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In brief: Summer shootings, buggy menace and more

Beetles on the brain

As the invasive emerald ash tree borer creeps its way into Central Virginia, UVA groundskeepers are suiting up for battle—kind of.

First discovered in the U.S. in 2002, this beetle has been detected in most of the eastern half of the country. After it lays its eggs inside ash trees, its larvae feed on the insides of the tree and disrupt its ability to transport water and nutrients, which kills the tree.

Hundreds of ash trees make up about 70 percent of the foliage on the Lawn on UVA Grounds. To prepare for an almost certain attack, the university’s trees are inoculated every two years, and just last month, Sten Cempe and a team from Big O Tree and Lawn Service were on site to inject beetle-killing emamectin benzoate into the bases of them. The inoculations are a temporary fix, but should work until a natural predator can be found to kill the borers, according to Cempe.

You oughta know

Emerald ash borers:

  • are native to Asia
  • have no natural predators in the U.S.
  • have killed hundreds of millions of ash trees in North America
  • have caused the USDA to enforce quarantines to prevent more infected ash trees
  • could contribute to the ash tree becoming endangered like the American chestnut, American elm and hemlock

*Information from UVA Today and the Emerald Ash Borer Information Network

 


Several shootings

Charlottesville police are investigating four incidents of shots fired around Friendship Court and the 700 block of Sixth Street SE between July 2 and 10. A juvenile was wounded July 8. Arrested were Chaz Dylan Newville early July 10 and a juvenile for a shooting that same night, and Zayquan Thomas is still wanted.

Plus column

Virginia tallies a $132 million surplus at the end of the 2017 fiscal year.

Naming rights

Congressman Tom Garrett proposes renaming two 5th District post offices for fallen servicemen: the Palmyra PO for Navy Gunner’s Mate Dakota Rigsby, who died on the USS Fitzgerald collision June 17, and the UVA PO for Army Captain Humayun Khan, who was killed in Iraq in 2004. Garrett’s first bill was to name the U.S. District Court in Charlottesville for the late SCOTUS Justice Antonin Scalia.


“It’s shaping up to be the East Coast Berkeley.”

Jason Kessler on his August 12 Unite the Right rally in a Salting the Earth podcast


No new leads

July 14 marked the five-year anniversary of the Pherbia “Faye” Tinsley murder in which the 51-year-old left her Barracks Road home early in the morning and was found shot to death in her car on Prospect Avenue. City police are still investigating this case.

Huffstetler’s war chest

Roger Dean Huffstetler and wife Emily. Publicity photo

Democratic candidate for Virginia’s 5th Congressional District and Marine veteran Roger Dean Huffstetler raised more than $336,000 in the last financial quarter, surpassing all other non-incumbent 5th District candidates in recent history. Democrats Ben Cullop, of Albemarle County, and Leslie Cockburn, of Rappahannock County, have also joined Huffstetler, Adam Slate and Andrew Sneathern in the race.

 

 

 

 


Deadly highways

Interstate 64 and the U.S. 29/250 Bypass saw three fatalities in fewer than 24 hours, as well as a stabbing earlier in the week. A woman’s body was found in the southbound lane of U.S. 29 near the Old Ivy Road bridge around 9:30am July 15, closing the road until 1pm.  Police are seeking information, and at press time, had not released the victim’s name.

Around 6am July 16, Winston J. Smith II, 32, who worked at NBC29 and was an actor in local theater, most recently Live Arts’ production of Death of a Salesman, headed the wrong way on eastbound I-64 and crashed head-on into Troutville resident Bethany M. Franklin, 30, a Moneta firefighter. Both died at the scene at the Ivy exit at mile marker 114, and the driver of a third vehicle—a Ford F-150—was taken to UVA Medical Center with minor injuries. Smith’s green Isuzu pickup was reported earlier driving recklessly on westbound I-64, and then in an emergency crossover, according to Virginia State Police.

And on July 11, a 46-year-old Fishersville woman was found critically wounded from stab wounds to her neck and abdomen on I-64 near mile marker 101 on Afton Mountain. Her ex-boyfriend, Rodney D. Burnett, 46, of Indiana, was arrested in her car and charged with malicious wounding.

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In brief: Eye-popping turnout, cereal beat-in and more

Get out the vote

The big news in the 2017 primary was record turnout for a non-presidential primary. Democrats were particularly energized, significantly topping their last gubernatorial primary in 2009. While not as many Republicans showed up, the GOP’s turnout topped 2009 as well.

