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In brief: ‘Hit piece,’ the unshrouder and more

But her emails

Independent City Council candidate Nikuyah Walker was the target of a November 4 story in the Daily Progress that she and her supporters called a “hit piece”—three days before the election—in which an anonymous source in City Hall questions her ability to “work collaboratively with city officials.” The story described her emails to officials as “aggressive” and “often confrontational.”


“Advocates for social justice don’t always behave politely.”—Joy Johnson to City Council on the topic of protesters arrested at their August 21 meeting


Blank slate

Dillwyn’s entire town council is up for re-election, but when the longtime clerk retired, no one reminded the councilors to register as candidates to be on the ballot. The ballot will be blank, and Dillwyn’s 244 registered voters must write in the names of the seven councilors they want to elect, according to the Progress.

Fogel files again

Civil rights attorney Jeff Fogel is suing Charlottesville, City Manager Maurice Jones and law firm Hunton & Williams on behalf of five plaintiffs, contending that Jones had no authority to hire the firm’s partner Tim Heaphy to do an independent review of the city’s response to the events of August 12.

Jeff Fogel, with plaintiffs Joy Johnson, Tanesha Hudson and Walt Heinecke, wants the city to fire Tim Heaphy. Staff photo

An end to Democracy

Nelson County’s Democracy Vineyards, which opened in 2007, announced it will close after Thanksgiving this year.

Another attempt

Around 1am November 5, city police arrested Brian Lambert in Emancipation Park and charged him with vandalism, trespassing and being drunk in public for allegedly cutting the orange fencing surrounding the Robert E. Lee statue. Lambert, arrested for being drunk at UVA on September 12, when students shrouded their Thomas Jefferson statue, is also one of three people who attempted to uncover General Lee on September 16.

Best BACON

Charlottesville High’s code-writing wunderkinds in Best All-Around Club of Nerds win first place in the first round of NASA and  MIT’s Zero Robotics competition.


Keep ’em at home

Signs at Water Street Garage, Rapture and UVA lawn. Photos staff and Emily Bagdasarian

While another tragic mass shooting made headlines over the weekend, some Charlottesville institutions are putting forth their best effort to make this city bulletproof.

Twelve days before a man who was booted out of the Air Force for domestic violence dressed in all-black tactical gear and shot up a First Baptist Church in Sutherland Springs, Texas, killing 26 and injuring 20 others, about a dozen signs prohibiting all weapons appeared at every entry point on the University of Virginia Lawn.

UVA spokesperson Anthony de Bruyn did not respond to multiple interview requests about the warnings, but other local entities that ban firearms were willing to discuss their decisions.

Charlottesville Parking Center officials posted “No Guns” signs in the Water Street Parking Garage in the immediate aftermath of the August 12 Unite the Right rally, according to general manager and former mayor Dave Norris.

“We were concerned when we saw dozens of heavily-armed neo-Nazis using the garage as a staging area on the morning of August 12 and had no grounds to ask them to leave, and received no response from law enforcement when we reported this activity to them,” says Norris. “Now that the signs are in place, we are better equipped to manage situations like this in the future.”

As for the sticker on Rapture’s door that bans firearms, owner Mike Rodi says it was largely in response to the summer’s “hate rallies,” when KKK and Unite the Right protesters “made it clear that they would take advantage of Virginia’s open carry laws and come armed.”

The owner of the Downtown Mall restaurant says businesses near the epicenter of the deadly rally “used every tool at their disposal to keep racist troublemakers out,” and signage was part of that. On August 12, many businesses also posted dress code signs banning hate symbols.

Rapture has long had a no-gun policy, says Rodi. “Guns and booze don’t mix.”

Other businesses posted no-gun signs before this summer. In late 2015, shoppers in Whole Foods became upset when they spotted a man packing heat in the produce section. Though Virginia is an open-carry state, Whole Foods’ corporate policy bans all weapons, and a sign declaring so was posted on its door by January 2016.

Eugene Williams Day

Vice-Mayor Wes Bellamy presents Eugene Williams with a proclamation on his 90th birthday. Staff photo

Charlottesville’s legendary civil rights leader Eugene Williams turned 90 November 6, and Vice-Mayor Wes Bellamy presented him with a proclamation declaring the day Eugene Williams Day at a birthday celebration November 4 at the Boar’s Head Inn.

