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(09/13/18 10:29pm)
U.Va. paid $200,000 to settle a discrimination lawsuit brought by former University administrator Betsy Ackerson, according to information obtained in an open records request by The Cavalier Daily. The suit was dismissed with prejudice from the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Virginia last month, meaning both parties had agreed that the matter is resolved.
(09/12/18 6:42pm)
The University will not cancel classes as a result of rain and wind from Hurricane Florence, the University’s Chief Operating Officer Patrick Hogan announced in an email Wednesday afternoon, citing a southwest shift in the storm’s path.
(09/12/18 3:35am)
University President Jim Ryan announced Tuesday morning the University would offer up to eight weeks of paid parental leave to all qualifying University salaried employees, expanding on an executive order by Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam that granted paid family leave to state employees.
(09/06/18 1:04am)
After an appeal to the Charlottesville Circuit Court Tuesday, Charlottesville resident Jeffrey Winder was fined $1 for assaulting Unite the Right organizer Jason Kessler on Aug. 13, 2017, during a press conference.
(09/05/18 1:45am)
A member of the Governing Council of U.Va.’s Miller Center resigned last Friday after the Center’s leadership became aware of a discriminatory email insulting female employees.
(09/01/18 7:34pm)
The company behind the $50 million luxury condominium West2nd project, Market Plaza LLC, has filed an appeal to the Charlottesville City Council of the Board of Architectural Review’s recent decision to deny a certificate of appropriateness for the development despite a press release last week announcing the project’s abandonment.
(08/27/18 1:28am)
In a show of bipartisan civic engagement, Student Council’s Legislative Affairs Committee brought together University Democrats, College Republicans and over one dozen other local and state organizations this past weekend to register incoming first-years to vote at their new addresses.
(08/23/18 4:27pm)
The attorney who led a third-party critical review of the law enforcement response to last summer’s white supremacist rallies in Charlottesville will soon become U.Va.’s top lawyer.
(08/24/18 1:21am)
Charlottesville City Council held a public hearing Monday evening to discuss the hiring of a permanent city manager — the City’s chief executive and administrator — where community members stressed the importance of transparency in the selection process.
(08/18/18 5:42pm)
The fate of a lawsuit seeking protection for the Foxfield horse racing course is slated to be decided on Aug. 28, Albemarle County Circuit Court Judge Cheryl Higgins ruled at a hearing Friday afternoon. During the hearing, Higgins heard four motions in a courtroom packed with dozens of people, many sporting “Save Foxfield Races” stickers.
(08/13/18 1:36am)
The Charlottesville Police Department is investigating a possible assault on one of its officers Saturday evening at the Downtown Mall, according to a press release issued Sunday night.
(08/12/18 9:53pm)
The Charlottesville Downtown Mall has reopened following restrictions on pedestrian access for the one-year anniversary weekend of the deadly Unite the Right rally, the City announced Sunday afternoon. The move came after tense confrontations between protesters and state police throughout the afternoon, as well as four arrests.
(08/12/18 5:33am)
As hundreds of protesters broke away from the U.Va. Students United protest around 8 p.m. Saturday at Lambeth Field, police officers cleared the streets as people marched to the Downtown Mall and occasionally physically engaged with demonstrators, though police officials reported no arrests. The evening’s rally criticized white supremacists, the University and the increased police presence in Charlottesville for the one-year anniversary of the violent white supremacist Unite the Right rally.
(08/11/18 2:28pm)
The City of Charlottesville announced several road closures Saturday morning to take effect during a planned demonstration by student activism group U.Va. Students United at the North Plaza of the Rotunda.
(08/10/18 9:38pm)
Metal detectors and crowd size limits will be among the security measures imposed Saturday night on a planned demonstration by student activism group U.Va. Students United at the North Plaza of the Rotunda, University President Jim Ryan announced in a community email Friday afternoon.
(08/08/18 3:24am)
Marc Short — a new Miller Center senior fellow and President Donald Trump’s former legislative affairs director — will be paid $48,000 for his one-year commitment to the Center, according to a letter outlining the details of his appointment. Short’s hiring has come under criticism in recent weeks, with two history professors resigning from their Miller Center positions in protest and over 3,700 people signing an online petition discouraging the Center from hiring Short.
(08/03/18 4:31am)
Jason Kessler, the white nationalist organizer of the deadly Unite the Right rallies last August, dropped a suit Thursday against the City of Charlottesville and former City Manager Maurice Jones over a “Unite the Right anniversary” rally. Kessler says the rally is dedicated to fighting for what he calls “white civil rights.”
(07/31/18 9:22pm)
In a closed session Tuesday, Charlottesville City Council tapped Assistant City Manager Mike Murphy to become interim city manager, replacing outgoing City Manager Maurice Jones.
(07/30/18 4:03pm)
Two days before Marc Short — the former director of legislative affairs for President Donald Trump — begins his paid senior fellowship with the Miller Center at U.Va., History Profs. William Hitchcock and Melvyn Leffler announced their resignations from their professorships at the Center. Both professors will remain in their roles at the history department in the College of Arts and Sciences.
(07/27/18 3:46am)
One year after torch-carrying white nationalists encircled and entrapped students and counter-protesters around the Thomas Jefferson statue on the Rotunda's North Plaza, umbrella activism group U.Va. Students United plans to return and “demand justice” for the transgressions of white supremacy — even as the University says the area will be closed to public access.