Categories
News

In brief: Worst state to vote, bug-free buses, facial hair for charity and more

We’re No. 49

Virginia ranks as one of the worst states in the country when it comes to ease of voting, according to a recent study from Northern Illinois University. Our state has slipped in the “cost of voting index” since 1996, when we ranked No. 42, to the “second most difficult” place to vote in 2016—just ahead of Mississippi, says co-author Michael Pomante.

Voter fraud is often cited as the reason for the restrictions, but Pomante says, “We don’t see voter fraud in other states that make it easier to vote.”

And what does No. 1 look like? That would be Oregon, home to automatic voter registration and where every voter on the rolls is mailed a ballot, which can be mailed or dropped off, says Pomante. “It makes voter turnout much higher.”

The next step for researchers is to look at voter disenfranchisement, says Pomante. “We do know there’s a correlation with minority population and voting. States with higher minority populations make it more difficult to vote.”

And on the cost of voting index, most Southern states wallow in the bottom half of the scale.

Reasons why the Old Dominion is so voter unfriendly:

  • Voter registration deadline: It’s three weeks before Election Day, while some states have same-day registration, automatic registration, or even pre-registration for those about to turn 18.
  • Photo ID: without it, voters have to cast provisional ballots.
  • No early voting.
  • Absentee voting: You’d better have a
    darn good excuse to do so.
  • Felon disenfranchisement: While not quite as bad as Florida, where 10 percent of
    the citizens can’t vote because they’ve spent time in jail, Virginians who have served their time have to petition the governor to get back their voting rights.

Quote of the week

“We’ve got to do a better job of teaching critical thinking to young people so they won’t be suckered by hate mongering.”—Martin Luther King III at the Virginia Film Festival


In brief

Rebel flags banned

The Charlottesville City School Board voted unanimously November 1 to prohibit wearing hate symbols such as Confederate, Nazi, and KKK imagery across the division. Albemarle, which has been sued in the past for restricting images on students’ clothes, is still wrestling with the issue.

Another UVA frat racial incident

UVA’s Student Hip-Hop Organization and I.M.P. Society denounced “blatant discrimination and violence” at an October 27 party they hosted at Beta Theta Pi, the Cav Daily reports. After deciding not to allow additional guests, white guys guarding the doors let their friends in, and fraternity members set up a separate, exclusive space from other partygoers, creating an unwelcome environment for minority students. The fraternity apologized November 2.

‘Graduation rapist’ in news again

Jeffrey Miller, formerly known as Jeffrey Kitze. Photo: Virginia Department of Corrections

Jeffrey Kitze was convicted of raping his sister’s UVA law school roommate in 1989. And he was back in jail for probation violations for stalking a local woman in 2013, when he changed his name to Jeffrey Ted Miller. In May, he moved to New York, where a woman recently requested a protective order against him, CBS19 reports.

Books are back

Another used bookstore will take the place of the Downtown Mall’s now-closed Read It Again, Sam, according to landlord Joan Fenton. She says new tenant Daphne Spain will open the doors of Second Act in February.

Cost of grooming?

Some Charlottesville police are fighting childhood cancer by not shaving their facial hair until February. “Officers will be allowed to grow beards and donate the money they typically spend on shaving and grooming to benefit the UVA Children’s Hospital Cancer Clinic,” according to a CPD press release on the Winter Wool campaign. Here’s hoping some CPD members are used to expensive shaves.


Transit boss declares CAT buses bug-free

During the summer, C-VILLE Weekly learned of Charlottesville Area Transit drivers being plagued by irritations that they attributed to bug bites. The city confirmed it was aware of “two or three cases,” but said the drivers had not seen the bugs they believed responsible for the bites.

“They have never found a thing,” says transit director John Jones. “There aren’t any bugs on the buses. There are bugs on people.”

When passengers visibly sporting bugs catch the CAT, says Jones, “We call Foster’s Pest Control immediately.”

City buses are vacuumed every night, cleaned every week, and bug-bombed regularly, he says. In fact, one driver’s rash came from the cleaning products. “They’re harsh,” says Jones.

A new trolley will have hard plastic seats to further thwart insect infestations, he says.

He also notes that a sofa in the drivers lounge that employees wouldn’t touch was replaced by a leather one that turned up in the city warehouse. “One of the judges downtown was getting rid of some nice furniture.”

Jones reassures CAT riders: “We never found an infestation of bed bugs or anything.”

