steadily creeping up in the Charlottesville area (as of April 6, there were 95 cases in our health district), we are still mostly in a stage of prevention and preparation. The pandemic has utterly changed the life of our community and devastated many people’s livelihoods. But the news reports from New York, where more than 600 people died in a single day and a field hospital has been set up in Central Park, still feel like dispatches from another planet.

Meanwhile, we are all trying to figure out how to live in this changed world. This week, we bring you stories about local efforts to grapple with the same issues that have come up in communities across the country and the world: How do our farmers get their food to customers? (p. 12). How do our public schools make sure kids with wildly different resources can equitably learn at home? How do we prevent our jails from becoming hotbeds for the virus?

Like so many other places, we are adapting on the fly, coming up with new solutions, and trying to make it work. We are hoping that the sacrifices we are making now will protect us. We are holding our breath.

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Opinion The Editor's Desk

This week, 4/1

On Monday, Governor Ralph Northam ordered all Virginians to stay at home, turning the “suggestion” that we all keep our distance into an official command. While the announcement likely won’t change much in Charlottesville, where schools, universities, and most businesses are already operating remotely, the order’s timeline—it’s in effect until June 10—was a forceful reminder that this crisis isn’t going away anytime soon.

Social distancing is vital–Virginia has over a thousand cases of COVID-19, and climbing. Staying at home is an act of responsibility for those in our community who are most at risk. But it’s worth noting that the burden doesn’t fall equally on all of us.

Here in Charlottesville, our wealthiest (and whitest) neighborhoods tend to be the ones with the most trees. A friend in Ivy has a lawn the size of a soccer field (complete with nets); in my own neighborhood, kids can wander down to the creek and ride bikes on the Rivanna Trail. Meanwhile, the city has closed the parking lots to most of its parks and even removed the rims from the basketball hoops.

It’s always been true that some people have more private resources than others. But now, our great levelers—public schools, public parks, public libraries—are out of reach. It’s more important than ever that we figure out how to take care of each other.

They say you can judge a society by how it treats its most vulnerable members—children, the elderly, the sick, and the poor. You can also judge a society, or a person, by how they act under times of stress and difficulty.

In the past few weeks, many in our community have responded to this crisis with resourcefulness and compassion: from fundraising to sewing masks to staffing food banks.

Now, we’re in it for the long haul. We’ll need to learn new ways of maintaining community, while staying apart.

 

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Opinion The Editor's Desk

This week, 3/25

At press time, there were fewer than a dozen cases of COVOID-19 in our health district. But the virus’ disruption to our everyday lives and livelihoods is already well under way. As we all struggle to adjust to this new normal, C-VILLE talked with local artists whose careers have been turned upside down by the sudden cancellation of shows, classes, and tours, and reported on efforts to help restaurants that have been forced to temporarily close or pivot to take-out only.

We are all figuring it out as we go, and those of us who are still fully employed and healthy should consider ourselves lucky. But the governor’s announcement Monday that schools will not reopen this academic year posed a seemingly insolvable problem to thousands of working parents: How do you take care of young children, let alone supervise their education, while simultaneously working full- time? (If you’ve got an answer to this one, I’m all ears).

Meanwhile, as our city, state, and federal governments struggle to provide an adequate economic response, locals have been stepping up to help: A GoFundMe for restaurant workers has raised more than $20,000, an emergency relief fund has $2 million, and a grassroots effort called Equip Cville has begun gathering personal protective gear for frontline health workers.

In normal times, this would have been our neighborhood issue (that feature is still here). But the theme that emerged in talking to residents before this crisis is even more resonant now: In all the city’s neighborhoods, it matters to people to feel like they live in a place where people watch out for one another. Over the past two weeks, our community has shown an amazing capacity to mobilize and help each other. In the coming months, we’ll need that spirit more than ever.

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Coronavirus Opinion

This week, 3/18

A week ago, schools were still in session, the bars and restaurants were full, and most of us were going about our everyday lives, albeit with a growing sense of dread. Here at C-VILLE Weekly, our most pressing problem was what to do with a multi-page cover story we’d prepared for the book festival, which had just been cancelled.

