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C-VILLE Weekly

Ivy residents will lose the convenience—and community—of Toddsbury when it closes October 11. (Staff Photo)

Repair despair: Ivy’s Toddsbury closes after 25 years

News | Lisa Provence | COMMENTS

Two days before the October 11 closing of Toddsbury of Ivy, a beloved convenience store in the heart of the small western Albemarle community, its parking lot was paved. That’s something the store’s owner says he’s been asking the landlord to do for over a year, and maintenance was a factor in Bruce Kirtley’s decision […]

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Some Charlottesville residents find the new mural on the side of Six Hundred West Main to be tone-deaf. Photo Credit: Staff Photo

Yay or neigh?: Mural stirs controversy

News | Brielle Entzminger | COMMENTS

The developers of Six Hundred West Main, a luxury apartment building that opened in September, promised the city a “gift” in the form of a public mural from internationally acclaimed artist Faith XLVII. But some residents may want to give it back. The mural, which was unveiled during the week of September 23, features a […]

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Photo: Skyclad Aerial

Future code: How will a tech boom change the city?

News | C-VILLE Writers | COMMENTS

By Sydney Halleman It’s 10am on the Downtown Mall, and already the sounds of demolition flood the area. Pedestrians stream past Mudhouse Coffee and The Whiskey Jar, and a few glance at the tall fence erected recently across the walkway, and the signs that read, “Do not trespass. Construction site.” Machinery looms over the area […]

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January 21
  • As the country looks ahead to a new administration and beyond, Charlottesville’s leaders and activists have hard-wo… https://t.co/Z5S8Ln03XF

    24 mins ago
  • RT @brielleentz: Since the fall, @CvilleDSA has been corresponding by mail with around a dozen people incarcerated at ACRJ. From gu… https://t.co/yt2CkhlDk5

    3 hours ago
  • RT @TheNolanStout: Chip Boyles, executive director of the Thomas Jefferson Planning District Commission, has been selected as Charlott… https://t.co/ufgrZLdsEA

    5 days ago
  • RECENT
News

In brief: Albemarle’s climate plan, monument case breathes new life, Brackney pushback, and more

By C-VILLE Writers | COMMENTS

Inching closer Albemarle County staff is recommending the Board of Supervisors consider adopting an ambitious climate goal: to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 45 percent by 2030 and reach net zero by 2050, aligning themselves with the same goals as the city. Last month, county staff gave the Board of Supervisors a second update on […]

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A corrections officer walks outside the prison prior to the execution of John Allen Muhammad at the Greensville Correctional Center in Jarratt, Virginia, November 10, 2009. Muhammad was sentenced to die for the murder of Dean Harold Meyers, one of 10 people left dead in a shooting spree by Muhammad and younger accomplice Lee Boyd Malvo that terrorized the Washington, DC, area in October 2002. Photo Credit: Reuters/Jonathan Ernst/Newscom

Capital secrets: News outlets sue VADOC to view executions from start to finish

By C-VILLE Writers | COMMENTS

By Spencer Philps Four news organizations, including BH Media Group, which publishes The Daily Progress, are suing the Virginia Department of Corrections over procedures they believe violate the public’s First Amendment right to witness state executions in their entirety. Members of the public, including the press, are allowed to witness executions. But the plaintiffs argue […]

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Lois Alderfer, who has been a family nurse practitioner in Virginia for 28 years, is the medical director at BRMC. (Photo: Zachary Wajsgras)

Reversing the trend: Nelson County’s top opioid prescriber has actively changed course

By Matt Weyrich | COMMENTS

The bombshell dropped on July 16. A report in The Washington Post, based on newly available data from the Drug Enforcement Agency, revealed every manufacturer, distributor, and pharmacy involved in the opioid crisis, and tracked the role each one played in the process that placed highly addictive prescription painkillers in the hands of patients. In […]

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Janice Kavanagh rents out this cottage to tenants through Airbnb, but has been forced to turn away several scam victims who tried to book the place via Craigslist. Courtesy of Janice Kavanagh

Renters beware: Local property owners caught in the middle of Craigslist scams

By Matt Weyrich | COMMENTS

Prospective renters using Craigslist to find temporary housing in Charlottesville have recently been the victims of scammers, paying thousands of dollars in rent up front before showing up on the doorstep of bewildered homeowners who already rented out their space. Janice Kavanagh is a Charlottesville real estate agent who rents out the front half of […]

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News
Independent City Council candidate Bellamy Brown (left) saw a surge of campaign donations this past summer, and drew the support of Democratic councilor Mike Signer.

