Categories
Culture

Ripple effect: Local restaurants connect creatively to survive the virus’ impact

As restaurants nationwide are forced to limit service in response to the coronavirus epidemic, workers and owners face economic as well as emotional uncertainty. Our gem of a food town is no exception. 

By the time Charlottesville announced its first case of COVID-19 on March 16, restaurants all over town were shutting down or moving to take-out only. At the City Council meeting that evening, several restaurant owners asked council to temporarily delay collection of the meals tax that came due on March 20. Councilors denied the request, but penalties for late payment have been suspended through May 31. 

While the city searches for other ways to support businesses in the months ahead, Charlottesville community members have already responded, swooping in to help provide some financial assistance and morale boosters, with the hope of spurring others to do the same.

Kate Ellwood, former general manager at Citizen Burger Bar, launched the Charlottesville Restaurant Community Fund with a GoFundMe site to help raise money for workers who rely on tips to survive and low-wage hourly workers

“I have a cousin who is a restaurateur in Boston, and seeing restaurants in these big cities shutting down, I figured it was only a matter of time before it happened to our community,” she says. “I reached out to [Citizen owner] Andy McClure, and ran it past him and he liked the idea, so I ran with it. 

Ellwood set an initial goal of $10,000, and at press time the fund was well over $20,000. She plans to keep running it, and either continue to donate to other restaurant workers or offer money to other area organizations, such as the food bank. She’ll distribute funds to workers with crucial needs—those who have chronic illnesses or children who need emergency food, or people who could use help paying for their medication or housing. “Any bit of money will help right now in their situation,” she says. The grants will top out at $200 per person, and Ellwood reached out to restaurant owners to determine the recipients. “I’ve had owners and managers contact me to nominate staff who they think could most use it, so that’s been really helpful,” she says. 

Beyond the financial support, Ellwood is also helping workers navigate daunting tasks like filing for unemployment. And, with the help of her training from the Community Investment Collaborative, she’s connecting other local businesses and organizations to create a large network that can help. Her efforts have earned her some national press attention, with Eater, Food & Wine, Imbibe, and Cherry Bombe magazines all spreading the word online.

Restaurants have scrambled to redefine themselves quickly in order to survive, many offering take-out and delivery services. And almost all eateries have expressed that the purchase of gift certificates is a great way to help them immediately.

Lampo Neapolitan Pizzeria has carryout service through online ordering. The Local and Junction are offering online orders with a Ten for Ten menu of comfort food items costing $10 (all proceeds go to The Local’s staff and the community). Tavola (co-owned by C-VILLE’s Culture editor Tami Keaveny) has shifted to retail wine sales and delivery, which wine director Seth Maynard says, “allows me to make the world-class wines on our list more affordable.” Seeing it as an opportunity to be creative, Maynard is offering several different themes for curated, mixed cases, including: Italian antiques (from classic Italian wine regions); What your parents drank (recognizable varietals and blends like Bordeaux); Wine that your kids drink (modern “hipster” wines from lesser known regions); and a dealer’s choice matched to a customer’s flavor profile. 

Others have reluctantly shuttered their doors for now. Angelo Vangelopoulous, owner of The Ivy Inn, closed on March 15, and started a relief fund for his staff. “It became clear to me that people weren’t getting the message that social distancing is what we need right now, so I thought it best that The Ivy Inn family did its part to get the word out and show how important this is to our community and everyone worldwide,” he says. 

Ellwood, meanwhile, hopes to launch a nonprofit to support the restaurant community in a more sustained way. “Doing something like this makes other people want to help,” she says. “It has a ripple effect.”


Paying it forward

Kathryn Matthews

While our local restaurant community is struggling, it is also pitching in to help others. Kathryn Matthews, owner of Iron Paffles & Coffee (and who is herself recovering from a major car accident that left her unable to work until recently), is helping to organize essential donations to those in need through the community website supportcville.com. 

“Since the outbreak of COVID-19, businesses across Charlottesville have taken a hit, especially the restaurant industry,” says Matthews. “The result has been an abundance of surplus food from canceled catering orders and lower-than-usual sales, which I couldn’t bear to waste. When I heard of other restaurants in a similar situation, I rallied the restaurant community together to donate their leftovers to low-income families.”