As president of the local NAACP chapter in the 1950s, after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Brown v. Board of Education that separate but equal schools didn’t cut it, Williams recruited plaintiffs to sue the Charlottesville School Board.

In 1980, Williams convinced his wife, Lorraine, brother Albert and sister-in-law Emma to sink their life savings into Dogwood Housing to provide
affordable housing to families throughout the city, bucking the trend of housing the poor in projects.

And the proclamation declares, “Eugene Williams has served as a symbolic conscience of Charlottesville for what is right and fair for all people and for bridging the diverse parts of the Charlottesville community.”

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Dems link Gillespie to Trump in governor’s race

Democrats in the only Southern state that voted for Hillary Clinton for president are now trying to wrap GOP gubernatorial candidate Ed Gillespie around President Donald Trump in hopes Gillespie will sink like a stone in the 2017 electoral waters. State Senator Creigh Deeds, House Minority Leader David Toscano, Mayor Mike Signer and former mayor Alvin Edwards joined Democratic Party of Virginia chair Susan Swecker on the Downtown Mall Thursday for the “Trump-Gillespie” tour.

Democratic Party of Virginia chair Susan Swecker hits Charlottesville on her way to the first gubernatorial debate in Hot Springs Saturday. Staff photo

“People are sweating like Ed Gillespie every time he sees Corey Stewart in front of a microphone,” says the colorful Swecker in the 90-some degree heat. She calls Gillespie Trump’s “new apprentice,” and says that if Gillespie were more to the right on women’s issues, “he’d be standing 50 miles east of Virginia Beach.”

However, in Norfolk earlier this week, Gillespie touted his ability to work with the Trump administration, according to the Virginian-Pilot.

Local elected Democrats criticized the Republican health care plan. In Charlottesville, Signer noted that before Obamacare, he was turned down for health insurance coverage because of a bad knee.

And Toscano says the Gillespie tax plan “is only going to transfer wealth to those who already have it.”

The Dems are stumping around the state in a lead-up to the first debate between Lieutenant Governor Ralph Northam and Gillespie, and printed up “Trump-Gillespie” signs, which were left under a tree during the press conference because elected Democrats don’t want to be photographed in front of a Trump sign, explains state Dem spokesperson Kevin Donohoe.

As for the possibility that some Republicans may actually want the Trump-Gillespie sign, Swecker laughs, and says state GOP chair John Whitbeck asked on Twitter if he’ll have to report the signs as an in-kind contribution.

The Virginia Bar Association will host the debate Saturday at the Homestead in Hot Springs.

 

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In brief: Eye-popping turnout, cereal beat-in and more

Get out the vote

The big news in the 2017 primary was record turnout for a non-presidential primary. Democrats were particularly energized, significantly topping their last gubernatorial primary in 2009. While not as many Republicans showed up, the GOP’s turnout topped 2009 as well.

Governor primary turnout

Democrats:

2017: 542,812 voters

2009: 319,168 voters

  • Up 70%

Republicans:

2017: 366,100 voters

2005: 175,170 voters

  • Up 108%

City Council primary turnout

2017: 8,522 voters

2015: 3,251 voters

  • Up 162%

City Council race: the numbers

Amy Laufer

$19,620 in donations

6,253 votes

46% of vote

Heather Hill

$18,055 in donations

4,597 votes

34% of vote

Bob Fenwick

$3,439 in donations

2,722 votes

20% of vote

Hill-Laufer-Platania
Heather Hill, Amy Laufer and Joe Platania move on to the November elections. Submitted photos

Commonwealth’s attorney race: the numbers

Joe Platania

$18,566 in donations

4,900 votes

62% of vote

Jeff Fogel

$6,335 in donations

2,976 votes

38% of vote


Tragic ending to an already sad story

ottoWarmbierOtto Warmbier, the UVA student detained and sentenced to 15 years of hard labor in North Korea for allegedly stealing a political banner, died June 19 in a Cincinnati hospital—nearly a week after he was medically evacuated from the Asian country in a coma, which officials said he had been in for more than a year.


