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Charlottesville Community Engagement

Town Crier Productions
Charlottesville Community Engagement
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  • Podcast for July 25, 2025: Audio stories on Charlottesville zoning, budget scenarios for expanded transit, and implementing Albemarle’s next Comprehensive Plan
    At long last, another sonic edition of Charlottesville Community Engagement. It’s summertime and the podcasting isn’t as easy due to a combination of travel, heat, and other factors but this edition will tide you over until the next version which may be in two weeks. Or perhaps on time? I’m Sean Tubbs, and if you’ve never heard one of these before, take a listen!In this edition:* Charlottesville City Council refers Development Code back to Planning Commission (learn more)* Charlottesville files motion asking Judge Worrell to reconsider default judgment (learn more)* Charlottesville Planning Commission reviews design for apartment building on Seminole Trail (learn more)* City Council briefed on budget scenarios for expanded service (learn more)* Albemarle Planning Commission discuss Comprehensive Plan’s implementation chapter (learn more)* The Albemarle Board of Supervisors followed suit eight days later and some members want AC44 to speak to social belonging (learn more)Commercial shout-out: This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit communityengagement.substack.com/subscribe
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  • Podcast for July 11, 2025: Five radio stories from Charlottesville and one from Albemarle
    What is the purpose of journalism? What is the purpose of the government? What makes up society? How did we get here? All the questions David Byrne asked in Once in a Lifetime? This is the audio edition of Charlottesville Community Engagement, a podcast that features audio versions of stories that have gone out in the written version. To add to the confusion, there’s also Information Charlottesville which is intended to capture all of these stories in one place for future people to look back toward.Now, what’s up this time?* Speakers seek answers on next steps for zoning in Charlottesville (learn more)* City Manager Sanders provides status report on various initiatives (learn more)* Charlottesville City Council gets update on ANCHOR program (learn more)* Applications being taken for Charlottesville Boards and Commissions (learn more)* Speakers tell Charlottesville City Council of what they say are threats to U.S. Constitution (must produce)* Albemarle Planning Commission recommends approval of more residential units at Brookhill (need to produce)Today’s experimental sponsor is Westwind Flowers. You can hear a more detailed description in the audio above, just after the show’s billboard. Why experimental? If you’re interested, respond to this email and I can share some information. An explanation of #895-AThis is coming out much earlier than usual, just as the Week Ahead for the period beginning July 14 will also be out earlier. I’m taking a road trip which means making adjustments. However, as a one-person operation, that doesn’t mean the work will stop. Hundreds of you are paying me to do this work, and so I do! I’m absolutely grateful. Sunday is also the fifth anniversary of the newsletter. I’ve not done anything too terribly special for it except decide to go on a road trip which will keep me away from the screen for most of the day. Instead I’ll see a good chunk of the country as I help out a friend. In any case, do take a listen if you’ve not heard one of these before. I got my professional start in public radio and realized fairly on that no public radio station in their right mind would hire me because in the early 2000’s I was quite critical of the shrinking amount of time available for local stories. So, stubborn old me created the Charlottesville Podcasting Network in 2005, a website I still maintain but won’t send you a link because I’ve not figured out how to fix something. And then I created a podcast called the Charlottesville Quarantine Report in March 2020 out of a desperate need to return to journalism. The podcast gets about a tenth of the audience, but I believe it’s the best version of the work I do. I love being able to mix in people’s voices, and there’s so much more to be done. However, I’m a one-person operation with many ideas to unfurl. Thanks to paid subscribers for helping to keep this thing sailing along and let’s hope I find the map. Charlottesville Community Engagement is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit communityengagement.substack.com/subscribe
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  • Podcast for July 5, 2025: Naturalization ceremony held at Monticello for 74 new citizens; Hundreds protest Ryan’s ouster at UVA
