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Hookipedia!

Pronouncing Monticello
Although nearly 100 percent of the intelligentsia in this town says "Mon-ti-CHELL-o," quite a lot of bright folks-- especially northern transplants living in Fluvanna-- say, "mon-ti-SELL-o" or that quirky southern variant, "monna-SELL-uh."

Channel 29
Local NBC affiliate supposedly not named after our biggest road. Bright red jackets come out during winter storms. It now faces competition for the first time since the other three networks all set up Charlottesville stations in the last year, collectively known as "The Newsplex."

Rio Road
"Rio," which means "river" in Spanish, was most likely used as a name for the old mill and bridge on this road because of their proximity to the Rivanna River. But the Spanish word is pronounced "Ree-o," some may point out. True, but locals at the time may have opted for the long "i" sound perhaps because it fit with the local pronunciation of the "RY-vanna" river. No one knows for sure, but they do know this: it was never Route 10.

Downtown Mall
An oasis of hipsterdom and a rare urban success story. Built in 1976, expanded in 1985, crossed by traffic in 1995. It's where the action is-- at least on warm Fridays.

Fridays After 5
Free summer concert series held at the east end of the Downtown Mall. Audiences used to sit on a grassy hill which has since been built over in favor of the spankin' new 3500 seat Charlottesville Pavilion.

The University
The more erudite name for UVA and the full text of one of America's most pretentious bumper stickers.

The Grounds
UVA doesn't have a "campus," it has the Grounds. (And it wasn't built by "TJ;" it was founded by "Mr. Jefferson.") And there's no such thing as a freshman. It's "first year," please.

The Lawn
The original grounds of UVA. Streaking the length of it is considered a rite of passage for students.

The Jack
The folksy diminuitive for the UVA's new 16,000 seat, $130 million basketball arena. UVA brass prefer "JPJ."

The Corner
Five blocks of fun. According to historian Coy Barefoot, students began using this moniker for the intersection of University Avenue and the central entrance to the University Grounds (where the fancy "honor" gate was erected in 1915) by 1902. The name stuck and eventually came to include all the real estate for several blocks in either direction. Now it's also the name of the radio station at 106.1 FM.

The "The"
Apparently, the word that absolutely must precede all UVA proper nouns.

Timberlake's
The town's olde tyme drugstore downtown. Still delivers. Still has a lunch counter with homemade soup and real ice-cream sodas. The fireplace is a local gathering spot in winter.

Garrett Square
The old-school name for the low-income housing complex near the Downtown Mall now called "Friendship Court."

County recycling
A cruel joke. In 2003, the County ended its curbside recycling program for everything but newspapers after the market for bottles, cans, and other landfill-packing stuff collapsed.

Three Chopt Road
Also known as Three Notched Road, this colonial version of a highway is essentially the path of today's Route 250, including such historic stretches as the Downtown Mall and West Main Street.

Sacagawea
Probably more famous for being on the unpopular gold dollar coin, she was one of the few non-local folks in the famous Lewis & Clark expedition. According to the February 2003 National Geographic, she's the subject of more statues than any other American woman, including the local one with her crouching on West Main Street. We're still holding out for a statue of York, the Albemarle-based slave on the trip.

The Omni
Built by City Council vote and lots of taxpayer dollars in the mid-1980s, it's simultaneously a symbol of government excess and a really nice place to stay if you want to stroll the Downtown Mall.

Bodo's
Charlottesville's fastest bagels-- and slowest opening schedule. The owner, Brian Fox, hung a "coming soon" banner on the Corner location in 1995. A decade after the sign-- and to bagel-lovers' awe and disbelief-- Fox finally opened the Corner and placed the third jewel in his bagel crown. Cox sold the franchise this year, but bagel fans need not fear. He kept it in the family by selling each restaurant to its respective manager.

Queen Charlotte Sophia
Wife of King George III, the royal the colonists fought the Revolution against. Fourteen years before waging war against the mother country, the General Assembly of the Virginia Colony elected to name the seat of Albemarle County for this young lady.

The White Spot
It's just a restaurant, but no glossary of the town is complete without mentioning this Corner mainstay and its Gus Burger and Grillswith.

Farmington Country Club
Still considered the swankiest place to swing a club, but the past decade has brought stiff competition from Keswick and Glenmore.

Jack Jouett
If there had been a southern poet as sharp as Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, schoolchildren might be reading less about Paul Revere and more about this guy, who warned TJ away from death or capture when the British invaded Charlottesville in 1781. Camping out on the lawn of Cuckoo Tavern in Louisa, he spotted some British soldiers moving toward Charlottesville and took off on his trusty steed to spread the alarm.

