It’s me (babe?) that you’re looking for

So here’s a confession: C-VILLE’s two arts guys, Brendan Fitzgerald and John Ruscher, took some heat from a letter to the editor last week about the A-Z Music cover story from April 15. The letter writer, John Dove, didn’t like the W–Washed Up section of the story.

You can read the letter here. Be sure to scroll down to the one titled "Rag-Time."

Well, neither Brendan nor John wrote that one. I did. So shots like this one were completely off target:

"Let me clue you in on something, Mr. Fitzgerald. When artists such as the ones you so smugly mock sell 50 or 60 or 70 million albums in their careers, that means people like them. A lot of people. People far less intelligent than you and the C-VILLE music critics admittedly, but nevertheless."

Never mind that the artists I picked out as not being washed up—some indie asshole name Bruce Springsteen and another guy with pigtails—have sold millions of records. And while this is absolutely the first time anyone has ever accused me of being intelligent about music, however tongue-in-check the accusation may be, Mr. Dove really shouldn’t take it out on our music critics.

I’m the one you want. Do what you want with me, but let the indie rockers go.

And speaking of the indie crowd … aw, shit … Mr. Dove went and pissed them right off. Please see this Nailgun post as exhibit A of why I’ve learned never to pick a fight about music with a skinny kid in tight jeans:

"Anyhow, back to the issue at hand; Mr. Dove may think it’s quite beneath his dignity to attend a 30-person warehouse show, but those of us who actually bother to venture outside of the narrow range of choices offered to us by mass culture and to get involved in the music community will have opportunity to be directly enriched by a shared artistic and social experience, while Mr. Dove and his ilk are paying hundreds of dollars to sit in the back of a stadium, hundreds of feet away from a tiny speck representing an artist whose creative peak happened several decades ago."

Now that’s all cleared up, let’s get back to the original thought that I had when I wrote the "Washed Up" section, namely that The Eagles are easily the worse band in the history of ever. I’m sure we can all agree on that.

No Comment

If you’re looking at The Spiral for the first time, welcome. This is the first day of what’s surely to be a long and glorious run of C-VILLE blogs. And man, we’d really love to hear what you think … but not quite yet.

I just got word from C-VILLE’s Grand Doo-Dah of the Internets that comments for the blogs aren’t up yet. Sorry about that. But comments are coming soon. We’ll let you know when that happens.

In the meantime, feel free to roam around here, and check out our other blog, This Just In.

And if you feel a burning desire to let me know what you think about a Spiral post (or life in general), hit me up via e-mail. And welcome.

Categories
News

Free Clinic fills gap for uninsured

For the better part of four decades, thoughts about health insurance rarely crossed the mind of Rachel Stegeman. She worked. Her husband worked. Bills were submitted, doctors appointments scheduled and life’s routines stayed perpetually in motion.

In fact, years of hard work were coming to a close. In April 2006, at the age of 61, Stegeman, who lives just outside of Charlottesville, filed for Social Security. Her husband, a local construction superintendent, made good money. His job provided health insurance for both of them.


Rachel Stegeman unexpectedly found herself one of 47 million Americans without health insurance.

Until it didn’t. Three months later, in the midst of separating from her husband, Richard, Rachel suddenly found herself in a situation more and more Americans are dealing with. Richard had moved out and unexpectedly retired, leaving her without health insurance.

Feeling like a trapeze artist hundreds of feet up, Stegeman was now working without a net. She had just been diagnosed with diabetes.

Stegeman had become one of 47 million Americans without health insurance. Families USA, an advocacy group for health care consumers, estimated that of the 4.2 million people between the ages of 25 and 64 living in Virginia in 2006, a little over 15 percent of them were uninsured. Of those uninsured, more than 10 working-age Virginians died each week due to lack of health insurance, according to Families USA.

“It’s a known fact that people without insurance live sicker and die sooner than those with insurance,” says Erika Viccellio, the executive director of the Charlottesville Free Clinic.

Because she had filed for Social Security, Stegeman’s income was limited. And with her newly diagnosed diabetes, insurers shied away from covering her. Previously covered by AARP, Stegeman hoop-jumped and paperworked herself to near exhaustion, trying to get back on its insurance plan. No luck.

“I’ve been through a lot of red tape and paperwork with them, but I haven’t been able to get it,” she says. “[Diabetes] just seemed to make it more complicated.” After six month of doctors appointments, letters and tests she could barely afford, “finally, I just gave up, I guess. Here I was paying hundreds and hundreds of dollars to do these things, and finally it got to the point where I just couldn’t do it.”