Governor primary turnout

Democrats:

2017: 542,812 voters

2009: 319,168 voters

  • Up 70%

Republicans:

2017: 366,100 voters

2005: 175,170 voters

  • Up 108%

City Council primary turnout

2017: 8,522 voters

2015: 3,251 voters

  • Up 162%

City Council race: the numbers

Amy Laufer

$19,620 in donations

6,253 votes

46% of vote

Heather Hill

$18,055 in donations

4,597 votes

34% of vote

Bob Fenwick

$3,439 in donations

2,722 votes

20% of vote

Hill-Laufer-Platania
Heather Hill, Amy Laufer and Joe Platania move on to the November elections. Submitted photos

Commonwealth’s attorney race: the numbers

Joe Platania

$18,566 in donations

4,900 votes

62% of vote

Jeff Fogel

$6,335 in donations

2,976 votes

38% of vote


Tragic ending to an already sad story

ottoWarmbierOtto Warmbier, the UVA student detained and sentenced to 15 years of hard labor in North Korea for allegedly stealing a political banner, died June 19 in a Cincinnati hospital—nearly a week after he was medically evacuated from the Asian country in a coma, which officials said he had been in for more than a year.


“North Korea is among the most heinous actors on the global stage. The case of Mr. Warmbier reminds us of the barbarism of the North Korean regime.”—U.S. Representative Tom Garrett


Another UVA rape allegation

Dalton Baril
Charlottesville police

The grandson of former Republican Virginia governor John Dalton, former UVA student Dalton Baril, 20, of Richmond, was charged with rape and forcible sodomy for a February 1 incident with another student that left her bruised and bloody, according to the Washington Post. Dalton turned himself in to the magistrate’s office June 14. He was released on $10,000 bond and will appear again in August.

Taxing decisions

The Albemarle County Board of Supervisors passed an ordinance last week to require short-term rental owners to pay the same lodging taxes as hotels and other homestays. The ordinance also requires owners, such as Airbnb hosts, to get a business license if they make more than $5,000 per year off their rental.

Former cop indicted

Christopher Seymore was an officer with the Charlottesville Police Department when he allegedly forced a local woman—and witness to a crime—to perform oral sex on him twice. A grand jury indicted him June 19 on two counts of sodomy. His trial is scheduled for December 7.

Legal Aid appeals DMV suit

Despite being rebuffed twice by a federal district judge, Legal Aid Justice Center is appealing the decision that the DMV is not a proper defendant in Stinnie v. Holcomb, arguing that it unlawfully suspends licenses of the indigent for failure to pay court costs with no consideration of their ability to do so.

In memory

WillowTree Apps, Inc. announced June 15 a $10,000 scholarship in honor of beloved former employee Whitney French, who was killed by her husband in a February murder-suicide. Applications for the scholarship, which aims to support women in the field of digital user experience and design, are due by December 9.


Trix are for kids

kesslerproudboysbeatin
Jason Kessler rattles off his breakfast cereals so he can be a member of the Proud Boys.

Whites-rights provocateur Jason Kessler and three others proclaimed, “I’m a proud western chauvinist,” and then were beaten in an alley until they could name five cereals in a Proud Boys video posted over the weekend. The “cereal beat-in” is the second initiation step to joining the Proud Boys, a masculinist fraternity for grown men that’s a self-proclaimed “alt-light” org. Matching polo shirts, a tattoo, abstention from masturbation and beating up an antifa are the next steps in joining the group, according to Southern Poverty Law Center.

Members were on the Downtown Mall June 17, and were refused service in several restaurants, including Violet Crown Cinema and Cinema Taco. In retaliation, Cinema Taco was hit with a barrage of one-star reviews on Yelp.

Unlike previous Kessler gatherings on the mall when Showing Up for Racial Justice members shouted at him, there was no chanting, but individuals on the mall did confront the group, and at one point, when they left, people applauded, according to WINA’s Dori Zook.

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Standing up: Andrew Sneathern announces 5th District run

Touting his background growing up on a farm and as an attorney, Andrew Sneathern threw his cap into the 2018 5th District congressional race today before dozens of supporters at Champion Brewery.

Sneathern, 46, plans to tap into the “unbelievable wealth of power coming from the Democratic party now, something I’ve never seen before,” he says.

A former assistant prosecutor for Albemarle County who now has a private practice, the Missouri-raised attorney says he understands the problems of rural residents in the 5th District from his own family’s experience farming 2,700 acres, which took eight people to run when he was a kid and now three people work it.

“Those jobs are not coming back,” he says, “and anyone who tells you they are, either doesn’t understand or is flat-out lying.”

A Dem has not won the 5th since Tom Perriello snagged one term in 2008 and it was “gerrymandered to keep a Democrat from winning again,” says Sneathern. “I’m strangely fitted for the 5th.”

Sneathern noted the “fear and mistrust” coming from the election of Donald Trump, and says he has the endorsement of Trump antagonist Khizr Khan. “We are a better country, a better commonwealth when we recognize we are more alike than different,” he says.

Referring to local patriots from the Revolutionary War era and casting 2018 as an epic election year, Sneathern says when his future grandchildren ask, “When it was your time, what did you do?” he wants to look back and say, “We all stood up together.”

Charlottesvillians Roger Dean Huffstetler and Adam Slate say they’re running in 2018 as well. Republican Congressman Tom Garrett, who just took office in January, has not announced whether he’ll seek another term.

