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In brief: Youngkin’s executive orders

Glenn Youngkin’s First Day

Glenn Youngkin was sworn in as governor over the weekend, and right away he signed nine executive orders. Number one is entitled “Ending the Use of Inherently Divisive Concepts, Including Critical Race Theory, and Restoring Excellence in K-12 Education in the Commonwealth.” Though educators say that critical race theory, an advanced conceptual framework for discussing the interactions between race and law, is not part of the curriculum in K-12 classrooms anywhere in Virginia, Youngkin used the term as a bogeyman throughout his campaign.

“Political indoctrination has no place in our classrooms,” reads the executive order in which a politician attempts to dictate what can and cannot be taught in Virginia’s classrooms.

Youngkin’s second executive order states that “parents should have the ability to decide whether their child should wear masks for the duration of the school day.” Already, the order has drawn pushback from school districts around the state, including here in Charlottesville. On Monday morning, both Charlottesville and Albemarle public schools released statements confirming that the districts will keep mask mandates in place. “We are following Virginia Senate Bill 1303, which requires schools to follow the mitigation recommendations of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) ‘to the maximum extent practicable,’” reads the Charlottesville City Schools bulletin.


Below is a brief summary of the Youngkin administration’s nine first-day executive orders. Opponents of the Republican have questioned whether all of these edicts will stand up to greater legal scrutiny in the coming weeks.

EO 1: Directs the state superintendent of public instruction to remove “inherently divisive concepts” from school curriculums.

EO 2: Allows parents to determine whether their children wear masks in school.

EO 3: Adds five new members to the Parole Board, which had become more lenient during the Northam administration, and orders a review of the board by the attorney general.

EO 4: Orders an attorney general investigation into sexual assault at Loudoun County Public Schools.

EO 5: Creates a chief transport­ation officer to review the performance of the DMV and the Virginia Employment Commission.

EO 6: Orders a review of state-mandated COVID safety practices for businesses.

EO 7: Creates a commission to fight human trafficking, through increased enforcement and penalties for perpetrators.

EO 8: Creates a commission of governor appointees “to study antisemitism in the Commonwealth, propose actions to combat antisemitism and reduce the number of antisemitic incidents.”

EO 9: Ends Virginia’s participation in the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, an 11-state cooperative program aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions.


In brief

Provost off to Penn

UVA Provost Liz Magill is leaving for a job as the next president of the University of Pennsylvania. Magill has headed UVA’s academics since 2019, after serving as the dean of Stanford Law and a UVA School of Law professor. She starts her new job on June 1, replacing outgoing Penn President Amy Gutmann, who headed the Ivy League university for 17 years. Ian Baucom, currently the dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, will be UVA’s next provost.

Fool me once

The winter storm earlier this month left thousands of area residents without power for as many as five or six days. Naturally, news of a second snowfall found central Virginians checking the batteries in their flashlights and in some cases preemptively booking hotel rooms. Though some snow fell, real disaster never struck—on Monday morning, less than 24 hours after the snow began to come down, PowerOutage.US reported just 12 Dominion Energy customers without power in Charlottesville and Albemarle combined.

Kessler won’t go away

Unite the Right organizer Jason Kessler has filed a motion challenging the decision in Sines v. Kessler, a month-long trial that late last year determined he owed $500,000 in punitive damages for his role in setting up the deadly 2017 rally. James Kolenich, attorney for Kessler, argued that the damages were “unconstitutionally excessive,” reports The Daily Progress.

Photo: Eze Amos

Former mayor is anti-snow day

When Charlottesville City Schools announced a snow day on Tuesday, former mayor Mike Signer took to Twitter to call for remote instruction during inclement weather. “Gov’ts largest agency is dark. While other systems have more progressive snow day policies,” the current WillowTree exec wrote. Our 2 cents? Get out there and make a snowman, Mike. Live a little.

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In brief: Fate of Lee statue determined

Lee will melt

Charlottesville’s statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee is about to take even more heat.

At the end of its Monday meeting, City Council unanimously voted to donate the Lee monument to the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center, which plans to melt down the statue and use the bronze to create a new work of public art.

Though council originally wanted to hold off on making its decision due to Vice-Mayor Sena Magill’s absence, the councilors decided to move forward with the vote at the end of the meeting after multiple frustrated community members urged them to do so during public comment.

The project, titled Swords Into Plowshares, will gather extensive input from the descendants of enslaved persons who were disenfranchised by Virginia’s Jim Crow laws. The Jefferson School will then commission an artist of national significance to create a new bronze sculpture in partnership with the community.