She says SupportCville is also looking for donations from the public of kid-friendly non-perishables, including canned fruit, granola bars, cereal, rice, pasta, peanut butter, and juice boxes, as well as financial donations.

 

Categories
Coronavirus Culture

Taking covers: Your social distancing reading list 

With the cancellation of the Virginia Festival of the Book, and recommendations to practice social distancing, there’s never been a better time to pick up some extra reading material. While we’re disappointed that we won’t get to hear from these authors in person, their work and words are still well worth your time. Whether you’re interested in fiction, non-fiction, true crime, or poetry, we have a recommendation to suit your tastes. Here’s a list of books from festival authors to keep you company at home.

Collections

Short stories have the power to open up entire worlds in just a few pages—and the stories within these collections do exactly that. 

  • Midnight at the Organporium by Tara Campbell
  • A Girl Goes Into the Forest by Peg Alford Pursell
  • The World Doesn’t Require You by Rion Amilcar Scott

Fiction

While history books often overlook the lives and experiences of women, historical fiction brings their stories to life. Pick up any of these novels to experience history alongside strong female characters.  

  • Brides in the Sky by Cary Holladay
  • Ribbons of Scarlet by Laura Kamoie
  • Call Your Daughter Home by Deb Spera

These two novels embrace characters with disabilities, providing much-needed representation for a community that is often overlooked in contemporary fiction. 

  • Like Wings, Your Hands by Elizabeth Early
  • Flannelwood by Raymond Luczak

Here are three novels that invite you to discover the impacts of contemporary diaspora, both individually and culturally. 

  • Gun Island by Amitav Ghosh
  • Travelers by Helon Habila
  • Last of Her Name by Mimi Lok

Explore the personal impacts of war on individuals, families, and communities with these two World War II-era novels. 

  • The Falls of Wyona by David Brendan Hopes
  • How Fires End by Marco Rafalà

Nonfiction

The Flint water crisis is just one example of America’s long history of environmental racism—here are two well-researched books that will enlighten you.

  • The Poisoned City: Flint’s Water and the American Urban Tragedy by Anna Clark
  • A Terrible Thing to Waste: Environmental Racism and Its Assault on the American Mind by Harriet Washington

More than merely looking back, well-crafted memoirs shine a light forward. These memoirs explore themes of abuse, addiction, race, gender identity, and more. 

  • Black Indian by Shonda Buchanan
  • Ordinary Girls by Jaquira Diaz
  • The Rib Joint by Julia Koets

Best-selling series

There’s a reason the following authors have all spent time on the best-seller list. These are the latest in their respective series, so be prepared to get hooked on the characters. 

  • A Bitter Feast by Deborah Crombie
  • Hi Five: An IQ Novel by Joe Ide
  • In a House of Lies by Ian Rankin

Crime and thrillers

True-crime fans can get lost in these page- turning examinations of violent crimes and how the rural communities where they occurred responded.   

  • Furious Hours: Murder, Fraud, and the Last Trial of Harper Lee by Casey Cep
  • The Third Rainbow Girl: The Long Life of a Double Murder in Appalachia by Emma Copley Eisenberg

If you enjoy beautifully written page-turners that will keep you guessing until the very end, here are three literary thrillers that should be at the top of your list.

  • Miracle Creek by Angie Kim
  • Saint X by Alexis Schaitkin
  • Blackwood by Michael Farris Smith

Poetry

With the right words, poets can create music on the page. These three collections promise lyrical language and thought-provoking beauty. 

  • Deaf Republic by Ilya Kaminsky
  • What Penelope Chooses by Jeanne Larsen
  • Kontemporary Amerikan Poetry by John Murillo

Poetry written in response to tragedy, violence, adversity, and the complexity of the human experience has the power to combat despair. These three collections demonstrate why there’s no better antidote to despair than art.

