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In brief: Payne, Ross outta here, Woodriff buying arena and more

Payne, Ross closing

When politicians need flack assistance stat, there’s one number they call: Payne, Ross and Associates. And around the beginning of the new year, Charlottesville’s public relations institution will close its doors after almost 35 years. “It’s a new vision,” says principal Susan Payne. Partner Lisa Ross Moorefield says the closing is a mutual decision, and she’ll be “exploring less structured options.”

Woodriff confirms arena deal

Hedge fund founder Jaffray Woodriff is buying the Main Street Arena, as previously reported by C-VILLE. Attorney Valerie Long says, “Our client is now the purchaser of the ice park for an entity he’s involved with.” His QIM firm is not involved in the deal, and he is not ready to talk about whether there will be an ice park in another location, says Long.

sydneyBlair
Courtesy UVA

R.I.P. Sydney Blair

Beloved UVA creative writing prof Sydney Blair, 67, died unexpectedly December 12 after being hospitalized for pancreatitis. She joined the faculty in 1986, won the Virginia Prize for Fiction for her novel Buffalo in 1991 and wrote many stories, articles and reviews for journals.

Why it’s not paying for West Main

UVA generates $4.8 billion in economic activity in this region, according to a recent study. The university has been cool to city suggestions that it pitch in on the West Main streetscape project, saying it already significantly contributes to the local economy. UVA doesn’t pay Charlottesville property taxes.

Albemarle County Executive Tom Foley says the good news about an otherwise grim budget is that no one gets laid off and county employees get a raise. Staff photo
Tom Foley. Staff photo

County exec wanted

Albemarle’s Tom Foley is riding into the sunset, er, to Stafford County, to be head administrator there. Foley started in Albemarle in 1999, and succeeded Bob Tucker as county exec in 2011.

Day in the sun

Solar Panel 2 by Dominion“The sun is my almighty physician,” once said the ubiquitous Thomas Jefferson.

In a small room at UVA on December 6, packed wall-to-wall with people eager to celebrate the installation of 1,589 solar panels on university rooftops, President of Dominion Virginia Power Bob Blue said, “I’m not exactly sure what he meant by that.” But what he does know is that UVA is one of 10 groups participating in Dominion’s Solar Partnership Program, and once all the panels are installed atop Ruffner Hall and the University Bookstore, they will generate 364 kilowatts of energy—or enough to power 91 homes.

Bright future

  • 965 panels, which could power the equivalent of 52 homes, are already installed
  • Students and Dominion will study the energy pumped back into UVA’s grid
  • The school’s 2008 Delta Force sustainability program reduced energy usage in 37 buildings, saving $22 million in energy costs so far

Steak of America

The Downtown Mall will be Bank of America-less, but will have another steakhouse. Staff photoWhen Bank of America closes its branch doors downtown in February, it leaves a grand 1916 building in its wake that will house a steakhouse, according to building owner Hunter Craig. And while he declined to identify the grilled-meat purveyor, he did say it would be locally owned, not a national chain.

Also inhabiting 300 E. Main St., which began as Peoples Bank and during its 100-year history has morphed into Virginia National Bank, Sovran Bank and NationsBank before Bank of America, will be…another bank. “Not Virginia National Bank,” specified Craig, who sits on the VNB board of directors.

Other as-yet-undisclosed tenants will lease office space in the building.

Quote of the week

“Plaintiff threatens to set a dangerous precedent for news organizations and those who rely upon them for accurate up-to-the-minute news throughout the country.”—Brief filed by eight news organizations in support of Rolling Stone’s motion to overturn Nicole Eramo’s $3 million judgment

Correction 12/19: Sydney Blair’s age and date of death were both wrong in the original version.

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Parking petition: Violet Crown hires PR firm

The Downtown Business Association of Charlottesville said in April it wasn’t taking sides in the parking wars fueled by litigation between the city and Mark Brown, owner of the Charlottesville Parking Center. That course changed when Violet Crown hired public relations firm Payne Ross, also a DBAC member, which circulated a petition calling for the city to maintain its ownership in the Water Street Parking Garage out of fear Brown will raise the rates.

“CPC wants to raise rates to market rates to as much as the market will bear,” says Robert Crane, an executive with Violet Crown Cinemas.

The Austin-based deluxe theater chain opened in November in the former Regal Cinema site and pays 35 cents an hour for the parking it validates, a rate Crane says the theater was given before it began construction. “We built our theater on reliance of that,” he says.

Brown bought CPC in 2014. By the time the theater was ready to open, says Crane, the rate had doubled.

Violet Crown went to the city, which pitched in 20 cents an hour for a rate of 55 cents an hour, says Chris Engel, director of economic development. “We thought it was important to keep the rate the same as Regal’s. They also bring a lot of people downtown.”

Merchants downtown can opt for different parking validation programs, all of which are subsidized to some extent, says Engel. “They don’t pay market rate. Validation is intended to make downtown more accessible to customers.”

George Benford is the new chair of the DBAC and he says the board voted on the April letter asking the two sides to settle the matter quickly because members didn’t want the Water Street Garage to close, something Brown at that time had not ruled out in his ongoing dispute with the city.

Brown filed suit against the city in March, claiming he’s being forced to keep the Water Street Garage rates below market rate—and below the rates charged in the city-owned Market Street Garage. The city sued Brown April 29, alleging it didn’t get right of first refusal on parking spaces Wells Fargo sold Brown.

Coming up with a petition on parking wasn’t on the agenda at the May 25 DBAC meeting, Benford says. “The gentleman from Violet Crown stood up and wanted to start a petition,” he says. “Emotions got a little high.”

When the question was asked whether parking should be like a public utility, Benford says he was one of two there who thought the garage should be private.

Susan Payne serves as chair of the DBAC marketing subcommittee. Photo Jackson Smith
Susan Payne serves as chair of the DBAC marketing subcommittee. Photo Jackson Smith

Payne Ross e-mailed a petition and a notice for a June 2 DBAC “open and impartial discussion on the future of parking garages” in downtown Charlottesville at Violet Crown. Payne Ross principal Susan Payne says DBAC hasn’t taken a position on the parking issue and she’s representing her client, Violet Crown. “This isn’t a DBAC petition,” she says.

“I think there’s been a lack of sunshine on this whole business,” says Payne. “People would like to know what going on. Misinformation or lack of information makes people uncomfortable.”

Citing litigation, Brown declines to comment on the petition. “The city and I are working toward a resolution,” he says.

Joan Fenton, owner of Quilts Unlimited and J. Fenton Too, says she pays $90 a month for parking validation. “I think the city should provide some of the parking downtown,” she says. “If you don’t have parking, you’ve killed the goose that laid the golden egg.”

Fenton doesn’t want the city to sell its share of the Water Street Garage because, she says, the city historically has sold properties they shouldn’t, such as the current McGuireWoods site on Court Square at a time when there was discussion about the courts needing to be enlarged.

“I think the city should be a partner in making neighborhoods thrive,” she says. “This neighborhood needs parking.”

Fenton has no problem with the city subsidizing Violet Crown. “That’s not unprecedented,” she says, pointing out that the city gave money to the Paramount and the Sprint Pavilion. “If that’s what helped get that theater here, great,” she says. “This is a huge draw.”

“We bring 1,000 people a night downtown,” says Crane. “That’s a good thing for downtown and that’s a good thing for CPC.”

The DBAC meeting at the Violet Crown will be held at 5:30pm tonight and is open to the public.