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In brief: Kids defend skate park, Hudson announces campaign, and more

Grinding to a halt

Last week, a final warning was issued to all skaters: If more than 25 people were seen gathered at the Charlottesville Skate Park—or other city parks and recreation areas—over the weekend, the city would consider shutting down all of its outdoor facilities until the declaration of emergency is lifted.

Officials stopped by the skate park throughout the weekend, and noticed an immediate improvement, compared to the gathering of more than 75 people witnessed at the park two weeks ago.

The threat of closing was enough to spark outrage among young skaters.

“There are some ways we could keep it open COVID safe,” said 12-year-old Skippy Norton during public comment at Monday’s City Council meeting. Norton, who claimed they’ve been encouraging fellow skaters to comply with safety rules, said, “If I’m having a hard day, I can go to the skate park and I’ll be happy…And I know it means a lot to a lot of kids.”

“Skating helps a lot with mental health…it can put you in a much better mindset,” added 12-year-old Alice Christian. “I’ve met many people at the park who have made my life a little bit more happy.”

“There certainly was a lot more compliance” with mask wearing and social distancing, said City Councilor Heather Hill during the meeting. “But it really is going to be the onus of the skate community to ensure that they’re following the rules…so [it] can continue to be open.”

Several parents joined the kids in speaking out against closing the park, urging council to consider less extreme measures.

“It’s a lifeline for my children,” said parent Kerri Heilman. “The lack of things they’re able to do, and being able to get to the skate park and be outdoors, it is really great for their mental health.”

“Skating rules!” her 8-year-old child chimed in.

_________________

Quote of the week

I would not mind spending Christmas with my family.”

—UVA football player Joey Blount, on whether or not he wants to play in a bowl game over the holiday break

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In brief

Sally forth

Unsurprisingly, Charlottesville’s delegate, Sally Hudson, has announced her campaign for re-election. In 2019, Hudson took down former city councilor Kathy Galvin in a primary before running unopposed in the general election. She says her priorities for next session include COVID relief, as well as continuing the work of the last session on education and the environment.

Sally Hudson PC: Supplied photo

Tree time

Charlottesville’s Christmas tree sellers are seeing record sales this year, reports NBC29. With everyone gloomy about the virus and eager to get out of the house, firs and pines are flying off the lots. If you’re hoping to get your holiday decorations set up early, don’t wait around.

Oh, shit

Charlottesville has recently begun wastewater testing to detect coronavirus cases, reports The Daily Progress, in an effort organized in conjunction with the state health department and the CDC. It sounds nasty, but the testing has proven an effective way of detecting the presence of COVID early in the virus’ spread—UVA has been running a successful wastewater testing program at its residence halls since September.

It takes two to HueHuetenango

At Monday’s City Council meeting, counselors decided to begin the process of becoming sister cities with HueHuetenango, Guatemala. The 120,000-person city is located in the west of the country and is known for a distinctive set of Mayan ruins nearby. Familial bonds between municipalities aren’t formed overnight, though—for the first three years, the two cities will just be “friendship cities,” says the commission.

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Living

Chairman of the boards: Local teacher launches Virginia’s first high school skateboarding program

On one of those fall days that starts out cool and warms up in the afternoon, hinting at the change of seasons, a group of 15 to 20 young skateboarders gathers in the upper corner of the Charlottesville Skate Park. Ranging in age from about 10 to 19, the kids are dressed in everything from full-on protective gear, to nude torsos and cutoff shorts, to Dickies work pants and T-shirts emblazoned with brand names like Vans and Supreme.

They stand in a loose huddle, laughing and teasing one another. One kid razzes another about “not screwing things up this time.” Wearing jeans and a backwards ball cap, Peter Hufnagel, 38, squats and looks up at the kids. One teenager, who’s filming the group to post online, peels away and gets into position on the course.

“Don’t think about the dude behind you,” Hufnagel says. “Don’t think about the camera. Focus on the ledge and what you gotta do to nail the landing.”

With a shout, the oldest kid dashes down the narrow cement runway, leaps on his board, and ascends the high two-step ledge. He performs a 180-kickflip so big he nearly crashes into the kneeling videographer.