Beta Bridge
Built over the C&O (now CSX) tracks in 1924 as part of a city-wide public works improvement project, it's now Charlottesville's most famous-- and most-often-changing-- site for public art. During the school year, it's typically repainted almost every day.

Jefferson Cup
Designed by the man himself, these low-volume pewter goblets adorn many a high school and college graduate's shelf of unused drinking vessels.

Meriwether Lewis
Intrepid Ivy-bred explorer of the American West and a private school cleverly disguised as a public school.

Federal Executive Institute
A former hotel on Emmet Street, now the site of a swanky sort of continuing education center for federal bureaucrats-- er, executives. Typical tuition: $9,000-- paid for by Uncle Sam and you.

"Not gay"
Homophobia still reigns at UVA football games, as some students improvise their own special line in "The Good Old Song," sung to the tune of "Auld Lang Syne."

Three presidents
Besides the ever-present "Mr. Jefferson," Central Virginia lays claim to at least two other presidents: James Madison, whose home, Montpelier, is in nearby Orange County, and James Monroe, whose more modest digs, Ash-Lawn Highland, sit near Monticello on Route 53. Just over the mountain, Woodrow Wilson was born in Staunton.

Foxfield
Who knew that the quest for a nice little horse race in Charlottesville would lead to a rite of spring that has replaced a notorious annual UVA bacchanalian fest? After the early '80s cancellation of "Easters," students needed another outlet for spring fever. They found it at Foxfield. Begun quietly in 1978, the races now draw over 10,000 for spring and fall runnings. However, in recent years, spurred by resident complaints of urine-soaked shrubs and drunk driving, County officials have asked police to keep closer tabs on the shindig

Topless bars
None in the City or surrounding counties. And why not? Officially, they're not illegal, but Virginia ABC law requires that all bars be restaurants. That means that 45 percent of its sales would have to come from food sales-- and that's a tough ticket when when your customers are less interested in surf & turf than T&A.

Sally Hemings
TJ's love interest. Probably buried under the Hampton Inn on West Main. City leaders opted not to rename 10th Street for her a few years ago.

The car bumper statue
That big silver statue outside St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic Church on Alderman Road is actually made out of old car bumpers. Sculptor/priest Father Henry Mascotte created a statue of a meditating Aquinas in the mid-1960s by piecing together auto salvage from around South Bend, Indiana.

Peter Jefferson and Martha Jefferson
Besides being an office park and a hospital, these are actual people from back in the day. Peter Jefferson was a county surveyor who built a house in Shadwell in 1735 (unfortunately, it burned down), but his greater fame came from having a famous son. Martha Jefferson was TJ's wife who bore him a daughter of the same name after whom the hospital is named. After the elder Martha died in 1782, Jefferson vowed never to remarry, opting to remain a widower for the next 44 years. His vow apparently did not preclude intimacy, however (see above, Sally Hemings). 

Vinegar Hill
Considered a slum, this racially mixed but mostly African-American neighborhood of homes and businesses was bulldozed in the early 1960s when "urban renewal" was all the rage. (The art house movie theater by this name opened in 1976.)

Earl Hamner Jr.
Just another kid in the Nelson County town of Schuyler during the Depression, he put his memories on paper, and one of the most long-lasting TV shows was born: The Waltons.

Dave
Used to be the bartender at Downtown pub Miller's until he threw it all away and started a band.

Coran
Dave's manager. Has a thumb in many Charlottesville pies including the new pavilion at the end of the Downtown Mall, Starr Hill Brewery, the Jefferson Theater, and Musictoday.com.

Trax
The house that Dave built? Not really; it was promoter Coran Capshaw who kept the place consistently booked before Tuesday-nights-with-DMB became legendary. And lest we forget, DMB had a manager before Capshaw, one Charles Newman. Trax was reduced to rubble in December 2002 to make way for a UVA hospital annex of some sort.

Celebrities galore

"Virginians are all snobs, and I like snobs. A snob has to spend so much time being a snob that he has little left to meddle with you."--William Faulkner

Screen: Sissy Spacek (Oscar-winning actress), Howie Long (Fox Sports analyst, Radio Shack pitchman), Sister, Sister star Tim Reid and his wife Daphne Maxwell Reid, who are movie producers now, but he'll never be forgotten as WKRP's Venus Flytrap.

