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Culture Living

Fighting hunger: As food insecurity rises, local nonprofits step up their efforts

Food insecurity in Albemarle County is on the rise. Feeding America, a national hunger relief organization, reports that while 11.8 percent of Charlottesville’s population was food insecure in 2018, that number is expected to rise to 15.1 percent by the end of 2020. Accordingly, the Blue Ridge Area Food Bank told Richmond’s NBC12 in August that 12 percent of its June customers were new clients needing emergency food assistance for the first time.

There are a variety of local places supporting the projected three in every 20 Charlottesvillians who are unsure where they’ll find their next meal. The organizations’ donation needs have changed during the pandemic, and the holiday season is always a crucial time, so here’s how you can help.

Blue Ridge Food Bank

What it does: Ninety-seven percent of the Blue Ridge Area Food Bank’s pantries across Virginia have stayed open to provide groceries during the pandemic, thanks to safety restrictions including drive-through food pickups and pre-packaged meal boxes.

How to help: According to the BRAFB website, a one-dollar donation can fund four meals. Volunteer opportunities are also available for low-risk workers. brafb.org

Loaves & Fishes

What it does: Loaves & Fishes, the largest agency of the Blue Ridge Area Food Bank, supplies groceries twice a month for families who need extra assistance filling their pantry. It currently operates a drive-through grocery pickup where clients accept bags from masked volunteers without leaving their cars.

How to help: Limited volunteering opportunities are available. Monetary donations can be made on the website. Thanksgiving dishes (anything from canned yams to instant mashed potatoes to frozen turkeys) are in high demand, as are diapers. cvilleloaves.org

Meals on Wheels

What it does: Meals on Wheels of Charlottesville/Albemarle is a nonprofit that has delivered hot meals five days a week since 1977. The organization connects with the most isolated members of Charlottesville in the most isolating time of their lives, ensuring that secluded seniors are checked on daily.

How to help: Over 90 percent of the meals provided by Meals on Wheels are directly subsidized by monetary donations, which can be made on the website. Contact MoW directly if you’re interested in providing physical donations or volunteering to do anything from answering phones to driving delivery vans. For holiday gift baskets, the organization is looking for mugs, tea, cocoa, puzzle books, winter accessories, and toiletries. cvillemeals.org

The Haven

What it does: When Charlottesville residents find themselves without a home, The Haven works to make that situation “rare, brief, and nonrecurring.” In addition to providing temporary housing, the shelter helps unhoused families seek new residences to call home.

How to help: The Haven website lists what a financial donation would fund, from $47 (a day’s worth of showers) to $2,1000 (the move-in cost for a one-bedroom apartment). Volunteering is limited due to safety restrictions, but low-risk volunteers can apply. In addition to monetary contributions, The Haven is looking for donations of coffee, as well as volunteers to work breakfast shifts over the holidays. thehaven.org

Emergency Food Network

What it does: Customers in need can call the Emergency Food Network once a month to receive kits for three healthy meals. No financial proof of need is required. Meal bags include non-perishables like canned tuna and fresh items like bread and milk.

How to help: All volunteer slots are full, and due to COVID-19 restrictions, food donations can’t be accepted; financial contributions are preferred. According to the Emergency Food Network, small operating expenses mean that about 91 cents of every dollar is spent on food. emergencyfoodnetwork.org

Local Food Hub

What it does: Local Food Hub works to connect local farmers with extra food to local consumers without fresh food. ItsFresh Farmacy program provides those in need with biweekly installments of locally sourced fruits and vegetables.

How to help: Food is already provided by area farmers, so monetary donations are the way to go. Thirty dollars is enough to send a bag of locally grown produce to someone in need. localfoodhub.org

Cultivate Charlottesville

What it does: Cultivate Charlottesville has helped students build gardens at schools across the city. According to CC, gardens built through the program have involved over 2,000 volunteers and produced over 80,000 pounds of food as part of the Food Justice Network, a group of more than 35 organizations working not only to alleviate hunger in the short term, but to attack the problem at its roots.

How to help: Volunteers are needed for everything from planting, harvesting, and weed control to outreach and research. Those interested in the organizational aspects of food justice can intern in the Cultivate Charlottesville office. cultivatecharlottesville.org

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Coronavirus News

Unsettled: The Haven, PACEM face challenges housing guests during the pandemic

As the number of coronavirus cases continue to rise in our area, life has become increasingly dangerous for those who do not have a place to call home. To protect these vulnerable community members, local shelters have pivoted from their usual operations and redoubled their efforts over the past several months—but not without challenges.

For months, these organizations have been scrambling to find housing for people who need it.

In March, People and Congregations Engaged in Ministry, or PACEM, which works with local community groups to provide shelter for the homeless, began housing women at The Haven and men at Key Recreation Center.

In late April, the Thomas Jefferson Area Coalition for the Homeless was able to secure funding for 30 rooms at a local hotel. All six of the women housed at The Haven, and about a dozen men from Key Rec, were transferred there.

The rest of the men, however, had to remain in a group setting, because the hotel rooms were reserved only for high-risk individuals, according to Jayson Whitehead, executive director of PACEM.

PACEM then managed to set up another women’s shelter at Thomas Jefferson Memorial Church in May. And once TJACH reserved 20 more rooms at the hotel the following month, these women were also transferred there, along with the men who were staying at Key Rec, regardless of their risk status.

But PACEM is no longer able to take in guests who aren’t high-risk, due to the limited number of hotel rooms available.

“Everyone who was in the congregate setting, whether they were women or men, did have a place in the hotel,” says Stephen Hitchcock, The Haven’s executive director. “That’s not the case now. If someone is experiencing homelessness, but is not [high risk], given their age or medical vulnerability, they do not have an emergency option [with us].”

Those who are not high risk can go to The Salvation Army shelter, he says. It’s often at capacity, though, and is currently unable to accept new guests, thanks to recent state restrictions.

In the spring, as a response to the economic fallout caused by the pandemic, Governor Ralph Northam and the Supreme Court of Virginia ordered a moratorium on evictions. On June 29, that moratorium was lifted, causing concern among advocates for the unhoused. Northam and the state supreme court reinstated the eviction ban on August 7, but in July, over 15,000 eviction hearings were heard in court, and more than 3,000 families were evicted across Virginia, according to the Legal Aid Justice Center.

From July 1 to August 7, landlords brought 73 unique eviction cases against Albemarle County renters and 57 cases against Charlottesville renters. Of those 130 cases, 28 have already been decided against the tenants, and dozens more remain on the docket in coming weeks.

However, Anthony Haro, executive director of TJACH, says it is “too early to say” if there’s been an increase in homelessness due to lifting the moratorium.

“I don’t think we’ve really seen it yet…we are anticipating it,” says Haro. “[But] there are programs that are stepping up to keep people in housing.”

The state is currently running a rent and mortgage relief program, which has about “$2 million available locally to help families facing eviction,” says Haro. “It’s been very, very busy. There’s lots of people reaching out right now…It’s not going to meet all of the need, but we’re hoping that it’s going to prevent a lot of those evictions that we are anticipating.”

The Community Resource Helpline, Charlottesville Housing RELIEF Fund, Alliance for Interfaith Ministries, and Charlottesville Housing Assistance Program are also providing relief to residents in Charlottesville, and surrounding counties.

For the guests it is able to house at the hotel, PACEM provides a variety of services, including daily meals, group therapy, and weekly checkups (performed by UVA medical students). Staff also sets up and brings guests to doctor’s appointments, which are covered by TJACH.

Due to the extensive health and safety measures both staff and guests have taken, there have been no COVID-19 cases among those at the hotel, according to PACEM’s Women’s Case Manager Heather Kellams.

“The women have said that, being at the hotel, they feel much safer. They feel that their mental and physical health needs are being met in this setting,” she says. “They have a chance to be more grounded, so that they can really look at their goals…and work on becoming more stabilized.”

Kellams says that guests are “really bored,” though, and she’s asking for donations of arts and crafts supplies, games, books, and other “enriching activities” to keep them occupied.

“Somebody could come in and cut their hair while wearing masks,” she adds. “Those are the kind of things that would really be helpful.”

The Haven and PACEM ultimately hope to transition guests to permanent housing, using the thousands of dollars in donations they’ve received. But the pandemic has made this more challenging than ever.

“We have a lot of dollars to house people. There’s just not affordable housing available,” says Hitchcock. “A lot of landlords are very skittish right now…They’re waiting to see what UVA does, and what it means for students to come back. They’ve got students in leases generally from August to August, and that directly affects us—that’s the affordable housing.”

“It’s been ironic to be heavily resourced financially but with a dearth of affordable housing,” he adds. “We’ve always had this affordable housing issue, but it’s acutely the case right now.”

When the pandemic does finally come to an end, Hitchcock is hopeful there will be an even greater push for affordable housing in Charlottesville.

“It feels like the general public is beginning to understand that homelessness is at its root a housing crisis,” he says. “And what is being amplified is that housing is health care. Everyone being safe—including folks who are extremely poor or housing insecure—is public safety.”