Once completed, the artwork will be gifted to the city to be installed on public land by 2026. The project will ultimately transform “what was once toxic in our public space into something beautiful that can be more reflective of our entire community’s social values” and “offer a road map for other communities to do the same,” writes Jefferson School Executive Director Andrea Douglas.

The project has received support from many local and national organizations, and raised nearly $600,000. The Jefferson School has launched an Indiegogo campaign to raise an additional $500,000 for the first phase of the years-long effort.

According to the campaign website, the funding will go toward transporting the statue to a foundry and melting it, conducting a six-month community engagement process, commissioning a nationally recognized artist, and hiring a salaried project manager.

Though the city received four other offers for the Lee statue, the councilors did not discuss them during the meeting. The Jefferson School was the only local entity that made a bid for the monument.

The city also has to decide what to do with the statues of Stonewall Jackson and Lewis, Clark, and Sacagawea. Council will vote on their fates on December 20.

Pipeline permit panned

The Mountain Valley Pipeline, a controversial natural gas pipeline under construction in western Virginia, was dealt a significant setback last week when the Virginia Air Pollution Control Board denied an important construction permit. The company planned to construct a compressor station in a predominantly Black community in Pittsylvania County, which garnered pushback from activists and the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality. The APCB cited the Virginia Environmental Justice Act, a 2020 law that requires state agencies to examine proposed policies “in relation to [their] impact on environmental justice prior to adoption,” in its denial of the permit. The Mountain Valley Pipeline team is now “evaluating its next steps,” says the Virginia Mercury.

In brief

Lee statue pedestal comes down in Richmond

Charlottesville isn’t the only city figuring out what to do with its reclaimed Confederate spaces. On Monday, Richmond’s leaders ordered the removal of the graffiti-covered pedestal that used to hold the statue of Robert E. Lee on Monument Avenue. The pedestal had become a symbol of the protests against police brutality that unfolded across the city and country in 2020, and the area around the dramatic, colorful pedestal had remained an informal gathering place. The land will now be controlled by city of Richmond, and its future remains unknown.

Karen Greenhalgh. Photo: Ballotpedia

It’s really over now

A recount confirmed a narrow Republican victory in House of Delegates District 85, in which Karen Greenhalgh beat one-term incumbent Alex Askew. Greenhalgh’s victory in Virginia Beach confirms that Republicans will hold at least 51 seats in the House for the next two years, though a second narrow Republican victory is pending a recount, too. Greenhalgh beat Askew by 115 votes out of more than 28,000 cast.

They literally stole Christmas

Nine-foot-tall inflatable snowman and Santa Claus decorations were pilfered from a yard in Belvedere this weekend, reports CBS19. The thief arrived at 4 in the morning and threw the decorations in a van, according to the doorbell camera of the affected house. It’s been a season of desperation, it seems—last week, CBS reported that Christmas trees had been stolen from a local farm, too. That’s no way to get in the holiday spirit, people.

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In brief: City under new management

Under new management

Charlottesville announced that Marc Woolley will become the city’s next interim city manager. Woolley has spent the last four years as the business administrator of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

“Right now there are certain acute issues that need to be taken care of, namely the budget and the comprehensive plan,” Woolley said at a virtual introductory press conference on Friday. “My role is to sit down with council and stakeholders and plot a course forward for the short term.”

The last city manager, Chip Boyles, resigned in October amid community outcry over his decision to relieve police chief RaShall Brackney of her duties. 

“I’m not here to upset the apple cart, unless it’s called for, but I don’t see that as my main charge,” Woolley said. 

In Harrisburg, Woolley said he helped get the city’s finances back on track. Harrisburg is Pennsylvania’s capital, a majority Black city with a population of 50,000 and a metro area population of 590,000. Before that, he worked at the Philadelphia Housing Authority, Delaware River Port Authority, and the Hershey Trust Company.

Woolley will become the sixth person to serve as city manager since 2018. On Friday he said the high turnover doesn’t phase him, and that he’s accustomed to “high-stress environments.”

“I’ve been doing this for many, many years, and I’ve been in almost any type of situation.” Woolley said. “Virginia does not have the monopoly on complicated or arcane versions of government. Pennsylvania is right up there.” 

The 52-year-old says he helps cope with the stress by spending time with his wife and kids, training German shepherds, and making cheese. 