Updated 6/2/17 to add candidate Roger Dean Huffstetler.

 

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In brief: Congressman Garrett, media lies, torched motel and more

Tom Garrett is mad as hell

Fresh off the heels of voting May 4 to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, U.S. Representative Tom Garrett was in town May 11 to tour DaVita, a dialysis facility on Pantops, and to squeeze in a few minutes with local media (see excerpts below). That’s when we learned Garrett is angry about threats and hate mail he and his family have received stemming from an MSNBC interview and subsequent coverage of that, and he’s threatening legal action.

What he said in an interview with MSNBC when asked about Charlottesville protests against the repeal of ACA: “I would wager based on the locality that that particular event occurred in, I wasn’t there, that none of those people did vote for me.”

What he says he didn’t say: “Tom Garrett says he doesn’t care if people get care and if people die because they didn’t vote for him anyway. That’s a lie.”

Responses he got on social media: “Mr. Garrett, I want to slash your face with a knife until you no longer resemble anything human.”

His heated response to social media attacks: “I’m doing the best I can. We might have different economic preferences. Shame on the people who do that sort of thing. “

What he says is the media’s responsibility: “You have a duty to point out when people lie.”

On not reading the American Health Care Act: “The reality of life is you have a staff to do this job.”

On protests at his office: “Keep protesting. It’s okay. This is America. It’s awesome. Disagreement is fine. Don’t lie.”


“I think it’s probably time to repeal and replace the beard.”

—Congressman Tom Garrett on his look since the election


MLK slept here

HotelFire_StaffPhotoThe motel where Martin Luther King Jr. stayed in 1963, a few weeks before he was jailed in Birmingham, went up in flames May 4. The 1955-built Gallery Court Motel on Emmet Street became a Budget Inn and in its latest incarnation, was rehabbed into Excel Inn. The cause of the fire is under investigation.

Burned

Victor Andrei, the man who allegedly assaulted a firefighter and led police on a brief chase when he was denied entry into the Excel Inn during the fire, was granted bond May 8. Andrei, a grad student at George Mason University, told NBC29 he had a school project due the following day and his materials were in his hotel room.

Staff photo

Catlin decamps

Former Albemarle spokesperson Lee Catlin, now assistant county executive, will retire November 1 after 25 years. Catlin was half of a county power couple, and her husband, former planning director Wayne Cilimberg, retired last year.

Next to last of the Republican mayors

dutchVogt-JenFarielloGunther “Dutch” Vogt, 95, who was Charlottesville’s mayor in 1968, died May 2 in Knoxville. The big issue of the day then was an unsuccessful referendum to merge the city with Albemarle County, which council supported, he said in a 2006 interview. About serving on City Council, he said, “It was a good experience, but I wouldn’t want to do it again.”

Late night snack

County police are asking for information about a Saturday night attempted food truck robbery behind Pro Re Nata in Crozet. A white man described as in his 20s or 30s and a woman in her late teens or early 20s fled on foot. One held a gun, but no injuries were reported and no money was stolen.

Driving amok

Amherst woman Mary C. Tenhoopen-Jones, 75, was charged May 3 after driving the wrong way on U.S. 29 in Nelson County around 10pm, refusing to stop and crashing into a state trooper cruiser while going 20mph, according to a release.

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In brief: Patricia Kluge’s new gig, municipal scofflaws and more

McAuliffe’s pen

In his last year in office, Governor Terry McAuliffe was unable to deliver on a campaign promise to expand Medicaid to 400,000 uninsured citizens, which is supported by 69 percent of Virginians, according to a recent University of Maryland poll. The General Assembly’s Republican majority prevented that, but it was not able to thwart another McAuliffe vow: that he would veto any “socially divisive” legislation.

McAuliffe signed 40 of his record 111 vetoes this session, and maintained a perfect tally of having zero overridden by the General Assembly, which needs two-thirds votes in each house to do so. Republicans have a sizable 66-34 majority in the House of Delegates, and 21-19 in the Senate.

Vetoed were:

  • Rob Bell’s Tebow bill to allow homeschoolers to play public school sports
  • Steve Landes’ Beloved bill requiring schools to notify parents of sexually explicit instructional material
  • Creation of charter schools without local school board approvals
  • Religious freedom bill, which LGBT advocates say legalizes discrimination
  • Legislation prohibiting sanctuary cities
  • Switchblade concealed carry and possession by minors
  • Criminal and Virginia Lottery background checks for applicants of public assistance
  • DMV photos added to electronic poll books
  • Concealed carry without permits for protective order seekers and military personnel under 21 years old
  • Planned Parenthood defunding
  • Coal tax credit

Ragged Mountain’s current prohibition against pets is pretty widely ignored, and some owners see the natural area as a place to leave their dogs’ feces. Staff photoSee you in court

Albemarle County declines Charlottesville’s offer of arbitration after City Council votes 3-2 to defy county law and allow bike trails at Ragged Mountain Natural Area.