Then came the UVA announcement, then the public schools. Then the events began falling like dominos, all the local harbingers of spring: the 10-miler, TomTom, even the Friends of the Library book sale. For the first time in the paper’s history, we scrapped our events calendar, the bread and butter of every issue, as the CDC advised social distancing and everyone in town, seemingly simultaneously, began to realize that our everyday lives were no longer sustainable.

Watching news of the coronavirus as it steadily does its damage across the globe has been like watching a slow-motion car crash, a multi-car pileup that’s headed straight for you. Yet, it’s still a shock when it hits. Virginia, which had zero known cases of COVID-19 when we first began reporting on the virus two weeks ago, now has 51, and the first Charlottesville case was announced on Monday.

By Monday afternoon, businesses on the Downtown Mall were closing up shop. I stopped into Bizou, an old favorite, and found the normally bustling dining room quiet and dark, the employees lined up behind the counter, eager for a takeout customer. They’re planning to try starting delivery. They’re hoping for the best.

Staying home, avoiding gatherings, shutting down (temporarily) our communal public life—it’s the right thing to do, the only thing to do, to keep the most vulnerable members of our community safe. But it still hurts.

 

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Opinion The Editor's Desk

This week, 3/10

Sunday marked the end of Charlottesville’s Liberation and Freedom Days, a week of events intended to commemorate the arrival of Union troops in Charlottesville in 1865. Though you’d never know it from our public monuments, for the majority of Albemarle residents those troops heralded freedom, not defeat (at the time, 53 percent of our local population was enslaved).

The final event of the week was a discussion of intergenerational trauma in African Americans. An emerging field of study in psychology, this research suggests that deeply traumatic events (like slavery and segregation) can leave traces, not just in one person’s life, but through multiple generations.

It’s an interesting thing to think about this week, as former mayor Mike Signer releases his own account of the events of the “Summer of Hate,” and the Virginia legislature has finally passed a law that could allow Charlottesville to move our Confederate monuments.

If the memorials bill is signed by Governor Ralph Northam, Generals Lee and Jackson could be out of our downtown parks by this fall. But the trauma they’ve caused—from their original erection in whites-only parks at the height of Jim Crow, to the white supremacist violence unleashed in their defense in 2017, will leave its trace.

The city could take a page from Dr. Jennifer Young Brown, who told the crowd on Sunday that the first step in healing from and halting intergenerational trauma is to recognize it. “Once we acknowledge there is a thing to mourn, we can move forward,” she said.

The legacy of slavery, segregation, and racism in Charlottesville won’t disappear when the monuments come down. But if we continue to grapple with that history and hurt, we can build something better in its place.

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Opinion The Editor's Desk

This week, 3/3

A week ago, federal health officials warned that the spread of coronavirus in the U.S. was inevitable, and that Americans should prepare for the possible shutdown of schools and other institutions. President Trump then contradicted those warnings, saying the virus was “very well under control in our country.” A few days later, he cast concern about the virus as a political ploy by Democrats, calling it “their new hoax.”

Since then, identified cases in the U.S. have risen from 57 to more than 200 in 18 states, and 12 people have died.* Most of the deaths were in Washington state, where the virus appears to have been circulating locally for weeks undetected. The confirmed case of a Florida man who had not traveled to or had contact with anyone from the hardest-hit countries indicates that COVID-19 may also be spreading locally in that state, and Florida officials declared a public health emergency.

At press time, there were no known cases of COVID-19 in Virginia, and health officials in Charlottesville say long-standing preparations for other flu pandemics have well positioned them to handle any potential outbreak. At the moment, the biggest local impact may be felt in the form of cancelled travel plans: UVA has asked its students studying abroad in Italy to return home and WorldStrides has relocated planned programs in some affected countries.

Meanwhile, as Virginia primary voters head to the polls, it’s a good time to see painter Robert Shetterly’s “Americans Who Tell the Truth” exhibit, now on view at several sites around town.

“So much depends on an individual who refuses to give in,” says Shetterly, who has painted nearly 250 portraits of truth-tellers, and recently added local residents Zyahna Bryant, John Hunter, and David Swanson to the series.