Categories
News

Rescinded: Felons who registered to vote do not pass go

For DeShon Langston, having his right to vote restored—and then unrestored—was like having a really nice dream and waking up to reality. That’s his reaction to a 4-3 Supreme Court of Virginia decision July 22 that the state constitution did not give Governor Terry McAuliffe the authority to restore voting rights en masse, as he did April 22 for more than 200,000 felons.

By July 29, the Virginia Department of Elections had placed all of those names back on the prohibited voter list. This week, people like Langston, who had registered to vote, will get letters advising them their registration has been canceled.

When he got out of prison in 2005 for drug distribution charges, Langston, 41, returned to his home state of Michigan, where felon voting rights are restored automatically upon release from prison. “The first time I ever voted was in 2008 in Michigan for Barack Obama,” he says. “I was on probation.”

But he returned to Virginia, which doesn’t make it so easy and requires felons to petition the governor to get their voting rights back. Encouraged by Virginia Organizing’s Harold Folley, Langston previously tried to get his voting rights restored online, but was told he’d need to provide more information. “I’ve got a wife, two young kids, two jobs,” he says. “I got other things on my mind.”

When McAuliffe signed his blanket restoration, “it felt like a step up for the future, where I can participate in my local government,” says Langston.

He wonders about the GOP-led opposition to him voting. “Is that how Virginia really feels about felons working to get their lives together?” he asks. And he’s convinced the restrictions on felon voting are racially motivated because the majority of felons are African-American. “Whatever their motivation is, it’s not benefiting me,” he says.

curtis-gilmore-eze
Curtis Gilmore Jr. wants to give back and not be seen as a second-class citizen. Photo Eze Amos

Curtis Gilmore Jr., 55, felt like he earned having his rights restored. He, too, was convicted of drug charges and has been out of prison since December 22, 2009. Gilmore works at Blue Moon Diner and is trying to be a productive citizen, and “not feel like I’m second class,” he says.

Now he wants to live a more conventional life, where before, “I always lived in the dark world—a life that could get you killed or get you locked up,” he says. He has seven grown children. “None of them turned out like me, thank God,” he says, putting his hands together in a prayer gesture.

It took Gilmore more than five years to pay $5,000 in fines so he could get his driver’s license back.

“I’m being restored,” he says. “Getting my rights back is one of the things I have to do. I was excited about getting to vote,” although he says he wasn’t disappointed when he heard the court had reversed the governor’s measure. “I know how politics work,” he says.

Delegate Rob Bell, a Republican who is running for attorney general, says it’s no secret he was one of those who challenged McAuliffe’s order and who helped expose those who were ineligible on the restoration list.

“We had policy concerns about treating everyone the same, and we had constitutional concerns,” he says. Under McAuliffe’s order, “there will be some very bad characters who qualify,” he says.

Bell, a former Orange County prosecutor, interviewed lawyers to take the case and checked in with other commonwealth’s attorneys. Jim Fisher in Fauquier County ran the names of a few people he knew wouldn’t qualify, and found a guy serving a life sentence, says Bell. He reached out to other prosecutors who checked high-profile cases and “the dam broke.”

One found a sex offender who was a fugitive noncitizen who had his rights restored. Another discovered 132 sex offenders who were civilly committed. “It got worse and worse,” says Bell. “It underlined the benefits of [restoring voting rights] case by case.”

Bell insists his opposition to McAuliffe’s order is not to disenfranchise black voters, and he points to a PolitiFacts investigation that says Virginia’s ban on felons voting is not a Jim Crow-era law. It notes the ban on felons dates to 1830, when only white men were given the right to vote.

Bell says he doesn’t object to felons getting their voting rights back, but he doesn’t want it an automatic process. “If someone turns their life around, everyone is delighted,” he says. “When people approach and ask me about this, I always ask if they’ve applied. For nonviolent felons, it’s not this big application.”

On August 4, registrars in Charlottesville, which had 86 felons who registered to vote, and in Albemarle, which had 82, received lists of names of those who had been unregistered.

McAuliffe has vowed he will sign letters restoring rights to the nearly 13,000 felons who registered to vote under his executive order.

Both Langston and Gilmore say they’ll register to vote if their rights are restored again. Langston is more interested in participating in local and state elections, which affect his family. “That’s what I care about,” he says,

And Gilmore wants to not be seen as a second-class citizen. “If I can vote my one vote, I can make a difference,” he says. “And I can talk about politics.”