Chip Harding
Sheriff Chip Harding File photo

Crime studies

The Virginia State Crime Commission will study the impact of collecting DNA for additional Class 1 misdemeanors, a move long advocated by Albemarle Sheriff Chip Harding, as well as the decriminalization of small amounts of marijuana, which was favored by nearly eight out of 10 Virginia respondents in a 2016 VCU poll.

Mandatory tax disclosure

Although Representative Tom Garrett said at his March 31 town hall he didn’t care that President Donald Trump did not release his income tax returns, last week Garrett filed a bill that would require future presidents-elect to do so.

‘Patricia Kluge’s Third Act is Sparkly’

The New York Times reports the former winemaker, who sold her business to buddy Donald Trump in 2011, has rebounded from bankruptcy and is now designing jewelry pieces that sell for between $30,000 and $45,000.

“Everybody who knows Donald knows his shenanigans.”

Patricia Kluge to the Times on Albemarle House litigation with President Trump

JenSorensen_CourtesyArtist
Courtesy Jen Sorensen

No funny business

Freelance cartoonist Jen Sorensen, whose work has appeared in C-VILLE each week since 2002, is a 2017 Pulitzer Prize finalist “for a thoughtful and powerful selection of work appearing in a variety of U.S. publications and often challenging the viewer to look beyond the obvious.”

 

 

Inappropriate hugger in court

Brien Gray-Anderson, 21, who was charged with assaulting women on the Rivanna Trail last spring, pleaded guilty April 10 to one felony count of abduction and two misdemeanor sexual battery charges. Two women were the victims of unsolicited hugs and bottom touching, and a third was pulled to the ground but fought Gray-Anderson off. He’ll be sentenced August 1.


$9 million facelift

A $9 million project that had UVA’s Northridge Internal Medicine building on Ivy Road blanketed in scaffolding for nearly two years is winding down. Its updated look includes a new entrance and lobby, larger elevators, a new staircase and a more traditional architectural look similar to the Transitional Care Hospital next door.

Northridge
Before
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Out loud: Protesters and counterprotesters keep volume up at Garrett town hall

This is what democracy looked like March 31 outside UVA’s Garrett Hall, the scene of Congressman Tom Garrett’s first town hall: rowdy.

Demonstrators armed with bullhorns both for and against Garrett pushed up against one another and made their positions known with shouts of “USA! USA! USA!” and “Hey, hey, ho ho, white supremacy’s got to go.”

While the pro-Garrett faction, many of which were carrying Garrett or Trump campaign signs, was outnumbered, they did manage to keep the volume up, and even inside Garrett Hall, chants could be heard for the first hour of the forum.

20170331-_L4C1977 garrett town hall
photo Eze Amos

Groups like Indivisible Charlottesville have called on Garrett to hold a town hall since he took office in January, and many were not pleased that his first meeting in the blue-hued center of the mostly red 5th District was limited to 230 people—50 Batten students and 180 chosen by lottery out of the 850 who signed up, according to Batten Dean Allan Stam, who led the discussion.

GarrettTownHall2_EzeAmos
Virginia State Police joined UVA police officers at the town hall. Around 60 officers were on hand. Photo Eze Amos

Dozens of police officers were stationed outside Garrett Hall to keep the peace, and despite heated exchanges between the factions, primarily Showing Up for Racial Justice and western heritage defender Jason Kessler’s Unity and Security for America, no arrests were made, according to university police.

Kessler, who recently was thwarted in court on his petition drive to remove Vice-Mayor Wes Bellamy from office, filmed a video in front of Garrett Hall detailing his equipment for the event, which included a sign with Pepe the Frog, a symbol appropriated by white nationalists, bearing the message, “Kekistani American Day,” and a shield to fend off the “antifas”—anti-fascists in alt-right lingo.

GarrettTownHall3_EzeAmos
photo Eze Amos

And the shields were used to push back on banner-carrying SURJ members in front of Garrett Hall. Among the dozen or so activist groups that have sprung up since the 2016 election, SURJ has emerged as the most militant. Its members surrounded and shouted down GOP gubernatorial candidate Corey Stewart February 11 when he was in town to denounce City Council’s vote to remove the statue of General Robert E. Lee.

At the town hall, this time Stewart was equipped with his own bullhorn to broadcast his promise to protect his supporters’ culture, heritage and history.

20170331-_L4C2166 corey stewart
GOP gubernatorial candidate Corey Stewart was back in Charlottesville again. Photo Eze Amos

“The strange part was outside the building, having to go through that gauntlet,” says town hall attendee Diana Mead. “It made me a little nervous.”

Also on Kessler’s video, Albemarle County Republican Committee’s new chair, George Urban, shares a tip that a “group of anarchists partially funded by George Soros were boarding a bus in Richmond headed for this event to cause trouble.” Urban declined to comment on “protesters’ organizing efforts” when contacted by C-VILLE.