He’s left multiple previous posts under contentious circumstances. Woolley was named in multiple lawsuits against the Philadelphia Housing Authority, though was ultimately cleared of any wrongdoing. And he clashed with the board of directors at the Hershey Trust Company, resigning after the leak of a memo he wrote describing dysfunction within the organization. 

That apparently didn’t bother the Charlottesville City Council too much—Councilor Lloyd Snook encouraged those on the call to read past “the first page of Google” when looking at Woolley’s background. 

Woolley was a finalist in council’s search for a deputy city manager for operations job, a position they ultimately went to Sam Sanders in July 2021. Council had previously indicated that it intended to give the community an opportunity for input on the interim city manager hire. Mayor Nikuyah Walker said she still believes that’s the best approach, but “this particular time presented us with some unfortunate circumstances” that made such a process difficult. 

The city plans to conduct a search for the permanent city manager in April 2022, and Woolley says he intends to apply for that position. In the meantime, he’ll make $205,000 per year, and will begin on December 1. 

Parcel credit 

For months, area residents have reported going weeks without receiving mail, largely due to staffing shortages and poor management at the Charlottesville Post Office. Last week, Virginia Senator Mark Warner met with USPS management to discuss recent improvements. 

“I think we got their attention,” said Warner during a press conference on the Downtown Mall last Thursday. “From the back office of operation, it looked much more organized, much cleaner, much different from before.”

Since Warner’s last visit on August 15,  22 new employees—four clerks, eight city carriers, and 10 rural carriers—have been hired. Twenty applicants are currently waiting to pass background checks. The office has also recently brought in a new acting postmaster and two additional senior officials.

Senator Warner works to address post office issues before holiday surge. Staff photo.

To handle the holiday surge, the office has recruited 11 retirees and 21 postal employees from around the state.

During a “mail surge” in October, management brought in around 45 additional mail carriers, who helped deliver around 90 percent of backlogged mail. It’s since seen a 90 percent decline in complaints about mail delivery at the post office window.

“I’m cautiously optimistic,” said Warner. “It felt like walking around the facility, there was a different attitude, but the proof is going to be in the reaction. I need to hear [from] the community if this is not taking place.”

In brief

Local kids get vaxed 

Children ages 5 to 11 are now eligible for COVID vaccination, and there are plenty of opportunities for families in the Charlottesville area to have their kids inoculated. The Blue Ridge Health District is offering vaccines for children by appointment at its Seminole Square space. Both city and county schools are planning to hold drive-through vaccination clinics on their campuses, and some pediatricians’ offices have begun vaccination events, starting with high-risk patients. 

Pulling out all the stops 

In a bizarre election footnote, Glenn Youngkin’s 17-year-old son attempted to vote for his father in last week’s election, even though the minimum age for voting in Virginia is 18. The poll workers at the Great Falls Library turned the boy away, reports The Washington Post. He “honestly misunderstood Virginia election law and simply asked polling officials if he was eligible to vote,” responded the Youngkin campaign. “Election integrity” was a major plank in Youngkin’s campaign platform. 

Brackney’s back

In a downtown press conference on Tuesday, former Charlottesville police chief RaShall Brackney revealed that she has filed formal complaints with CPD’s human resources department, the local Office of Human Rights, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, and the NAACP, concerning her firing in September. She says city leadership defamed, harassed, and discriminated against her for her efforts to dismantle systemic racism within the department. She is demanding $3 million from the city. If the city does not respond to the complaints soon, Brackney and her attorney say they will take her case to federal court.

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In brief: Council campaign spending, lazy slobs and a tv boycott

Show us the money

Getting on City Council can cost a lot more than what the part-time job pays, even after a raise in 2018 boosted the salary to $18,000 annually. So far, no one’s touched Mayor Mike Signer’s all-time high of $51K to get elected, but major cash has been raised this year in some cases. In others, not so much. Above are the City Council candidates’ numbers as of September 30, according to the Virginia Public Access Project.

Democracy dropouts

Click to enlarge.

Americans like to extol our exceptionalism for living in a free country, while conveniently skipping over the foundation of democracy: showing up at the polls and voting.

 

In that category, American citizens are lazy slobs.

Oh sure, we turn out in presidential election years, which nationally is a lackluster 50 percent. Locally, we do somewhat better, yet only mustering around 70 percent—barely a passing grade. And in a year where it’s merely local and House of Delegate races, which some argue are the most important, and fewer than one-third of the city and county’s 100,000-plus registered voters can be bothered to go to the polls.

