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In brief: Some kids lobby, some get married and some listen to Drake

Mental health focus

Lucas Johnson isn’t old enough to vote yet, but the 17-year-old Monticello High senior and his peers from two other county high schools—Choetsow Tenzin at Albemarle and Alex Moreno at Western Albemarle—didn’t let that stop them from demanding the General Assembly support more school instruction on mental health.

“I had a best friend who admitted to me she wanted to drive her car through a guardrail,” says Johnson. “That really shook me. Alex had to go to two funerals for people who’d committed suicide. And Choetsow had numerous friends who struggled with mental health.”

The teens want more time devoted to mental health in ninth and 10th grade health classes, and they have proposed changes to the Code of Virginia to say mental health must be included. “We came out of our health classes knowing nothing about mental health,” says Johnson. “We were concerned we didn’t know how to help.”

The three met at the Sorensen Institute High School Leaders Program last summer, and did preliminary work on the bill there. They met with state Senator Creigh Deeds, who has been a leading advocate for strengthening mental health services in Virginia after his son, Gus, committed suicide in 2013.

And they have powerful allies in the House of Delegates, where Rob Bell is patron of the bill and Delegate Steve Landes, chair of the House Education Committee, is copatron.

“We went to Richmond on January 27 to lobby,” says Johnson, and they have been two other times since the General Assembly has been in session, scheduling a “slew of meetings” to get copatrons and testifying.

Their efforts appear to have paid off. The Deeds-backed Senate bill passed 39-1 February 13, and the House bill got a unanimous nod that same day.

Johnson has been interested in politics and policy for years and says this “has only furthered” his interest, especially as it could bring actual change.

“We came out of our health classes knowing nothing about mental health.” Monticello High school student Lucas Johnson

Flu fatality

The first flu-related death in the Charlottesville area was reported February 16 at the University of Virginia Health System, where clinicians have categorized this flu season as “moderately heavy,” and have seen 450 confirmed cases since October.

Credit Image: © Zach D Roberts/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press

University regs

After the summer’s white supremacist torch rally that ended in a brawl on Grounds, UVA School of Law Dean Risa Goluboff is leading the charge to re-examine how the school regulates events. Her recommendations to the faculty senate require people who aren’t students, faculty or staff to reserve their space ahead of time, with reservations capped at 25 people for up to two hours on weekdays.

Stops and frisks

Charlottesville Police detentions of those who are not arrested continue to be predominantly African-American (around 70 percent), and have increased, according to documents civil rights attorney Jeff Fogel obtained under the Freedom of Information Act. He says last year’s 151 detentions far exceed previous years, and that former chief Al Thomas ordered tracking of the stops halted.

Cat’s out of the bag

Scottsville Town Council voted on a trap-neuter-return program as a humane way to deal with the town’s feral cat colonies on February 20 after C-VILLE Weekly went to press. Scottsville Weekly reported in 2013 that the town’s Cat Man—Bud Woodward—had trapped more than 100 cats and taken them to be spayed. Apparently the problem persists.

Run, Kate, run

Kate Fletcher, a 43-year-old English teacher at Louisa County High School, will attempt to run for 24 continuous hours starting at the high school’s track at 8:30am on March 29, in an effort to raise money for the LCHS newspaper class and college-bound seniors.

Quote of the Week: “8th grade to now…still get the butterflies. I love you #2/18/18 @AlexaJenkins_” —UVA sophomore guard Kyle Guy proposes to his longtime girlfriend during the No. 1 basketball team’s eight-day break

 

Tracking top songs

Drake

Based on the results of C-VILLE’s online poll, rock hits and rap wits share common ground when it comes to the unique blend of area high schooler’s musical taste, showing the world that the next generation of humans might not be so doomed after all. And even if they are, they’ll have some awesome playlists to accompany the apocalypse.

Drake took the No. 1 spot with his song “God’s Plan,” followed closely by Cardi B’s “Bodak Yellow.” And a surprising tie for third was a mix of old and new, with Billy Joel and Frank Ocean fans making their voices heard. Rounding out the results was an eclectic mix of genres ranging from Led Zeppelin’s “Stairway to Heaven” and Queen’s “Killer Queen,” to Lil Skies’ “Nowadays” and Ed Sheeran’s “Perfect.”