“North Korea is among the most heinous actors on the global stage. The case of Mr. Warmbier reminds us of the barbarism of the North Korean regime.”—U.S. Representative Tom Garrett


Another UVA rape allegation

Dalton Baril
Charlottesville police

The grandson of former Republican Virginia governor John Dalton, former UVA student Dalton Baril, 20, of Richmond, was charged with rape and forcible sodomy for a February 1 incident with another student that left her bruised and bloody, according to the Washington Post. Dalton turned himself in to the magistrate’s office June 14. He was released on $10,000 bond and will appear again in August.

Taxing decisions

The Albemarle County Board of Supervisors passed an ordinance last week to require short-term rental owners to pay the same lodging taxes as hotels and other homestays. The ordinance also requires owners, such as Airbnb hosts, to get a business license if they make more than $5,000 per year off their rental.

Former cop indicted

Christopher Seymore was an officer with the Charlottesville Police Department when he allegedly forced a local woman—and witness to a crime—to perform oral sex on him twice. A grand jury indicted him June 19 on two counts of sodomy. His trial is scheduled for December 7.

Legal Aid appeals DMV suit

Despite being rebuffed twice by a federal district judge, Legal Aid Justice Center is appealing the decision that the DMV is not a proper defendant in Stinnie v. Holcomb, arguing that it unlawfully suspends licenses of the indigent for failure to pay court costs with no consideration of their ability to do so.

In memory

WillowTree Apps, Inc. announced June 15 a $10,000 scholarship in honor of beloved former employee Whitney French, who was killed by her husband in a February murder-suicide. Applications for the scholarship, which aims to support women in the field of digital user experience and design, are due by December 9.


Trix are for kids

kesslerproudboysbeatin
Jason Kessler rattles off his breakfast cereals so he can be a member of the Proud Boys.

Whites-rights provocateur Jason Kessler and three others proclaimed, “I’m a proud western chauvinist,” and then were beaten in an alley until they could name five cereals in a Proud Boys video posted over the weekend. The “cereal beat-in” is the second initiation step to joining the Proud Boys, a masculinist fraternity for grown men that’s a self-proclaimed “alt-light” org. Matching polo shirts, a tattoo, abstention from masturbation and beating up an antifa are the next steps in joining the group, according to Southern Poverty Law Center.

Members were on the Downtown Mall June 17, and were refused service in several restaurants, including Violet Crown Cinema and Cinema Taco. In retaliation, Cinema Taco was hit with a barrage of one-star reviews on Yelp.

Unlike previous Kessler gatherings on the mall when Showing Up for Racial Justice members shouted at him, there was no chanting, but individuals on the mall did confront the group, and at one point, when they left, people applauded, according to WINA’s Dori Zook.

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Progressive setback? Laufer, Hill, Platania move on; Fenwick, Fogel out

The heavily watched June 13 primary in Virginia offered several surprises, most notably record-setting Democratic turnout and Corey Stewart’s near upset of Ed Gillespie in the GOP gubernatorial race. Conversely, hometown favorite Tom Perriello’s race against Ralph Northam for governor was expected to be much closer than Northam’s 12-point win.

And in city Democratic primary races, challengers Amy Laufer and Heather Hill handily unseated incumbent Bob Fenwick, and Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney candidate Joe Platania blew out progressive, Equity and Progress in Charlottesville-endorsed opponent Jeff Fogel.

The energized progressive element of the Democratic party fielded House Minority Leader David Toscano’s first primary challenger, UVA instructor Ross Mittiga, in the 57th District in a dozen years.

And yet when the dust settled, establishment Dems were still firmly entrenched, and the upset threat came in the Republican Party, with former Trump Virginia campaign manager Stewart nearly toppling expected shoo-in Ed Gillespie in the GOP governor’s race.

‘It was certainly the closest of the races and the biggest surprise of the night,” says UVA’s Center for Politics analyst Geoffrey Skelley. Gillespie, who nearly unseated Senator Mark Warner in 2014 and was expected to be the GOP standard bearer, squeaked by Stewart with slightly more than a point.