  • Dispatch by Cameron Awkward-Rich
  • In the Months of My Son’s Recovery by Kate Daniels
  • The Last Love Poem I Will Ever Write by Gregory Orr

Romance

Even busy professional women need to make time for love. In these three contemporary romance novels, the protagonists attempt to balance work and love.  

  • American Love Story by Adriana Herrera 
  • Dating by the Book by Mary Ann Marlowe
  • Summer on Moonlight Bay by Hope Ramsay

 

Categories
Coronavirus

Hitting home: Coronavirus closings rattle Charlottesville

Virginia reported its first two coronavirus cases on March 9. By March 13, Charlottesville and Albemarle’s governments had each declared a local state of emergency and Governor Ralph Northam had ordered all public schools in Virginia to close for at least two weeks. Charlottesville’s first positive COVID-19 case was announced on March 16, and as of March 19, there have been three more positive cases. Schools and other institutions around the city have been scrambling to adjust, and at press time, many local restaurants and businesses were temporarily shutting down or had switched to delivery only. Here’s a rundown on some of the biggest changes that have happened this week.

Our schools

In times of crisis, strong communities rally together. That spirit was on full display at the PB&J Fund Monday morning, when a dozen volunteers bustled about, sorting donations into lunch packages for students who wouldn’t have access to food while their schools were closed.

“We are packing up lunches for 300 kids in the city today,” said Executive Director Alex London-Gross. “We are so grateful that the elementary school PTOs in the city were mobilized, and really have done a great job getting these donations pouring in.”

Starting on Tuesday, both the city and county schools picked up where the PB&J fund and the PTOs left off, providing grab-and-go breakfasts and lunches at several area locations during the school shutdown. (For more information about food pickup times and places, go to www.charlottesvilleschools.org. In the county, visit www.k12albemarle.org.)

The rapidly escalating situation means schools have been forced to work on the fly to continue to provide some facsimile of their normal services.

“We are talking to principals, and teachers soon, about how to stay connected to students while they’re at home,” says Albemarle County Schools Strategic Communications Officer Phil Giaramita. The school will offer optional, ungraded “self-directed learning activities,” as well as opportunities for teachers to check in on the social and emotional state of their students as the closures continue.

Though some parents will be working from home, many people still have to go to work, potentially leaving young children unsupervised. The city and county schools are looking for ways to provide childcare for families who might not otherwise have access, though firm plans have not been announced.

“Everybody’s working really hard to come up with solutions,” says Krissy Vick, the city school’s community relations liaison. “This is all so fluid.”

Our university

Like many universities around the country, UVA decided to move all its classes online, urging students not to come back to school after spring break ended on March 16.

“My first reaction was being sad,” says UVA Student Council President Ellie Brasacchio. “As a graduating fourth-year, it’s very possible that my undergraduate career just ended. What’s giving me hope and optimism is I think the university’s response to all of this has been very good, particularly in their response to helping first-generation and low-income students.”

The school has given money to help students with travel-related expenses, and Student Council has created a program to pair students in need with donors looking to help.

In the classroom, the shift to online learning will require instructors to get creative. Andrew Garcia, a fourth-year history and politics major, says it feels like the school didn’t give the faculty much guidance on how to make the transition.

“My Italian class, our final grade is on an in-person movie that we’re supposed to make,” Garcia says, an assignment that is now impossible. “How are you going to grade things? People are going to have unequal resources. My books are [in Charlottesville]. I live eight hours away.”

Some students don’t have reliable internet access at home, which will make online classes especially difficult.

Brasacchio and Garcia note that many students are returning to Charlottesville despite the directive to stay away. President Jim Ryan repeatedly urged students to head home, but also shared a heartfelt message offering sympathy to everyone who had been “pouring their hearts into something that will now not happen.”

The university’s closure will also have serious effects on the school’s student workers, university staff, and contract workers. Gyms, dining halls, libraries, and other facilities will either close completely or be open for limited hours. Arielle Hogan is a technician at a biology lab in the medical school. She says she doesn’t know if she would continue to get paid if the lab has to shut down.

As of Tuesday afternoon, some dining halls and libraries, as well as the parking system, were still operating as normal, despite the spread of the virus. UVA spokesperson Brian Coy says the school is aware of the situation, and is working to assist its staff, but that a plan hasn’t been finalized yet.