Politics: Julian Bond (fiery NAACP chair), Lawrence Eagleburger (frequent Fox News commentator and Secretary of State for about five minutes during administration of Bush 41), Larry Sabato (television's favorite politico talking head), Nathaniel Howell (ambassador to Kuwait during the Gulf War), John Whitehead (religious/civil rights fighter who rose to national prominence by pressing Paula Jones' case against Bill Clinton).

Money: John Kluge (Once the richmest man in the world, he's now ranked #52 by Forbes with a fortune of $9 billion.), Patricia Kluge (billionaire's ex-wife turned businesswoman), Edgar Bronfman (heir to Seagram fortune and bison purveyor)

Music: Dave Matthews (boogie rocker), Maxine Jones (member of Grammy-nominated '90s girl group En Vogue), John McCutcheon (frequent Grammy nominee), Mary Chapin Carpenter (Batesville's resident folkie), Corey Harris (bayou blues).

Fiction: John Grisham (world's #3 novelist-- topped only by Dan "Da Vinci Code" Brown and that clever Rowling lady), Jan Karon (Jessica Mitford series), John Casey (Spartina), Rita Mae Brown (from Rubyfruit Jungle to Sneaky Pie Brown mysteries), Ann Beattie and Deborah Eisenberg (darlings of MFA programs).

Moved away: Muhammed Ali (owned Nelson County property in the mid-'80s), Tami Hoag (best selling author), Tina Fey (SNL head writer and "Weekend Update" anchor went to UVA), Katie Couric (Anerica's favorite news gal happens to be a UVA alumnae), Jessica Lange, Sam Shepard (romantically linked for decades, this thespian couple owned an Albemarle farm until the mid-'90s, moved to Minnesota and now live in a co-op in New York), Lawrence Ferlenghetti (renowned poet and founder of San Francisco's City Lights Bookstore, he owned a home on Park Street from 1998 to 2002)

Sports: Gene Corrigan (longtime ACC Commissioner). Howie Long (see "screen" above).

Poetry: Rita Dove, Charles Wright, George Garrett.

Pop Culture: Peter Max (pop artist whose works look like the Yellow Submarine cover) owns land near Yogaville in Buckingham, Cathy Baker Purcell (the "That's all" girl from Hee-Haw) lives in Orange County, Julann Griffin, ex-wife of Merv, co-founder of Jeopardy!, and owns a farm in Fluvanna.

Dead fraud: Anna "Anastasia" Manahan. Claimant to the Russian throne was determined by DNA in 1994 to be not a romantic, missing grand duchess but a delirious Polish peasant who later married a local eccentric.

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Community Low-down

CHARLOTTESVILLE
Size: 10.26 square miles
Population: 40,315
Change since 2000: -10.5%
Density: 3,929 people per square mile

ALBEMARLE COUNTY (about 3/4 the size of Rhode Island)
Size: 722.61 square miles
Population: 92,035
Change since 2000: +13.9%
Density: 127 people per square mile

SCOTTSVILLE TOWN
The only town in the County, Scottsville has the distinction of being so small that election to government offices (of which there are many) is hotly contested.
Size: 1.54 square miles
Population: 555
Density: 360.2 people per square mile
--source: U.S. Census 2006 estimate (except Scottsville, 2000 Census). It remains to be seen if Charlottesville has actually lost 5,000 people in six years or whether the Census is underestimating and about to create another
5,000-person miscount in the 2010 survey as they did in 2000.

What's this area like?
Well, according to a demographic firm called ClaritasExpress, the 22901 and 22902 zip codes consist of the following human types: Boomtown Singles, Country Squires, Gray Power, Young Influentials, Bedrock America, Family Thrifts, Hometown Retired, Mobility Blues, Suburban Pioneers and Suburban Sprawl (as if we needed Claritas to tell us that!). According to the census, which is summarized by many folks, women constitute over 53% of the local population.

Neighborhood Stuff

Predators nearby?
Virginia requires convicted rapists, pedophiles, and other violent sex offenders to register their whereabouts with the state police. You can search the database to see if there's one living near you.
http://sex-offender.vsp.virginia.gov/sor/

Noisy neighbors?
CHARLOTTESVILLE-- In residential areas of the city, the 10pm-6am limit is 55 decibels (or about the level of loud talking). Charlottesville police are the enforcers on this one and may be willing to come out and measure the racket with their special meters. 970-9041
ALBEMARLE-- Any increase of 15 decibels above the ambient sound level-- with few officially sactioned exceptions like school events, agriculture, church bells, and the "lawful discharge of a firearm"-- is prohibited. The law is broader when it comes to TV and musical devices, which says any annoyance of anybody in a residential area is illegal. Albemarle police can be reached at 296-5807.