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Magic bullet: Trademark issues halt Harry Potter event for a spell

By Natalie Jacobsen

This year’s Halloween was supposed to mark the fourth, and predictably largest, Harry Potter festival Scottsville had ever hosted. But the magic was quelled with a phone call from Warner Bros. Entertainment citing trademark infringement.

The town’s spellbinding transformation, including businesses and their owners, has transfixed children, students and adults alike.

“Halloween was always a big deal for Scottsville,” says Kristin Freshwater of Baine’s Books & Coffee. “Living in a rural area growing up, we would have to drive to each house to trick-or-treat…to make it easier, Scottsville had its own Halloween: Every shop would hand out candy.” When Freshwater transformed Baine’s into Honeydukes (the fictional candy shop in the Harry Potter series) one year, the spark for a whole festival was ignited. “We ran wild with it—nonprofits, vendors, shops all jumped on board.”

To cope with the burden of planning an annual Harry Potter Halloween, Freshwater formed the Ministry of Magic, a group of a dozen shop owners and creative people in town. Two other festival heavyweights are Chris Hornsby and Nakahili Womack, of Om Tattoo & Massage, which was transformed into Ollivander’s Wand Shop.

Four years ago, Scottsville saw a handful of shops embrace the Harry Potter Halloween theme, with 800 “muggles”—non-magical people—visiting. Last year, 25 shops and locations, not including a marketplace with a dozen independent vendors, joined the fun, and nearly 10,000 visitors poured in, brandishing wands and donning Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry house colors of Ravenclaw, Slytherin and more.

James River Brewery became The Leaky Cauldron, and a life-size dragon sat atop Tavern on the James, aka Hog’s Head Inn. Victory Hall swapped names with the Great Hall, welcoming young witches and wizards to the sorting hat ceremony. The library became Flourish and Blotts Bookseller, and even St. John’s Episcopal Church didn’t want to miss out on the magic: “They researched to recreate the cemetery and look of St. Jerome’s Church at Godric’s Hollow…adding tombstones of Lily and James Potter, even the Peverell family,” says Freshwater. “I was in awe.”

But a few weeks prior to Halloween weekend this year, Freshwater received the call. The Warner Bros. rep was “really friendly about it,” and explained countless festivals across the nation were unwittingly using its intellectual property, says Freshwater.

Warner Bros. representatives told her businesses cannot actively use trademarked Harry Potter-related names but nonprofits, including libraries and churches, can. Without enough time to switch gears for this year’s event, it was canceled. Going forward, Freshwater says the event will be a Wizarding Fest.

“We are disappointed, but now we have an opportunity to create original, inspired names,” she says. “We all love the Harry Potter books, films and J.K. Rowling—we want to respect her intellectual property.”

Other Harry Potter events nationwide have had to evolve or adapt to Warner Bros. guidelines, or face legal consequences. The largest in the nation, the Harry Potter Festival in Jefferson, Wisconsin, has lawyers in constant communication with Warner Bros. to seek permission for certain name uses.

Some Harry Potter festivals in nearby cities, including Staunton and Roanoke, are still “flying under the radar,” Freshwater says.

Freshwater believes the magic will be back in full force next year, albeit with some changes. “You will see new names, some new decorations…but it’ll still be magical,” she says. “Scottsville is a tight-knit community…if anyone needs help or has an idea, we’ll talk about it and make it happen.”

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The buzz in Scottsville, the state’s first Bee City

One in every three bites of food we take has been touched by a pollinator. And Scottsville—recently the first town in Virginia to become a Bee City—is sharing the buzz on the role pollinators play in the community.

On June 24, during National Pollinator Week, Scottsville will host its first pollinator celebration in which, among other activities, local beekeeper and business owner Heather Stertzer will answer questions after a screening of More Than Honey, a documentary about the world’s declining bee population.