Party favors: Dems question Mike Signer’s support of independent Bellamy Brown

By Matt Weyrich | COMMENTS

When Mayor Nikuyah Walker was elected to City Council in November 2017, she became the first independent candidate to claim a seat since 1948. A few weeks ahead of the 2019 election, another independent is making headway among prospective voters—and current councilors. Bellamy Brown raised more than double the amount of money between July and […]

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News
With schools closed since March due to the ongoing pandemic, Charlottesville-area teens have had to finish their high school careers with makeshift versions of the events they had looked forward to for years. PC: Eze Amos

Healthy minds: CHS students discuss mental health with Virginia’s education secretary

By Brielle Entzminger | COMMENTS

Shana Bullard felt terrified. She was about to meet Virginia Secretary of Education Atif Qarni, for a roundtable discussion on mental wellness initiatives at Charlottesville High School. “I was very intimidated,” says the CHS junior, who’s been active in several of the school’s mental wellness programs. But she found Qarni to be personable and down-to-earth. […]

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Robert Tracci hopes to fend off challenger Jim Hingeley to retain his seat as the Albemarle County commonwealth’s attorney in a race that’s already had an “unprecedented” twist. Photo by Jen Fariello

Turning up the heat: Albemarle Commonwealth’s Attorney Robert Tracci faces a progressive challenger with deep pockets

By Lisa Provence | COMMENTS

Political races in Albemarle County are usually pretty staid compared to Charlottesville’s—except for the commonwealth’s attorney race. Prosecutors Jim Camblos (in 2007) and Denise Lunsford (in 2015) were both ousted after controversial, high-profile cases. And 2019 has promised to be another closely watched contest—even before incumbent Robert Tracci’s opponent received an unheard-of $50,000 donation. Republican […]

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News
The very first cover of C-VILLE Review

30 years and counting

By C-VILLE Writers | COMMENTS

In 1989, Bill Chapman was a senior at Hampden-Sydney College and Hawes Spencer, a former student, was working in the communications office. Chapman had just completed a summer internship at Richmond’s Style Weekly, and “It seemed like Charlottesville needed a smarter, less reverent paper than The Daily Progress,” he says.   The two founded C-VILLE […]

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News
The new project is expected to include 28 apartments as well as agricultural space and an eventual farm store. (Photo: Skyclad Aerial)

In brief: New Hogwaller project, march on, cyberstalking arrest, and more

By C-VILLE Writers | COMMENTS

Hogwaller reset After City Council’s rejection of his zoning and permit requests earlier this year, Justin Shimp, developer of the embattled Hogwaller Farms project in Belmont, is back with fresh plans for a newly acquired parcel partially overlapping the site of his previous proposal. The name of the new project—Rootstock Farm Apartments—should be better received […]

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The stairs that led to the top of the coal tower have been removed, but the base and surrounding dirt area are easily accessible. (Photo: Matt Weyrich)

Slow going: Water Street coal tower restoration project at a standstill

By Matt Weyrich | COMMENTS

Charlottesville’s C&O train station closed its doors in 1986, but that hasn’t kept the building and its adjacent coal tower out of headlines in the three decades since. The site of both a double homicide and an apparent suicide, the abandoned tower became a popular hangout spot for drug users and the homeless in the […]

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One Charlottesville High School senior estimates about 25 percent of his classmates vape. Photo: Myles Clark

Vape escape: Raising the vaping age hasn’t deterred teens

By Brielle Entzminger | COMMENTS

Bathrooms. Locker rooms. Cars. Check any of these places on a typical school day, and you’re likely to find students taking part in the latest teen trend: vaping. “It’s pretty common around my crowd,” says one Charlottesville High School senior, who estimates about 25 percent of his classmates vape. “Kids will duck out of class […]

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Democratic General Assembly candidates Jennifer Kitchen, Elizabeth Alcorn, and Tim Hickey are sharing resources to help make inroads with rural voters. Photo: courtesy of subjects

Putting up a fight: Rural Dems band together in deep-red districts

By Lisa Provence | COMMENTS

Ten Dems running in solidly red General Assembly districts—like the ones that dissect Albemarle County—are doing what rural folk have always done: banding together to help each other out. They’ve formed a coalition called Rural Groundgame, hired a few staffers, and are sharing resources on how to reach the voters who face the same rural […]

