If you like these newsletters, this is a great time to tell a friend to subscribe! Tuesday Aug. 16, 2022 Charlottesville’s Police Civilian Oversight Board on Friday launched an online portal where residents can submit complaints of alleged misconduct by Charlottesville City Police officers. Complaints will go directly to the new board for investigation. The […]
Author Archives: Jessie Higgins
I'm Charlottesville Tomorrow's managing editor and health and safety reporter. If there’s something you think we should be investigating, please email me at jhiggins@cvilletomorrow.org! And you can follow all the work we do by subscribing to our free newsletter! Hablo español, y quiero mantener a la comunidad hispanohablante informada. Si tienes preguntas o información que debo saber, por favor, envíame un correo electrónico a jhiggins@cvilletomorrow.org.
Our #Charlottesville
Did someone forward you this email? Subscribe here for free news. Friday Aug. 12, 2022 Charlottesville will always be the town where five years ago today hundreds of white supremacists, neo-Nazis and Ku Klux Klan members marched through downtown in a shocking display of violence and hatred. Their rally traumatized us. And it left us […]
Did Charlottesville change after Unite the Right?
Did someone forward this email? Subscribe for free to get updates at the end of the week about our coverage of this anniversary in Charlottesville. Monday, August 8, 2022 People across the country will be talking about Charlottesville this week as we approach the Friday anniversary of Unite the Right. But for those who live […]
Our #Charlottesville: How Charlottesville Tomorrow is covering the fifth anniversary of Unite the Right
Five years after the “summer of hate,” we’re telling our community’s own stories.
Parents rush to get their toddlers vaccinated as first doses of pediatric COVID-19 vaccines arrive in Charlottesville
The long awaited approval of a COVID-19 vaccine for young children comes as a relief to many parents, especially as more young children are becoming sick with the newer variants of COVID-19.
Virginia just made its biggest investment in school buildings in over a decade. Now, it has to decide how to dole out the money.
Charlottesville City Council will apply for funding. It has budgeted to rebuild Buford Middle School but hasn’t yet budgeted for the overhaul of Walker Elementary.
We’re at the start of another COVID-19 surge — but this time, health officials expect hospitalizations will be low
“I’d like to say that, along with this lovely spring that we are having, this is part of a new beginning. But, we have been fooled before so we’ll just have to wait and see,” said Dr. Reid Adams, UVA Health’s chief medical officer.
City Council supports the much-needed Buford Middle School rebuild, but must raise taxes or delay other projects to do it
It’s possible to fund the school renovations without raising taxes — but that could mean postponing things like sidewalk repairs, road paving, and new affordable housing projects.
PVCC has more nursing students than ever — but can’t find enough nurses to train them
“It’s a conundrum,” said Nicole Winkler, the dean of Health and Life Sciences at Piedmont Virginia Community College. “It’s a quagmire. I don’t know how else to describe it.”
City plans to hire an engineering firm to find ways to make ‘race track’ Fifth Street safer
There have been four fatal crashes in less than two years along a mile-long stretch of Fifth Street Southwest. But making the road safer isn’t as simple as reducing the speed limit.