Updated 8/12

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News

The Power Issue: People and organizations that hold us together in tough times

 

Every year, C-VILLE publishes a power issue. It’s usually a rundown of local real-estate moguls and entrepreneurs, tech tycoons, arts leaders, and big donors. This year’s issue is a little different—most of the people and groups listed here aren’t the richest folks in town. They don’t own the most land, they don’t run the biggest companies. But when things got really rocky, they stepped up, and exercised the power they do have to help those around them. This isn’t a comprehensive or objective list, of course, but we hope it highlights some of the many different forms that power can take in a community like ours. Dan Goff, Brielle Entzminger, and Ben Hitchcock

The Organizers: Black Lives Matter movement in Charlottesville 

There’s a revolution brewing. Activists all over the country and the world are taking a stand against police brutality, and Charlottesville is no different. Over the last few weeks, local black activists young and old have organized events in support of the national Black Lives Matter movement and its associated goals, including a march from the Charlottesville Police Department to Washington Park and a Defund the Police Block Party that marched from the John Paul Jones Arena parking lot to hold the intersection of Barracks Road and Emmet Street. Other organizations such as Congregate Charlottesville and its Anti-Racist Organizing Fund are supporting the activists calling for defunding the police department. Little by little, change is happening—on June 11, Charlottesville City Schools announced it will remove school resource officers and reallocate those funds for a new “school safety model.”—D.G.

Eze Amos: Photo: Eze Amos

The Documenters: C’ville Porchraits

How do we preserve art and community during a pandemic? It’s been a question addressed by many creatives, perhaps none more successfully than the creators of Cville Porch Portraits. Headed by Eze Amos, the “porchrait” takers, who have photographed 950 families outside their Charlottesville-area homes, also include Tom Daly, Kristen Finn, John Robinson, and Sarah Cramer Shields—all local photographers in need of work once the city shut down. The group has donated $40,000 to Charlottesville’s Emergency Relief Fund for Artists. “This is for everyone,” says Amos of the project, which has been successfully emulated by other photogs, including Robert Radifera.—D.G.

The Musicians: The Front Porch

As most concert venues were struggling to reschedule shows and refund ticket money, The Front Porch, Charlottesville’s beloved music school and performing space, wasted no time in pivoting to COVID-friendly programming. Executive Director Emily Morrison quickly set up Save the Music, a livestreamed concert series that brings performances by local artists like David Wax Museum and Lowland Hum to the comfort and safety of your home. If you haven’t tuned in yet, there’s still plenty of time—as the city tentatively reopens, Morrison recognizes that live music will likely be one of the last things to return, so she’s extended Save the Music to late August.—D.G.

 

Jay Pun. Photo: John Robinson

The Innovator: Jay Pun

All restaurant owners have had to get creative to keep their businesses alive during the pandemic, but almost no one has been as creative as Jay Pun, co-owner of both Chimm and Thai Cuisine and Noodle House. Pun has gone further than just a pickup/delivery model by starting a virtual cooking series on Instagram and Facebook Live, and selling kits to be used in tandem with the lessons. He’s also donated significant amounts of food to UVA health workers, and most recently has brought other Thai restaurants into the conversation: A recent discussion with the proprietor of famed Portland institution Pok Pok focused on food, but also touched on the issue of race in America.—D.G.

The Reporter: Jordy Yager

Through his work as a Digital Humanities Fellow at the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center and as a reporter for multiple local news outlets, journalist Jordy Yager addresses equity or the lack thereof in all its forms. This is showcased most notably in his Mapping Cville project, which takes on the enormous job of documenting Charlottesville’s history of racially restrictive housing deeds, but also through in-depth coverage of Home to Hope, a program dedicated to reintegrating formerly incarcerated citizens into society, and other studies on the redevelopment of Friendship Court and the day-to-day lives of refugees. Yager’s also extremely active on Twitter, retweeting the content of community organizers as well as his own work, and keeping his followers up to date on, well, almost everything.—D.G.

Kat Maybury (left) and Sherry Cook volunteering at the Haven. Photo: Zack Wajsgras

The Safe Places: The Haven and PACEM

Since the onset of the pandemic, the places that serve some of our community’s most vulnerable members have ramped up their efforts to keep guests and staff safe. Downtown day shelter The Haven has opened its doors to women who needed a place to sleep, while also continuing to provide its regular services, including daily to-go meals, with cleanliness and social distancing measures in place.

PACEM has remained open, serving more than 40 people per night, even though its volunteer staff is smaller than usual. Guests are screened for virus symptoms, and they’re given face masks, among other safety precautions, before being admitted to either the men’s or women’s shelter, where there’s at least six feet between every cot. Though it had to move its male guests out of a temporary space at Key Recreation Center on June 10, PACEM will offer shelter for women at Summit House until at least the end of the month.

Thanks to funding from the city, county, and a private donor, PACEM has also housed 30 high-risk homeless individuals in private rooms at a local hotel, in addition to providing them with daily meals and case management. Men who still need shelter after leaving Key Rec have been able to stay at the hotel for at least 30 days.—B.E.

The Sustainers: C’ville Mutual Aid Infrastructure

One of the most heartwarming nationwide responses to COVID-19, and all of the difficulties that came with it, was the widespread creation of mutual aid networks. Charlottesville joined the trend in March, creating a Facebook page for community members to request or offer “time, money, support, and resources.” Since it was launched, the page has gained hundreds of followers, and posts have ranged from pleas for a place to sleep to the donation of a

half-used Taco Bell gift card. The page’s moderators have also shared resources such as a continually updated list of when and where food-insecure community members can access pantries. Though it came about through dire circumstances, the C’ville Mutual Aid Infrastructure network is proof that our community looks after its own.—D.G.

Howie and Diane Long. Photo: Keith Sparbanie/AdMedia

The Nourishers: School lunches

Before COVID, over 6,000 students relied on our public schools for free (or reduced price) breakfast and lunch. To make sure no student has gone hungry since schools closed in March, Charlottesville City Schools and Albemarle County Public Schools have given away thousands of grab-and-go breakfasts and lunches to anyone under age 18, regardless of family income. With the help of school staff and volunteers, both districts have set up dozens of food distribution sites, as well as sent buses out on delivery routes every week. During spring break, when CCS was unable to distribute food, Pearl Island Catering and Mochiko Cville—backed by the Food Justice Network and area philanthropists Diane and Howie Long—stepped up and provided 4,000 meals to kids in neighborhoods with large numbers enrolled in free and reduced-price meal programs. Even though students are now on summer break, that hasn’t slowed down staff and volunteers, who are still hard at work—both districts plan to keep the free meal programs going until the fall.—B.E.

The Superheroes: Frontline workers

After Governor Ralph Northam issued his stay-at-home order in March, most Charlottesvillians did just that: stayed at home. But the city’s essential workers didn’t have that luxury. In the language of Northam’s executive order, these are employees of “businesses not required to close to the public.” Frontline workers’ jobs vary widely, from health care professionals to grocery store cashiers, but they all have one thing in common: The people who do them are required to put on their scrubs or their uniform and go into their physical place of employment every day, while the rest of us work from the safety of our sofa in a pair of sweatpants. Their reality is one that the majority of us haven’t experienced—and the least we can do is thank these workers for keeping our city running.—D.G. 

Jim Hingeley. Photo: Elli Williams

The Reformers: Commonwealth’s attorneys/Albemarle-Charlottesville Regional Jail

The area’s commonwealth’s attorneys are some of the most powerful people you might never have heard of. During normal times, Albemarle’s Jim Hingeley and Charlottesville’s Joe Platania have tremendous influence over sentencing decisions for those on trial in their localities. They’ve both worked toward progressive reforms since taking office, but since the pandemic took hold, they’ve accelerated their efforts.

The effect has been especially pronounced at the Albemarle-Charlottesville Regional Jail. Under the guidance of the commonwealth’s attorneys and Jail Superintendent Martin Kumer, around 90 inmates have been transferred to house arrest. As prisons across the state have fought coronavirus outbreaks, the ACRJ has yet to report a single case among those incarcerated.

“It’s a shame that it took this crisis to motivate the community to get behind decarceration,” Hingeley said at a panel in May, “but it’s happened now, and when the crisis has passed, we’re going to work to continue doing this.”—B.H. 

Zyahna Bryant. Photo: Eze Amos

The Voices: Charlottesville Twitter

“Twitter isn’t real life,” some say. (Most often, they say it on Twitter.) But Charlottesville’s ever-growing group of dedicated tweeters has recently used the platform to make real-life change.

The synergy between social media and protest is well-documented, and the demonstrations against police brutality that have taken place across town have been organized and publicized on Twitter, as well as on other social media platforms. Meanwhile, people like Matthew Gillikin, Rory Stolzenberg, and Sarah Burke have used Twitter to call out the police department for botching its collaboration with state forces and dragging its heels on revealing important budget details. And Molly “@socialistdogmom” Conger—perhaps Charlottesville Twitter’s most recognizable avatar—continues to digest and interpret dense city government meetings for the public, making real-life advocacy easier for everyone.

