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In brief: Capsized cop, jail board booed, and another Tar-jay?

Another Tar-jay?

Local mogul Coran Capshaw’s Riverbend Development has plans for the former Kmart shopping center on Hydraulic, now known as Hillsdale Place. The company went before the Planning Commission May 14 for entrance corridor approval (after C-VILLE went to press).

The plans keep the existing footprint of the center that’s been closed since 2017. An 8,000-square-foot plaza lined
with shops and restaurants will be the space’s new focal point.

A Target-red-colored anchor, an outdoors store that looks suspiciously like an REI, and a mysterious storefront dubbed “Bells & Whistles” are depicted in the drawings.


Quote of the week

“There’s no way to prepare for a madman.” —WINA’s Dori Zook reports on the May 11 machete attack of two hikers on the Appalachian trail, one of whom was killed. James Louis Jordan, 30, of Massachusetts, faces federal charges.


ICE wins

The Albemarle-Charlottesville Regional Jail Authority Board voted 7-4 to continue voluntarily notifying U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement when an undocumented inmate is released from jail, prompting explosive reactions from some people in the audience. Activists had been pressing the board to change its policy for more than a year.

Hit and run

Police are searching for the driver of a dark-colored sedan that grazed a pedestrian around 11pm May 9 on Pine Street near the Islamic Society of Central Virginia. Police do not believe the victim was intentionally targeted, but the mosque, which is holding nightly prayers during Ramadan, has a GoFundMe campaign to pay for additional security measures, and is now paying a police officer $40 an hour to be there every night.

Photo by Edward Thomas

Cop on a roll

An unusual sight on Seventh Street caught the eyes of many passersby last week, when a Charlottesville police cruiser rolled backward over a steep embankment, narrowly missing an apartment window. Only its front end could be seen peeking over the hill, putting it in a pretty challenging position for a tow. Cops say an officer exited his car to chase a suspect on foot—and you can probably guess what happened next.

Sheared

Greene County Commonwealth’s Attorney Matt Hardin cut his 10-inch tresses and donated them to Locks of Love May 8.

New ride

Megabus is launching a route from Charlottesville to Dulles Airport beginning May 16. The service will leave from the Seventh Street SW entrance of the Amtrak station and run Thursdays through Mondays, for $25 to Dulles and $20 back. Megabus entered the local market last fall, causing the Starlight Express to halt, and a trip to New York City that once took about six and a half hours now takes nine or 10.

Sheepskin stats

UVA will hand out 7,090 degrees over the upcoming weekend, about the same as last year.

  • 4,211 baccalaureate degrees, 151 of which were earned in a speedy three years, and five in a super-fast two years.
  • 457 medical and law degrees.
  • 2,448 total graduate degrees, including 311 Ph.D.s, 12 doctors of education, 20 doctors of nursing practice, and 10 doctors of juridical science.
  • 1,210 graduates are international students.

Categories
News

Starlight memories: Bus service folds with coming of Megabus

Oliver Kuttner saw a need. In the early part of this century, it wasn’t easy to get from Charlottesville to New York. Amtrak did not have daily service—and with connections, a plane ride could take almost as long as driving.

So real estate/light car developer Kuttner partnered with David New. They gutted a Trailways bus, added 22 leather BMW seats, a state-of-the-art sound system, upgraded toilet, and free snacks and beverages. The Starlight Express with luxury motorcoach service to Manhattan was born.

As he readied the Starlight for its first trip in October 2004, New described its drop-off point in New York City, the Meatpacking District, as a “hot, up-and-coming area.”

Oliver Kuttner and David New started the six-and-a-half-hour luxury bus shuttle service to Manhattan when there weren’t many other options to get there. photo Jen Fariello

A generation of Charlottesvillians boarded the deluxe coach at 5:30pm on a Thursday or Friday, and stretched out for the ride that arrived around midnight. The service made weekending in the city both convenient and, at $149 roundtrip, affordable.

On October 10, Starlight’s current operator, Dan Goff, got a text that Megabus was coming to town. He immediately pulled the plug.

“We’ve been DISRUPTED!” says the notice on its website.

Goff, who owns a limousine and bus company and who bought Starlight in 2010, had already noticed signs the New York shuttle was in trouble. He’s always seen a bump in ridership when fuel prices went up. “The canary in the coal mine earlier this year was that fuel prices went up, but ridership didn’t,” he says.

He suspended service for three months during the summer, and had just resumed it October 4. The news of Megabus proved to be the death knell. “Charlottesville is barely big enough for us,” he says.

Megabus is owned by Coach USA, which is owned by a Scottish company called Stagecoach Group. Its website shows service beginning October 14 with $79.99 one-way fares for nearly nine-hour trips.

The international company is “capable of buying business for awhile with $5 fares,” says Goff.

“I’m not crying,” he says. “Starlight was never our primary business.” But he admits it is difficult to say goodbye.

Kuttner had predicted the Starlight’s demise back in 2009, when the state decided to subsidize Amtrak service through Charlottesville.

And with Hurricane Michael slamming into the Gulf Coast this week, Kuttner is reminded of Hurricane Katrina, when he and New loaded a bus with supplies and drove to Pearlington, Mississippi. “The storm surge there was 28 feet,” he says. “We saw dead people—six or seven—lying on the roof of a Walmart. It was total devastation.”

The Starlight Express heads to New York in 2009. File photo

Most of his Starlight memories are happier. While he and New operated it, “It was almost a small family business,” he says. “I drove when there wasn’t a driver or when I wanted to go to New York. I liked driving.”

“It was pretty exciting to put it all together and pull it off when a lot of people said it wouldn’t work,” says New. They started by running the service for a three-month trial period to see if it would work. “People came out of the woodwork,” he says. “So many people in Charlottesville have a New York connection.”

Rosemary Miller remembers Bodo’s bagels and Orangina as snacks in the early days. “When we lived in New York, it was my favorite way to get back and forth,” she says. “Friendly drivers, a stop to get off and get food, and there was always some familiar face onboard.”

Says New, “It took a lot of the pain out of getting from Charlottesville to New York.”