To get an official designation from Bee City USA, municipalities must commit to create sustainable habitats. To comply, Scottsville leaders have sourced pollinator-friendly flowers from an organic nursery for the butterfly garden in the 100 block of Main Street, and Mayor Nancy Gill has prompted employees to use organic sprays during maintenance. The Scottsville Center for Arts and Nature currently hosts two honeybee colonies and is working on a long-term plan for potentially housing more in the future.

Stertzer, who opened Scottsville Supply Company with her wife in November 2015, says one of their goals is to increase the success rate of area colonies through specialized beekeeping classes.

“Bees, butterflies and other pollinating insects are part of the ecosystem, so if we fall out of balance with one, the ripple effect will cause a larger problem,” she says. “I see bees as an example of the larger picture for our environment. Bugs are a good pulse for our planet.”

Bee-lieve it or not, Stertzer says she loves her hobby because of the calming effect it has on her. “After years of stressful jobs, including law enforcement and deployments while in the Army National Guard, I find it relaxing to be surrounded by thousands of bees. Seems a bit odd after saying it.”

Search 1st Annual Scottsville Pollinator Celebration on Facebook for a full list of activities.

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Missing doctors: Patient seeks records after clinic closes

When a medical practice in Scottsville shut down and relocated to Charlottesville, a lupus-stricken patient was frantic, thinking 15 years’ worth of her medical records had vanished.

Jennie Hamilton-Thorne of Keene says she last visited a doctor at Revolution Health Center in December and was not notified the practice was moving in January. When she went back again in late April, the clinic had closed. She says she learned from Scottsville Pharmacy that the “doctors had left town.”

“I sent an e-mail in May, asking for my records because I did not wish to travel out to Charlottesville,” says Hamilton-Thorne. “I received no reply, so I called and left messages. I even wrote them.”

She says she received no response, leading her to believe that her doctor had gone missing and the practice was ignoring her.

“I hadn’t seen him in weeks or heard from anyone, so I involved the Virginia Board of Medicine to help obtain my records,” says Hamilton-Thorne. She learned that her physician had an address change. The board also assisted her in a written request for her records.

One of Hamilton-Thorne’s doctors wasn’t missing at all—but instead, had left the practice. Dr. Martin Katz is now with Downtown Family Health Care in Charlottesville.

According to the Code of Virginia, physicians are required to transfer patient records when a practice relocates, is sold or closes.

In an e-mail to Hamilton-Thorne, Revolution says it attempted to notify patients of its move starting in late 2015, and that it changed its phone message, posted signs, sent e-mails and in some cases letters to patients without e-mail.

Hamilton-Thorne notes that she received her first response from Revolution Health Center after contacting C-VILLE, and she found an unsigned e-mail lurking in her junk mail June 22 that offered a brief apology followed by an explanation of Revolution’s attempt to notify patients of its move.

Revolution says it mailed Hamilton-Thorne’s records June 21 after receiving her e-mail request and before C-VILLE contacted the clinic.

Revolution says it did not receive Hamilton-Thorne’s previous e-mails and phone calls. “I do not remember receiving a phone call nor voice message from you in May either,” writes Stacey Forren in an e-mail to Hamilton-Thorne.

“A written medical records request must be received by Revolution Health Center to have a patient’s medical records transferred either to themselves or another physician’s office,” Forren says.

All medical record requests will be processed within 48 hours upon receipt, she says. Revolution Health Center will not e-mail records to patients or other physicians’ offices; however, records can be faxed or mailed via the United States Postal Service. Patients may also pick up their records from the office if they’ve made prior arrangements to do so.

Hamilton-Thorne consulted Revolution’s website, which says the grand opening of the new center is anticipated in mid-2016 and provides details of the location of the temporary clinic.

C-VILLE reached out to Dr. Zachary Bush, one of the senior founding partners at Revolution Health Center. “At this time he is not giving any interviews with the local media as the transition to Charlottesville is not complete,” says an e-mail signed by the Revolution Health Team.

On June 25, Hamilton-Thorne received some of her records and says she’s continuing to lobby for the rest.