Supposedly the 2016 election galvanized the country. Will that call for action be evident in the polls? We’ll find out November 7.

Officer-involved shooting

City police killed J.C. Hawkins Jr. October 13, after Hawkins allegedly sexually assaulted and robbed a 72-year-old woman in the 300 block of Riverside Avenue. Three officers found him on the Rivanna Trail, and say he pointed a handgun at them. Officers shot at Hawkins, he fell into the Rivanna River and “succumbed to his injuries,” police say. The officers are on administrative leave as Virginia State Police investigate.

Coach indicted

An Orange County grand jury indicted former volunteer softball coach Cathy S. Rothgeb, 57, of Stanley, on 34 counts related to sexual assault of children October 16. Rothgeb coached from the 1980s to early 2000s.

NBC29 boycott

Henry Graff’s interview with white nationalist Richard Spencer on the heels of “Charlottesville 3.0”—the October 7 tiki torch flash mob here—has irate viewers forming a Boycott NBC29 Facebook group with 122 members vowing to tell the TV station’s advertisers they don’t approve. Others simply changed the channel.

Gateway or gridlock?

Belmont Bridge photo by Jack Looney

City Council voted 4-1 October 16 to pass the conceptual design for the Belmont Bridge two-lane replacement project, with Bob Fenwick being the lone dissenter.

Borrowed & Blue shutdown

The Charlottesville-based tech startup that connected hundreds of couples to wedding vendors since 2011 abruptly announced October 16 that it would shut down all business operations, effective immediately.

Quote of the Week

Don Gathers. Photo by Eze Amos

“Someone set up a report card for city government. I believe this puts you on academic probation.” —Don Gathers at the October 16 City Council meeting

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In brief: Monolithic tendencies, hysterical society and more

Monolith on West Main

What wasn’t quite clear from renderings of The Standard, the deluxe student apartments now under construction across from The Flats on West Main Street, was just how massive and Soviet Bloc-looking the 499-space parking garage is.

This is what The Standard will look like in a year or so. Mitchell/Matthews

Good news: It’s going to be covered by the building and won’t be a stand-alone monstrosity.

According to Chris Engel, the city’s director of economic development, the “parking being built is solely to support the building,” which has 189 units and commercial and retail on the first of its six floors.

Developer Landmark Properties, based in Athens, Georgia, is “redefining the college living experience,” according to its website. The complex is shooting for a fall 2018 move-in.

The Standard garage back in July. Staff photo

“It’s kind of an eyesore,” says Flats resident William Rule. The construction noise, too, has been a problem, he says.

Mel Walker, owner of Mel’s Cafe, is not perturbed about the construction down the street or the upcoming influx of students. “They’ve got to eat somewhere,” he says.

 

 

 


CPD’s August 12 bill

Photo Eze Amos

Charlottesville police spent nearly $70,000 for the Unite the Right rally, including almost $44K on overtime and a $565 pizza tab from Papa John’s. The bill includes $3,300 for Albemarle sheriff’s deputies, $2,400 for jailers and $750 for the services of clinical psychologist Jeffrey Fracher. The city spent $33,000 for the July 8 KKK rally.


“Solidarity Cville rebukes the ‘Concert for Charlottesville’ as a show of false unity.”—Statement dropped about the same time the Dave Matthews-led concert was beginning September 24.


Art installation erased

A group of residents worked through the wee hours September 24 to transform the Free Speech Wall to the Solidarity Wall. Little more than an hour later, a man erased their efforts.

Where’s the gas?

Charlottesville’s first Sheetz opens September 28 on the Corner. The petroleum-less convenience store is a new concept for Sheetz and the fourth it’s opened in the middle of a college town. It features USB phone charger ports every three feet, and is open 24/7, which means rush hour around 2am on weekends.

Historical Society under fire

Steven Meeks. Photo Eze Amos

For years the tenure of Steven Meeks as president of the Albemarle Charlottesville Historical Society has brought grumblings from former board members and a loss of half its dues-paying membership. Now the city is citing leadership and transparency issues in its proposal to up the rent for the McIntire Building, where the nonprofit is housed, from $182 a month to $750, according to Chris Suarez in the Daily Progress.

 

 

 

Accused murderer arrested

Huissuan Stinnie, the 18-year-old on the lam since being accused of the September 11 murder of New York man Shawn Evan Davis on South First Street, was arrested in Fluvanna September 25. He faces charges of second-degree murder and use of a firearm in commission of a felony.