Stewart’s message was “‘I was Trump before Trump,’” says Skelley. “It’s hard to dismiss his play to cultural conservatives and attaching himself to the Confederate monument issue.” Stewart made several visits to Charlottesville over City Council’s vote to remove the statue of Robert E. Lee. “He got his name out there,” says Skelley.

On the other hand, Dem turnout could be unsettling for Republicans in the fall. “The Democrats were clearly animated,” observes Skelley. “They had record-setting turnout for a non-presidential primary.”

While it’s not surprising that Perriello claimed 80 percent of the votes in Charlottesville, in the state’s major metropolitan areas, he trailed Northam by 15 points in Northern Virginia, and even more in Richmond. And in Northam’s home base of the Hampton Roads area, Northam led by 40 percent, says Skelley.

In Charlottesville, many predicted Laufer’s victory and saw it as a battle between Fenwick, who was endorsed by EPIC, and Hill. Laufer took a hefty 46 percent of the vote, while Hill picked up 34 percent and Fenwick nabbed a meager 20 percent.

“First of all, [Fenwick] was wildly outspent and arguably out-worked,” says former mayor Dave Norris, an EPIC founder who is no longer on its board.

“My sense is among the general population, there’s a lot of frustration with what is going on in the city and a lot of them took it out on Bob,” adds Norris.

EPIC also endorsed civil rights lawyer Jeff Fogel for commonwealth’s attorney. Fogel garnered 32 percent of the vote, but Norris doesn’t see that as a resounding defeat.

“Jeff played an important role in bringing attention to systemic racial inequity in the criminal justice system and the failure of the war on drugs,” says Norris. “His presence forced his opponent to take bolder positions.”

Unknown is what factor Fogel’s June 2 arrest for assault, stemming from a confrontation at Miller’s with an associate of whites-righter Jason Kessler, played in the voting booth.

“My position is progressives did great,” says Fogel, who says he got far more votes than expected because of the surge in turnout.

With progressive candidates like Perriello, Mittiga and Fogel being shut out of Democratic nominations, what does that bode for the fall?

“I think the progressive candidates and the progressive community has its work cut out for it,” says Norris. “It’s going to take a lot of mobilizing, maybe smarter strategy and more resources to prevail.”

On City Council, he says, “I think this is the year [independent] Nikuyah Walker could pull off a victory,” although she faces an ever-growing pool of independent candidates, as well as Dem nominees Laufer and Hill, in the November election.

Far from being disheartened by progressive candidates’ lackluster showings, Norris says, “Everyone understands change takes time. It’s important to get people into the debate. We may not have won this election, but we certainly influenced the debate.”

And in other state primary races, Justin Fairfax took the Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor, while state Senator Jill Vogel edged out state Senator Bryce Reeves in an acrimonious contest that included a defamation suit.

A Richmond Times-Dispatch editorial opined that Reeves was unsuitable for office after he criticized Vogel for supporting “the first openly gay judge in Virginia.”

Skelley is skeptical that the piece impacted Reeves, who took 40 percent of the primary vote, in a GOP contest where “Corey Stewart nearly won.” Says Skelley, “I don’t think gay bashing is going to hurt you in that situation.”

Correction June 15: Dave Norris said “smarter strategy,” not “harder strategy” would be needed for progressives. And Amy Laufer won with 46 percent of the vote.

Updated June 19 with Fogel comment.

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In brief: Dems down to wire, KKK coming to town, snakeheads and more

Two will move on

One last look at the Democratic City Council candidates before the June 13 primary

Heather Hill

Age: 39

Occupation: Independent consultant; former engineer and brand manager; VP of Hill Family Operations

Education: Bachelor’s in industrial and systems engineering from Virginia Tech, and an MBA from UVA’s Darden School of Business

Political experience: President of the North Downtown Residents Association and “my home, overseeing the conflicts of three children under 7!”

Top issues:

1. Transparency and accountability

2. Affordable housing

3. Investing in infrastucture and multimodal transportation

Top complaint she’s received from residents: When citizens invest time and energy to bring priority issues forward, and there is no response.

Fun fact: “I still hold the record at my high school for the 100-meter dash, along with legs in the 400-meter and 1,600-meter relays—all set in 1995.”