Remove the snow!
CHARLOTTESVILLE-- Many people don't realize that a city ordinance requires all citizens to remove snow from the sidewalks along their property within 12 hours of the time the snowfall ceased. (During the blizzard of '96, an altercation broke out when someone dug out a spot for his car, and an interloper parked in it!)

Grass/weeds
CHARLOTTESVILLE-- In the city, you're subject to a fine if you let them grow over 18 inches tall. Not long ago, the city created "no mow" zones near creeks and streams in five city parks, but as for houses, grass must still be mowed within 150 feet of a residence unless a citizen petitions the city to have a riparian buffer zone-- and to date, no one has. Moreover, city residents are required to mow up to the street even if the grass in front of their house doesn't actually belong to them. Enforcer: zoning department. 970-3182

Newcomers
The
Newcomers Club of Greater Charlottesville says it's open to all who have been residents of the area for less than three years. 980-2725, .

Before you dig...
Since undergrounding utilities is all the rage, Virginia has one sweet phone number you should call first
to avoid death and injury when you put that shovel in the ground. After you call "Miss Utility," honchos come out, free of charge, and spray-paint lines where underground utilities lie. 800-552-7001

Utilities

Getting electricity
Currently you are served by only one company. Depending on where you live, it's probably one of the following:
Dominion Virginia Power 888-667-3000
AEP-Virginia - 888-707-4237
Allegheny Power - 800-255-3443
Central Virginia Electric Cooperative - 800-367-2832
Rappahannock Electric Cooperative - 800-552-3904

Choosing the juice
While you still don't have any choice over which company attaches its electric wires to your house, you can pick which company produces the energy that flows through them, thanks to a new state-mandated competitive program called
Virginia Energy Choice. When you sign up for electric service, most of the above utilities should be available. 877-YES-2004

Going green
If you're a Dominion customer, you can buy "green" electricity (generated entirely from renewable resources) or wind power from Arlington-based Pepco Energy Services (703-253-1800).

Landline phones
The phone book lists several local providers, but as far as we can tell, the only one that actually provides landlines for a price that doesn't require a second job is...
Embarq. Embarq split off from its parent company when Sprint joined forces with Nextel. Embarq inherited Charlottesville's landline and high-speed Internet business and also offers seperate wireless service. To establish service, dial 811 from a Embarq landline or 800-304-7628. Businesses can buy local service from Ntelos (877-468-3567) or Telcove (formerly Adelphia) (817-8170), in addition to Embarq's business unit (800-901-9675).

Natural gas
Efficient stuff for heating. Only available through the underground pipes of Charlottesville's
City Public Utilities, which serves the City and nearby suburban areas. Charlottesville Gas even has a new natural gas safety mascot: Flicker the Flame. (The city eschewed such suggestions as Jack Gas and The Flamer.) City Public Utilities is hungry for customers and provide three interesting services: $100 rebates for converting to gas water heaters, installing low-flow toilets, and one free pilot-lighting of your furnace each year.
Billing: 970-3211
Pilot lighting: 970-3800

Propane and fuel oil
An alternative for folks who don't live on the natural gas pipeline. While fuel oil is generally just for heating, many Central Virginia households use propane for both cooking and hot water in addition to heat. Many local companies will fill your tank.

Coal and firewood
UVA, in addition to burning natural gas and fuel oil, also makes heat the old-fashioned way:
with coal. But as far as we can tell, no one is selling coal retail in Charlottesville, and there are probably only a few dozen houses with those cute little coal-burning fireplaces anyway. As for firewood, every bubba and his brother seems to be selling the stuff come fall. Make sure you get what you pay for. A cord is 128 cubic feet, or 4 ft. by 4 ft. by 8 ft. (or 3 ft. by 6.5 ft. by 6.5 ft.). Prices typically range from $90-$160 per cord.