Store it in style

Lifelong mountain biker and Charlottesville resident Eric Pearson was frustrated by the hassle of having to back his car out of his garage each time he pedaled home and needed to hang his bicycle back on the hook over his workbench, so he committed to buying an outdoor storage container for his two-wheeler.

“I quickly discovered that no elegant product existed,” he says, and decided to build a device for those who also wanted an aesthetically pleasing way to keep their bikes from becoming one of the 1.5 million stolen in the country each year. Thus, the Alpen Bike Capsule was born.

Courtesy Alpen

Each slim silver cylinder uses an integrated Bluetooth lock to provide secure access, is waterproof, lightweight, durable and bolts to any surface. While Pearson says his capsules look great outside any home or apartment, or on the back of an RV, we think it looks like it came straight off a Star Wars set—and we’re okay with that.

The product should hit the market by mid-2018, he says. And though it’ll set customers back about $1,000, Pearson says early orderers can expect significant discounts.

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In brief: Greenway to nowhere, Richmond rundown, sucker punches and more

Greenway to nowhere

Perhaps you’ve noticed the small gravel trail that runs alongside McIntire Road, past the old Lane High School that now serves as the Albemarle County Office Building and the baseball field and then, seemingly, stops in its tracks at Harris Street. In 2006, the city began a project to build the multi-use trail, Schenk’s Greenway, as a connector between the office building and McIntire Park.

But the greenway has been closed and under construction since July 2015 for the first phase of a $1.5 million Rivanna Water and Sewer Authority project called the Upper Schenk’s Branch Interceptor Replacement, an upgrade to increase wastewater infrastructure capacity along that sewer line, according to RWSA spokesperson Teri Kent. It’s currently about 85 percent complete and scheduled for a substantial push in March with landscaping and site restoration finished this spring.

The trail will be paved to accommodate the expected increased use, says city trail planner Chris Gensic. The long-term trail plan is to connect the Downtown Mall and Preston Avenue to McIntire Park—Schenk’s Greenway will be the middle section of that trail.

Here's what it looks like now. Staff photo
Here’s what it looks like now. Staff photo

So much presidential activity

Teresa Sullivan's had a rough five years. Will she stay at UVA's helm? Photo: Ashley Twiggs
Photo: Ashley Twiggs

On the same day Barack Obama handed over the keys to the White House to Donald Trump, UVA President Teresa Sullivan announced she would be leaving when her contract expires in summer 2018, and the university will begin a search for a new prez.

Blogger arrested

Photo: Eze Amos
Photo: Eze Amos

Jason Kessler, the man who dug up Vice-Mayor Wes Bellamy’s offensive tweets and who is collecting signatures to remove him from office, was arrested January 22 on the Downtown Mall for allegedly punching a man in the face, according to Tomas Harmon at the Newsplex. Kessler contends the punching was self-defense.

EPIC goals

Dave Norris, Jeff Fogel and Dede Smith. Staff photo
Dave Norris, Jeff Fogel and Dede Smith. Staff photo

A new city political organization—Equity and Progress in Charlottesville—debuted January 17, and features former elected officials such as Dave Norris and Dede Smith. It hopes to tap into the Bernie Sanders’ progressivism and elect candidates to tackle income inequity and affordable housing.

New Dominion Bookshop’s loss

Photo: Amanda Maglione
Photo: Amanda Maglione

Long-time owner Carol Troxell, 68, died unexpectedly January 18, the Daily Progress reports. Troxell bought the Downtown Mall store in the mid-’80s, and made it a popular haven for author readings and Virginia Festival of the Book events.

State parks high

Governor Terry McAuliffe says attendance in 2016 was a record, with 10,022,698 visitors, which topped 2015 by 12 percent.

Richmond rundown

The General Assembly has been in session two weeks, and here’s a snapshot of what’s happening.

  • Redistricting: Delegate Steve Landes, one of Albemarle’s four delegates (thank you gerrymandering), carried a constitutional amendment to take the politics out of electoral line drawing.
  • Misdemeanor DNA: Albemarle Sheriff Chip Harding and Commonwealth’s Attorney Robert Tracci called for a study to expand DNA collection for misdemeanors like trespassing, petit larceny and assault in a bill carried by Delegate David Toscano and co-patroned by Landes.
  • Removal of elected officials: Already difficult in Virginia and requiring a petition signed by 10 percent of voters in the last election, this bill requires 20 percent of the voters’ signatures and a special election.
  • Bathroom bill: Delegate Bob Marshall’s bill, modeled after North Carolina’s, died quietly in a Republican-controlled subcommittee January 19.