Endorsements: “I have not focused on cultivating a list of political endorsements in order to concentrate
time and energy on earning the backing of every citizen in Charlottesville. Check out my campaign ‘village’ at HillforCville.com.”

Amy Laufer

Age: 45

Occupation: Current school board member, former chair; former middle school math and science teacher

Education: Bachelor’s in geology from the University of Milwaukee-Wisconsin, and a master’s in secondary science education from Columbia University.

Political experience: Active member of the local Democratic party and a volunteer for many candidates; founder of Virginia’s List, a PAC dedicated to supporting Democratic women running for state office; twice elected to the school board, where she served as chair and vice chair

Top issues:

1. Workforce development

2. Affordable housing

3. Environment

Top complaint she’s received from residents: “In my time on the school board, I learned how important it is to have concrete goals and priorities, and I’d like to see more goal-oriented thinking from the current council so we can really work together and achieve meaningful, practical solutions.”

Fun fact: “I met my husband, Aaron, in the Peace Corps; we have three children at three different public schools in Charlottesville.”

Endorsements: Tom Perriello, Democratic candidate for governor; L.F. Payne, former 5th District congressman; Jennifer McKeever and about two dozen more.

Bob Fenwick

Age: 72

Occupation: General construction contractor

Education: Bachelor’s in physics from Georgetown University

Political experience: Elected to City Council in 2013

Top issues:

1. Elected representatives should serve as representatives and recognize that they do not automatically become experts in city management merely because their political campaigns were successful.

2. Neighborhood protection

3. A fairer balance in the distribution of municipal funds

Top complaint he’s received from residents: “When elected representatives don’t respect the will of the entire
community.”

Fun fact: He was branded “a treacherous scalawag” during the monuments discussion.

Endorsements: Together Charlottesville, Equity and Progress in Charlottesville (EPIC)


White watch

North Carolina-based group Loyal White Knights of the KKK has applied to hold a July 8 rally on the steps of the city’s circuit court, while Jason Kessler’s Unity and Security for America will hold an August 12 assembly in Lee Park.

“I feel embarrassed by all of what I’ve seen tonight.”Karenne Wood, a member of the Monacan tribe, at the June 5 City Council meeting

New visitors

UVA Rector Bill Goodwin, whose term ends this month, said he did not seek reappointment to the Board of Visitors. His son-in-law, Robert D. Hardie of Charlottesville, was appointed, as were Robert M. Blue of Richmond and Maurice Jones of New York. John A. Griffin, also of New York, was reappointed.

Fishing for answers

Colby Horne didn’t know exactly what he caught when he reeled in a slithering, 27-inch creature from Lake Anna last week, so he threw it back in. A Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries biologist has identified it as a snakehead—an invasive species of fish—and says they were likely introduced illegally.

Homicide arrest

City police charged Gregory Nathaniel Fitzgerald, 40, with first degree murder for the February 5 homicide of Robert “Bobby” Hall Reauveau. Fitzgerald was served at the Albemarle Charlottesville Regional Jail, where he was incarcerated on separate charges.

Reid’s drive-through

Reids_EzeAmos
Photos Eze Amos

A car plowed through Reid Super-Save Market June 3 around 5:45pm when the elderly driver allegedly hit the gas rather than the brakes. A man’s leg was pinned under the car and he was taken to the hospital with minor injuries. The store reopened at 8am June 4.

reidCar

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Miller’s time: Candidate arrested in mall shout-down

Commonwealth’s attorney candidate Jeff Fogel was arrested in the wee hours today when five police cars came to his house following an alleged assault earlier in the evening outside Miller’s on the Downtown Mall.

That was where the latest confrontation between whites-righter Jason Kessler and Showing Up for Racial Justice took place after Kessler dined at the popular venue’s outdoor patio and was spotted by SURJers, who put out an APB for its members.