Perhaps Dr. Anthony Fauci, longtime director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, who has steered the country through numerous disease outbreaks, should be next on Shetterly’s list.

“You don’t want to go to war with a president,” Fauci told news website POLITICO on Friday, explaining his refusal to downplay the potential impact of coronavirus. “But you got to walk the fine balance of making sure you continue to tell the truth.”

*Updated 3/5 to reflect the rapidly increasing number of identified cases and deaths; live updates here.

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Opinion The Editor's Desk

This week, 2/26

Almost 20 years ago, clergy members at downtown churches became concerned about the men and women they frequently found sleeping in church doorways when they arrived at work in the morning. As faith leaders, they wanted to provide a better kind of shelter, so they teamed up with the Thomas Jefferson Area Coalition for the Homeless, and created a new, grassroots organization they named PACEM.

PACEM stands for People and Congregations Engaged in Ministry, but it’s also the Latin word for peace—what the program hopes to provide to dozens of people who would otherwise be sleeping on the streets. Each week, a rotating group of churches and community groups provides a hot dinner and beds for the night. Caseworkers also help guests address their needs and work towards finding permanent housing.

PACEM was originally designed to run only in the coldest months, from October to April, but this year the organization is hoping to extend the season to provide year-round shelter to those who need it. And women’s case manager Heather Kellams is also advocating for a permanent shelter for women, who have been seeking shelter in rising numbers recently, and who face unique challenges living on the street.

To meet their new goals, they’ll need more local support. But if the past is any indication, that’s a challenge Charlottesville is well-equipped to meet.

With more than 80 churches and local groups involved to date, PACEM is a prime example of  a community stepping up to take care of its most vulnerable, one that’s especially welcome as our national leaders attempt to make a virtue out of callous indifference and cruelty.

Whether it’s a new shelter, a new park, or a new monument, Charlottesville is still small enough, and certainly wealthy enough, that we can mobilize to make the changes we want to see.

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Opinion The Editor's Desk

This week, 2/19

Less than a week after county resident Richard Allan was arrested and charged with two felonies for stealing Court Square’s modest slave auction block marker, The New York Times Magazine ran a new story from its 1619 Project on the issue of slave-sale sites nationwide, and how inadequately we commemorate the horrific tragedies that happened in these places.

As SUNY Binghamton professor Anne C. Bailey writes, “Family was one of the few bright spots in the long night of slavery, and the auction was the event that ripped enslaved families apart.”

The article notes that only a small percentage of these sites have been properly documented and preserved. “To look at some of these images,” Bailey writes of the accompanying photographs of slave-sale sites today, “is to grasp how invisible some of American history’s most grievous wounds have become.”

In Charlottesville, Allan’s theft galvanized ongoing discussions by the city’s Historic Resources Committee to create a more prominent slave auction memorial. And the county is hosting community conversations on the broader issue of how history is told in Court Square, which includes the county-owned monument to Confederate soldiers that dwarfed the city’s markers to Albemarle’s formerly enslaved majority.

These are positive steps, and Charlottesville has done better, more inclusive work than many other areas in Virginia in beginning to acknowledge its African American history. But whatever new memorials emerge, it will only be the beginning.

On Monday, Times reporter Nikole Hannah-Jones, the originator of the 1619 Project, came to Charlottesville for talks with UVA President Jim Ryan and journalist Jamelle Bouie, and said acknowledging the legacy of slavery is only the first step. “Courage is in the doing,” she said, in a call for universities to go beyond studying these issues and provide monetary reparations. “The courage is in trying to repair that damage.”

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Opinion The Editor's Desk

This week, 2/12

Richard Allan III, who has the long white ponytail and gentle manner of an old-school hippie, came to our office on Friday afternoon to confess. Before he allowed himself to be turned in to the police, he wanted to explain, for the record, why he’d pried the slave auction block marker out of the sidewalk in Court Square, and made sure it could “not be recovered.” And he wanted to talk face to face.    

The outrage comes quick these days; social media, especially Twitter, doesn’t lend itself to nuanced thinking, and people are seldom offered the benefit of the doubt. But Allan’s decision, both impetuous and years in the making, to simply remove the plaque from the sidewalk and throw it in the James River, seemed to resist knee-jerk reaction.