University Democrats, whose offer of a larger space to hold the town hall did not receive a response from Garrett, held a non-partisan democracy festival in the amphitheater across from the town hall. That event was relatively calm in comparison, says communications coordinator Virginia Chambers. She said between 18 and 20 groups set up tables, and she estimates 600 attended.

Despite the rain, says Chambers, “People were walking around and engaging with people at the tables.”

A March 1 release from Garrett’s office said Batten’s rules for the town hall prohibited signs, cheering, clapping, booing and chanting; several of these were broken immediately.

GarrettTownHall6_EzeAmos
Breakin’ the rules. Photo Eze Amos

A handful of SURJers made it into the front row of the town hall, where they unfurled a banner that read, “No dialogue with white supremacy.” They chanted “white supremacy has got to go” as they headed out of the room on their own volition.

“It didn’t bother me,” says Mead, “because they were so efficient. They got their message out and didn’t have to be dragged out. It was pretty classic civil disobedience—except they didn’t want to go to jail.”

In a statement, SURJ said, “Engaging in polite conversation with Garrett normalizes his extreme views and allows them to spread. Instead, we need to disrupt this language…”

Garrett acknowledged the chants outside and in. “There’s no place for white supremacy in the forum of Thomas Jefferson’s university or in the nation of the United States of America,” he said.

During the two-hour forum, Garrett responded to questions submitted by attendees and randomly chosen by the Batten School on health care, President Trump, Russian influence, immigration and guns in the District of Columbia.

GarrettTownHall7_EzeAmos
Congressman Tom Garrett said his concern for safety was the reason for holding the town hall in a smaller venue. Eze Amos

At times his responses seemed to draw bipartisan applause, such as when he said he would support the removal from office of any officials determined to collude with Russia, or when he said he did not believe all refugees should be banned from entering the U.S.

His detailed and rapid-fire responses to some questions caused Stam to remark, “I think you’re turning out to be a little more wonkish than people expected.”

Garrett promised to hold more town halls in the future, and has one scheduled May 9 in Moneta.

GarrettTownHall5_EzeAmos
Frank Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy Dean Allan Stam led the discussion with Congressman Tom Garrett. Photo Eze Amos

He concluded with thanks to the Batten School and to the attendees. “Whether you think I’m the best congressman or the worst ever, thanks for caring enough to come out,” he said. “This is what drives the greatest nation on earth.”

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Where’s Tom? The case of the missing congressman

Craig DuBose made his appointment February 1 to meet with Congressman Tom Garrett in the congressman’s Charlottesville office March 6. Heather Rowland made hers February 10. Both constituents called to confirm their appointments before showing up at Garrett’s Berkmar Crossing office, and both were dismayed to learn Garrett wasn’t there.

“I was disappointed,” says DuBose, a carpenter. “I had taken the day off from work. It’s common courtesy to notify if you have to cancel.”

Garrett’s chief of staff, Kevin Reynolds, said it was a scheduling mistake.

Rowland says she confirmed her meeting with Garrett the morning of March 6. Reynolds told her that, too, was a mistake, and she should have been told “or with an aide,” she says.

Rowland is a volunteer counselor who helps people sign up for the Affordable Care Act, and that’s why she and a couple of colleagues wanted to meet with Garrett. “I felt we had insights about constituents who had benefited from the Affordable Care Act,” she says, noting that 36,000 people in the 5th District signed up in 2016.

“They’re good upstanding members of the community who happen to not earn very much,” she says. Garrett is critical of Speaker Paul Ryan’s plan, and Rowland describes Garrett’s health care vision as basically a health savings account. “If you have no money, there’s no way you’ll have money for an HSA,” she adds.

Meeting with Reynolds was not the same as meeting with the congressman, she says. “He’s taking your message but not answering your questions,” she explains.

DuBose says he called several times the week before to confirm the meeting, and when he showed up at the district office, he was told Garrett had other meetings in Nelson County, where he met with the Farm Bureau. “If these other meetings were planned and I called last week to confirm mine, they had a half dozen times to let me know,” he says. “That’s just bad form.”

Rowland and DuBose weren’t the only constituents stood up by the scheduling snafu. Some members of Indivisible Charlottesville, which has regularly scheduled protests at Garrett’s office and held a town hall meeting without him February 26, also had appointments that day.

Indivisible Charlottesville lies “perpetually,” Garrett told the Lynchburg News-Advance. “They’re like the kid in school who nobody talks to because every word that comes out of his mouth is a lie.”

“They should get their story straight before calling community groups liars,” says Indivisible’s David Singerman.

Garrett stands by the characterization. According to his office, Reynolds has reached out to several Indivisible leaders, including Singerman on March 6, and says they refused to meet with him or, in another case, to take phone calls from Garrett.

Garrett spokesperson Andrew Griffin also challenges Indivisible claims of wanting “civil dialogue” and “nonviolence,” and says Reynolds was called an “S.O.B.” by a bullhorn-wielding Indivisible Nelson member on March 6, and another has “wished death” on Garrett in an online forum.