The effect is felt on UVA Grounds, as well—this month, tweeters shamed the university into changing its new athletics logo to remove a reference to the school’s historic serpentine walls, which were designed to conceal enslaved laborers. After UVA abruptly laid off its dining hall contract employees in March, outraged tweeters raised tens of thousands of dollars for those workers, while pushing the university to create an emergency contract worker assistance fund. And recently, Zyahna Bryant drew attention to UVA President Jim Ryan’s limp response to the protests that followed the death of George Floyd, when she tweeted her resignation from the school’s President’s Council on University Community Partnerships. Keep tweeting, people. It’s working.—B.H.

 

Updated 6/24 to clarify which organizers were responsible for recent demonstrations to support Black Lives Matter.

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News

Answering the call: PACEM seeks to create a permanent women’s shelter

Last August, Chinikqua Joseph’s Buckingham County home burned down. Thankfully, no one was injured or killed by the fire, but she, along with her mother and godmother, lost everything. They were homeless.

While looking for housing, Joseph stayed with friends, and later with a boyfriend. When that relationship became abusive, she had to find a new place to stay. Joseph has epilepsy, so it’s difficult for her to hold down a job, and she had trouble saving money for housing.

Just when she thought she would have no choice but to live on the street, Joseph learned about PACEM (People and Congregations Engaged in Ministry), which works with local congregations and community groups to provide overnight shelter, as well as food and resources, for the homeless during the colder months. 

Joseph is part of a startling rise in the number of local women seeking shelter at PACEM, says executive director Jayson Whitehead. In 2015, an average of 8 women per night sought shelter through PACEM, while in 2018 and 2019 the nightly average was 15. Last season, PACEM sheltered 73 women total. So far this year, the average has been 16 women per night.

In response to the growing need, advocates like Heather Kellams, PACEM’s women’s case manager, are hoping to extend the organization’s season, which currently ends in April, as well as build a permanent, year-round women’s shelter in Charlottesville. 

“Women are really the most vulnerable population,” Kellams says. She attributes the rise in those seeking shelter to a variety of causes, from domestic violence to mental illness to opioid addiction. Behind those, “it’s usually deep-rooted trauma,” she says. “When you start to peel back the skin of the onion of every woman, you find that these are women who are really just in fear and hurt, that are just striving for somewhere to…rebuild and enrich their lives.”

“The current [PACEM] model is transient and doesn’t really lend itself for a woman to be able to nest and grow,” Kellams says. And other local women’s shelters do not fully meet the need either. The Salvation Army’s shelter requires guests to pass a drug screen and breathalyzer, and the Shelter for Help in Emergency offers temporary housing only to victims of domestic violence. 

Kellams envisions a small shelter that would provide counseling and health care, and connect guests to work opportunities and community resources. Like PACEM’s current program, it would be low-barrier, meaning it would not require ID or screen for alcohol or drug use.

“I see deep potential in how [guests] could really develop and be positive, productive citizens, and heal from deep trauma, and actually return to their previous lives…but they won’t be able to do that unless they have a healing base that they can call their home,” Kellams says, “It’s the responsibility of our community to keep these women safe and not turn them out to the streets.”

Tamie Edwards has experienced the dangers of living on the street. After her husband was murdered last January in Charlottesville, Edwards could no longer afford to remain in their home. With no place to stay, she soon discovered PACEM, which gave her a place to sleep.

She left, briefly, when she got involved in another relationship. But that relationship turned abusive, and living on the Downtown Mall left her vulnerable to harassment and assault.

After nearly a month, Edwards returned to PACEM for help.

“I haven’t been able to find housing because of my income…I [receive] $700 a month” from SSI, Edwards says. “There are a lot of ladies in my situation…so having a women’s shelter would be really awesome.”

Kellams hopes to find a benefactor or partner who can purchase or donate an existing building to use for the shelter, pointing to other local organizations, such as On Our Own, that have followed that model. But she says PACEM also plans to start a fundraising campaign soon, in case it’s necessary to rent or buy a building.

In the meantime, PACEM has been working to expand its services and programs for women. Every Monday, it hosts Sister Circle, which helps participants “learn about their strengths,” and “teaches them about wellness, and other types of life skills,” Kellams says. The women also do community service projects, as well as fun activities.

“Sister Circle is a positive group to be a part of. It’s great to be able to gather and release onto other women in need of support,” Joseph says. “The circle allows us to share our vision of what it means to be a competent woman, and that competence is within all of us.”

PACEM also seeks to raise awareness about its need for more host sites, as well as a permanent women’s shelter. 

“We hope by making the public aware of what we’re doing…that folks will step up and support what we’re doing,” says Whitehead. “It is something we really need the community at large to embrace…we can’t do this by ourselves.”

Correction February 26: Eight women per night and 15 women per night sought shelter through PACEM in 2015 and 2018/2019, respectively, not eight and 15 women total. This year, an average of 16 women have sought shelter through PACEM per night, not 16 women total. 

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News

In brief: 1619 Project comes to town, Chase announces governor bid, and more

Get serious: Talking reparations, monuments, and more

What does it mean to confront the truth? To not be complacent in an unjust system? To seek justice for those who’ve been oppressed by that system for over 400 years?

Acclaimed New York Times Magazine writer Nikole Hannah-Jones grappled with these questions­—and more—during a discussion with Times columnist (and local resident) Jamelle Bouie at The Haven on February 17.

“So much about the society that we’ve developed has been touched by [slavery], but we treat it as very marginal,” says Hannah-Jones, who also spoke at the Rotunda with UVA President Jim Ryan earlier in the day. Charlottesville “is a place that’s clearly still grappling and struggling with that legacy. And so I think it was important to have that conversation here.”

Hannah-Jones, who originated the magazine’s ongoing 1619 Project on the legacy of slavery, connected the project’s work to the years-long controversy surrounding the city’s Confederate statues, which she described as monuments to white supremacy.

“I just find it appalling that black folks pay to maintain statues to white supremacy and enslavement,” she says. “If you can’t get rid of monuments to people who fought [for slavery], then you’re not actually serious about making larger repairs.”

Hannah-Jones also addressed economic reparations for the descendants of slaves, saying “you cannot repay centuries of stolen capital without capital.” 

After reading Before the Mayflower: A History of Black America in high school, Hannah-Jones says she could not stop thinking about the mass erasure and misrepresentation of black history. After years of reporting on de facto school segregation and other racial justice issues, she pitched the 1619 Project to paint a broader picture of the long-lasting impact of slavery.

Hannah-Jones said 1619 has been criticized by some as “too pessimistic,” and she does not think there is a real desire for change, as “people aren’t willing to do the work,” especially when it personally affects them. 

Yet she encouraged community leaders, activists, and others to keep up the fight. 

“We do have to believe we can destruct the system that we have,” she said. “If you don’t believe it, then you can just sit comfortably where you are.”

About the 1619 Project

The 1619 Project was launched by The New York Times Magazine in August 2019, with a special issue devoted to tracing the legacy of slavery in America (which began 400 years earlier), and its impact on our current inequalities. The multimedia project now includes a podcast, teacher resources, and a forthcoming book, and aims to “reframe the country’s history,” the magazine says, “by placing the consequences of slavery and the contributions of black Americans at the very center of our national narrative.”    

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Quote of the Week

“Fairfax needs to resign…Granting Fairfax the honor of speaking at the gala sends an exculpatory message I do not believe is merited.”

­—Charlottesville-based Dem super-donor Michael Bills, who withdrew a sponsorship when Lieutenant Governor Justin Fairfax was invited to speak at the Blue Commonwealth Gala 

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Ban banned

Charlottesville’s state Senator Creigh Deeds was one of four Democrats who voted to reject a bill that would ban the sale of assault weapons in Virginia. The bill had been supported by Governor Ralph Northam, and its failure is a rare victory for a gun-rights crowd that has loudly voiced its grievances in recent weeks. Deeds, whose district includes rural areas in Bath County, continues to earn his reputation as one of the most gun-friendly Democrats in the legislature.

Tessa Majors update

A 14-year-old middle school student was arrested in New York City February 14 for the fatal stabbing of Barnard freshman and St. Anne’s-Belfield alum Tessa Majors. The teen was charged with one count of intentional murder, one count of felony murder, and four counts of robbery. He will be tried as an adult.

Funke business

Hajo Funke, a German professor specializing in far-right extremism, was supposed to spend a semester teaching at UVA—but his visa has been delayed indefinitely, reports the Cavalier Daily. The professors who hoped to collaborate with Funke speculate that his work on far-right politics, criticism of Unite the Right, or a recent passport stamp from Iran might have caused the delay, but the consulate has kept mum. Foreign students and professors have had increasing difficulty entering the country since Trump took office, reported The New York Times in June.

Chasing power

State Senator Amanda Chase, who recently called Democrats “traitors” for passing modest gun restrictions, is the first Republican to announce a 2021 candidacy for governor. She says she has “brass balls’’ and will fight “the liberal, socialistic agenda that has taken control of the Capitol.” Chase says she’ll run as an independent if she can’t secure the Republican nomination, which actually might be a smart electoral play—Republicans have not won a statewide election in Virginia since 2009.

Virginia state Senator Amanda Chase has announced her bid for governor. PC: senate.virginia.gov

 

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News

Better care for all

 

Health is vital to well-being, but not everyone gets the care they need. Here’s a look at some local efforts to help underserved populations, from new moms to new arrivals.