Quote of the Week:

“Charlottesville is a ‘beautiful ugly city.’” —The Reverend Brenda Brown-Grooms’ description used at former vice-mayor Holly Edwards’ January 12 funeral was echoed—twice—at City Council January 17.

Correction: Equity and Progress in Charlottesville was misidentified in the original version.

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In brief: Major demolition, pruning presidential grapes and more

Fate of the Republic

The 1980s Republic Plaza on West Main has been brought to its knees over the past month to make way for luxury student apartments. By Christmas, a claw had relentlessly chomped away its top two floors. In its place will be The Standard, a six-story, mixed-use structure with 189 apartments and a 499-space parking garage.

More tweetstorm fallout

Wes Bellamy. Photo: Mina Pirasteh
Photo: Mina Pirasteh

Beleaguered Bellamy resigned from his teaching job December 26 after going on leave November 29 when a  local blogger dug up vulgar tweets Bellamy made between 2009 and 2014 before being elected to City Council. Signatures are now being collected for a petition to remove Bellamy from City Council. Luckily for the vice mayor, Virginia does not make it easy to remove elected officials.

Turner turnaround

Dr. Rick Turner, president of the Albemarle-Charlottesville Chapter of the NAACP, addresses the crowd at last week’s rally in remembrance of Trayvon Martin. Photo: Annalee Grant
Dr. Rick Turner addressed the crowd at a rally in remembrance of Trayvon Martin. Photo: Annalee Grant

Little more than a month ago, Rick Turner fended off a challenge to his presidency of the Albemarle Charlottesville NAACP, a position he’s held for 12 years, and accused some white members of “deviousness.” He says he’ll resign December 31. “Now is the time for new and vibrant leadership!” he says in a December 20 release.

Trump’s migrant workers

Donald Trump has tweeted his objections about the affirmation that must be signed to vote in Virginia's March 1 Republican primary. Photo: Amanda Maglione
Photo: Amanda Maglione

BuzzFeed reports Trump Vineyard Estates applied for six H-2 visas to bring in foreign workers to prune grapevines for $10.72 an hour. Workers are provided lodging at no cost, must be able to bend over for long periods, work in weather as cold as 10 degrees and lift up to 60 pounds, according to the application.

City staff swelling

Charlottesville hired its first redevelopment manager: Brenda Kelley from Clarksville, Tennessee. And at its last meeting of the year December 19, City Council discussed whether it should hire a city architect and a person dedicated to the arts community, according to Charlottesville Tomorrow.

Good look at William Taylor Plaza

On December 20, the Board of Architectural Review approved most exterior design plans for a new 120,000-square-foot plaza located at the corner of Cherry Avenue and Ridge Street and named after—you guessed it—colonial landowner William Taylor. The board did, however, ask developers to revisit paint color options for the back of the building and said the rustic-looking garden element in front isn’t in line with the rest of the design. The plaza will be built in two phases: The first will include a Fairfield Inn by Marriott, and the second will include apartments and condos.

Quote of the Week: “I’m not leaving nor am I going anywhere, just starting a new chapter. We all need to use this time to think about how we heal, how we band together as a community, and how we create solutions to the issues in this community.” —Vice-Mayor Wes Bellamy in his statement announcing his resignation Monday as a teacher at Albemarle High

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In brief: Dog lives matter, steakhouse speculation and more

Totally cleared

Robert Davis is ready to "thrive and flourish" as a free man with his felony record expunged. Photo Ryan JonesRobert Davis, 32, spent 13 years in prison for a Crozet double slaying after making what experts call a textbook false confession. He was released a year ago on a conditional pardon and on December 16, the governor granted an absolute pardon, a rarity in Virginia. Read more.

Rumor of the week

Is Lampo opening a steakhouse in the downtown Bank of America building, where owner Hunter Craig has already confirmed a grilled meatery will be going? Lampo co-owner Loren Mendosa says, “That’s a popular rumor,” and declined to comment.

Last week’s rumor confirmed

Odds are pretty good that ice skating is not in the Main Street Arena’s future. Staff photo Quantitative Investment Management owner Jaffray Woodriff issued an official Payne Ross release acknowledging that an entity called Taliaferro Junction LLC is evaluating the Main Street Arena as a purchase for a 21st-century office building that will not house QIM.