“Our staff and congressman are routinely cursed, threatened and mocked by people from this group despite their wish for ‘civil dialogue,’” says Griffin.

Singerman recalls that years ago, when he was an intern in the House of Representatives, congressmen considered district work meetings “sacrosanct.” He says, “I’m pretty shocked Garrett would stand up his constituents that way.”

He adds, “It’s a bad precedent with what it says about Garrett’s commitment to the 5th District.”

Or maybe it’s not so much the 5th District for the Republican congressman as it is Dem-leaning Charlottesville, suggests DuBose. “They’ve made the calculation they really don’t have to deal with people in Charlottesville.”

Garrett is not the first congressman named Tom who has been called upon to face angry constituents. Tom Perriello was elected in 2008 and his support for the Affordable Care Act cost him a second term.

“I think you have a moral obligation to hear from your constituents—even the ones you don’t agree with,” says Perriello. “It’s not that hard. You show up and listen. They’re your boss.”

Perriello had “a couple dozen” town halls and “stayed until the last question was answered,” even if it was past midnight, he says.

Garrett has scheduled a March 31 town hall at UVA’s Batten School, where 135 tickets will be distributed by lottery. An earlier March 13 event was changed because of yet another scheduling conflict.

“It seems pretty pitiful to me,” says Perriello. “You can do both—have a large town hall and a smaller event. The only reason to restrict attendance is you don’t want to answer constituents.”

However, Griffin cites safety concerns—and the riot at the University of California-Berkeley because of an invitation to former Breitbart editor Milo Yiannopoulos—as the reason for having the Batten School host the town hall.

“The issue with a spirited crowd is the potential for violence, intimidation and disenfranchisement by members of a greater, more spirited crowd,” he says. “We are adamant that we will not subject any constituent, regardless of their political support, to this potential scenario.”

Perriello offers advice to congressmen considering the repeal and replacement of Obamacare: “This is not a game. This is people’s lives.” And that requires “standing in front of them and hearing their stories,” he says. “Sometimes you shouldn’t be quite so afraid to do the right thing.”

And while DuBose and others didn’t get to meet with the current 5th District representative March 6, Garrett did make it to Charlottesville March 11 to meet with the Albemarle County Republican Committee at its monthly Sam’s Kitchen breakfast.

Correction 12:37pm: Griffin was misidentified in one reference.

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In Brief: Members only, additional candidates emerge and more

More candidates emerge

Charlottesville School Board member Amy Laufer announced a run for City Council February 27, and former Albemarle School Board chair Ned Gallaway wants the Democratic nomination for Albemarle’s Rio seat. BOS Chair Diantha McKeel seeks a second term representing the Jack Jouett District. And Angela Lynn again will challenge Weyers Cave Delegate Steve Landes for the 25th District seat.

Kitchen tragedy

Local chef Allie Redshaw was involved in a tragic accident the morning of March 1 when her right hand was caught in a meat grinder at Lampo Neapolitan Pizzeria. She was rushed to the UVA Medical Center, where her hand was amputated at the wrist. At press time, more than $100,000 had been raised for her and her family via a GoFundMe campaign.

“America isn’t a democracy.”

—U.S. Representative Tom Garrett on Twitter responding to complaints about his March 31 town hall lottery.

With prejudice

A charge against James Justin Taylor for allegedly assaulting white heritage defender Jason Kessler was dismissed March 3 at the prosecution’s request because video footage did not support Kessler’s complaint. Kessler, who has filed a petition to remove Vice-Mayor Wes Bellamy from City Council, faces an assault charge April 6.

Membership has its privileges

The Derek Sieg/Josh Rogers/Ben Pfinsgraff private social club targeting the creative community nearly collapsed—literally—when the former Mentor Lodge roof caved in a year ago. Common House is back on track and  plans to open this spring. For a $600 initiation fee and $150/month dues (couples get a price break), members have their own brass keys for a home away from home that includes coffee, cocktails and Chickapig.


The current size of the Main Street Arena is 20,211 square feet. The size of the tech incubator to be built in its place will be 100,000 square feet.
The current size of the Main Street Arena is 20,211 square feet. The size of the tech incubator to be built in its place will be 100,000 square feet. Staff photo

An icy farewell

The sale of Mark Brown’s Main Street Arena to Jaffray Woodriff’s Taliaferro Junction LLC, which plans to build a technology incubator with retail in its place, means big changes for the Downtown Mall—and to all the people who like to strap on ice skates. Skating will continue at the ice park through the fall, and then something will need to freeze fast or local hockey teams and figure skaters will be left on thin ice (the new owner says it’ll donate equipment to a business venture that wants to open an ice rink in a new location). Construction on the incubator is planned for spring 2018.

PROPERTY HISTORY

Built: 1996
Brown paid $3 million in 2010
Woodriff paid $5.7 million in 2017


What does 100K square feet look like?