BY Brielle Entzminger, Ben Hitchcock, Erika Howsare, Laura Longhine, and Jennifer MacAdam-Miller.


‘A medical home:’ Treating Charlottesville’s refugees

Seven-year-old Aakriti Tamang sits on an exam table, sipping apple juice, while nurse practitioner Becky Compton listens to the girl’s heart, lungs, and stomach with a stethoscope. On the other side of the table, fourth-year UVA medical student Haley Smith smiles warmly at Aakriti, who glances up briefly, shyly, while Smith and Compton take turns asking questions about her general health, habits, school, and social life.

Aakriti’s answers are what you’d expect from a first grader: lots of details about favorite school lunch options (chicken nuggets, corn dogs, mac ‘n’ cheese, and tacos), the class she likes the most (P.E.), and her BFF (a girl named Mikaela). But when Smith or Compton attempt to tease out more information about health matters, Aakriti just shrugs or whispers, “I don’t know.”

Across the room sits her father, Nima. He listens attentively, occasionally asking questions or chiming in to provide details that Aakriti leaves out. He does so with the help of an interpreter on speakerphone, who translates between Nima’s native Nepali and English. Today’s appointment at the International Family Medicine Clinic at UVA is a routine annual check-up, something that most Americans have had access to their entire lives. But for the Tamang family, and many other refugee patients seen at IFMC, this type of medical care represents a huge cultural shift.

Aakriti was born in a refugee camp in Nepal. Her parents were among hundreds of thousands of ethnic Nepalis driven out of Bhutan in the 1990s, many of whom still languish in camps in Nepal after more than two decades. With the help of the International Rescue Committee, the Tamang family arrived in Charlottesville in 2015, when Aakriti was 2—and, after an initial screening by the Virginia Department of Health required for all new arrivals, were referred to the IFMC for the family’s primary medical care.

According to Harriet Kuhr, executive director of the IRC in Charlottesville, that simply doesn’t happen in most cities where refugees are resettled. “We’re incredibly fortunate,” says Kuhr. “In a lot of places, finding and linking the newly arrived refugees to good health care is an issue. It’s not an issue for us here.”

That’s largely thanks  to Dr. Fern Hauck, professor of family medicine and public health sciences at UVA School of Medicine, who is also founder and director of the IFMC. Hauck says her interest in global health and refugee care took root after working with Cambodian refugees in Thailand in the late 1980s.

“When I learned that there were refugees coming to Charlottesville, I was delighted,” Hauck says, though she soon discovered that their access to health care was what she terms haphazard. “Patients would arrive without records for 15-minute appointment slots with no interpreter. It was very difficult. We didn’t have any real relationship with the IRC or the health department in terms of sharing information.”

“The overarching goal was to provide a medical home for new arrivals.“ says Dr. Fern Hauck, the clinic’s founder

Hauck set out to change all of that. And in 2002, with the blessing of her department chair at UVA, she and a couple of doctors and nurses began working with what was, at the time, a relatively small local refugee population. “The overarching goal was to provide a medical home for new arrivals,“ Hauck says, “to make it easier for them to get the care they need to maximize their health and their integration into a good life here in Charlottesville.”

Today, an interdisciplinary team that includes an RN care coordinator, social worker, pharmacist, and psychiatrist work alongside the clinic’s doctors and nurse practitioners. The clinic also coordinates with the IRC, the health department, Community Health Partnership, Legal Aid, local schools, and other community organizations to provide wraparound care.

“We have a specific outreach and process that Dr. Hauck has worked hard to put into place to make sure that we are very integrated into the community,” says Compton. Quarterly meetings with key community partners help with planning for the special needs or known issues of the refugees and special immigrant visa holders whose resettlements are in process. For the most part, communication between IRC’s social workers and IFMC’s care coordinator happens daily.

“Sometimes we hear about care needs when people are coming here with a very complicated medical history,” Compton says. “So, before they’re even here, we’re starting to work on setting appointments with specialists. These folks have already been waiting for however many years they’ve had this issue. We want to decrease that.”

“Our refugees come from different environments,” explains Hauck. “They’ve left their home country and gone to another country—and sometimes they’ve been to several countries in camps. In those settings, they’re not going to get any primary care.”

What happens in Charlottesville is transformational. “By having a medical home for these patients, we extend our services beyond acute care management, or even disease management like hypertension, to provide colonoscopies and pap smears and mammograms,” says Hauck. “Basically, to get people into the routine kind of health care that we try to provide to all Americans.”

Toward the end of Aakriti’s well-child visit, Compton suggests to Nima that Aakriti should get a flu shot. Through the interpreter, he asks, “Is it necessary? Is it required?” Compton explains that while it’s not mandatory, a flu shot can prevent certain viruses or shorten the severity and duration of illness. Nima seems satisfied by her explanation and agrees to the flu shot.

Compton’s one concern during this visit is the trend she sees on Aakriti’s growth chart. She calls Nima over to the computer to have a look and, through the interpreter, explains what one of the climbing lines might indicate, and how nutrition can play a role. Then she speaks directly to Aakriti. “I know that chicken nuggets and mac ‘n’ cheese taste good, but make sure there’s something green on your plate.” Nima smiles and laughs after the interpreter translates, the way every parent does when someone suggests their child might actually eat a vegetable.

“After living for years in a refugee camp and existing on rations,” Compton explains later, “the American lifestyle can present new health challenges for many of our refugees.” And that will require yet another cultural shift. –JM


Michelle Little’s ACAC physical therapy program focuses on pelvic health for new mothers, who often suffer from incontinence and other debilitating problems. Photo courtesy subject.

Baby steps: PT specialist helps new mothers stay active, safely

Kylie was 28 when her first baby, a daughter, was born. The new mom had always been very active—“running, lifting weights, and playing different sports,” she says. Even during pregnancy, she’d worked out. But after giving birth, she discovered big changes in her body, including the separation of her abdominal muscles down the midline of her belly, a common condition called diastasis recti. “It was hard for me to return to athletics, postpartum,” she says. “Ten months after I had my daughter, I ran the Charlottesville Ten Miler, and I had a lot of hip pain and pelvic pain during my training for that. And there was weakness in my core.”

Her experience is far from unusual, and many postpartum mothers suffer from even more debilitating problems, including incontinence and prolapse of the pelvic organs. According to Michelle Little, a physical therapist specializing in women’s health, one in four women experiences pelvic dysfunction. No wonder, then, that back when Little treated only orthopedic cases—joint pain and the like—her postpartum patients kept telling her about pelvic problems too.

Based, in those days, at UVA, Little wanted to refer these women to a specialist, but many of her patients discovered that it was hard to find a PT locally who would accept their insurance. “I had a lot of patients who reached out saying ‘I can’t afford that; can I come back?’”

Already an orthopedic specialist, Little decided to earn an additional certification in obstetrics and pelvic health, and last summer she started a new program through ACAC Physical Therapy focused entirely on pelvic health. Being based
at ACAC allows her to offer a few key things to patients: she accepts insurance, has a private treatment room, can spend 45 minutes per appointment, and the gym provides child care while women get treatment.

She’s also bringing her previous specialty to the table. “I think pelvic health and orthopedics shouldn’t be separated,” she says. “As an example, I might have a postpartum mom with urinary incontinence or prolapse, and she wants to do a half marathon and has knee or hip pain. That would be a patient who needs to see two or three providers, but because of my specializations in orthopedics and pelvic health, I can do all that in one.”

Kylie, who started with Little as a PT patient, discovered that she needed to relearn how to engage her core before she could effectively go after her exercise goals. “She would watch me squat and really help me with hip position and breathing, and making sure I’m engaging properly,” Kylie says. “She is so knowledgeable. I have definitely gotten back to full lifting and running, everything I was doing before I was pregnant.”

Little says that most women get far too little information about pelvic health throughout the childbearing period. “What’s so confusing,” she says, “is that after you have a baby, you have this six-week period where you are on pelvic rest. You’re not supposed to do exercise [or] lift anything heavy, but you have a newborn and oftentimes already have a toddler. The reality is you’re constantly lifting and carrying.”

Local doula Zoe Krylova says that emotional wellness can also suffer when a new mother confronts physical changes in her body. “Physically, a mom might experience core muscle weakness,” she explains. “This can lead to self-criticism and shame around issues of physical strength and body image. Sometimes even holding your baby can challenge those weakened muscles, and this can be crushing to a mom.” Little agrees: “Urinary incontinence and back pain increases the risk of postpartum depression and anxiety. It’s all so interconnected.”

After six weeks, Little says, women are usually cleared for exercise but aren’t given a lot of guidance. “If you look at the U.K., Canada, [and] France, most women receive pelvic PT after they have a baby, to assess the musculoskeletal system and help them return to exercise,” she says. “But in our community and across the U.S., women are left with bounce-back programs or weight-loss programs.” These focus on a quick return to exercise but are not necessarily optimal for long-term health.

