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4BETTER OR WORSE- The week in review

Published July 26, 2007 in issue 0630 of the Hook
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Driest: The Rivanna Water and Sewer Authority asks residents to voluntarily conserve water July 23. Rainfall is 6 inches below normal, and RWSA executive director Tom Frederick predicts water will stop flowing over the dam at the South Fork Rivanna Reservoir within a few days. 

Latest Bad Newz for Michael Vick: The former Virginia Tech quarterback hero is indicted July 17 for operating an illegal dogfighting operation at his Smithfield home. The Atlanta Falcons, for whom Vick now plays, ask him not to show up for training until the NFL evaluates his indictment, amid grisly allegations that losing dogs at Bad Newz Kennels were electrocuted, drowned, shot, or hanged. 

Biggest Darden scandal: A July 7 Daily Progress article about student Rafael Diaz-Tushman and his burgeoning PayPal-inspired business for online porn and gambling sends the business school and its alumni into an uproar, and Diaz-Tushman is booted from the Batten Institute's prestigious incubator program, Brian McNeill reports in the DP.

Best way to galvanize Virginia voters: Sock 'em with hefty fees for bad driving. Since an "abusive driver" law went into effect July 1, more than 100,000 citizens have signed an online petition calling for the law's repeal before all members of the General Assembly face voters in November, the Washington Post reports.

Nicest raises: Charlottesville School Board approves a 5.9 percent raise-- $9,000-- for Superintendent Rosa Atkins, upping her salary to $162,000. In Albemarle, Superintendent Pam Moran gets a 4 percent raise of $6,600, which pulls up her wages from $166,400 to $173,000. The overall national salary for superintendents averages $141,191, according to the Education Research Service.

Biggest JADE arrest of the week: The drug task force takes 11 grams of cocaine valued at $1,100 off the street July 20. Gary Arnold Brookman and Dayle Anne Murphy are charged with conspiracy to distribute, and naturally they have a gun, which earns them another felony charge. Additional charges are pending, according to a release.

Longest pot-growing sentence: Louisa resident Geoffrey Alan Cummings, 53, receives five years in prison for the 352 marijuana plants police found growing on his property last summer. Cummings also forfeits his $250,000 house.

Lightest pot-growing sentence: Gary Peck, who crammed hundreds of plants into a small 7' by 7' fenced space in his Scottsville yard to supply his sick wife, gets a suspended five-year sentence July 18, according to Progress reporter Liesel Nowak. 

Better late than never: UVA finally ditches Social Security numbers for student, faculty, and staff IDs, the Cav Daily reports, after a number of breaches, most recently when hackers obtained the personal information of 5,700 faculty. 

Most eye-watering: Pepper spray discharged in an elevator evacuates the downtown ACAC July 18 for two hours.

Best fundraisers: The two female Democratic challengers for the Albemarle Board of Supervisors have raised more than the Republicans. Marcia Joseph has accumulated $10,288 to Chairman Ken Boyd's $8,700, and in the White Hall District, Ann Mallek has $15,010 to David Wyant's $10,680, according to the Virginia Public Access Project.

Worst blow to Huja-vision: City Council shelves former planning director Satyendra Huja's plans for a $15k statue symbolizing Charlottesville's relationships with its sister cities, according to Seth Rosen in the Progress.

Wiki-est president: Monticello's website now contains more than 300 articles about Thomas Jefferson, although only staff and respected Jefferson scholars can change the content, unlike the inspiration for the feature, Wikipedia.

Worst loss for Maybelline: Former TV evangelist Tammy Faye Bakker Messner dies July 20 at age 65 following a long bout with colon cancer.

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Comments

                     
Tom Rhetoric7/27/2007 10:50:09 PM

From now on Tom Frederick is Tom Rhetoric.

It was five years ago he was yapping his pie hole about blah blah blah we don't have enough water.

No new facilities are being constructed, and the South Fork reservoir hasn't even been dredged to make room for more water.

Fees have exponentiated and money is now being spent in the name of burning thousands of gallons of diesel fuel to truck out poop to other communities. Tom is a cheerleeder. Until he and Mike Gaffney are out, we can expect more B.S.

RWSA needs results-oriented leadership, not someone who is trying to be politically correct.

Drought of action7/31/2007 9:39:47 AM

There is no drought! I'm trying to get some contracting done, and I know it has rained almost every day for the last few months. The grass is lush and green. The real drought is in the ability of RWSA to do anything. It is patently obvious that the reservoirs are too small for the population, and have been for years. Now we have raised fees, and guilt laden PR, to make up for RWSA's poor performance. It's reprehensible.

TONY DEIVERT8/2/2007 7:33:20 AM

We're all getting duped by the 'water' shortage'. There would not be a shortage except that our local pols and their inept, like-minded folkery have overlooked the obvious--we have created a demand that exceeds supply.

This excessive demand is the development blank check paid with our tax monies to the Woods and the Craigs of the community. It's developer-welfare paid by our misery.

No, don't blame the developers, their bad behavior and their smart lawyers. Blame the duped-out supervisors who have no idea of economics and have no idea of how we get 'droughty' conditions every summer.

Instead we wring our hands as someone who is hooked on the daily soaps and we buy into the supervisor folly as if they were reasoning people instead of bad actors playing the role of governance.

The economics thing gets us all. The supervisors are spending our money on things that do not provide benefits but only to a few and misery for us bankrolling the few.

The water thing is a climate thing--a supply item. But is aggravated into excessive demand with our money converted into developer-welfare while we go around letting our lawns dry to a crisp and avoid flushing the toilet as often. Is that really doing our part?

No we are fostering bad habits by duped-out supervisors who are puppets of the local welfare funded developers.

Best regards,

Tony Deivert


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