SquareFootImages_SS-MikeIngalisforTheSabrecom_WH-DanielSchwen_KC-PublicDomain

As a comparison to the size of the incoming tech incubator, a football field is 57,600 square feet, the White House is 67,000 square feet, and the Kennedy Center is 180,000 square feet.


But wait, there’s more

Last week we wrote about 10 groups that have sprung up since the election, only to learn we omitted Progressive Democrats of America—Central Virginia Chapter.

Inspired by: The 2004 election results, with a mission to transform the Democratic Party. Local chapter formed after 2016 election.

Issues: Health care, climate change, SuperPACs, voter access and election integrity, social and economic justice

Strategy: Grassroots PAC operating inside the Democratic Party and outside in movements for peace and justice. Participates in letter drops to legislators, rallies and supporting democratic progressive candidates.

Event: Sponsored documentary GerryRIGGED, airing at 6:30pm March 22 on WCVE

Supporters: 36 at the group’s first public meeting January 4; 90 on e-mail list

Info: facebook.com/groups/198937913888031/

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In brief: Garrett fires back, starter homes for the rich and more

Eyesore optimism

The skeletal Landmark could morph into the deluxe Dewberry Hotel in 2018, the Daily Progress reports, but some details still need to be worked out. For instance, the city is offering 75 parking spaces in the Water Street Garage, despite litigation with management company Charlottesville Parking Center, which says there are no spaces to spare.

Take that, Charlottesville

Congressman Tom Garrett’s first bill is to designate the U.S. District Court on West Main as the “Justice Antonin G. Scalia Federal Building and United States Courthouse” in honor of the conservative jurist, who taught at UVA law from 1967 to 1974. In response, an online petition favors naming the building for someone who stood up for the rights of the African-American Vinegar Hill community on that site, which was razed for urban renewal.

danaRucinski-NGIC
Colonel Dana Rucinski, left, takes command of the spy center. photo courtesy NGIC

Change of command

Former National Ground Intelligence Center commander Colonel Ketti Davison passed her torch to Colonel Dana Rucinski—another female leader—at a February 16 ceremony at the spy center. The outgoing colonel warned her successor that it’s a challenging time to take over the brains of the U.S. Army: “Our enemies no longer fear us,” she said.

Gender pay lawsuit

Assistant Vice Provost Betsy Ackerson is suing UVA, claiming she was paid less than her male peers while doing more work, and that her bosses retaliated against her when she complained and when she needed medical leave and accommodation.

Lee statue solution?

Scottsville Weekly’s Bebe Williams suggests moving it to River City, where Van Clief Nature Area could be a home for all sorts of old or homeless sculptures.

roostera
Courtesy Scottsville Weekly

The high life

C&O brownstoneThe first foundations have been poured for C&O Row, a deluxe brownstone-like development—actual building material will be brick—with 23 single-family homes on Water Street. Prices start at $869,000 and can top $1 million, depending on how customized you want to get. (While the cost of housing is a big issue in town—Coran Capshaw’s Riverbend Development contributed $100,000 to the city’s affordable housing fund for this project—apparently there are plenty of people who can pony up big bucks to be within walking distance of C&O the restaurant.) The 11 houses in the first phase have already been reserved, says Lindsay Milby with Loring Woodruff. The coal tower on the property is going to be spruced up as a private park for the enjoyment of residents.

  • 3,200 to 3,600 square feet
  • Sub-Zero fridge and Wolf range come standard
  • Elevator to rooftop terrace optional
  • Two-car garages
  • Builders are Martin Horn and Evergreen Home Builders First homes available late summer-fall 2017

Richmond rundown

Gerrymandering survives Republicans in a House committee, including
Delegate Steve Landes, voted February 17 to kill Senate redistricting reform bills for this session.

Challenges nonetheless State Democrats plan to contest 45 seats in the heavily GOP-controlled House of Delegates, including the 17 districts held by Republicans that Hillary Clinton carried in 2016. All House seats are up for re-election this year.

Top vacancy House Speaker Bill Howell, R-Stafford, says after 29 years in office and 14 as speaker, he will not seek re-election.

Vetoed Governor Terry McAuliffe nixes Delegate Rob Bell’s Tebow bill that allows homeschooled kids to play in public school sports—again—as well as legislation allowing concealed carry of switchblades and one that expands handgun concealed carry for those who’ve been in the military.

Quote of the week

“We urge all forms of media to resist normalizing racist ideas that in any other age would be identified as precisely what they are: white nationalism.”Pam Starsia, Showing Up for Racial Justice

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Howdy, constituents: Congressman’s tweets, office location annoy some

While Tom Garrett carried the 5th District with 58 percent of the vote, his popularity didn’t seep into the Dem-majority Charlottesville area. In office less than a month, the new congressman has had hundreds of protesters show up every week at his Berkmar Crossing office, to the consternation of some of the business park’s owners and tenants.