Little thinks mothers need better education both during and after pregnancy, and through her LLC, Women In Motion Wellness, she offers birth-preparation and postpartum classes at ACAC and Bend yoga on the Downtown Mall. “There’s so much we can do preparing moms to stay active during pregnancy, and have a strong core and a good pelvic floor to prepare for the push phase of labor,” she says.

Kylie acknowledges the realities of the transition to motherhood: “There are changes about my body that will probably be forever,” she says. “But I’ve accomplished my goals [returning to exercise]. You can definitely forget your identity when it comes to taking care of your baby, so having that part of my life was so important to me.”—EH


Trust builders: A clinic for the homeless provides more than medicine

Health care for people experiencing homelessness can often be “quite disjointed,” says UVA physician Ross Buerlein. Simple things like having a safe place to store meds or a way to remember appointments, not to mention navigating byzantine financial aid applications, can be a stumbling block for those in crisis.

Buerlein and his colleagues wanted to help. “I knew that if we could intervene early… help manage their chronic conditions, and help them with navigating the complex web that is our health care system, we could make a really big difference in their lives, with pretty minimal financial expenditures on our end,” he says.

Dr. Ross Buerlein

The team decided to hold a bimonthly medical clinic at downtown day shelter The Haven, instead of requiring patients to come to UVA. They spent roughly two years planning, talking to Haven guests and community leaders, and pulling together funding, people, and supplies.

Finally, in May of last year, they opened their first clinic, in The Haven’s cafeteria. No one came.

“It was a little disheartening,” Buerlein admits. “I was scared that all of our legwork was for nothing.”

Many people who are homeless have had bad experiences with the health care system, says Becca Kowalski, a second-year med student at UVA who was part of the clinic team. “So the first step to improving their health is rebuilding those relationships.”

The group adjusted their approach, making the clinic walk-in instead of appointment-based, and starting with medical care rather than getting the financials sorted first. With the help of Haven director Stephen Hitchcock, as well as several med students who had worked or volunteered at The Haven in the past, they slowly developed trust with guests. By  the second clinic, “I think we saw two patients,” Buerlein recalls. “Now, it’s always a bustling clinic.”

Patients receive care for chronic conditions like diabetes, high blood pressure, and high cholesterol, as well as acute issues like wounds and infections. A psychiatrist helps diagnose and initiate treatment for patients with mental health issues—in terms of resources, just having a diagnosis can open a lot of doors, Buerlein says. And the team has partnered with Region 10 and SOAR to help move their cases along.

“It’s been eye-opening to me to see how challenging it is to get patients who often have pretty severe mental illness…expedited care,” says Buerlein.

In general, the staff spend a lot of time on “health care navigation”—helping patients fill out paperwork, qualify for financial assistance, refill prescriptions, and so on. “That’s been a big role that we’ve been able to fill, much bigger than I was anticipating,” Buerlein says.  There are “all these little hurdles,” he says, “that for most patients aren’t a huge deal, but can be a dealbreaker for homeless folks.”

Partnerships have been essential: a local NAACP chapter helps patients sign up for Medicaid, the health department gives vaccines and HIV and hepatitis screenings, and a local nonprofit called All Blessings Flow provides free medical equipment (like canes and wrist braces), which they deliver to The Haven.   

In addition to the clinic itself, held every other Thursday, volunteers spend time at The Haven on other days to do outreach, remind patients of appointments and help them with related tasks, and generally build relationships. Last fall, Kowalski and fellow med student Jacqueline Carson spent Wednesday evenings at the PACEM men’s shelter, an overnight program that is housed in various local churches throughout the winter.

The clinic, says Carson, has been “the best part of my whole medical experience” and confirmed what she wants to do after graduation–join the burgeoning field of “street medicine.” 

Recalling how she was able to get a raised bed for one recently-hospitalized client, who’d found it painful to get up, Kowalski says, “Even the small things we’re able to do for folks makes a big difference.”—LL


Volunteers and doctors discuss a patient’s chart at the Charlottesville Free Clinic. Photo: John Robinson

Care free: Uninsured patients find help at the Free Clinic

“We’re taking care of the people who take care of Charlottesville,” says Colleen Keller, director of the Charlottesville Free Clinic. Tucked behind a parking lot on Rose Hill Drive, the clinic keeps a low physical profile. Inside, though, the complex is a labyrinth; the facilities contain a dental clinic and full pharmacy.

The Free Clinic provides primary care for people who fall into one of the many gaps in the American health care system: those who make too much money to qualify for Medicaid, but don’t get health insurance from their job, often because they work part-time. In Charlottesville, a town with a booming service industry, that’s a significant portion of the population. In 2018, the clinic saw 1,100 medical patients and 1,400 dental patients.

“We’re their regular doctor,” Keller says. “We provide medical, primary care, basic medical wellness prevention, mental health care.” Most of the clinic’s patients are seeking treatment for chronic illnesses like hypertension and diabetes.

The clinic runs on generosity. The organization receives about $200,000 total from the state and the city, but the rest of its $2 million budget comes from philanthropy. The staff is almost entirely volunteer—700 people contribute 14,000 hours per year, according to Keller. Charlottesville’s two large hospitals mean the town is full of medical professionals ready and willing to lend their time and expertise to the clinic. “It’s somewhat unusual to have such an incredible supply of the same doctors someone insured sees,” Keller says.

“As aspiring medical students, it’s really helpful and beneficial for us to see how doctors work from day to day,” says Tehan Dassanayaka, a master’s student at UVA who volunteers at the clinic. “Everyone who comes in the clinic is just really kind and appreciative of the work we do.”

The clinic doesn’t charge any fees at all, though many patients leave a dollar or two in the donation box after picking up their medication.

“Often the patients get that sort of look on their face of, ‘What is this going to cost me?’” says Dr. David Schmitt, a retired infectious disease specialist who has been working with the clinic since 2012. “When you tell them nothing, it’s so emancipating.”

“Volunteering here is kind of a reminder every week of why we’re doing what we’re doing,” says Sula Farquhar, a UVA post-baccalaureate student. “Selfishly, it’s my favorite part of my week.”

The clinic is well-supplied, but it can’t do everything.

“Oftentimes, we know what the problem is, but it’s just, ‘how are we going to take care of that?’ because these patients don’t have insurance,” says Dr. Alan Binder, a retired cardiologist and regular Free Clinic volunteer. “They may not have access to the medication that they need, or the tests that they need, or the therapy that they need. And that oftentimes becomes a marked difficulty.”

“We can be incredible, but [the Free Clinic] doesn’t help you if you have to go into the ICU for three days,” Keller says.

Charlottesville’s exorbitant housing costs and high proportion of service-industry jobs leaves lots of people in the lurch. “Even though you have a perception of the community being affluent, there’s still a preponderance of people who are uninsured,” Keller says.

“Some of them, it’s the first checkup they’ve ever had,” Farquhar says. Those circumstances mean making patients feel comfortable is more difficult and more important than in a commercial practice.

“Much of medicine is figuring out what the patient isn’t telling you,” Schmitt says. “If they feel that they’re in an atmosphere that is un-pressured, you’re more likely to be able to extract that information and deal with it.”

The clinic has an “open-door policy.” Sometimes just leaving the door open isn’t enough, though. “There’s still a large unserved population here that we’re trying to draw into the clinic,” Schmitt says.

In 2018, 47 percent of the clinic’s medical patients were people of color. “We’re thinking a lot about, ‘does everybody know the door’s open, in every community, all races? Can we do better at that?’” Keller says.

Keller will tell you that in a perfect world, the Free Clinic wouldn’t need to exist. The mission initially was to operate the clinic “only as long as you need it.” And while that need isn’t going away, it may soon be getting smaller. Virginia’s 2018 decision to expand Medicaid means many of the people served by the Free Clinic have recently or will soon become insured.

Charlottesville-Albemarle had 12,000 uninsured adults before the latest round of Medicaid expansion. By the time the expansion is over, later this year, that number should be down to around 5,000. The clinic is actively enrolling its former patients in the newly accessible program.

“Regardless of your politics, it does give people coverage, particularly for hospitalizations,” Kellers says of Medicaid expansion.

“We had a lot of people who were sad to leave,” Keller says. “We talked to them about how this is a step forward. Any way people can get more access and coverage is a better world.”—BH


Executive Director Elizabeth Irvin helps support The Women’s Initiative’s free mental health services. Photo: John Robinson

By women, for women: The Women’s Initiative offers free therapy

In recent years, the topic of mental health has become increasingly prevalent in American media. From popular shows like “13 Reasons Why” to hit songs like Logic’s “1-800-273-8255,” it seems that we, as a society, are more willing to talk about mental health, and provide help to those in need.

Yet mental health care remains unaffordable for many Americans. Therapy can range from $65 to $250 or more per hour, and while insurance (for those who have it) can cover some of the costs, it can be difficult to find a therapist who accepts your plan.

Here in Charlottesville, The Women’s Initiative is working to break down these barriers, offering free and low-cost mental health care to women in need—regardless of their ability to pay.

Founded in 2007 by therapist Bebe Heiner, who saw a profound need for mental health care for underprivileged women in our community, TWI now serves over 4,000 clients a year, employs nearly two dozen staff (all but two are women), and provides a wide range of services.