“White supremacists should not be allowed to move quietly in public spaces,” SURJ member Pam Starsia recently told C-VILLE. And the group has admonished Miller’s for serving white nationalists after Richard Spencer’s tiki-torch procession in Lee Park May 13.

surjers2
SURJ members serenade diners at Miller’s with chants like “Nazi go home.” Photo Eze Amos

Fogel says he had been to a candidate event last night and had just gotten home when a friend called and asked him to come observe things at Miller’s, where he dined with City Council candidate Nancy Carpenter. “I had a delicious hamburger and a beer,” he says.

kessler-starsia-cops
Jason Kessler, center, airs his grievances to police officers about SURJ members such as Joe Starsia, right. Photo Eze Amos

Kessler was surrounded by SURJ members shouting, “Nazi go home,” and “No fascists, no KKK, no Nazis in the USA,” as he filmed the event. Kessler spotted Fogel dining in front of Miller’s, and chastised him for calling Kessler a “crybaby” in April.

On video, a man with Kessler called Fogel a “communist piece of shit.”

Fogel replied, “What did you say?” and is seen reaching in with his hand toward the man on the video.

“Oh my God, this guy just assaulted my friend,” an elated Kessler says, and he urged his friend to press charges.

Fogel declined to comment on the alleged assault, but he did say he went home and had gone to bed when five police cars and officers showed up at his house at 12:30am. He says he was arrested, rather than given a summons for the misdemeanor charge, because the magistrate told him, “I didn’t like the way you talked to the sergeant.”

Fogel’s client, Veronica Fitzhugh, was arrested in a similar manner the night before with five officers coming to her home for misdemeanor charges of disorderly conduct and assault and battery, stemming from a May 20 encounter with Kessler on the mall, according to Fogel. His arrest “was just like what happened to Veronica,” says Fogel.

Charlottesville police spokesman Steve Upman did not immediately respond to inquiries from C-VILLE about the show of force in making the night-time arrests, and whether any other arrests would be coming from the scene at Miller’s.

The complaint was filed by Caleb Norris, says Fogel.

It’s unclear how the arrest will impact the Democratic primary for commonwealth’s attorney, where Fogel faces Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney Joe Platania. Platania declined to comment on the arrest of his opponent. In an interview yesterday, Fogel noted that he’d never been arrested.

The first-hand experience of being hauled to the jailhouse was eye-opening for Fogel, who has sued city police for stop-and-frisk records and has made criminal justice reform his platform.

fogel-mugshot
Attorney Jeff Fogel experiences the other side of the legal system with his early morning arrest. Charlottesville Police

“I never realized how uncomfortable it is to sit in the back of a police car with handcuffs,” he says. “You have to sit forward and there’s no leg room in the back of a cruiser.”

He says, “I’m sure there are people treated much worse than me. I’m a 72-year-old who’s running for commonwealth’s attorney with no record.”

Miller’s did not respond to a request for comment at press time, but the Newplex’s Taylor Cairns reports Kessler was banned for life from Miller’s, and Fogel says Carpenter also was told not to come back.

millers-exterior
Miller’s had more going than John D’Earth’s regular Thursday gig last night. Photo Eze Amos

 

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Lynn challenges Landes—again

White Hall resident Angela Lynn is tossing her hat into the 25th District ring, most of which lies in Augusta County, so it’s no surprise that gerrymandering was the first issue she talked about during her announcement in front of the Albemarle County Office Building March 7.

Democrat Lynn, who challenged incumbent Steve Landes, R-Weyers Cave, in 2015, says she noticed before her first run that when she went to vote, “There was no one on the ballot except for the incumbent.” She immediately went to work for One Virginia 2021, the group that got shut down on redistricting reform last month in the General Assembly.

Calling gerrymandering a “corrosive issue,” Lynn points out that Landes serves on the privileges and elections committee, which killed this session’s redistricting reform bills.

Landes carried his own resolution that would have forbidden political consideration in drawing district lines. His bill also died in subcommittee along with a handful of others. Senate bills that crossed over to the House of Delegates got a vote from the committee—with Landes voting no—but still met their demise.

Lynn lost to Landes’ overwhelming 66 percent in 2015, and she acknowledges taking the 25th would be tough. While Lynn won in the western sliver of Albemarle that’s part of the district, Landes took 78 percent of the vote in Augusta, and 74 percent in Rockingham County, which is also part of the district.

“The only way for me to be an incumbent in a gerrymandered district is I need new voters,” she says. “I need them to come out. I need the energy we’re seeing now to come out. It’s a call to action.”