    There are now 364 days to go until the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, a historic document that remains relevant as we approach the semiquincentennial. Eight days have passed since the executive branch of the federal government demanded the resignation of University of Virginia President Jim Ryan. There’s a lot happening, and Charlottesville Community Engagement is intended to document as much as possible. I’m Sean Tubbs.In this edition:* Five people were shot in the city’s Fifeville neighborhood late Friday night including two children* A Charlottesville Circuit Court judge has thrown the city’s zoning ordinance out after a legal deadline was not met (learn more) (learn even more)* President Jim Ryan has resigned from the University of Virginia and the path is known for his replacement (learn more) (learn even more)* Former Attorney Ken Cuccinelli continues to serve on the UVA Board of Visitors despite his confirmation being rejected by a Virginia Senate committee, prompting a legal case* Seventy-four new Americans were sworn in as citizens on the morning of July 4 at Monticello (not yet in print)* Hundreds of people were on hand for a protest at UVA just a few hours later to demand steps to prevent the public institution from more federal interference (not yet in print)* Greene Supervisors vote to move forward with smaller water supply (learn more)Thanks for reading Charlottesville Community Engagement ! This post is public so feel free to share it.A note before we beginThis edition should have gone out yesterday as soon as I finished the version for WTJU, but I chose to attend a social event instead. I’m glad I went but do wish I had stayed to complete the work.You will also note that this edition has written versions for three stories including the one about the shooting. I didn’t have a lot of audio to work with this week, and I wanted to document in audio the zoning code and the Ryan resignation. The headlines are sparse because those are slugs. The protest story and the naturalization story will be posted to Information Charlottesville before going out in Monday’s newsletter.No written shout-outs in this one because I want to get this posted, but I’m going to be experimenting as I go.Five people shot in Fifeville Friday nightAn Independence Day celebration in Fifeville turned tragic late Friday night when gunfire erupted, sending five people to the hospital including three children.A series of firework displays had begun after dark across the neighborhood causing many people to be outside to see and hear the explosions.According to an information release from Charlottesville Police Department, officers responded to multiple calls of a shooting on Orangedale around 11:23 p.m. The first officers arrived a couple of minutes later and found five people who had been shot.The victims were a 10-year-old girl, an 11-year-old boy, a 17-year-old male, an 18-year-old female, and a 52-year-old male.“Due to heavy foot and vehicle traffic, emergency medical units were initially unable to access the scene,” reads the release. “Officers and medics worked together to transport the victims on foot and in patrol vehicles, applying pressure to their wounds until additional EMS personnel arrived.”Everyone shot was reported to be in stable condition as of the release sent out at 11:13 a.m. this morning. The Criminal Investigations Division and Forensics Unit are investigating and police want to see video footage.The Fifeville Neighborhood Association is holding a community gathering at 6 p.m. at Abundant Life at 782 Prospect Avenue.Copy for UVA RYAN:Facing pressure from the United States Department of Justice, University of Virginia President Jim Ryan resigned from his position on June 27.The Cavalier Daily reports that the Civil Rights Division under the control of President Donald Trump sent seven letters to UVA between April 11 and June 17 insisting that not enough had been done to demonstrate that programs to encourage and promote Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion had not been sufficiently dismantled.In a statement, Ryan said he did not want to put federal grant funding at risk to save his job, a job he planned to leave in 2026. So he resigned and Executive Vice President J.J. Davis will serve as acting president.Many groups have condemned the pressure from the federal government including the Faculty Senate. The Virginia Conference of the American Association of University Professors sent a letter on June 30.Later on in the program we’ll have audio from a protest held at the University Avenue side of the Rotunda on July 4.The Board of Visitors had been scheduled to meet on July 1 for a personnel matter but canceled the virtual event before it began. The claim is that the meeting wasn’t needed, but on that same day former Rector Robert Hardie was served with a lawsuit arguing that one of the members of the Board of Visitors continued to sit in the position unlawfully.On June 9, the Senate Privileges and Elections Committee failed to confirm Ken Cuccinelli for the seat. Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares advised Hardie and others to ignore that out of a claim that the entire General Assembly had not taken a vote. Members of the committee have sued in Fairfax County Court and are seeking an injunction.More from that protest in a moment.DEVELOPMENT CODE copyNearly five years ago, the City of Charlottesville embarked on a process called Cville Plans Together which sought to update the city’s housing policies, the Comprehensive Plan, and the zoning code. The general idea was to increase development rights across the entire city and to remove City Council from many of the decisions about density and height.City Council voted unanimously on December 18, 2023 to enact the code, and a group of property owners who disagreed with the blanket approach filed suit in Charlottesville Circuit Court asking for the new rules to be declared voided ab initio, a Latin term meaning “from the beginning.”The plaintiffs in White v. Charlottesville survived an attempt by the city to have Circuit Court Claude Worrell dismiss the case. In April of this year, Judge Worrell ruled that the case would proceed to trial and a date was set for June 2026.However, attorneys for the plaintiffs noticed that the outside counsel for the city, Gentry Locke, failed to respond to a directive to submit a particular document. On June 2, they filed for default judgement and the next day the city’s attorneys filed for permission to file late.In a hearing in Charlottesville Circuit Court on June 30, Judge Worrell sided with the plaintiffs and expressed lament that the case would not go to trial.“There are things in this case I thought might be useful about what zoning is and what zoning isn’t,” Worrell said. “It would have been interesting.”The next day, the city’s Department of Neighborhood Development Services sent a note to the development community.“Pursuant to the order issued by the Honorable Judge Worrell of the Charlottesville Circuit Court on June 30, 2025, the City of Charlottesville is currently reviewing all zoning and development applications on file to assess appropriate next steps,” reads the email.The next day, Charlottesville City Manager Sam Sanders called the default judgement “terribly disappointing.” This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit communityengagement.substack.com/subscribe
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  • Podcast for June 20, 2025: Several stories from Charlottesville City Council's second meeting in June
    In this edition:* There’s a new vote-counting system in Charlottesville City Council but this past week, Council had to take a series of voice votes because it wasn’t quite ready.* City Council briefed on Neighborhood Development Services work plan, forthcoming zoning changes (learn more) * City Council gets briefing on Human Rights work in Charlottesville (learn more) (2.75)* Charlottesville Police Chief Michael Kochis addresses recent shootings on the Downtown Mall as well as a decision to not use crime analysis software known as Peregrine (learn more) * Council takes a series of votes on items that I’ve not yet written for print!Shout-out to subscribers!On the days when I stop and wonder if what I’m doing has any value, I sit down and write people who have decided to contribute to the business. I thanked over a dozen people yesterday to let them know that their support fuels me. There have been around a thousand people who have done so in the past five years, and I’ve managed to do all of that without any assistance from a marketing staff.There are organizations out there that secure grant funds in order to hire people to secure more funding! I just want to cobble together enough of an income to be able to keep going. If I had not been here the past five years doing this work, there are many things that would not have gone reported.* I wrote at least 100,000 words on the creation of the Development Code and continue to monitor new projects every single week* I am covering Albemarle County’s enthusiastic push for economic development including the purchase of land for a future defense and intelligence sector* I track what the University of Virginia is purchasing, what they plan to build, and how they intend to growI dislike selling myself. I’m a self-effacing journalist with leaky self-confidence. I’m fairly certain I am not employable in this community anymore. This is all I got, and I’m hopeful to keep going for a while.And thanks to the hundreds of people who believe in my work enough to pay me. One day I am hopeful I can help train more people. I know I’m passionate about this work and hopeful for the future. If you want to learn more about how you can support the work, check out this section on the Information Charlottesville website. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit communityengagement.substack.com/subscribe
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  • Podcast for June 14, 2025: Albemarle Supervisors get briefing on economic development, cost of county services