Internet access
In addition to the myriad national providers, residential customers have several firms with a Central Virginia presence to choose from:

Blue Ridge Internetworks 817-0707
Broadband Network Services, Inc. - 817-7300
Ceva Net - 877-444-2382
Comcast- 888-266-2278
Embarq- 866-228-1362
Firstnet- 817-3131
Helix- 963-4900
Ivy Group- 979-2678
Localnet- 977-2962
Ntelos - 877-4NTELOS
Pure Internet - 866-517-0033
Embarq
 - 800-777-4683
VA.net- 296-6055

Cable/Satellite/Wireless Television
Many years ago, when cable television was thought to be a natural monopoly, the city struck a deal making
Adelphia the sole provider of cable television in the city. In 2006, Adelphia got divied up between Time Warner and Comcast, the latter of which got dibs on the local cable market. Technically, it's not the exclusive provider; it just works out that way. The company provides everything from local broadcast channels to all the premium goods including HBO and Cinemax. 888-266-2278

Dish Network Satellite service starts at $19.99/month for 10 months. 800-333-3474 Circuit City offers DirecTV which provides 150 channels for about $41.99/month. 973-0601.

Water/Sewer
CHARLOTTESVILLE-
Before they open the flow, they'll demand a letter of credit or ask you to pay a deposit. But that's not what scares some customers. Ever since the drought of 2002, rates have soared-- with the summer water (May-September) price currently $45.57 per 1000 cubic feet and winter $35.05 per 1000c.f. The sewage rate is $35.20/1000c.f. There's an additional $4/month service charge for each utility.
Charlottesville Utility Billing Office. 970-3211

ALBEMARLE- Albemarle has a scaled-fee system which is consistent all year. Up to 3000 gallons of water is $3.62 per 1000 gallons. From 3000-6000 is $5.43 per 1000g. Above 6000 gallons, your rate nearly doubles to $9.67 per 1000g. Nonresidential and multi-family rates are $5.33 per 1000. The sewer rate is $4.41/1,000 gallons-- plus $5.11/month service charge. That's a hike of a couple dollars across the board, and according to the Albemarle County Service Authority that's due in part to the County replacing old pipes this year. (Note that Charlottesville and Albemarle calculate their rates differently. Charlottesville uses the cubic foot, which equals 7.48 gallons.) Albemarle County Service Authority. 977-4511

If you're not on the water grid
Many communities in Albemarle County must use well water or trucked-in water because they're not hooked up to the water system by choice or because they're in rural areas. Many suburban houses buy their water from the Authority and then use an in-ground
septic system to process wastewater. These things are regulated by the local Health Department at 1138 Rose Hill Drive, which can even show you a little sketch of where your property's septic field is located. 972-6259

Where's my water from?
If you're on either the city or county water system, your water is stored at one of these three reservoirs: the South Fork Rivanna, Ragged Mountain, or Sugar Hollow. The quasi-public body that chlorinates and sells the water to Charlottesville and Albemarle is the
Rivanna Water and Sewer Authority. Confused? Yep, us too.

Ye olde droughte
Emergency water restrictions took effect during the infamous summer and fall of 2002. No washing of cars, sidewalks, plants, etc. As a result, now all automatic irrigation systems on the public water supply must contain a rain sensor. If we get another such emergency and you want to report someone breaking the rules, call 970-3040.

Trash/Recycling

Recycling
CHARLOTTESVILLE-
Curbside recycling is free: newspapers, magazines, catalogs, cardboard, aluminum cans, other metals, and glass bottles that are brown, green, or clear are picked up at curbside on the day your trash is collected. City guidelines are available from the City Public Service, 970-3830.

ALBEMARLE- To the eyes of many greenies, Albemarle County stepped back into the dark ages on July 1, 2003 when-- aware that there's insufficient market for second-hand glass and plastic-- it dropped those two categories as well as cans from its curbside program. Now the county demands that private haulers (who actually do the work) pick up only newspapers and magazines. Find out more from the county Engineering Department. 296-5861
Now your best county bet is the
McIntire Road Recycling Center (906-0763) which is open to city and county residents accepts almost all major categories including cardboard, books, spray cans, #1 and #2 plastic, and colored glass. M-F 7:30am-5:20pm, Sat 8am-5:20pm, Sun 12:30-5:20pm. And if you've got a lot of metal, you might get some real money down at Coiner's Scrap Iron & Metal in the Woolen Mills neighborhood. 296-6465

Trash hauling
ALBEMARLE- Many people haul their own trash to the landfill or bury it on their property, but most suburbanites hire one of the many private haulers who advertise their services in the Yellow Pages. Typically, they charge $10-20 a month.