Three days a week, TWI hosts a free walk-in wellness clinic at its main office, during which adults who identify as women can come in and meet with a counselor.

On Mondays, a clinic is held at City of Promise, in Westhaven, and on Tuesdays there’s a clinic at the Jefferson School.

“That is another way that we try to be available to women where they are,” says Communications and Outreach Director Amanda Korman, “to be accessible and welcoming.”

The walk-in clinic is also a pathway to individual counseling. After going through an eligibility screening, clients are connected with a therapy option that suits their needs.

“If you can afford your co-pay and have insurance, we’re going to help you find care in the private community,” says Executive Director Elizabeth Irvin. “If you’re staying with us [for care], it’s because you have no insurance or your insurance is insufficient, which is unfortunately the case for so many people.”

TWI has a sliding scale for individual counseling, but over 90 percent of its clients receive free counseling, funded in part through a grant for victims of crime.

In addition to therapy, clients can choose from a variety of no-cost mental wellness programs. TWI regularly hosts support groups and workshops, as well as creative arts and mind-body activities.

It also works to provide culturally responsive programs, as “the impact of inequality, discrimination, and events like August 12th [is] a really important part of mental health that need to be addressed in order to provide healing,” says Korman.

Shelly Wood, director of the Sister Circle program

The Sister Circle program is a support group specifically for black women. Then there’s the Chihamba West African dance and drumming class and, at the Jefferson School, a monthly yoga class for all people of color.

“A lot of the women [we serve] feel very isolated…they may be one of a handful of black women at their jobs, or in school, or wherever they are,” says Sister Circle Director Shelly Wood. “Just being able to come and find a group of women that look like them and who are having some similar experiences has been really helpful for them. They find a sense of community.”

Led by Ingrid Ramos, the Bienestar Program offers an array of services in Spanish for Charlottesville’s Latinx community, including a support group for Latinx women and a playgroup and parenting program at Southwood. On Wednesday afternoons, TWI’s walk-in clinic is also available in Spanish.

Ingrid Ramos, director of the Bienestar program

“We see and hear from [Latinx women] that it’s so nice to come to a place where I can receive help in my native language,” says Ramos. “They are feeling seen [and] understood because they know that they have a different cultural reference in life.”

For transgender folks of all ages and identities, the Charlottesville Trans* Peer Group and PFlag  host monthly support sessions at The Women’s Initiative.

“Our idea is to build lots of different entry points,” says Irvin. “Different people [need] something different for healing.”

And in the future, The Women’s Initiative hopes to expand its services and outreach even more, in turn helping to touch more lives.

“The need is greater than what we currently can provide,” says Irvin. “The more that we can grow to meet the needs of our people—that’s our goal.”—BE

Categories
News

More than a store: Uplift Thrift benefits mental health, addiction services

With the newly expanded Goodwill on 29 North, SPCA Rummage in Seminole Square, and boutique favorites like Darling, Charlottesville has no shortage of spots to score second-hand goods. But the newest arrival, Uplift Thrift, comes with a unique mission: all of its proceeds support the work of On Our Own.

Since 1990, On Our Own has offered free services to adults struggling with trauma, mental illness, and addiction. Its programs center around a peer support model, meaning “everyone who works here actually is in recovery,” says executive director Erin Tucker. 

“Having that lived experience to share with someone else is really important,” she says. “It offers an instant rapport with people.” 

While the recovery center gets some local and state government funding, Tucker also continuously applies for grants. She hopes that the revenue from Uplift Thrift, which opened on Black Friday, will make a big difference.

When founder Paul Patrick first opened On Our Own (in partnership with Region Ten), most of the people who came in were experiencing homelessness or struggling with mental illness or addiction, Tucker says. Because there was no place that met their basic needs (such as showering), the center felt obligated to offer those services.

However, when The Haven opened as a day shelter in 2010, “we turned [the center] into a place where only people who were in the contemplative stage of recovery could come,” says Tucker. “We didn’t want anything to distract people from their recovery.”

Today, On Our Own has a variety of structured programs run by trained peer recovery specialists. It also hosts a daily peer support group and connects visitors with personal advocates, who do weekly one-on-one peer support. 

According to Tucker, about 30 to 50 people stop by every day, excluding Sundays. 

Tucker pictured with senior staffers Cyndi Richardson and Cristy Bodie, who have worked at On Our Own for nine and six years, respectively.

For over two years, Heather (who asked that we not use her last name) has been going to On Our Own for mental health support, which she says has helped her to put her life back together.

“If I’m having a bad day, if I’ve lost sight of my path to wellness, I know I can always go to On Our Own, and I will be accepted for where I am, and encouraged to re-center on my own goals of recovery,” she says. “It feels like family.”

Over the years, On Our Own has forged several long-standing partnerships, including one with the upscale consignment shop Glad Rags. The shop donated all of the clothing and jewelry that it didn’t sell to the center, but because it was mostly vintage items that its visitors didn’t want, Tucker sold them herself and put the money toward the center’s services. 

“[One day] I realized it would be better if we had a space for all of these lovely clothes,” Tucker says. “But right about the time we were looking for the place, the state called us with good news, saying that they were going to gift us an amount of money…[and] then the owner of Glad Rags decided to retire, and she gifted us all of her inventory that was left over.”

In addition to shopping at Uplift Thrift, those willing to help can donate gently used items (excluding beds and mattresses) to the shop—or sign up to volunteer or make a donation on On Our Own’s website.

Categories
Living

Emu update: Merry Christmas, Gladys, wherever you are

On November 29, the day after Thanksgiving, we posted a story about Gladys the emu and the Cathcarts of Albemarle County. That holiday had been incomplete for the family, because Gladys—one of three emus who live on the Cathcart farm near Carter’s Bridge—was still missing after bolting from her pen with her sister Mabel ten days earlier. (Their brother, Floyd, stayed behind.)

Rip Cathcart and one of his three beloved emus. It’s likely he’ll spend Christmas without one of them, Gladys, because she’s been on the loose for weeks. Photo: Courtesy Millie Cathcart

After searching for the big birds (only ostriches are larger) and responding to a flurry of reported sightings and photographs posted online, Rip Cathcart, 62, and his wife, Millie, 55, rescued Mabel. She was in Schuyler, about 13 miles away from home, which would be incredible if emus weren’t capable of running as fast as 30 miles per hour. A father and son had spotted the bird while hunting and managed to capture and hold her until Rip and Millie arrived.

Millie Cathcart said that with the exception of a few trolling comments, the community response via social media—NextDoor.com, Charlottesville/Albemarle Lost & Found Pets, Facebook—was heartwarming. People wanted to help. People did help. Good Samaritans exist!

After our story came out, and readers (many thousands of them, according to Facebook and C-VILLE Weekly site analytics) discovered that Gladys was still at large, Cathcart received word from another Schuyler resident.

“This past Friday [December 6] a man in Schuyler heard strange noises when he was out on his property,” Cathcart related via email. “He had read your article and knew that Gladys was still on the loose! He went home and did some Google and YouTube research on emu noises, and is pretty sure that’s what he heard. He called my husband’s office, and they called me and connected us. We have a glimmer of hope!

“This Good Samaritan is not giving up easily,” the email continues. “He called me on Saturday [December 7] and planned to spend several hours on his property searching. He had a bucket of organic sunflower seeds for her, and some rope, and I told him the details of how Rip and I secured Mabel so we could put her in my car.  He said he is very good with all kinds of animals, and seems to look at this as an interesting challenge!

“He called me with an update yesterday (Sunday). He spent 2-3 hours both days searching, and heard rustling leaves, but no Gladys. Unfortunately, today was a cold rainy day and she’s probably hunkered down somewhere in thick bushes for shelter. I am amazed and thankful for folks like him who are spending their time to help. He has researched and read up on Emus, and he’s all set. I hope their paths cross and the next phone call I get from him is great news!”

What we have here is a story of love, hope, and community, and beautiful examples of the kindness of strangers as well as human respect and affinity for animals. On one hand, the tale is terribly sad—Gladys is still missing, and the Cathcarts will spend another big holiday unsure of her whereabouts and well-being.

But on the other hand, it is encouraging. Collectively, we are all too well aware of the rancor and divisiveness among our fellow human beings. Reading and hearing the news of the day can be emotionally and psychically exhausting. Here in Charlottesville, you may think, If I hear one more damn thing about those Confederate statues, my head is going to explode!

It might be better to reflect for a minute about Gladys the emu. As we here at C-VILLE Weekly have discovered, Millie and Rip Cathcart are remarkable people. We would like to think that they set an example for us all. Have we spent too much time and too many words on a trifling saga about a big bird? That may be a valid criticism, but we would urge you to view our coverage of Gladys in the context of our other work. A cover story about The Haven homeless shelter, a heartrending profile of jazz great Roland Wiggins, an examination of the death of a man who died while trying to cross the treacherous Route 29… We believe that all of these stories deserve to be told (otherwise we wouldn’t publish them, natch) and discussed, because telling and sharing stories creates powerful glue.

With this in mind, we will leave you with the content of a recent text message from Millie Cathcart. (Please forgive us if sharing it seems a bit self-indulgent.) As the saying goes, “The heart is a very, very resilient little muscle.”