“In politics, you don’t ever take anything for granted,” says Landes, who chairs the education committee and is vice chair of appropriations. He says he’ll seek a 12th term to finish work on high school SOL requirements and Medicaid reform.

Military wife Lynn taught public school in Virginia and is the mother of five public school graduates. She says she wants to fully fund education, protect health care and halt the Atlantic Coast Pipeline.

“I need people in September and October who are really fed up,” she says, hoping for an army of volunteers to knock on doors. “This is a really different time.”

Updated March 10.

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John Lowry is doing things differently in second supes run

This is not John Lowry’s first Albemarle Board of Supervisors rodeo. He ran for the Samuel Miller District seat in 2009, and lost to one-term Republican Duane Snow.

Lowry, 69, is doing a few things differently this time around. For one, he’s seeking the GOP nomination at the party’s mass meeting in May rather than go it alone as an independent. And he’s decided to eschew the bow tie that was his signature look in 2009.

“I decided to run again because increasingly in the past couple of years, I’ve been unhappy with the direction of the Board of Supervisors,” he says.

Specifically, he’s talking about the comprehensive plan amendment rebuff that deterred Deschutes Brewery from locating here in 2015 and sent it packing to Roanoke.

“I couldn’t believe how the door was closed on the prospect of having a craft brewery close to two highways on the edge of the growth area,” he says.

With a new county executive and economic director being hired, says Lowry, “We need a new economic development strategy and we don’t have one.” The retired businessman from Wheat, First/Wachovia/Wells Fargo, who chaired the county’s Economic Development Authority for 12 years, and the Board of Equalization, which hears tax assessment appeals, for five years, says he’s the person who can provide that strategy.

To do so, Lowry is calling out a few of the county’s sacred cows. He says the growth area needs to be expanded and he challenges the long-held tenet that growth doesn’t pay for itself.

To maintain the county’s rural character, the comprehensive plan put 25,000 acres into the growth area. That area has shrunk to fewer than 24,000 acres after Biscuit Run was repurposed from a mega-development south of town to a future state park. “I would certainly be open to the suggestion of expanding it,” he says.

No-growth advocates maintain growth doesn’t pay for itself because new residents require expensive services, such as schools.

“It’s just flatly not so,” declares Lowry. Instead, the county should look at the cost of infrastructure as an investment that will eventually pay off.

Incumbent Liz Palmer says she’s not ready to announce whether she’ll seek another term. Lowry, she says, “has been active in the Republican party so I’m sure he’ll run a good campaign.”

In 2009, Lowry ran against two other candidates who had never run before for the open seat that had been held by Sally Thomas for four terms.

“A lot feels different,” he says. “The incumbent has a track record and I have a track record.”


Key word: ‘balance’

  •   Expand growth area
  •   More light-industry zoning
  •   Encourage new businesses
  •   Hold real estate tax rate
  •   Create rainy day fund

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Perriello resurfaces… and wants to be governor

Former congressman Tom Perriello announced his surprise candidacy for governor of Virginia Thursday, upsetting the plans of many leading Virginia Democrats.

In a hastily arranged speech at the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center in downtown Charlottesville, Perriello spoke of how his father first arrived in Virginia.

“He grew up in West Virginia, Italian immigrant parents, in and out of poverty,” Perriello said. “He got a local scholarship to come across the mountains and go to UVA.” His father spent his first day crying on a bench in Lee Park, thinking, “‘I don’t belong here, this isn’t a place where a mountain kid from West Virginia belongs,’” said Perriello, “but everyone here did make him feel welcome.”

Perriello won election to Congress in the 5th District of Virginia in 2008, ousting longtime incumbent Virgil Goode. A strong supporter of President Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act, he narrowly lost reelection in 2010 to Robert Hurt.

Following his defeat, Perriello became president and CEO of the Center for American Progress Action Fund, a progressive public policy research and advocacy organization. Most recently, he served as the Obama administration’s special envoy for the Great Lakes Region of Africa and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

His unexpected campaign to become governor was only assembled in the last 10 days.

“My initial reaction is that it’s certainly a stunning development,” says Geoffrey Skelley, a political analyst at the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics.

