A dayslong pro-Palestine protest on UVA Grounds shows no sign of stopping
The protesters will be allowed to stay, so long as university policies are followed: No structures, no holes in the ground, and no attaching signs to objects or trees.
They lived through the 2017 white supremacist rallies in Charlottesville — and say comparisons to pro-Palestinian campus protests are unfair
Trump’s claims are ‘political theater,’ says Rabbi Tom Gutherz of Congregation Beth Israel.
After years of debate, Charlottesville chooses a new sign to commemorate Court Square slave trade
“Enslaved Charlottesville residents Fountain Hughes and Maria Perkins recalled Court Day sales as dreaded occasions that separated Black families,” the marker will read.
The Latest from Changing Charlottesville
Here’s what Charlottesville Tomorrow achieved and learned last year — and what we’re looking forward to next year
Our 2023 Impact Report celebrates our readers, subscribers and donors who make our work possible.
Charlottesville Tomorrow creates two new positions to help our newsroom grow and innovate
Aliyah Cotton and Ashley Harper join the team as People and Culture Officer and Product and Technology Officer.
A seasonal shelter in Charlottesville is serving more people than ever — which presents challenges now that it’s closed
The City is working on a longer term plan, but shelter staff say they see more immediate need than ever.
Join a conversation about the future of local journalism in central Virginia
Three local news organizations will talk about how we meet the needs of communities at a panel in the Tom Tom Festival on Friday, April 19.
The Big Stories
It was once his family’s farm — the largest Black-owned farm in Albemarle County — but now we all own part of it
Philip Cobbs tells the story of his birthplace, and why we should all know its history.
2024 Voter Guide for Central Virginia
Help us build this year’s voter guide by taking a 2-question survey. What questions do you have for the candidates who want to represent you?
Fifeville residents got a say in a private developer’s plans by making an unusual agreement
The resulting project is designed to give low income residents jobs, services and affordable housing. And the developer will earn “much less” profit because of it.
Voters didn’t have a say in nearly 75% of local Central Virginia races this year — because there weren’t enough candidates
Folks on the ground say it’s hard to get people to volunteer for unpaid positions subject to long hours, political polarization, and public vitriol.
Charlottesville Tomorrow is hiring its next managing editor
The central Virginia nonprofit seeks a newsroom leader with strong editing experience and a heart for community and local news.
The MacArthur Foundation announces support for Charlottesville Tomorrow as part of Press Forward
Eight newsrooms are the first to be funded by a new coalition that seeks to grow local news.
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These stories were published as a part of Charlottesville Inclusive Media’s First Person Charlottesville project. Have a story to tell? Here’s how.
How one family owned and ran the largest Black-owned farm in Albemarle County — for generations
Philip Cobbs tells the story of his family’s land, and the remarkable ancestors who were determined that their legacy would be equality.
Listen: Why this photographer wants communities in Charlottesville to say, ‘No, we are not oppressed’
On the In My Humble Opinion podcast, Marley Nichelle says they want Black communities in Charlottesville to feel like they can thrive.
More news
Albemarle County School Board to vote on collective bargaining resolution at Thursday night’s meeting
The vote comes after two and a half years of campaigning for collective bargaining from the Albemarle Education Association.
Charlottesville area’s only free Head Start program closed suddenly, leaving nearly 200 families without childcare
The decision was in the making since October, but parents weren’t notified until March 5.
Come July 1, Agnor-Hurt Elementary School will be Agnor Elementary School
Benjamin Franklin Hurt was a former Albemarle County Public Schools administrator who supported performances with students in blackface, Confederate flags and swastikas.
Here’s everything you need to know about running for local office in Virginia
We help you navigate the multiple deadlines, stacks of forms and varied instructions to become a candidate.
If you’re heading to a City Schools sporting event next fall, expect to walk through a metal detector
After some debate among students, staff and community members about whether to put metal detectors in schools, the School Board decided to use them exclusively at sporting events and other out-of-school activities.
In a scathing rebuttal, Charlottesville attorneys say plaintiffs ‘concocted technical faults’ in their lawsuit seeking to overthrow the new zoning ordinance
“The Plaintiffs already have that which they now seek to deny others — good, affordable housing in a desirable locality,” the city wrote. “To do so, the Plaintiffs, having lost at City Council and at the ballot box, seek a judicial veto of the City’s zoning ordinance changes.”
More than 1,000 gather to press county supervisors to invest — heavily — in affordable housing
“For people of all ages to have a stake, to have a place to rent or to own, is absolutely astonishingly challenging,” County Supervisor Ann Mallek said. “Albemarle County needs to up our game.”
Charlottesville residents join lawmakers in asking Gov. Youngkin to sign flurry of tenants rights bills
“If he hears from people all over the state, maybe he’ll listen,” said former Charlottesville City Councilor Kristin Szakos.
City Council grapples with how to handle additional $9 million funding request from Charlottesville City Schools
Officials consider a ‘significant’ local tax increase to cover it.
It’s a rare and, for some, special day. Here’s how 4 Charlottesville residents are celebrating their Leap Year birthdays
Julius Caesar created a calendar with occasional Feb. 29s 2,000 years ago — and babies have been missing out on birthdays ever since.
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