“Everyone kind of went into response mode,” Coy says. “No one’s ever done anything like this.”

Our shelters

People experiencing homelessness are especially vulnerable to the coronavirus. With Salvation Army shelters at capacity and overnight shelter program PACEM facing a shortage of volunteers, downtown day shelter The Haven has stepped in to house guests overnight. The Haven was granted exceptions to its special use permit for the duration of Charlottesville’s state of emergency, per a resolution passed at Monday’s City Council meeting.

PACEM has had to significantly reduce its volunteer force due to the coronavirus threat.

“Manpower is going to become a real issue going forward,” says Jayson Whitehead, executive director of PACEM. “[We] rely heavily on volunteer involvement, and some of our congregations have an aged population—those folks are appropriately concerned about coming into our environment.”

With the volunteers it has now, PACEM has been screening each guest for symptoms of COVID-19 before admitting them to its host sites, and has sent one guest they feared had the virus to UVA hospital (his results came back negative). It’s also implemented social distancing, making sure there’s six feet in between all cots, and provided some guests with face masks—but desperately needs more, along with gloves, Whitehead says.

Meanwhile, The Haven has also implemented a range of policies to keep its guests, staff, and volunteers safe, including asking all volunteers and staff who are high-risk to stay home, and assembling a low-risk volunteer task force to assist remaining staff. Everyone must wash or sanitize their hands before entering the building.

“The real problem is for someone who is in that circumstance, they can’t practice social distancing, at least not in the same way,” says Steven Hitchcock, executive director of The Haven. “We’re trying to be responsive to that and keep the community safe.”

Other organizations that support at-risk communities have faced different challenges. With panicked shoppers wiping out the aisles at grocery stores around town, local food pantries like Loaves & Fishes have gotten the short end of the stick. The pantry receives nearly half of its food supplies directly from grocery stores, and has noticed a significant decrease in donations in recent days. When Wegmans—one of the pantry’s largest bakery donors—only donated one loaf of bread on Friday, “we realized that might be a new normal,” said Executive Director Jane Colony Mills.

_______________

Quote of the Week

“The coronavirus pandemic is giving us a window into what it looks to shift our lives when there is a major change in our safety status. Climate change is going to do the exact same thing to us that the coronavirus is doing to us now.”

—local resident Emily Little on the proposed city budget not including climate change funding

 

 

Updated 3/19 to reflect current number of coronavirus cases in Charlottesville

Categories
Coronavirus

What’s happening…and what’s not

In an effort to contain the growing coronavirus/COVID-19 threat, a lot is shifting. Schools are closed, government proceedings are different, local venues are cancelling and postponing events, and local shops and restaurants are closing or pivoting to different business models. We’ll keep you updated as best we can on this page.

On Monday, March 30, Gov. Ralph Northam issued a stay-at-home order, which mandates that individuals remain in their place of residence except for food, supplies, work, medical care, and exercise. And when out, people should follow best social distancing practices and stay at least six feet away from others.

Follow @cville_culture on Twitter for a daily lineup of virtual concerts, book readings, and more. Have one you’d like to feature? Email erin@c-ville.com.

Last updated: Tuesday, March 31, 12:08pm

Community

The University of Virginia

Classes and in-person events on Grounds and in town are cancelled; events at John Paul Jones Arena are postponed through the weekend; ACC has suspended the spring athletic season; and more.

Piedmont Virginia Community College

Classes scheduled for March 16 and 17 have been cancelled, and most will move online effective Wednesday, March 18. All events scheduled to be held on the main campus and at satellite locations are cancelled or postponed, through April 4.

The City of Charlottesville:
  • All public meetings of city  boards and commissions are cancelled except for City Council; the public is encouraged to take advantage of remote participation options and to not attend the meeting in person.
  • All city-sponsored events and activities, including Parks & Rec activities, are cancelled.
  • The public libraries will be open until 6pm on Monday, March 16, and then closed through the end of March. The library directs patrons to their digital resources at  jmrl.org/on-download.htm.