CHARLOTTESVILLE- The city gets this done via a private firm that swings by your house once a week, but you have to pay (to cover landfill fees and encourage recycling) via the dreaded sticker system. Here's how it works. You have to buy stickers, which you affix to your trash can or bag. You can pay weekly by buying 32-gallon stickers for $2.10 each or 13-gallon stickers for $1.05 Or spring for the
annual sticker ($94.50) and paste it on the side of your trash can. For more information, call 970-3146.
$25 large-item disposal- Until 2004, Charlottesville residents got a big bonus: up to two annual visits from a huge truck with a giant claw that will take away jumbo trash like refrigerators, tree limbs, and sofas. They still pick up, but now you have to pay. To schedule, call 970-3321.
Free leaf pickup- Another bonus of living in the city. Free collection begins each November with pickup of bagged leaves (the city even provides free bags) and vacuuming of raked-to-the-curb leaves. 970-3830

Burning stuff
ALBEMARLE-- You're allowed to burn stuff in the county! But there are some rules. Moreover, between February 15 and April 30, open burning may take place only between the hours of 4pm and midnight, unless you're burning a distance of 300 feet or more from woodlands or other material capable of spreading fire to woodlands.
Other regulations also apply. Fire Marshal: James Barber. Albemarle Department of Fire & Rescue: 296-5833

CHARLOTTESVILLE-- No outdoor burning in the city. Fire Marshall: Steve Walton. Charlottesville Fire Department: 970-3240


The landfill
It operates under the goofy name
Materials Utilization Center, but everyone still calls it "The Ivy Landfill." Located on Dick Woods Road (Route 637) in Ivy, it no longer actually puts trash in the ground. Instead, it accepts your garbage and documents that need shredding for $66/ton (less for vegetation) and ships it far away. Hours: 7:30am - 4pm Mon-Sat. It accepts the following items for free: paint, motor oil, antifreeze,  batteries (including household batteries). The landfill is also the site of the Encore Shop, which lets people claim "trash" as treasures. 977-2976

Reporting dead animals
CHARLOTTESVILLE- Call City Public Service (970-3830) or police dispatch (977-9041) for pickup.
ALBEMARLE- Call VDOT (293-0011) or police dispatch (977-9041) for pickup.

Reporting Pollution
Virginia's Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) urges you to report suspected pollution incidents during business hours by calling Amy Owens at DEQ's regional office at 540-574-7800-- or the Department of Emergency Management at 800-468-8892 on nights, holidays, and weekends.

Jury Duty
In Virginia,
potential jurors are selected randomly by jury commissioners using lists designated by the court, such as the voter registration list and the driver's license list. You are reimbursed $30 for each day you serve. See our "Courts" section in Goverment & Economy for more.

Gardening
This town contains not only an old-fashioned rural Co-Op, but also a major national catalog retailer in Plow & Hearth, and more garden centers than you can shake a watering can at. Plus, the City of Charlottesville offers 30'x30' plots of land that can be rented for just $40 a year ($60 to non-residents) in Azalea Park and at the old Fairgrounds near the old Bodo's. Renewal registration starts the first Monday in February. New renters can sign up the third Tuesday in February. 970-3260

Every April, some of the most sumptuous gardens and grounds are open to the gawkers of Historic Garden Week. See "Annual Events" in our Outings section for more. 804-644-7776

Farmer wannabes should call the Virginia Cooperative Extension to find out what the extension agents think you can grow and how to do it. 872-4580

-->>See our "Books" section in Culture for libraries.

Safety
Charlottesville Police - Information: 970-3280. Chief: Timothy Longo
Albemarle Police - Information: 296-5807. Chief: John Miller
UVA Police- Information: 924-7166. Chief: Michael Gibson
All emergency calls- for all three jurisdictions: 911
All non-emergency dispatch calls- for all three jurisdictions: 977-9041

Consumer tips-->>See our Consumer section

Weather

Snow
The most fun time locally is the winter when everyone flips out when it snows. On average we get 24 inches per year, but it only takes a few flakes (or even the threat thereof) to close schools. Remember the February 2003 snow? The National Weather Service claims it was only seven inches, but the granular nature of what fell from the sky was so dense that most area schools were closed for two days after the bulk of the snow had fallen. (Monday, February 16, 2003, Presidents Day, was already a holiday.) That's still well short of the all time record for Charlottesville, when 20.7 inches fell on March 6, 1962.

Tornadoes
It's not proven, but our
state climatologist thinks this area has the makings of a minor tornado belt. 

Hot hot heat

Charlotesville averages highs in the mid-80s during the summers, but it is not, as they say, a dry heat.  With average relative humidity during the summer months hanging around 70 percent, the average heat index (a.k.a. "feels like") is in the low 90s.


Sources:
Virginia State Climatology Office as well as the National Weather Service which has stations in Blacksburg, Sterling, and Wakefield which compile data on this area.

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