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Signer elected mayor, Bellamy vice mayor

Newly elected Mayor Mike Signer promised respect and results at the first City Council meeting of the year but received a test in maintaining order when he was greeted by protesters and disrupted twice by angry constituents. The council elected another first-termer, Wes Bellamy, vice mayor.

Rumors that Signer would be the next mayor were confirmed at the beginning of the January 4 council meeting, and press releases announcing the new leadership went out within 10 minutes of the meeting’s start.

The amount of money spent on the race—nearly $100,000, the costliest council election ever—was one issue cited during public comment, along with the “systemic racism” that divides the city economically. “You’re absolutely right,” said Bellamy of the latter. “We’re prepared to deal with that.”

Civil rights attorney Jeff Fogel was the first to comment, and he denounced the behind-the-scenes selection of mayor. He said it was hard to believe Signer’s support of transparency “when you start out with no transparency.” Bellamy later said he was happy to discuss why he voted for Signer.

Paul Long, a former City Council candidate, organized a protest about development and gentrification before the meeting. He, too, was concerned about the amount of money spent on the election and said, “I’m very cynical about this council.” When he ran out of time during public comment and Signer cut him off, Long said, “You’re in the pocket of big business.”

After public comment and follow-ups from councilors, Fogel stood up and began to respond to Bellamy. “This is not proper procedure,” Signer said repeatedly. “You’re a lawyer. You know parliamentary procedure.”

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A city divided: Should West Main be rezoned?

Locals voiced concerns about a potential zoning amendment in the plans for West Main Street at a public forum in front of the City Planning Commission and City Council December 8.

Amendments to the current zoning laws could include dividing West Main into east and west sections with the bridge by the Amtrak station being the dividing line, rather than the current division of north and south sides of the street. Building height west of the bridge would be limited to 75 feet, and on the east side, where most historic buildings still exist, the limit would be 52 feet. No special use permits permitting additional height would be allowed for either side.

For some, preserving the historic aesthetic of West Main is a family matter.

Scott Peyton, a lifelong Charlottesville and Albemarle County resident and partial owner of West Main’s Hampton Inn & Suites, says he’s okay with new developments popping up on the street, “but only to the extent that [they do] not compromise the integrity of the context” in which they are built and, for him, that context goes a long way back.

Born in 1848, Peyton’s great-grandfather, Francis Bradley Peyton, was the station master for the city of Charlottesville for several decades. He worked for Southern Railway from about 1874 to 1929 and lived on three acres of land across from the current Amtrak station. Though Peyton never knew his great-grandfather, the land and mid-19th century home were passed down for generations. Peyton remembers many Sundays after church spent visiting family in that home.

His father, Francis Peyton III, operated Peyton Pontiac Cadillac, an automobile business on West Main for 40 years. Sitting now in its place is The Flats @ West Village, a 101-foot-tall apartment complex that required a special use permit and became the center of much controversy once it was built and locals saw how tall 101 feet actually is. The Flats had trouble leasing its 622 bedrooms before it opened in summer 2014, according to a previous report by C-VILLE, which said the complex had leased about 9 percent of its space, or 56 bedrooms, in January. Flats manager Gina Sacco says 99 percent of the rooms are currently leased.

“I realize that times change,” Peyton says, and “I certainly appreciate and respect the right that people have to develop their property according to what they’re entitled to do,” but he remains in favor of proposed zoning changes, especially height restrictions, that would preserve the character of everything West Main used to be.

However, a number of others hope the zoning on West Main will stay the way it is. Earlier this fall, the Planning Commission recommended the amendment for approval, but City Council deferred the decision for further discussion of the zone in which Midway Manor would fit.

Midway Manor, an affordable housing community for seniors, is located on Ridge Street and has been zoned with downtown properties since the mid-’70s to have 101-foot use. Speaking on behalf of Midway Manor Associates, Valerie Long, the chair of Williams Mullen’s land use practice, says the complex is currently 48 feet tall, and if it were to be zoned with West Main East, which only allows for a 52-foot height, “not even a single story could be added,” which would throw a wrench in any plans for expansion.

Planning commissioners voted 4-2 to have the property included in zoning plans for West Main East.

Keith Woodard, a prominent figure in Charlottesville’s sustainability community and owner of Woodard Properties, says the current proposal for rezoning could disallow the growing trend of rooftop gardens, which are heavily desired by urban dwellers. Greg Powe of Powe Studio Architects in Charlottesville agrees, adding “Roofs should not be viewed as only a functional cap to the building.” He encourages developers to use rooftops and valuable real estate for the good of the community.

Part of the amendment requires bicycle parking at new developments, and the front wall of all buildings would have to be at least 10 feet from the front of the property line to provide more room for plants and trees. It would also close the loophole that currently allows penthouses to be built above maximum height limits.