The marker was most notable for the contrast it showed between the way the Confederacy, which fought to preserve slavery, is memorialized in Court Square (with a statue of a Rebel soldier atop a 25-foot-tall column, flanked by cannons), versus the paltry recognition granted to the enslaved majority who built this area, via this small plaque in the sidewalk and a nearly illegible marker on a building nearby.

Which is to say, it was beloved by no one.

A project to create better signage in Court Square has been in place since 2011, according to the city’s assistant historic design planner. Allan says he was told in 2014 that better, more legible signs were in the works. The Blue Ribbon Commission, in 2016, recommended both replacing the existing marker and building a new memorial to enslaved laborers.

Sometimes change comes painfully slowly, after years of steady effort, as this week’s feature on abolishing Virginia’s death penalty shows.

Days after meeting Allan, I’m still not sure what to think about his actions, but I can relate to his impatience. Allan was tired of waiting.

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News

‘Why I did it:’ County resident confesses to taking slave auction block

Albemarle County resident Richard Allan, an amateur local historian and longtime environmental activist, has admitted to taking the bronze slave auction block marker from Court Square in the early morning hours of February 6. Charlottesville police would not confirm whether Allan was in custody.

“I did not remove the metal slave plaque in the ground…with the intention to offend anyone in our great town or our historic county,” Allan told C-VILLE in an exclusive interview before an acquaintance turned him in to the police. “I want it to be clear that there was no harm intended.”

Allan, 75, says he found the plaque’s placement in the sidewalk to be insulting, and that he acted after years of frustration that nothing was done to create a more fitting tribute to the enslaved laborers who built much of Charlottesville.

Noting that his family had a history of owning slaves along the Gulf Coast, he said, “Out of respect to the enslaved persons in my own family’s personal history; out of awareness that down the generations I have inherited money that should have been paid in wages to those people… I removed the insulting plaque and have ensured that it will not be recovered.”

Allan implied that he had disposed of the plaque in the James River, but would not say exactly where. “I don’t want the damn thing recovered,” he says.

Allan first became concerned about the issue in 2014, in response to a letter in The Daily Progress from local civil rights icon Eugene Williams. Williams criticized the removal of a historic marker on Number 0, Court Square, identifying it as the site of a former slave auction block, and its replacement with the “unobtrusive marker set into the sidewalk” along with a dark marble marker on black history that was “difficult to see, let alone read.”

Allan says he met with Williams, who told him he was the only person to respond to his letter, and talked with many others. “It became very clear to me that, for many in Charlottesville, it is the height of insult to place the history of Charlottesville enslavement on the ground where people with dirt on their shoes can stand upon it,” he says.

After those conversations, he wrote his own piece expressing “deep concerns” about the removal of the gray slate marker and its replacement with the sidewalk plaque. “I reported  these concerns and my article to the city’s Preservation Committee, and was told changes would be made soon,” Allan says. “That was five and one-half years ago. No changes were ever made.”

Allan says he had long thought about removing the plaque himself, and knew it should be done on a rainy night, when no one would be on the streets. So this week, he says, “on a rainy night when I could not get to sleep, because of feelings of sadness and disgust, I found myself doing what I had been considering for over two years.”

He headed to Court Square at about 2:45am, he says, and used a wonder bar and a kitchen knife to pry up the marker. “It took about 15 minutes,” he says.

Allan says he had contacted City Council about the issue in November, and received a response from then-vice-mayor Heather Hill thanking him and letting him know that the council was looking into doing something about the marker. “Two and a half months have elapsed,” Allan says. “Again, no action,”

“I absolutely believed…that nothing would be done on this issue for a number of years, and that something had to be done,” he says.

“I deeply apologize if removing a metal plaque that people can stand on with dirt on their shoes offends any citizen of our county,” he adds.

“I’m not the story,” he concludes. “Eugene Williams’ letter is the story. I’m just a person who feels passionately about this.”


Updated 2/8 with additional information from Allan. C-VILLE will continue to follow this story including in our print edition Feb. 12.