Music

The Front Porch

All operations (concerts and lessons) are suspended until further notice. March and April concerts will be rescheduled, and spring music classes are still set to begin April 13. Private music lessons are available through Skype. Beginning Friday, March 20, in conjunction with WTJU 91.1 FM, The Front Porch will be broadcasting live concerts every Tuesday and Friday night.

IX Art Park

Events are cancelled or postponed until further notice.

The Jefferson Theater

The Swing into Spring event scheduled for March 15 has been postponed until May 31; March and many April shows are either cancelled or postponed. Check with the venue about other events as bands continue to update their tour dates.

Melody Supreme

Per a Facebook post, the downtown record shop will limit its in-store hours, as well as the number of customers allowed in the store at one time. Customers can shop remotely for curbside pickup or mail delivery.

The Music Resource Center

Will remain closed as long as Charlottesville City Schools are closed.

The Paramount Theater

No events for the remainder of March. Check the theater’s website for the most up-to-date information about which events have been cancelled for good, and which will be rescheduled.

Prism Coffeehouse at C’ville Coffee

Three upcoming concerts have been postponed, and the organization offers information about ticket refunds and concert safety.

Rapture

According to a March 15 Facebook post, “closed indefinitely.”

Sidetracks Music

As of March 20, the shop is closed to browsing, but they’ll deliver or mail CDs and records to your door.

The Southern Cafe & Music Hall

Many events are postponed or cancelled. Check with the venue about other events as bands continue to update their tour dates.

WTJU 91.1FM

The station continues to broadcast via 91.1 FM Charlottesville and online at wtju.net. Beginning Friday, March 20, in conjunction with The Front Porch, the station will be broadcasting live concerts every Tuesday and Friday night.

 

Dance

Charlottesville Tango

All March events cancelled.

 

Stage

American Shakespeare Center

Staunton-based theater organization cancels all in-house and traveling performances through May 31.

Live Arts

All meetings, events, programming, and production is suspended as of March 18. Production for Sweat and The Children, scheduled to run at the theater between April and May 2020, are postponed until next season. The building is also closed to the public for eight weeks.

The Paramount Theater

No events for the remainder of March. This includes Charlottesville Ballet performances, concerts, film screenings, and more. Check the theater’s website for the most up-to-date information about which events have been cancelled for good, and which will be rescheduled. 

 

Words

Jefferson-Madison Regional Library

The local library system will close at 6pm on Monday, March 16, and remain closed through the end of the month. This applies to all JMRL facilities, including library branches in Charlottesville, Crozet, Greene, Louisa, Nelson, Northside, Scottsville, and the Bookmobile. All library materials due in March will have their due dates changed to April after 6pm on Monday, March 16.

New Dominion Bookshop

The shop is closed, but customers can shop remotely. Books will be available for curbside pickup or local delivery. All events, except book clubs, postponed through the end of March.

Virginia Festival of the Book

All events cancelled. (But you can still read the books.)

 

Museums and Galleries

The Bridge Progressive Arts Initiative

Per a press release issued on Monday, March 16, The Bridge announced it has closed its gallery, ceased after-school programming, and cancelled all social programs until further notice, though it will be holding a “quarantine haikus” event online. The organization has also postponed its REVEL 2020 fundraiser, originally scheduled for Saturday, May 2.

The Fralin Museum of Art

Closed to the public until further notice.

James Monroe’s Highland

Closed until April 3.

Jefferson School African American Heritage Center

Closed through the month of March. “We hope to roll out new ways of enjoying our programs should the pandemic continues in our region,” said the March 17 announcement.

Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection

The Kluge-Ruhe is closed, but people can explore the collection online.

McGuffey Art Center

All public events, classes, and First Friday art openings are currently postponed until at least March 27.

New City Arts Welcome Gallery

Closed for now.

Second Street Gallery

Closed for now, but staying engaged via social media.

 

Food + Drink

As local restaurants close, some are shifting to take out, see an ongoing list of closures and adjustments at Charlottesville 29.

BBQ Exchange Porkapalooza

The annual Porkapalooza event, originally scheduled for March 28 + 29, has been postponed. The restaurant remains open at this time.