The Planning Commission has recommended that City Council approve the rezoning, and council will take the final vote December 21.

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Mensch: Former mayor Francis Fife dies at 95

If it seems like Francis Fife has always been an integral part of Charlottesville, for most of the 20th century he was.

“It’s hard to imagine a program here he didn’t have a finger in,” says his wife of 33 years, Nancy O’Brien, who was Charlottesville’s first female mayor. She remembers meeting him when he was working to put together the Rivanna Water and Sewer Authority.

Fife, who turned 95 October 1, died October 16 from complications after a fall three weeks ago.

He served on City Council for eight years and as mayor from 1972 to 1974. During his mayoral tenure, council voted to create the Downtown Mall, seen as a risky proposition at the time, a vote from which Fife abstained because he was vice president at People’s Bank, now the Bank of America downtown. He founded the Charlottesville Housing Foundation, which became Piedmont Housing Alliance, and the Rivanna Trails Foundation. He also served on numerous boards, commissions and committees.

“He was passionate about justice,” says O’Brien. “He was passionate about housing, and he cared about people.”

Fife was born in 1920, and for most of his life—except for a stint in the military during World War II and grad school at Rutgers—lived at Oak Lawn, the 350-acre farm his family bought in 1847, according to his wife. He milked cows on the property during the Depression, and he told his pal John Conover, a former city councilor, about riding around Charlottesville on a horse, hitting a tree and falling off.

Buford Middle School sits on land that was once part of the Fife farm, says Conover, and the neighborhood called Fifeville is indicative of his deep roots in the community. “He never thought it necessary to live anywhere else,” says O’Brien.

He first ran for City Council in 1950 on the World Peace ticket and got clobbered, recalls Conover. Fife was elected to City Council as a Democrat in 1970.

He had a wry sense of humor and thought the funniest thing going was human beings, says O’Brien. “He could laugh at himself, and laughter was a very important part of our lives.”

She describes Fife talking with someone who did not agree with him on an issue, but that person would walk away smiling. “He was a good listener and fascinated with people, and that came through,” she says.

“He never viewed himself as an insider,” says Conover. “He challenged the status quo”—with the good manners with which he was raised. “He was an embodiment of old Virginia who learned to adapt to the new day,” adds Conover. “He had a sense things could be done differently,” even during the dark days of segregation.

Conover says his friendship with Fife was cemented during the creation of the Rivanna Trails, a private effort to create a trail system that circles the city. “We were not going through government,” says Conover. “We were just going out in the woods with sharp things making trails.” The city and the Rivanna Trails Foundation were sued in 2005 by a citizen who didn’t want the trail on her land. Fife later said if he had to do it again, he would have gotten easements.

“I think he needs to be remembered for his remarkable integrity and his environmental stewardship,” says City Councilor Dede Smith, who notes that he was a founder of the Ivy Creek Foundation.

“My favorite memory is just seeing him coming and thinking, ‘Boy, this is going to be nice to talk to Francis,’” says Conover. “Some people just light up your world.”

“He had an incredible way of looking at life,” says O’Brien, “a way of finding the humor, a way that was gentle and kind.”

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Sage’s grandmother beseeches City Council

A couple of grim anniversaries were noted on September 13: the one-year anniversary of the disappearance of 18-year-old UVA student Hannah Graham, and five years since 19-year-old Orange resident Samantha Clarke vanished. Her last known contact was with Randy Taylor, the man convicted in 2014 for the murder of missing teen Alexis Murphy.

The grandmother of another missing teen, Sage Smith, 19, came before City Council September 8 to remind councilors it’s coming up on the three-year anniversary of Smith’s disappearance.

“I just want to put you on warning,” said Lolita “Cookie” Smith. “I’m going to be in your face every time you look around.”

Cookie Smith said she has undergone triple bypass surgery and has suffered from the stress of Sage’s disappearance. “I can’t understand, for the life of me, why these other people’s cases can’t be solved, but these white girls can be.”

Asked Smith, “What makes one life more valuable? I don’t understand. It’s killing me.”

Smith begged for answers. “Help me,” she said. “That’s my baby out there and I’m asking y’all, please do something.”

Smith had left by the time councilors responded to public comment. “I could feel Ms. Smith’s pain and know there could be nothing worse than losing a child,” said Kristin Szakos.

“Our police department has put in as many hours on this case as it has on the cases that have been solved,” she said. “It’s heartbreaking, but not every case is solved.”

Sage, a transgender black woman, was last seen November 20, 2012, on West Main Street after making plans to meet an acquaintance. She has never been found, nor has Clarke or Murphy.