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News
The number of refugees granted admission to the United States has dropped dramatically since Donald Trump took office. Photo: Lachen Parks

The longest hour: A refugee resettlement simulation drives home the hardship and heartbreak of trying to enter America

By Jennifer MacAdam-Miller | COMMENTS

My name is Abebi. I am a 12-year-old girl and I live in Nigeria. One day while I was at school, a group of men with guns burst in and kidnapped my entire class. The men were from the jihadist terrorist group Boko Haram, which means “no Western education.” They want to establish Sharia, or […]

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Paul H. Cale Elementary School is now one step closer to having a new name. (Photo: Staff Photo)

What’s in a name?: Behind the recommendation to rename Cale Elementary

By C-VILLE Writers | COMMENTS

By Ali Sullivan The final meeting lasted just a few minutes.  After months of investigation, an advisory committee determined that Paul H. Cale Elementary School—named after a former Albemarle County Public Schools superintendent—should change its name. The recommendation comes nearly four months after the Cale Advisory Committee’s first meeting and almost a year since Lorenzo […]

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UVA Hospital System revamped its debt collection system just four days after the Washington Post wrote a story about it. (Photo: Skyclad Aerial)

In brief: UVA hospital makes amends, a yak on the run, and more

By C-VILLE Writers | COMMENTS

Kinder, gentler health care UVA Health System says it will revamp its financial aid guidelines and sue fewer patients after facing a massive backlash from a Washington Post story about the university’s proclivity to go after nonpaying patients. A Kaiser Health News report revealed that from 2013 to June 2018, the state-owned health system sued […]

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News
Three Board of Supervisors candidates showed up for a Senior Statesman forum: incumbent Ann Mallek and Steve Harvey for White Hall, and Donna Price for the Scottsville District. (Photo: Staff Photo)

Mallek challenged: White Hall candidates gently spar at forum

By Lisa Provence | COMMENTS

Longtime Albemarle County Supervisor Ann Mallek hasn’t had a challenger to represent the White Hall District for the past two elections. That changed with Republican Steve Harvey, whose nickname is “Super Steve.” At a September 11 Senior Statesman forum, the former Army helicopter pilot drew some clear lines about his priorities. In his introduction, after […]

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A few Confederate supporters and protestors met outside the courthouse on Wednesday. Staff photo.

Case (almost) closed: Plaintiffs to receive attorneys’ fees, but not damages  

By C-VILLE Writers | COMMENTS

In the final day of the Monument Fund’s lawsuit against the city, Charlottesville Circuit Court Judge Richard Moore ruled that the plaintiffs won’t be awarded damages, but will receive a to-be-determined amount in attorneys’ fees that’ll be less than the original ask of over $604,000. Early in the three-day trial, the culmination of a case […]

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A few Confederate supporters and protestors met outside the courthouse on Wednesday. Staff photo.

Legal wrangling: City argues against $604K fees for Confederate statue attorneys 

By Matt Weyrich | COMMENTS

Extensive and lengthy cross-examinations were heard in Charlottesville Circuit Court on Thursday as  lawyers representing the plaintiffs in the lawsuit against the city to prevent it from removing statues of two Confederate generals broke down why they believe the city owes over $604,000 in attorney fees and litigation costs.  The lawsuit was filed by the […]

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Reverend Robert Lewis of the Hinton Avenue United Methodist Church appeared before City Council on August 5 to express his support for the apartment project. (Photo: Eze Amos)

Legal action: Belmont residents file petition against church rezoning plan

By Matt Weyrich | COMMENTS

A dispute over the rezoning of a Methodist church that wants to add affordable housing units reached Charlottesville Circuit Court on September 5, when a group of city residents filed a petition for the plan to be thrown out. Thirty-one people, including Belmont/Carlton Neighborhood Association president Kimber Hawkey and Quality Pie owner Tomas Rahal, are […]

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Martez Tolbert grew up boxing, often getting into fights with other kids on the street. His aggressive nature has since subsided, but his love for the gym remains. Tolbert now works out in his basement, sparring with close friends who also put an emphasis on staying physically fit.
Photo: Eze Amos

Fighting for a second chance: Reentry services work to provide opportunities for ex-offenders

By Matt Weyrich | COMMENTS

Martez Tolbert grew up hustling. “Even as a 3-year-old, I was selling drugs for my uncle and didn’t even know it,” he says. “He was just giving me little backpacks to go up the street.” When he was 11, Tolbert moved with his family from Detroit to Charlottesville, landing in Westhaven. He was raised by […]

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