Author Archive for Waldo Jaquith

Page 316 of 549

At Last, We Are Fulfilled

My life was dark, and without meaning. I moved through the days as a blind man through fog, my vision obscured but I too blind to know.

Yesterday, the heavens opened up, trumpets pealed, and the angels descended. My pathetic life, at long last, has meaning. Verily, Chez Target has opened.

No longer must I cover my face in shame as I skulk through Wal-Mart among those of my financial class and, yet, to whom I know I am innately superior. No longer must I suffer the slings and arrows of an outrageous drive to Short Pump. My empty life can be filled with cleverly-designed consumer goods, very much like those found at Wal-Mart, yes, only somehow better, in ways that I could not explain. Target is my shepherd, I shall not want.

It’s like when Krispy Kreme opened. Only the high will last longer this time. I just know it.

Griffin Explains Her Lawsuits

Former Charlottesville superintendent Scottie Griffin (who now goes by “Scottie Jo Griffin”) had an interview with the Fall River school board yesterday, in an effort to take the top post there just weeks after her C’ville fall from grace. As reported by the Herald News today, she explained what led to her being sued in New Orleans:

Griffin explained that the lawsuit in New Orleans stemmed from complaints that had begun previous to being hired. She said she attempted to rectify a situation in which the secretary did not receive pay for overtime work, but the employee did not respond to those attempts.

“I left the school system and was not asked to give a statement or show up (in court),” Griffin said about a hearing concerning the employees’ grievance.

Griffin’s statement stands in stark contrast with reality. In fact, the lawsuit had to be settled, because Griffin “disconnected her telephone numbers and refused to get in contact with lawyers,” and then failed to show up on court, as described by her own attorney. Her dismissal of the lawsuit as “complaints that had begun previous to be hiring” are also at odds with the truth. As Bob Gibson uncovered in the Progress some months ago, the woman who sued her was a 36 year veteran of the New Orleans school system. She requested a transfer away from Griffin, shortly after Griffin took the reigns there as an area superintendent, citing “intolerable working conditions,” unpaid overtime, and invented allegations of theft. As conditions became worse, Clay’s health deteriorated, until her doctor ordered her not to work until she could get out from under Griffin’s thumb. Griffin denied her medical leave. Clay sued. Griffin left the job shortly thereafter, remaining there for just eight months.

But Griffin doesn’t settle for merely misrepresenting her time in New Orleans. Then there’s Our Fair City:

She continued to explain that her shortened term in Charlottesville was in part an issue of politics after an attempt to reassign a veteran employee of the school district.

“I came under attack from a person who was very well politically connected,” Griffin said. “That attack continued throughout the school year. I could handle being attacked and I could handle the slander, because I knew it wasn’t true.”

She said as the matter progressed she found it was taking away from her efforts to focus on student achievement, and that led to her decision to resign.

“I decided if I cannot focus on student achievement, I would resign my position, and I did,” she said.

That’s rather a simplistic way to describe the proceedings. Others might describe it as Griffin attempting to fire a whistleblower who made public widespread concerns among teachers and administrators that Griffin’s “decisions” and “behaviors” were “significant barriers to the success of our efforts to close the achievement gap and to provide excellent educational experiences for all students.” After Griffin’s public embarrassment and subsequent further exposure as a fraud, she was forced out and paid a quarter of a million to please just go away.

In her interview in Fall River, MA, Griffin described herself as “one of the best candidates you’ll ever encounter,” and bravely offered to move there from Charlottesville if selected for the position.

Interviews with two other candidates are scheduled for Monday.

07/26 Update: James Fernald has a story in today’s Daily Progress.

Professional Putt-Putt in C’ville

jamesw points out that Charlottesville’s Putt-Putt, down on Rio, is featured in this New York Times photoessay on professional miniature golf. Professional miniature golf? One of the stars is 10-year-old Olivia Prokopova, of the Czech Republic, who has an entourage that includes a coach. It turns out that our local miniature golf course is noteworthy because it was “designed to make competitive putting possible by taking chance out of the equation.” I guess that’s why I lose there every time — no windmills.

Hollymead Town Center Demographics

jamesw writes: “In a posting on Hooville.net, “ariccabona” points to a marketing site for the new Hollymead Town Center. The Complete Demographics (PDF) has some interesting data. For example, within a 5 mile radius of the center, 22% of the population has a graduate degree. Within the same area there are 1,442 businesses!”

Greene Candidates: End Growth

If there’s one thing that every candidate for the Greene County Board of Supervisors can agree on, it’s the need to end growth. So reports Kate Andrews in today’s Progress:

“Let’s take our county back,” said Patsy Morris, who is running in a special election for the at-large seat left open by Kenneth Lawson, who resigned earlier this year.

[…]

She criticized “big contractors” for buying up county land and said they are forcing out low-income residents.

“I’m not the chairman of anything,” she added. “I’m just a poor kid trying to cut my taxes.”

Supervisor Jeri Allen, running to keep her Ruckersville seat, said big companies are “absolutely” buying a great deal of land in Greene.

“But people are selling it to them,” she added. “We can all rail and scream and cry about it, but as long as people can come in and wave money, there’s nothing we as a board can do about it.”

Her board colleague and Stanardsville candidate, Kevin Welch, added that he and other supervisors have voted to place limits but are hamstrung by past inattention to growth.

“Most property in Greene has been subdivided,” Welch said.

Morris’ opponent, Gary Lowe, said supervisors haven’t done enough to curtail residential growth.

If elected, he’d push for ordinances to require developers to pay the county proffers if they wish, for instance, to switch agricultural zones to residential.

Lowe, as Planning Commission chairman, said he’s tired of having to “rubber-stamp subdivisions. I want us to be in control of our destiny.”

Six candidates, every one of them wants to control growth. Development in Greene County has exploded in recent years, particularly as the cost of real estate in Charlottesville and Albemarle has skyrocketed, pushing less-affluent people into the outlying counties. Greene’s population increased 48% between 1990 and 2000 (compare to 14.4% statewide), and another 10.1% from 2000 to 2003 (compare to 4.3% statewide). Morris hits closest to the mark with her comment about just trying to cut taxes — since new residents, on the whole, require more in services than they pay in taxes, growth is a money-losing proposition in our area.

With the Albemarle County BOS elections just getting underway, it’s not yet clear what the major issue will be. But with growth as the topic in Greene and in Charlottesville’s recent House of Delegates race, candidates may be race to see who can oppose growth soonest and the most strongly.

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