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‘Inherently dangerous’: Route 20 claims another life

Even before Juliana Porter became the latest motorist to die October 4 on Route 20 South, longtime commuter Edward Strickler had gone to an Albemarle County transportation meeting to voice his concerns about the road to Scottsville.

He’s seen a lot of fatal or near-fatal accidents since he moved to Scottsville 20 years ago. Strickler estimates that at least three times a week, he and his partner will see dangerous behavior on the road that causes them to go, “Whoa, look at that,” he says. “When someone is gaming the passing zones or passing on a double-yellow line, you can’t do anything. There’s no shoulder to get over on.”

Six people have died on the Constitution Route since 2011, according to Albemarle County Police, but the changes Strickler would like to see—reduced speed limits, eliminated passing zones and added shoulders—are not likely to happen, says the Virginia Department of Transportation.

Porter, 25, a UVA med student from Norfolk, was driving north on Route 20 when her Honda Civic crashed head-on into a Ford Explorer about a mile north of Keene. She became the county’s 11th fatality this year, say Albemarle police. She was valedictorian of her high school class, graduated magna cum laude from Davidson College in 2012 and was engaged to be married next year, according to her obituary.

Strickler, who works in the UVA School of Medicine, says it was not the first time a young doctor has died. He recalls a colleague who had just finished his training and was preparing to start an independent practice when he crashed on Route 20. His peers at the hospital worked unsuccessfully to save his life, and he died leaving a widow and young children. Strickler remembers well his funeral, and says, “In the midst of so much loving care for the dead and the living there was always the truth that this death, this sorrow, this loss were all avoidable.”

Strickler wants the speed limit from the town of Scottsville to Scottsville Elementary School reduced from 35mph to 25mph. While the lower speed would reduce the severity of an accident, says Joel DeNunzio, VDOT’s resident administrator for Albemarle, “The reality is that people are not going to drive that slow.”

Passing zones are another area of concern for Strickler after seeing people make dangerous maneuvers. VDOT will take a look at those, says DeNunzio.

While traveling in rural Maryland recently, Strickler noted its “marvelously wide paved shoulders” and wonders why Albemarle’s rural roads can’t have the same.

Two problems, responds DeNunzio. Part of it is the topography of rural Maryland compared with here. Roads closer to the mountains have fewer shoulders, he says.

“I love the idea of wide shoulders,” which would greatly improve the safety of Route 20 between Charlottesville and Scottsville, he says. However, adding a 4′ shoulder would cost between $15 million and $20 million. Instead, DeNunzio says he’ll recommend spot improvements, which are more likely to find funding, and adding Route 20 to the long-range transportation plan for rural roads.

“Route 20 is an old road that has become a commuter route,” he says, and it would take major reconstruction to straighten curves and flatten hills.

Earl Smith, candidate for the Scottsville seat on the Board of Supervisors, has been riding on that road since he was 12 years old. “What we have now is like a superhighway compared to before,” he says.

Smith remembers “a horrible wreck” in the late 1970s where “six or seven” kids riding in a pickup truck were killed on the same stretch of road where Porter died.

He says he hears a lot of complaints about speeding, and he thinks a lot of the dangerous passing on double-yellow lines comes from people driving too slowly. “A tremendous amount of people are scared to death to drive 20,” he says. “I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve ranted about them going 25 or 30mph and won’t pull over.”

Smith agrees that Route 20 South can be perilous, but says he doesn’t think it’s any more dangerous than Black Cat or Old Lynchburg roads.

“It’s always been an issue,” says Rick Randolph, who’s also running to represent the Scottsville District on the Board of Supervisors. “It’s a longstanding concern. People feel it’s best to straighten it out. Given the precarious nature of VDOT funding and the cost that would be involved, the chances are very slim we’ll see that happen.”

Randolph, too, points out that Route 20 isn’t the only inherently dangerous thoroughfare in the county and lists Route 53—“that’s an extremely dangerous road”—and routes 22/231 and 20 North.

Randolph and Smith both suggest signage might be a good idea to urge caution. “People need to remind themselves they need to drive prudently,” says Randolph.

Strickler has another idea for improving safety with more community policing and the presence of officers, “particularly at commuting time.”