So her employer, who is an annual donor to the Charlottesville Free Clinic, suggested she try the Free Clinic, which receives 2 percent of its funding from Charlottesville and Albemarle County, and 4 percent from the state. For almost a year, she has been going there for appointments for all her medicine—14 pills a day. All of it is free.

“They’re just diehards,” she says about the clinic’s doctors, all of whom are volunteers. “They stay and get it done.”

The 15-year-old Free Clinic treats working people who make enough money that they do not qualify for free treatment at UVA and Martha Jefferson hospitals but who don’t make enough that they can afford insurance. Its patients are housecleaners, waitstaff, child-care providers, construction workers and part-time workers like Stegeman who don’t have health benefits.

The clinic saw roughly 1,500 people last year, and while the number of patients increases each year, the frequency of treatment for those patients has increased five fold over 10 years. Most patients come in for multiple appointments, and those appointments are taking more and more time.

“There has been a real shift in the type of care our patients need,” says Viccellio. “Most of our patients now have multiple chronic diagnoses.”

The number of prescriptions that the Free Clinic provides has gone up 600 percent since it opened, says Viccellio. She attributes the increase to patients’ lack of access to preventative care. According to Families USA, uninsured adults are more than 30 percent less likely than insured adults to have had a checkup in the past year and are most likely to be diagnosed with a disease in an advanced stage.

“Rather than coming in to get an antibiotic and be done,” says Viccellio, “they’re coming in for all these medications to manage their illnesses. There are so many more layers to what we’re doing now.”

Viccellio says more and more middle-income workers are coming in without insurance, just like Stegeman, who is waiting until she turns 65 and will be covered by Medicare.

“I’m probably the only woman in the United States,” she says, “that’s wishing to be a little bit older.”

C-VILLE welcomes news tips from readers. Send them to news@c-ville.com.

Categories
News

Your tax dollars, at work

Worked for city for: Three years

Resides in: Charlottesville

Job title: Director of Communications, a.k.a. the city spokesman. Barrick oversees media relations in town, runs the three local access TV channels, works as a liaison for the Police Department and manages the internal communications of City Hall.


Ric Barrick


Best of times: “I love the most challenging days when I work with the great people in our department and use good judgment to solve a big problem and finish the day with it complete and done—that’s the best.”

Worst of times: “A lot of times people will ask for things that are legally or logistically impossible—you’re just not going to please everyone. Even though you do the best you can, you just have to move on to the next challenge.”

Strangest moments on the job: “We had a flood in City Hall when the roof leaked right on top of our TV station. All the water coming through the ceiling was yellow-green because it had picked up the pollen outside. My relaxing weekend turned into a rescue mission trying to save what equipment I could. I called the Police Chief and he volunteered his goulashes for me.”

If he were a superhero, he’d be: “Multiple Version Man. I often have to be in more than one place at one time to ideally get my job done. Having many versions of myself would certainly rid me of that dilemma.”

C-VILLE welcomes news tips from readers. Send them to news@c-ville.com.

Categories
News

Council stops interchange dead in its tracks

Way back in July, Charlottesville had grand designs on breaking ground for the Meadowcreek Parkway (MCP) in the fall of 2008. Fast forward nine months, and the birth of the controversial parkway through a park is still far off in the distance.

At an April 21 City Council meeting, where 30 of the 34 public speakers came out against the MCP, councilors refused to approve a design for the 250 interchange. Instead, they scheduled a work session for late May, after which they’ll kick the whole mess back to the 250 Interchange Steering Committee.

In short, this is far from being a done deal.

The design’s footprint was too big for Council, even those members like Julian Taliaferro and David Brown, who are MCP supporters. Taliaferro called the design “out of character for the intersection.”


City Council couldn’t be convinced of this interchange option—Julian Taliaferro expressed concern that it might be too big—and will hold a work session in late May.

Previous C-VILLE coverage:

Agency says MCP needs another look
DHR: Environmental assessment may not go far enough

Pick one: public gets a look at last two interchange designs
A vocal opposition shows up at the MCP public hearing

Council makes final step towards MCP
Norris forced to choose between principle and pragmatism

Meadowcreek Parkway to-do list in city
Council approves two designs for 250 interchange

MCP may have future legal problems
Parkway project’s segmentation could be illegal

Commission approves MCP interchange
Commissioner Lucy frustrated with final review

Parkway interchange design gets support
Committee likes roundabout design as new city gateway

State funding problems affect local roads
Meadowcreek Parkway could be stalled

County approves road priorities
Meadowcreek Parkway tops the list

Councilor Holly Edwards, who along with Satyendra Huja is new to Council, says the MCP is still politically viable but that she couldn’t support it in its current form.