Lieutenant Governor Ralph Northam previously had been the only declared Democratic candidate for governor in the upcoming election. Northam had long since secured the endorsements of major figures in the state Democratic Party, including current Governor Terry McAuliffe, and was expected to run unopposed for the nomination.

“All those well-laid plans by McAuliffe, formulating these plans, all of this has been thrown off,” Skelley says. In Congress, Perriello “was progressive on the big ticket items, the stimulus, cap-and-trade, but he was endorsed by the NRA.” Skelley notes that Perriello also backed the Stupak Amendment to the Affordable Care Act, which would have prevented federal funding of abortion, “so his record, at least as a member of Congress, is not Sanders-esque.”

But in the context of running against Ralph Northam, who was the target of a party-switch effort in 2009, says Skelley, Perriello “is clearly to the left of Northam.”

As of June 30, Northam had $1.59 million in his campaign fund. With a campaign organization only 10 days old, Perriello has a long way to go to catch up financially. However, between 2009 and 2010, Perriello was able to raise $3,775,000 for his federal campaign fund, which was subject to tighter restrictions than his new state-level campaign in Virginia.

During his 2008 and 2010 campaigns for Congress, Perriello captured attention, support and donations from many progressive groups, both locally and nationally.

“He was a darling of the net-roots,” says Skelley. “He’s young and energetic. In terms of how he casts himself, he would be viewed as the more progressive of the two candidates. It’s probably more than just that in terms of the framing. Northam isn’t that well known. Lieutenant governor isn’t a job that draws a lot of visibility.”

“Virginia’s everything to me,” said Perriello. “It’s the place that gave my family a chance at the American dream, the place that gave me a sense of progress.” He recalled the first political race he worked on—Doug Wilder’s bid for governor—and “the fact that the capital of the Confederacy would elect the first black governor in the entire country. That said to me anything is possible. I’ve taken that spirit around the nonprofit work I’ve done around the state… and also into conflict zones around the world.”

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Tom Perriello meets the press after his surprise announcement he’s running for governor. Photo Jen Fariello

Perriello did not mention any of his potential Republican opponents during his speech, which include former GOP party chair Ed Gillespie, former Trump state party chair Corey Stewart, state Senator Frank Wagner and Silverback Distillery owner Denver Riggleman, but afterwards he had only kind words for Northam.

“I think Mr. Northam is a really nice guy and I think he’d be a really good governor and we agree on an awful lot,” Perriello said. “This isn’t about me running against him, this is about me running for the voters of Virginia.”

“Northam is an early favorite but I think that Perriello is a very legitimate opponent,” Skelley says. “I wouldn’t be surprised if he ends up winning the nomination.”

Updated at 9:31am January 10 to correct the name of the public policy research and advocacy organization Tom Perriello worked for.

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Chapman passes prosecutorial torch to Platania

Charlottesville’s legal community turned out today for Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney Joe Platania’s official announcement that he wants the job of his boss, Dave Chapman, who will not be seeking a seventh term.

Chapman introduced and endorsed Platania, whom he hired in the city prosecutor’s office in 2003. “It’s important to me who’s the next commonwealth’s attorney,” said Chapman, and that person should be able to “look on the face” of a lengthy murder trial and “not have knees knocking.”

The commonwealth’s attorney should be able to “walk down the mall without fear, even when you’re near people you’ve put in jail and who call you by your first name,” said Chapman.

Platania, who worked in the public defender’s office when he came to Charlottesville in 1999, stressed prosecutorial discretion. “This community demands more from its prosecutors than simply jailing those who commit crimes,” he said.

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Joe Platania. Staff photo

“I will strive to keep the community safe while prosecuting those who commit crimes fairly,” said Platania.

The position requires experience, integrity and innovation, along with a “common-sense perspective,” he added.

City Space was packed with Platania supporters, despite another big Dem event taking place 45 minutes later: Tom Perriello’s announcement he was running for the party’s nomination for governor. Among those present for Platania were former Albemarle commonwealth’s attorney Denise Lunsford, county clerk Jon Zug and city clerk Llezelle Dugger, city Sheriff James Brown, Mayor Mike Signer, Councilor Kathy Galvin and former city Republican chair Buddy Weber.

“I’m going to support Joe,” said Weber. “I think he’s the best and that’s why I’m here.”