Accounting for every penny

Charlottesville plans to award Belmont Bridge preliminary design and engineering to Kimley-Horn of Richmond, and negotiated the cost to $1,980,038.77, according to a release.

ABC not liable

A photo of Martese Johnson on the night of his bloody arrest went viral. Photo by Bryan Beaubrun
Photo by Bryan Beaubrun

A judge dropped the Virginia Alcoholic Beverage Control and Agent John Cielakie from Martese Johnson’s $3 million lawsuit stemming from his bloody 2015 arrest after he showed his real ID at Trinity Irish Pub and was turned away.

No more No. 15

UVA basketball star Malcolm Brogdon’s jersey is headed for the display cases and his number has been retired, making him the eighth Hoo to receive this honor. Brogdon is now a rookie for the Milwaukee Bucks.

Sad tidings

Christopher Spears, 22, of Waynesboro died in a single-car crash around 4am December 16 on U.S. 250 in Crozet in Albemarle’s sixth fatal crash this year.

Candy land

UVA-gingerbread_0020
Photo Tom McGovern

From the initial blueprint to the cardboard model to the actual cookie construction, UVA Dining’s executive pastry chef Janice Benjamin takes building gingerbread houses to a new level. This year, she based her annual holiday work of art, which currently sits in the main lobby of the UVA Children’s Hospital, on everyone’s favorite movie of the season: Elf.

On the house: 304.5 hours of labor | 98 pieces of gingerbread |
60 pounds of royal icing | 6 pounds of cherry Twizzlers used on
the Empire State Building | 6 different kinds of licorice | 2 12-volt rechargeable wheelchair batteries to power the skating rink

Accused cat killer granted stay

Niko gets a stay of execution. Courtesy Prayers for Niko
Courtesy Pray for Niko

An Albemarle County pit bull named Niko, on doggie death row for allegedly attacking and killing a neighbor’s cat in 2014, has been granted a stay until January 18, when his owner will appeal Judge Cheryl Higgins’ order to execute him.

What was scheduled as Toni Stacy’s last visit with her pup at the Charlottesville Albemarle SPCA on December 18 turned into a protest attended by many sign-waving dog-lovers and an eventual celebration when Stacy received the news later that day.

The case has also attracted the attention of Against All Oddz Animal Alliance Inc., a Buffalo, New York, rescue organization that has offered to take Niko into its care. It is undecided whether the group will be allowed to gain custody of him.

Prayers for Niko/Niko Strong, a Facebook page for the pit’s supporters, has nearly 4,000 members. Kristy Hoover, a friend of Niko’s owners, created the group last October. “He’s just a typical dog,” she says. “He’s not vicious in any form.”

Stacy maintains that Niko did not attack the cat he’s charged with killing, but she posted on Facebook that “it’s all in God’s hands now.”

Quote of the week

It was such an amazing relief to have gotten the news and it was so favorable. It’s been a long, long journey. Attorney Steve Rosenfield upon hearing Governor Terry McAuliffe had granted Robert Davis an absolute pardon.

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In brief: ‘Jihadist Threat,’ local government responsiveness and more

Chief of economic development splits

While Albemarle County is all about economic development these days, Faith McClintic lasted 19 months before departing, and cited frustration working with the Board of Supervisors as one reason for taking a job with the Virginia Economic Development Partnership in Richmond, according to Charlottesville Tomorrow.

Not Republican enough?

Downtown Business Association of Charlottesville co-chair George Benford faces fire again, this time from state Senator Tom Garrett, the GOP candidate for the 5th District, for being featured as a lifelong Republican in an ad for Dem Jane Dittmar. Garrett says Benford has contributed to Democrats the past 15 years. Benford defends his GOPness and says he supports Donald Trump—and Dittmar, the Daily Progress reports.

Understanding the Greene County threat

Sheriff Steve Smith stepped into hot water when he posted that his office would host a November 5 seminar on Islam called Understanding the Threat. Critics were unappeased when he renamed it Understanding the Jihadist Threat, and they claimed it would be biased, especially after learning there are no Muslims on the panel. PVCC, where the event is being held, has joined in the outrage.

The talk of the town

Charlottesville’s open data cheerleader, Smart Cville, founded by resident Lucas Ames, surveyed representatives of 16 local neighborhoods about residents’ biggest concerns and the rate of responsiveness of local government to those issues.

According to Smart Cville’s findings, traffic, development/zoning, crime and pedestrian/biking issues top residents’ list of concerns.