“Unfortunately, nothing new, no sightings or information for weeks. We continue to hope that someone has taken Gladys in and given her a new home. It has been amazing how many people we know, and have met, who have read your story! Our daughter was at Orangetheory [Fitness], and someone who knew her, but who she didn’t know, started talking about your story. Soon the entire lobby was talking about it. Your story brought 10 unrelated people together—all had read it!”

And with that, we wish you all the best this holiday season and an excellent New Year!

 

Categories
Opinion The Editor's Desk

This week, 12/18

“It’s hard to know how to navigate all the different things coming our way on the global and national stage,” Stephen Hitchcock, the executive director of The Haven told me recently. “To understand how to think well and live well in light of the systems we’re entangled in. It can feel almost paralyzing.”

That’s one of the reasons Hitchcock does the work he does, running The Haven, the downtown day shelter for homeless and extremely low-income people in the heart of Charlottesville. “To give my time and attention to this group of folks feels like a small way forward.”

Over the past few weeks, I’ve had the pleasure of spending some time at The Haven, which celebrates its 10th anniversary this January. The range of help it provides is hard to summarize: from basics like a hot breakfast, a clean pair of socks, and a warm, dry place to spend the day, to services like a walk-in medical clinic (run by UVA), free counseling, assistance in getting an ID, and an array of housing programs to help guests get and keep a permanent place to live.

More than anything, The Haven is a model of community, of kindness and respect. It runs on generosity, from the local businesses that donate food and services to the former teachers frying eggs and the one-time guests returning to give back to the place that helped them get a new start.

“To see these volunteers coming here, looking for nothing in return, you don’t get that in the world a lot,” Keavon, a recent guest, told me.

It feels like an example of the best that Charlottesville has to offer, and one that’s particularly welcome this time of year. When I asked Owen Brennan, the director of operations, why he does this work, he paused for a long time. “I think because I, on a regular basis, get glimpses of how we’re meant to live together, as human beings,” he said.

You can’t get a better Christmas message than that.

Categories
News

Where you’re always welcome: In an increasingly expensive city, downtown day shelter The Haven is a model of community and ‘radical hospitality’

Photos by Zack Wajsgras

In January, The Haven will celebrate 10 years of serving homeless and extremely low-income people in the heart of Charlottesville.

As the Downtown Mall has been revitalized, the area has become increasingly expensive, home to luxury residences like C&O Row and the 550. The Haven, in a 19th-century church at First and Market streets, is both a stark reminder of those left behind by Charlottesville’s growing wealth and lack of affordable housing, and a beautiful example of community and kindness.

The Haven is a low-barrier shelter, meaning it accepts everyone who walks in, even if they’re drunk or high. It serves a free hot breakfast 365 days a year, and offers guests (the preferred term for people who access its services) a place to shower, do laundry, store their possessions, get mail, and use the internet. Staff connect people to services for mental health, substance abuse, job training, and medical care. And they administer several housing programs to help guests get and keep a permanent place to live.

“This is a community in which our first goal is to care for each other, to treat each other with respect,” says operations director Owen Brennan. “So beyond the services, at base this is a place where we want folks to feel like they belong, where they feel at home, and where they’re always welcome.”

At 6:30 on a cold December morning, it’s still dark, and Charlottesville’s streets are quiet. In the basement of The Haven, light shines through the windows like a beacon.

Inside, David Slezak, a retired Latin teacher who wears purple Converse sneakers and a slender gold chain over his T-shirt and jeans, has been in the kitchen since 5. Coffee is brewing and the team of four volunteers, all women, are busy washing dishes, shredding turkey, and toasting bread on the griddle. Slezak, who goes by Dee Dee, is surveying the latest pile of food donations heaped on one of the kitchen’s metal work tables.   

“Now, I don’t know what I’m going to do with two gallons of molasses,” he muses.

Slezak, 72, has been volunteering with The Haven since it opened, and was hired as kitchen manager in 2016. He makes what one staffer refers to as “magical breakfasts” out of the sometimes odd assortment of donations from local restaurants, caterers, and church dinners that supplement the staples. “We’ve been known to have salmon, scallops,” he says. “Once we got two bushels of crabs donated from a local restaurant. I reheated them and we got out the hammers and the newspapers and had Maryland crabs.”

This morning, there’s turkey in gravy, cheesy asparagus, and buttered cabbage, along with the usual eggs, toast, and grits. “I try to serve two proteins every day, and two vegetables,” Slezak says. There are strawberries and whipped cream, yogurt and granola.

Eggs are cooked to order.

After the front doors open, at 6:45, guests start filing in, filling mugs with coffee and taking seats at the big round tables. Breakfast is served starting at 7:30, but there’s already cereal out, and trays of donated Christmas cookies. Several guests pause by the kitchen to say hello and good morning.

Mark Malawa, a slender man in a baseball cap and glasses, sticks his head through the door.

“What do you need?” Slezak asks.

“A milk and an Ensure?” Malawa asks. “If you can help me; I’m going to be gone all day.”

“You want food to go? I can put a little plate together for you,” Slezak says.

“Whatever you can do, I’m grateful.”

Malawa used to work for PACEM, the nonprofit group that provides overnight shelter at local churches from October through March, but recently he’s become a guest himself.

Slezak grabs a takeout container and fills it with turkey, cabbage, toast, and a fried egg. He doesn’t forget the fork.

“This is more than breakfast to a lot of people,” he says later, noting that many pack extra food to take to work.

At 7:15, everything is ready, and Slezak lifts up the metal shutter between the kitchen and the dining room. “This is our dinner bell,” he says, smiling, as the metal clanks loudly into place. “I wish it was a little more romantic.”

Volunteer Janice Pfund serves breakfast.

For the next hour or so, the volunteers are busy filling plates, taking requests, replenishing mugs

“White or wheat?’

“Do you want the turkey on top, or on the side?”

“We don’t have oats, but we have Cream of Wheat, is that okay?”

When you’re living on the street, Slezak says, “you have so few choices.” So he cooks eggs to order. “You need a scrambled egg, you need an over easy, you need a sunny side up, we’re going to do that for you.”

Cleveland Michie, 62, used to buy breakfast at McDonald’s, until a homeless friend told him about The Haven. Michie is “housed,” but lives alone and is battling lung cancer. “I can’t afford good, nutritious food,” he says. He’s been eating breakfast at The Haven every day for the last two years, and says his appetite has increased and he’s gained “at least 10 pounds.”

“Dee Dee and Ellen [Hickman, a kitchen volunteer], they serve deeply, with honesty and love,” he says. “They have smiles, they don’t make you feel bad or look down on you. And they know the kitchen.”

Slim and neatly dressed, with glasses and graying hair, Michie says he gives back by offering free haircuts to other guests, as well as to residents at area nursing homes.

“If I ran across a lot of money,” he says, “I’d build a building just like this.”

***

Volunteers Lizzie Weschler (left) and Riley Goodwin help out at the front desk. Throughout the morning, guests stop by to check their mail, make appointments, ask for toiletries and towels to take a shower, or get clean socks, underwear, and other clothes.

By 8:30, breakfast is winding down. Riley Goodwin and Lizzie Weschler, high school students from St. Anne’s, make their way to the front desk. They’re in the midst of a three-week “intensive” on reimagining community service, so they’re staffing the front desk every morning, while two other students help out in the kitchen, on the prep shift for tomorrow’s breakfast.

Guests stop by to sign in and ask for towels, shampoo, razors, and soap, so they can take a shower. They use the hand sanitizer on the corner of the desk, ask for socks and ibuprofen.

“Can I get a shirt?” one man asks. Goodwin disappears into the long, narrow room behind the desk, which is stocked with supplies from underwear to hats. She emerges a couple minutes later with a hooded sweatshirt.

“No shirts, but we have a hoodie,” she says.

“Awesome, that’ll work.”

The girls field a call from someone looking for dental care (they connect the caller with the Charlottesville Free Clinic) and refer someone else with a housing question to Herb Dickerson, the shift supervisor, who’s been working at The Haven almost as long as it’s been open.

“I’m pretty much like a walking resource manual, if you will,” he says. “I direct people to whatever services they need, keep trouble down.”

Guests ask for their mail (they can use The Haven as their mailing address) or for a cup of detergent to do laundry. There are three washers and dryers, and people like Dickerson make sure guests move their loads through promptly.    

Monday through Wednesday, Dickerson works the floor, and on Thursdays and Fridays he does community outreach, working with ex-offenders, substance abusers, and people with HIV/AIDS. An ex-offender himself, Dickerson says “I’ve lived on the streets. I understand being homeless.” When people come in, he says, “The first thing they need is rest.”

Later, a guest who introduces himself as Tim lingers by the desk, serenading the students with a couple Christmas songs. “This is a place where you can chill,” he says. “It’s a blessing to have a place like this.”   

***

Volunteers Anne Cressin (left) and John Rogers, who also provides free counseling, sort through mail for guests. Many use The Haven as their mailing address. Along the left wall, more than 70 bins provide personal storage for guests (there’s a waiting list).