“I didn’t feel comfortable with the design options that were presented,” she says. “The thing I’d really like to believe is that there’s a way to build a compromise. Whether or not building a compromise means building a road, I don’t know.”

There are still roadblocks in the path of construction, and one of those is the not-insignificant $4-8 million gap in funding the 250 interchange. City Development Services Manager Angela Tucker told Council that the design can be directed to stay within the $27 million federal earmark for the interchange, though it’s unclear if an off-brand design will satisfy Council.

The interchange is only one of three technically separate projects that together would form the Meadowcreek Parkway. And the city School Board still needs to give its approval of a donation of roughly 8.5 acres of land to build the city portion of the actual road, as opposed to the interchange.

School Board Chairman Ned Michie says that he expects the Board to do just that at their May 1 meeting. It will likely come with some conditions, like a 25mph speed limit around the school—a detriment to the idea of the MCP being a quick route into Downtown—though the approval has a distinctly pro forma feel.

The School Board doesn’t seem to have much to gain by trading ball fields for a busy road, but Michie makes it clear that the School Board won’t make a stand against the MCP, even though he’s received some pressure from anti-parkway people to do just that. The battle over the parkway, says Michie (who himself has mixed feelings about the MCP), is better fought in City Council than in front of the School Board.

“We weren’t elected to make transportation decisions,” says Michie. “Numerous City Council members have run and included that as part of their platforms, and the voters have had a chance to choose people based in part on city councilors’ positions on the Meadowcreek Parkway.”

C-VILLE welcomes news tips from readers. Send them to news@c-ville.com.

Categories
Living

May 08: Over the mountain, into the fold

Dear reader, close your eyes with me, if you will, and think back to a lost time, an era gone, the enchanted world of local real estate circa 2004 and 2005. Do you remember that distant past, when homes sold in days, mortgages were written with the effortless sweep of an ink pen and the buyers were buying what the sellers were selling? Seems like a different lifetime, huh?

In those heady, mad days of snapping up all the home that your (then) powerful dollar could buy, a little secret was brewing just across the Blue Ridge Mountains. Before the real estate markets in Charlottesville and Albemarle County dried up, before the average number of days a house for sale stayed on the market jumped from 43 in 2005 to 114 in 2008, a few brave souls were making their way over Afton Mountain to a place that boasted a bounty of affordable housing. And Realtors followed them.


Staunton might be a mountain climb away, but more people these days are willing to make the daily trek.

Now, in the cold harsh light of the real estate downturn of 2008, there is a place where affordable housing exists, seemingly buffered from the high prices of Charlottesville and its urban ring by the Blue Ridge. It comes at a price, though, usually a 30-minute trip into town. But to some, it is worth the daily journey. Affordable housing seekers, allow me to introduce the Central Valley, the Staunton/Waynesboro real estate market.

As if to acknowledge that the reach of the Charlottesville real estate market has finally moved over the mountains, the 2008 First Quarter report from the Charlottesville Area Association of Realtors (CAAR) has for the first time included data from the Central Valley. That brings it into the mix that includes not only Charlottesville, but Albemarle, Fluvanna, Greene, Louisa and Nelson counties as well.

“Geographically, our natural market area has changed and grown well outside the normal parameters,” says Dave Phillips, CEO of CAAR. “We thought it was time to go ahead and start analyzing that from our market report standpoint.”

Even though the markets remain stagnant in Charlottesville and Albemarle, the median price of homes rose from this time last year. If you’re looking for a home priced under $200,000 (and a market starving for first-time buyers hopes you are), your options grow more plentiful the farther you get from Charlottesville. According to MLS data, the two localities with the most houses under $200,000 are Fluvanna and Waynesboro.

As for homes built since 2000 that are under $200,000, “the only places you’re going to find those are in Waynesboro and Louisa,” says Phillips. He compares a 50-year-old house in Albemarle to a 15-year-old house in Greene. “Or,” he says, “I can take you over the mountains, and I can get you one that’s 3 or 4 years old.”

But about those mountains….In the search for affordable housing around these parts, there are tradeoffs. And one is a daily trip over those mountains. The Great Valley may hold a dream house that fits into your budget, but ask yourself this: How do I feel about a daily commute that spans two watersheds? Can I afford a hybrid car with the money saved on the down payment? Do I have enough books on CD for this commute, preferably epics written by authors with Russian-sounding names?

Because you’re going to spend a lot of time in your car.

But then again, Waynesboro is only 15 minutes from Crozet. The commute isn’t 40 years in a desert. But those mountains! What Phillips calls “that hill” can serve to separate Charlottesville from Waynesboro in more ways than just the physical distance.