IX Art Park

The winter farmer’s market will be held this Saturday, March 21, as scheduled.

Loaves and Fishes

Local food pantry remains open, but has cancelled all volunteer shifts. Staff will hand out pre-packaged boxes of food to those in need. Donations are still being accepted to help buy food.

 

Outside

Charlottesville Ten Miler

Canceled this year.

Saunders-Monticello Trail

Closed temporarily. Will reopen March 30 if public health conditions allow.

 

Nonprofit

Charlottesville/Albemarle SPCA

Per a press release issued March 17, the shelter is operating by appointment only, and public spay and neuter services are on pause. Rummage store temporarily closed.

Meals on Wheels

Still delivering, and taking extra preparation and delivery precautions. Because delivery volunteers will not interact with clients receiving meals, the organization will call clients via phone to check on their well-being. Meals on Wheels is in need of phone brigade volunteers to call and check in on clients.

 

Etc.

Caromont Farm

Goat-snuggling season has been postponed.

Festival of Cultures

The 17th annual festival, scheduled for May 9, has been cancelled.

Tom Tom Festival

Event postponed until September 21-27, 2020; individual ticket sales also postponed.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tuesday Evening Concert Series

UVA

All events cancelled.

 

 

 

 

 

Categories
Coronavirus

In it together: Life under quarantine in our Italian sister city

Just weeks ago, Caterina Martini was celebrating the first birthday of her daughter, surrounded by friends and family at a large gathering. Hugs and kisses passed freely from person to person.

Life changed quickly for Martini and her family on March 10, when the Italian government issued a national quarantine to fight the spread of the coronavirus.

Until further notice, she is sharing her home with her closest family members, just outside of Charlottesville’s Italian sister city Poggio a Caiano.

Martini, who visited Charlottesville in 2016 through an exchange organized by the Sister City Commission, says the quarantine is currently in effect until April 3, and that no one in her circle has become infected.

Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte announced on March 11 that all bars, restaurants, hairdressers, and nonessential company departments had to close, in a move that is sure to further damage the Italian economy.

“The largest part of us don’t see this as an economic crisis, but as the inevitable consequence of a necessary safety measure,” says Martini. “We are all concentrated on the virus and on the prevention of it, so we do what we have to, to survive—literally.”

At the time of her email to us, she reported that citizens in her region of Tuscany (where there are currently about 40 reported cases of coronavirus) have “permission to go to the supermarket and to drugstores, but we have to follow some rules, like use a surgical mask and gloves to protect us, enter just two or three at a time in the stores and stay almost a meter away from other people.”

Martini also says that in order to travel long distances within the country, or to visit a neighbor or family member, Italians need a special certificate to prove that the trip is necessary.

Public offices are open, operating by appointment, and taking the same types of precautions.  As for those who need parts for their Vespa or a new pasta sieve? “We can still have almost everything delivered (Amazon is working a lot), and the trash is still handled regularly,” says Martini.

President Donald Trump’s initial denial of the magnitude of this health crisis (instead focusing on financial mitigation, which had little effect on the stock market) has led to many U.S. citizens feeling vulnerable, as Americans face a lack of resources including test kits (it’s been reported that the state of Virginia has less than 700 available). Italy too was late in recognizing the pace and impact of the outbreak, and quickly became Europe’s coronavirus epicenter.

Christian Althaus, who models infectious diseases at the University of Bern in Switzerland told The Guardian: “You can argue they [Italy] noticed it late, but that could have happened elsewhere too. Once they realised what was happening, I think they took it seriously. The first lockdown was the right choice, and expanding it nationwide probably too. They realise they need to curb the epidemic.”

Martini does not deny the economic peril, but says Italians will weather it together. “The quarantine, for the economy, is disastrous, but as we usually say in Italy, ‘We are all on the same boat,’” she says. “So we hang on, and we use this as an opportunity to stay with our families, at home, doing the things that usual life doesn’t permit us to do.” It’s a sentiment that could certainly ring true on our side of the globe in the weeks to come.

Tami Keaveny is a member of the Charlottesville Sister City Commission.