Which public problems seem the most pressing based on association meetings, public comment and your own personal opinion?

Ranked in order, residents are also concerned about:

  • Parks/public spaces
  • Other
  • Parking
  • Gentrification
  • Education, affordable housing and environmental/sustainability
  • Economic equity
  • Economic development, beautification and public transportation

Participating neighborhoods

  • Rose Hill
  • Johnson Village
  • Venable
  • Greenbrier
  • Lewis Mountain
  • Little High
  • Woolen Mills
  • Starr Hill
  • Belmont-Carlton
  • Ridge Street
  • North Downtown
  • Burnet Commons
  • Fry’s Spring
  • Robinson Woods
  • Meadows
  • Martha Jefferson

City staff is responsive to problems

Agree—70%

Disagree—25%

Don’t know—5%

City Council is responsive to problems

Agree—45%

Disagree—40%

Don’t know—15%

Quote of the week:

“People going to court aren’t necessarily in  a shopping or movie-going mode.” Supervisor Norman Dill on Albemarle’s discussions to move its courts from downtown to spur economic development, Charlottesville Tomorrow reports.

Categories
News

In brief: Who’s a racist, Miller time and more

Armed robbery season in swing

Along with the influx of students come reports of muggings: September 4 around 11pm in the 400 block of Rugby Road; August 31 around the 800 block of Cabell Avenue; August 30 in the 300 block of Sixth Street SE; and August 21 around midnight in the 1500 block of Gordon Avenue.

Rolling Stone thwarted

Charlottesville Circuit Court Judge Richard Moore ruled September 1 against the magazine’s motion to kill Phi Kappa Psi fraternity’s $26 million lawsuit. The brothers say author Sabrina Rubin Erdely defamed them in her now-debunked article “A Rape On Campus,” in which she placed a horrific sexual assault in their frat house.

No. 1 in this poll

Business Insider ranked UVA the best public college in the nation, citing four of its undergraduate schools (arts and sciences, architecture, engineering and nursing), and its 600 student clubs and 25 varsity sports, or the university’s “work hard, play hard mentality,” as they like to call it.

Paint the town burnt orange

UVA head football coach Bronco Mendenhall’s (below) debut game against the University of Richmond starts the season with an inglorious 37-20 loss to the Spiders.

"There are only two ways to do things in my book. We do it the exact right way or we do it again," says Bronco Mendenhall, new head football coach at the University of Virginia. Photo by Jackson Smith
Photo Jackson Smith

More beer! (and jobs)

MillerCoors will create 27 new jobs by expanding its Shenandoah brewery—a $60 million investment. It’s responsible for domestic favorites such as Coors Light, Miller Light, Redd’s and Henry’s Hard Soda, and also brews Leinenkugel’s Summer Shandy and Blue Moon Belgian White Ale.

Mary Baldwin grows up

Staunton’s Mary Baldwin College, which opened as a women’s college in 1842, is kicking off its 175th year by changing its name to Mary Baldwin University and expanding to a larger course catalogue than ever before.

Be Uncommon

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Matteus Frankovich Skyclad AP

This student housing complex, located just 0.2 miles from Grounds at 1000 W. Main St., opened for residents August 12. It offers a slew of amenities including a full gym, private workout room, pool, sundeck, grilling station, media center, reservable private study room, golf simulator and, perhaps its biggest draw: a microbrewery. University students and craft beer-lovers, prepare yourself: Hardywood Brewery reps say they’ll be ready to welcome you to their first-floor location in October.

But don’t get too comfortable. Uncommon boasts being “the anti-one-size-fits-all” on its website—whatever that means.

Bedrooms: 355

Current residents: 354

Rent: $699-$1,449

By the Numbers

Help line

The Charlottesville Salvation Army’s annual telethon will air from 6-8pm September 13 on CBS19 and WCHV 107.5 FM. Here’s a look at the impact the Salvation Army had on our community in 2015.

More than 56,000 meals served to guests at its Ridge Street facility

27,000 nights of lodging

More than $100,000 given to Charlottesville and Albemarle County residents to prevent utility disconnections

Quote of the week

Dylan Roof is racist. Anyone who thinks black lives don’t matter is racist.
Anyone who doesn’t think that all lives matter is racist. Suggesting that local
law enforcement should help federal law enforcement to uphold the law
is not racist.—5th District congressional candidate Tom Garrett responds to the Democratic Party of Virginia’s portrayal of him as a racist.