“That hill was always a huge psychological barrier,” he says. “But for whatever reason that barrier is now gone, and folks are willing to travel over there.”

Yes, the promise of affordable housing can certainly make people do funny things.

Mark Warner coming to Downtown Mall on May 6

Democrat Mark Warner, candidate for the U.S. Senate seat that Republican John Warner (no relation) will soon vacate, is coming to Charlottesville.

He’ll be on the Downtown Mall on May 6 at 2:15pm. You can RSVP here.

I’ve spoken with Warner two times, once when he came to Darden and the other at the Jefferson-Jackson Dinner. Both times he came across as funny and on-point. At the JJ Dinner, where Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton were scheduled to speak, I tried to pin him down on which candidate he was going to back.

Governor Tim Kaine and former Governor L. Douglas Wilder were Obama supporters. Warner, though, had a little more to lose by backing the wrong candidate and then having to deal with a president that he’d snubbed, so he played those questions close.

In one of his answers, he talked about the need for the Democratic candidate to be able to win rural Virginia voters, something that Warner himself was able to do with marked success. So I asked him which candidate’s message played the best to those folks.

He didn’t take the bait. Instead, he said something like, "Oh no, that’s your job. I don’t want to put you out of work."

The Talented Mr. Norris

Sure, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg might have his own global news service, but he ain’t got shit on Charlottesville Mayor Dave Norris, who not only writes a blog, he also hosts a public-access T.V. show.

The latest episode of Norris’s show, "Postcards from Charlottesville," features two activists, Elena Day and Stratton Salidis, who make his job very, very easy, as each of them has the ability to fill vast swatches of airtime with seemingly endless  screeds against Dominion Power and the Meadowcreek Parkway (MCP), among others. But they’re activists, so you knew that already.


Dave Norris

Norris, in my view, is doing a bang up job as mayor. And really, there’s only one criterion I use to judge that: the willingness of said mayor to cut people off at city council meetings when their three minutes of public-comment time has elapsed. Norris uses a subtle, yet forceful index-finger point to the sand-filled timepiece in front of him. Magnificent technique.

Anyhow, if you’re interested in the MCP, Dominion’s plans to build a coal-fired power plant in Wise County and another nuclear reactor at Lake Anna, then check out the show. It  streams on Charlottesville’s website.

Salidis, a longtime transportation activist and MCP hater, makes some very good points (especially about the segmentation of the project), takes some shots at the media (deserved, in most cases) and says the MCP is a step in "exactly the wrong direction."

One thing that doesn’t get a lot of play, though, is the fact that the MCP was supposed to be one of three roads in a city-county network. The two county roads of this network? Yeah, well, those aren’t happening any time soon.

Norris has been a vocal opponent of the MCP, though he voted for an easement that would allow its construction. The fact that the show’s host is also the mayor makes for some great moments, like this one concerning the MCP:

Norris: "So where are we right now … well I know where we are right now, but … for the viewers."

His honor mostly plays it straight, not weighing in with his opinions (and not asking a damn follow-up questions to break up five- and six-minute rants). But he does tip his hand at the end.

Salidis argues that the MCP will essentially serve as a cut through for county residents, increasing city traffic.

"That’s exactly right," says Norris.

Residents question Hope shelter

Two residents of the 10th & Page neighborhood where the Hope Community Center is located urged councilors Monday night to take a closer look at the homeless shelter in the residential neighborhood. The community center, which acts as a shelter for the homeless during the night, was cited for a zoning violation in February for running a shelter in a residential neighborhood. On April 17, the city ruled that Hope could continue to run the shelter while it applies for a zoning amendment.

John Gaines, a resident of 9th Street NW, said residents need answers to questions concerning safety and property values. Another resident said that he would willingly pay higher taxes for a shelter that is located in a commercial area.

CHS students will ride for free

As gas prices and sea levels rise, Charlottesville is expanding free public transportation to high school students. Starting June 5, the city will let current CHS freshmen, sophomores and juniors ride Charlottesville Transit Service (CTS) buses free for a year as a part of its Demonstration Program.

CTS will also provide free bus rides to city and county kids ages 6 to 18 from June 5 through August 19. But before they can ride for free, children will need to (deep breath here) get a permission form from city schools, get parent signature on said form, get proof of residency and take all this mess to get a CTS photo ID at school.

Here’s the photo schedule:

  • Venable Elementary—Wednesday, April 23
  • Greenbrier Elementary—Thursday, April 24
  • Buford Middle—Monday, April 28
  • Walker Upper Elementary—Tuesday, April 29
  • Alternative Education Program—Wednesday, April 30
  • Ivy Creek—Wednesday, April 30