The lavish move animates the other kids. They jump on their boards, form a rolling line, and attack the ledge, launching into the air one after another. All land and swerve to avoid colliding with fellow skaters. Onlooking parents and kids applaud and shout approval.

Last in line, Hufnagel makes the run and lands safely. The kids celebrate with high-fives, chest bumps, and more shouting.

“Visit pretty much any skatepark in the state, and you’ll find a similar atmosphere,” says Hufnagel, director of innovation at the Miller School of Albemarle and a skateboarder since the age of 8. “There’s this amazing ethos of inclusivity. Skaters go out of their way to support one another and help each other improve.”

Hufnagel is on the cusp—in Virginia, at least—of a major trend. Anticipating the debut of skateboarding at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, he decided last August to launch the commonwealth’s first high school skate team. Eight students signed on. They practice daily, led by Hufnagel and local skating icon Bruce Vlk. The team’s success led Hufnagel to found the VAHS Skateboarding Series, a competitive league for middle and high school kids.

“The feedback we got from students was so overwhelmingly positive, it was clear we needed to find a way to get this sport into other schools,” says Hufnagel.

The goal is to build an interscholastic athletic community that allows kids to represent their schools in competition and connect with other young skaters statewide.

“These kids are passionate athletes,” Hufnagel says. “We think they deserve to have the same opportunities as kids that participate in traditional sports like football or basketball.”

Hufnagel is operating in familiar territory. In 2011, he developed the Miller School program that launched both the state’s first high school-affiliated mountain biking team as well as the first nationally sanctioned competitive interscholastic cycling league on the East Coast. Miller School’s cycling and mountain biking program has grown to about 50 riders, including Katie Clouse, winner of 21 national junior titles and the youngest member ever to make a U23 (under 23) world championship team. Virginia now has 35 interscholastic mountain biking teams and more than 500 student riders.

“Our plan is to replicate the success we’ve had with mountain biking for skateboarding,” says Hufnagel. “We’re going to follow the same template.”

The VAHS Skateboarding Series will likely launch at the Charlottesville Skate Park, with an additional two or three competitions held at other venues in Virginia. The events will be open to middle and high school teams and individual skateboarders alike.

“Getting these teams into schools is going to require building a certain critical mass,” says Hufnagel, who describes the events as rallying points for skaters. “To do that, we’re going to have over-the-top, professional-quality [events] production value. We want these kids to feel really special and walk away inspired.”

Hufnagel and Vlk are developing materials to help launch and sustain programs. “Right now, we’re putting together a packet that will include practice templates, rule books, risk-management protocols, liability insurance, and the like,” says Hufnagel.

He says he has been in discussions with brands including Red Bull and Nike to fund skaters’ insurance and train coaches. “We need to have the things in place that make it easy for an athletic director at a public school to say ‘yes’ when kids ask about starting a team.”

Though the league is inchoate (a website is still in production), word is getting out. Skaters at Staunton High School have petitioned their school administrators about forming a club team and joining the VAHS. Brian Culpepper, a SHS junior, was one of four schoolmates who took part in the ledge-jumping exercise at Charlottesville Skate Park in the fall. They see the VAHS as an opportunity for validation and a way to gain resources for their sport.

He and his friends skate nearly every day, working hard to improve. But because the school doesn’t have a team, “people don’t take us seriously,” he says. “That perception is what we want to change.”

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News

Daily grind: Construction on city’s $2 million skate park ramps up

There aren’t many places to skateboard in Charlottesville.

The city closed its skate park on McIntire Road during construction of the U.S. 250 Bypass and John Warner Parkway interchange in 2012 and moved it to McIntire Park. And last month, it closed the second location, too.

Nineteen-year-old Piedmont Virginia Community College student David Juers says it’s been tough to find a place to break out his board—and he and his skater friends still hit the desolate park from time to time to get their fix.

“We kind of just hop the fence and skate it,” he says. “Every once in a while, cops will come and kick us out.”