    The podcast edition of Charlottesville Community Engagement marks the end of the workweek for the devoted staff at Town Crier Productions and the beginning of the next one. The mission is to write as much as possible and to always strive to capture more. The podcast edition reaches about a tenth of the audience for the written version. From a production standpoint, they’re the same thing - stories about the community that may help you understand some of the shifting dynamics. I’m Sean Tubbs, and I’m glad to be able to bring this information to you.On this edition:* Inaugural director of Manning Institute of Biotechnology shares vision with UVA Board (learn more)* UVA surpasses $6 billion in major fundraising campaign (learn more)* Charlottesville Planning Commission briefed on forthcoming updates to zoning code (learn more)* UVA provides update on construction projects to Charlottesville Planning Commission (learn more)* City parks and recreation put garden plot term limits on hold (learn more)* Albemarle County Supervisors get briefings on the cost of county services as well as economic development (stories come out on Monday)Charlottesville Community Engagement is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Soul-searching SaturdayThere are no shout-outs in the print edition but I’ll take this Saturday afternoon to write up the current state of that form of public announcements. I’ve strived to be transparent with how my company makes revenue.Prior to launching this newsletter on July 13, 2020, I launched a Patreon account for people who wanted to provide seed money for the overall venture. I did not know how I would distribute the work. At the time, my work consisted of a podcast called the Charlottesville Quarantine Report.That went out through Simplecast, and I still pay $15 a month to host the work until I can figure out a more permanent place for it to live. I think it is a valuable archive of a time in history. If you want to hear one, go back and listen to the June 8, 2020 edition which gave an update on what local government was doing.Producing that program made me want to move forward with this newsletter, which was a podcast for almost all of the first 700 editions. These were very short in nature at first but expanded over time as I got used to doing the work.If you look at the print version of the July 13, 2020 edition, there is no shout-out. There are also no pictures. No headlines. It’s literally a radio script. If you take a listen, you’ll hear a shout-out to Rapture. I put that in as a placeholder as I spent some time in public radio and wanted to do something. At the time, the place had reopened under COVID rules and it was where I spent time away from home.In the July 15, 2020 edition, I noted that Mead Oriental Rugs was supporting the show in both the print and the written versions. I’m friends with the owner. There was no money exchanged.In the fourth version, College Inn was a shout-out. One of the owners let me do this and I don’t remember if we had any sort of an arrangement or not. They’re now gone.This continued for those first few weeks with me adding in others here and there, even promoting the Charlottesville Podcasting Network. That’s the site I created in 2005 as an experiment in audio distribution.By the 14th edition of the newsletter, I began to implement something from the Patreon world. For most of the time of the site, if you paid $25 a month through Patreon, you’d get a certain number of “shout-outs” in the newsletter. I began to track these, as there were many people willing to support the work.And so on. Now we’re up to 879 editions of the regular newsletter, and over 315 editions of the Week Ahead newsletter. All produced by one person. However, the business has grown incrementally, and there is now much in the shout-out system that needs to be fixed.I’m hoping to do that over the course of the year. I’m no longer taking any new requests under the old system but I have two paid advertisers who are going to work with me as I begin to put the new system in place. This will be a mixture of message here in Substack, banner ads on Information Charlottesville, as well as mentions in the podcast.The shout-out will continue and the new policy will contain some way of getting public service announcements. There are thousands of you reading this newsletter and I suspect that number will grow as more people learn.Now I need to get going because the next set of stories beckon. Thank you for reading to this point if you did. If you didn’t read to this point, please know I’m waving at you and saying hello anyway.Thanks for reading Charlottesville Community Engagement ! This post is public so feel free to share it. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit communityengagement.substack.com/subscribe
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Regular updates of what's happening in local and regional government in and around Charlottesville, Virginia from an award-winning journalist with nearly thirty years of experience. communityengagement.substack.com
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