The Haven was born when Hollywood director and UVA alum Tom Shadyac returned to Charlottesville to film Evan Almighty in 2005, and decided he wanted to do something to help local people experiencing homelessness. He purchased the First Christian Church, and The Haven opened in 2010, part of the Thomas Jefferson Coalition for the Homeless.

At the time, says current executive director Stephen Hitchcock, the public library was the de facto low barrier day shelter in town, as it is in many cities. All along, the intention was to not only provide basic services to the homeless, but to incorporate housing programs that would help get them out of it, to “see homelessness as a circumstance, not a condition,” Hitchcock says.

The Haven became an independent nonprofit in 2014, and it now administers two federal housing grants: the Rapid Rehousing Program, which provides temporary subsidies for people exiting homelessness, and Homelessness Prevention, which is meant to help people at imminent risk of losing their current housing.

“The public perception is we’re a day shelter, but half our operations are helping to get folks into housing and helping to stabilize them once they’re there,” says Brennan.

The Haven follows a “housing first” philosophy, a nationwide trend toward connecting people with housing as soon as possible, rather than waiting until they’re “housing ready” and all their other issues have been resolved.

Staff meet with guests one-on-one to determine what their housing needs are and what resources may be available to help. “Some people only need a little bit of help,” Hitchcock says. Some people make enough income to pay rent, but don’t have the money to put down first month’s rent plus a security deposit. Others are dealing with acute mental health crises or substance abuse. “We’re trying to provide the right amount of help at the right time,” Hitchcock says. And that help can be more than just material.

“A colleague of mine likes to say that people don’t become homeless because they run out of money; people become homeless because they run out of relationships,” says Hitchcock. “I think there’s a lot of truth in that.” He recalls the epigraph to Howard’s End—“only connect.”

“I’m reminded of that all the time,” he says. “What we’re talking about is creating connection. So many folks are disconnected.” That can come from aging out of foster care, or aging alone; it could be because of divorce, or loss of a job, or incarceration. Whatever the reason, “we want to be a place where people can start, or start again.”   

***

Guests at a weekly writing group run by Day Shelter Coordinator Rob White (center) in the sanctuary. The space is an extra place for guests to sleep or find quiet during the day, and is also frequently rented out for weddings and community events.

On Mondays at 10am, Day Shelter Coordinator Rob White hosts a writing group in the former sanctuary. The space is large, and beautiful, with beamed ceilings and stained glass windows. The Haven hosts groups and events here throughout the day, like a weekly class on mindful breathing, and monthly touch therapy sessions from Zero Balancing. But it also rents out the space for weddings and community events, like concerts and film screenings. The Village School, a private all-girls middle school down the street, uses it for recitals. “It’s such a cool thing, to hold these things proximate,” says Ocean Aiello, the community outreach director. “Screaming seventh grade girls and a homeless shelter; those things are not usually next to each other.” 

Guests here for the writing group gather around a large table, and share their work. A woman named Marie reads a poem, and says she wrote it after getting a cardiovascular stress test. “The doctors told me, ‘You have a fragile heart,’” she says. “Doesn’t everyone have a fragile heart?”

One man reads from an ongoing story he’s writing, and a woman shares a short passage on camping, showing the meticulously drawn rocks she’s sketched in her small notebook.

There’s a new visitor today, Harold Tucker. He’s a large man in a ski cap, with a ruddy face and a mustache that’s turning white. He sits down and immediately starts writing.

He lost his wife three years ago, he tells the group. They were married for 41 years.  “Life has gone downward since.” He writes about a dream he had, in which his wife urged him to move on. “I don’t know how to do that,” he says.

Marie tells him he is in the right place. White offers him a journal, and suggests he try writing directly to his wife, in the present tense.

The group has been talking about mindfulness, and today White has a poem for them to read, “The Fish,” by Elizabeth Bishop. It’s a fairly long piece, about catching a fish, one that’s been hooked many times before.

“He’s tired,” Tucker says of the fish. “Like a lot of us are.”

“Every day, you keep hoping things are going to get better,” he says. “But sometimes they don’t.”

Tucker was a truck driver for decades, but after his wife died, he got cancer, and had to get off the road. He’s estranged from his kids, and was sleeping in the park before he got connected with The Haven and PACEM.

White asks him to think of one thing he does, or could do, that would bring him purpose, and Tucker starts talking about kindness, about how he makes an effort to greet people and say good morning.

“That would make a nice poem,” White says. “It does matter.”

The group turns back to the Bishop poem, talking about how she focuses on the moment. 

“The whole point of the poem is, don’t give up,” Tucker says.

Marie turns to him with a smile. “See how you get what you need in this class?”

***

Debbie Arrington makes use of The Haven’s laundry room. Guests use a sign up sheet for the washers and dryers, which are typically busy all day.

Kevin Mellette, a wiry man who seems to be constantly in motion, ducks outside for a smoke break in the rain. His official title is facilities manager, but his role seems to encompass a bit of everything: “I do shift supervision, I do security, make sure the building runs properly.”

A certified peer recovery specialist, he provides support for people who are using or suffering from mental health issues. “I’m also a recovering addict, so I kind of know my way around, if you will,” he says. “A great deal of our population—maybe more than 50 percent—suffer from something that is related to some form of trauma. And being homeless, that’s trauma in itself.”

The Haven doesn’t have any official security guards, but Mellette and others, like Dickerson, are in charge of keeping the building safe. “Mr. Dickerson and myself, we’re both from the street, so we have a tendency to be able to come across to people,” Mellette says. If there’s a conflict, he’ll do his best to de-escalate it, and will call the police when needed to escort someone off the property. 

Mellette first showed up at The Haven for mandatory community service, through the circuit drug court. He’d been in a worsening cycle of substance abuse and criminal charges. “On this last go round, I decided to do something different,” he says. He’s been clean since September 28, 2015. “The Haven gave me that opportunity, that continuing of care for me. The way I pay it back is by helping others.” He’s been working here for four years now. About The Haven, he says, “I think what it does is, it offers those who are homeless a place in which they can gather themselves. A haven, a place where people can feel safe and deal with whatever trauma they’re going through, without having to be inundated with more trauma.”

***

PACEM guests board a JAUNT bus, headed to a local church where they will sleep for the night. Through PACEM, a rotating group of congregations and community groups provide dinner and shelter for roughly 45 men and 20 women each night. In the morning, they are bused back to The Haven for breakfast.

At 5pm, the Haven staff turns things over to PACEM, whose offices are also in the building. Every night, roughly 45 men and 20 women gather to board JAUNT buses that take them to area churches, which provide dinner and beds for the night. The number of women seeking shelter has gone up sharply in the last couple years, says caseworker Heather Kellams. She’s working to extend PACEM’s season to provide year-round beds for them, while also looking for private funding to create a permanent women’s shelter. “These women…are extremely vulnerable,” she says. “They need a lot of care.”

Like The Haven (and unlike the year-round shelter at The Salvation Army), PACEM is low-barrier. So before loading the buses, Brian Henderson, a seasonal staff member who is simultaneously warm and commanding, asks guests to give him any drugs, alcohol, or other “paraphernalia”  they may have in their bags, and to stay in the designated sleeping areas in the churches where they’ll be staying.    

The Tuesday before Thanksgiving, Tucker shows up looking for a spot, but the rules have changed and guests are supposed to register earlier in the day. The staff know Tucker, though, and it’s almost Thanksgiving, and there’s an open bed. They let him join.

One phrase Haven staff use to describe their work is “radical hospitality.” “We try to cultivate a culture of accompaniment,” says Hitchcock. “We work to be the kind of community we hope Charlottesville is—to hold out, this is how folks can be with one another across different backgrounds, different ages, races, genders, sexual orientations—you name it, it’s all here.”

It’s a feeling that comes across to many guests, too. “They’re good people,” Tucker says of The Haven staff. Yes, there’s the food and shelter. But he also talks about how they’ve given him bus fare, helped him get his license when his wallet was stolen. “They give me clothes, they give me gloves, let me take a shower, so I feel like I’m human.” He pauses. “So I feel like I’m human. Not just somebody sleeping on the street.”

*

 

Guest book

“When you see somebody sitting on the street, before you sit there and judge them, know their story.”
–A Haven guest


Shift supervisor Herb Dickerson sings as volunteers prepare for the Wednesday lunch café.

Food for the soul

The Haven closes from noon to 1pm, and on Wednesdays, the dining room becomes a lunch café, open to the public for a $10 donation. It’s not a moneymaker, but it’s a chance for guests to get some paid food service experience, setting up, doing dishes, and serving the downtown lunch crowd. And it’s an opportunity for the public to see “a different side of what homelessness looks like,” says Evie Safran, who runs the program.

Like many Haven staff, Safran is a former teacher (she taught public preschool in Charlottesville), but she also had a 30-year catering career. She recruits weekly guest chefs, ranging from local restaurant and corporate chefs to caterers and dedicated home cooks, and the food “runs the gamut from down-home Southern to South Indian vegetarian,” she says.

Lunches also include a salad, sides, delicious homemade limeade, coffee, and dessert.

Like the church rentals, and an annual 8K run in the spring (which features a homemade breakfast in the sanctuary afterwards), it’s a way to bring the broader community into The Haven.