 David Juers is wearing out unauthorized skate spots around town until the new park opens in November. Photo by Tom Daly

His other haunts include the splash pad at Tonsler Park and a couple of skate spots around UVA, but Juers says he’s waiting with bated breath for the completion of the $2 million McIntire Skate Park that’s been on the books since 2012.

“All those delays happened and it’s been pushed back so many years now,” Juers says. “The excitement had gone down, but now that the project is starting up again, it’s definitely exciting. When it does get done, it’s going to be so awesome.”

The city announced in January that it would finally begin building two projects that City Council approved six years ago under McIntire Park’s master plan. Construction of the skate park and a $2.5 million pedestrian bridge across the Norfolk Southern Railroad—which will connect the east and west sides of the city park—is scheduled to begin March 5.

Parks & Recreation Director Brian Daly says the new park will be a “wheel-friendly social space” open to bikes and in-line skaters, too. Features of the park, scheduled to open in November, include a butterfly bowl and a flow bowl, a half pipe, a pump bump, a sculptural brick bank and several grinding ledges.

“There will be an emphasis on programming at the facility, with various levels of skate camps and classes to include beginner, intermediate and advanced private lessons, local and regional competitions and special events,” adds Daly.

During the buildout, access to the south side of McIntire Park from the westbound 250 bypass will be limited to construction, service and emergency vehicles.

Though the city contributed most of the $2 million in funding, it wasn’t alone. The Tony Hawk Foundation, founded by one of the country’s most prominent skating legends, donated $25,000 for the park.

“Tony is a great guy,” says Juers. “My friends and I appreciate his donation, and we hope he comes out opening day to skate with everyone. He made it possible to get a skate park that will put Charlottesville on the map.”

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News

How to spend $162 million: The city’s budget increases 3.5 percent

Charlottesville City Manager Maurice Jones presented his proposed budget for fiscal year 2017 to City Council on March 7.

The $161,871,784 budget is a 3.5 percent increase over 2016’s fiscal year budget, which was approved at $156,391,435. The latest budget is Jones’ sixth version.

“The biggest chunk is going to the schools,” he says, and overall, he is proposing an additional $1.9 million for city schools, along with a 1 percent increase in the lodging tax rate to help offset the cost of school funding. The increase will add $566,000 in revenue.

The tax rate will stay the same at 95 cents per $100 of assessed value; because property values increased by 2.56 percent in 2015, the city made an extra $3.1 million in property tax revenue.

In just two words, Jones says he can summarize next year’s budget as allocating money for “quality services” in the city. And, in his opinion, one of the most significant capital improvement projects in the works is the development of a $1.7 million skate park at McIntire Park.

Renovations to Charlottesville’s circuit and general district courts are also a priority, with $4.5 million projected for circuit court renovations over a five-year span and $500,000 in the current budget for design. An additional $500,000 is proposed for general district court renovations, which will require more than $7 million over the five years.

Over the next three fiscal years, Jones is proposing $10 million for improvements to West Main Street. In five years, $1 million will be used to install new sidewalks and almost $500,000 will go toward maintaining underground utilities.

By 2025, City Council’s vision for Charlottesville is for it to be “America’s healthiest city,” and Jones says the budget supports that by allocating money for keeping up with parks and recreation “to help ensure that people have opportunities to exercise.” Over the next two fiscal years, $1.5 million will go toward implementing the McIntire Park master plan.

Minor changes to some services will save almost $400,000, Jones says. Those include reducing pool hours at the Washington Park Pool and a change to the Charlottesville Area Transit route 7, which will reduce the number of operating buses to six per hour, instead of seven. Wait times between buses on that route will increase to 20 minutes, up from 15 minutes.

Council will meet March 10 for a budget work session.

BUDGET BREAKDOWN

$161,871,784: Total budget is a 3.5 increase over 2016 fiscal year budget

No change: Tax rate stays the same, 95 cents per $100 of assessed value

$63,569,933: City schools get the biggest piece of the general fund budget pie, with an increase of $1.9 million

$3.1 million: The additional revenue from property values, which increased 2.56 percent in 2015

$10 million: Amount slated for West Main improvements

$1.5 million: for the McIntire Park
master plan