Like the new president, whom he supported, Garrett has taken to Twitter, and some constituents are bothered by the tone of the tweets. Still more complain about Garrett holding Facebook town halls rather than addressing constituents face to face, and at least one citizen says Garrett has blocked him on Twitter.

And that’s all before his first month anniversary.

“It’s becoming a nuisance,” says Chuck Lebo, who owns a condo in the same building as Garrett’s in Berkmar Crossing. “I consider it private property. I have tenants that rent from me having a hard time finding spaces to park.”

Protesters who took part in the February 11 demonstration organized by Charlottesville NOW tore up grass and bushes and left trash, says Lebo.

Lebo faced a related private property issue before in 2005, when he managed Shoppers World, now known as 29th Place. Then-House of Delegates candidate Rich Collins was campaigning in the Whole Foods parking lot and refused to leave the privately owned center. Collins was charged with trespassing, and later acquitted on appeal.

The latest congressional office is not the only occasion the right to assemble and petition one’s government has clashed with property rights locally. After Democrat Tom Perriello took office in 2009, he rented space downtown in the rear of the Glass Building, which was the scene of frequent Tea Party protests, until the building’s owner booted them to the public sidewalk after an Americans for Prosperity bus took up eight spaces, for which other tenants paid $100 each and complained they couldn’t use.

Carole Thorpe, chair emeritus of the Jefferson Area Tea Party, says her group protested at Berkmar a few times after Robert Hurt was elected in 2010 and moved his office there. “This crowd seems to be a little louder,” she says, noting that tea partiers “skewed older” and “behaved ourselves.”

She suggests congressmen put their offices somewhere centrally located where activists won’t impede others, because “that comes with territory.”

Garrett spokesperson Andrew Griffin says his office had gotten complaints, and after the first protest, property owners spoke with police about demonstrators blocking doors and parking lots. The second rally, he says, “was much more respectful of other tenants in the building.”

He adds, “[W]e welcome people to exercise their right to peacefully assemble and to protest.”

David Singerman with Indivisible Charlottesville, which plans weekly demonstrations at Berkmar Crossing, says his group is trying to find alternate parking and be respectful of business owners, but points out, “Congressman Garrett works for us. He’s put his office in a place that has insufficient parking and is not easily accessible by foot.”

garrettTimetoProtestHe adds that on Twitter, Garrett “mocked” the protesters for seemingly having plenty of time to demonstrate during business hours.

Craig DuBose takes issue with a tweet in which Garrett referred to Berkeley protesters as “nazi fascists.”

garrettFascistTweet2-15-17

“This has been a pattern of his on Twitter,” says DuBose. “To me it’s embarrassing and insulting. If you can’t grasp how totally inappropriate that is and how far beneath the dignity of the office it is, it’s completely astounding.”

Local realtor Jim Duncan says Garrett blocked him on his GarrettforVA Twitter account after he asked three times whether Garrett was going to seek to investigate the Trump administration’s ties to Russia.

duncanBlocked“It’s more spiteful blocking,” Duncan says.

Griffin says no one has been blocked on Garrett’s official Rep_Tom_Garrett account unless they’ve issued death threats, but that the GarrettforVA account is personal. “If Tom chooses to block people on his personal account, it is perfectly within his rights to do so,” says Griffin in an e-mail.

Duncan, too, feels Garrett’s tone is unbecoming an elected official, and mentions a tweet in which Garrett responded to #clown by saying, “No need to bring [Senate minority leader] @chuckschumer into this!”

garrett#clownTweet“That interaction is not becoming of the office,” he says.

Of course Garrett is not the only local politician whose tweets are causing controversy. Vice-Mayor Wes Bellamy’s vulgar tweets from a few years ago inspired a petition to recall him from office (see story on page 10).

Protesters have been clamoring for a town hall meeting with Garrett, and last week, he held events on Facebook February 13 and 15. That, too, drew a chorus of complaints.

“He gets to filter the questions,” says Indivisible’s Singerman. “He can stall and it’s harder to interrupt if he’s not answering.”

The timing of the video events is also a problem, says Singerman. “A lot of people in the 5th District don’t have Internet access, and 9pm is an inconvenient time when libraries and restaurants with Wi-Fi are closed.”

“It was a complete failure,” says DuBose of the first event. “The question I phoned in was not the question asked. They posed a general question that didn’t address the specific question I asked and allowed him to read from the script.”

“Facebook hall questions being changed simply isn’t true,” says Sullivan. “Some were paraphrased on the first town hall because we were reading them as they were rolling through the comment feed and with over 6,200 pouring in, I was jotting notes as quickly as possible.”

Because of the complaints, at the second Internet town hall, questions were “literally copied and pasted from Monday night so that there was no confusion, so for anyone claiming last night was not read correctly is being disingenuous at best and dishonest at worst,” says Griffin.

As for in-person town halls, Griffins says a schedule for future events will be put out, but he doesn’t have a time frame for when.