Charlottesville Community Engagement
Charlottesville Community Engagement
September 29, 2023: Chief Kochis refutes claims of police brutality in Market Street Park incidents
1
0:00
-21:34

September 29, 2023: Chief Kochis refutes claims of police brutality in Market Street Park incidents

Plus: MicroCAT is expected to launch on-demand services in Albemarle on October 30
1

The final Friday of September is upon us and there are 344 days until there is another one. Perhaps the best thing to do is to think about today while also thinking about all of the times that are still waiting in the future. It’s the mission of each edition of Charlottesville Community Engagement to provide a little context of where this community has been, where it is, and where it might go in the future. All while staying, right here. I’m Sean Tubbs. 

On today’s program:

  • Albemarle County has three new questionnaires about draft language in their ongoing Comprehensive Plan update

  • An on-demand microtransit pilot in Albemarle County on October 30 and Albemarle Supervisors got the details earlier this month

  • Charlottesville Police Chief Michael Kochis addresses the allegation of police brutality in Market St. Park that led to the recent lifting of the park’s closing times 

    Sign up for free, but I’ll keep telling you paid subscriptions will help me keep an eye on things!

First shout-out: Interpreting Monticello through the Archaeological Record

In today’s first subscriber-supported shout-out: On October 11 at 6 p.m. the Albemarle Charlottesville Historical Society will host speakers who will give an introduction to the world of archaeological research at Monticello. 

The talk at the Center at Belvedere will provide an overview of work conducted near Thomas Jefferson’s house as well as off the mountaintop and explain how the artifacts recovered from these excavations provide scholars with critical pieces of information about the people who occupied this landscape before and during Thomas Jefferson’s lifetime.  Artifacts from various Monticello sites will be made available for attendees to see and discuss after the talk.

Visit the Center at Belvedere’s website for more information or sign up for the event on Facebook. This presentation will be live-streamed and collected for future viewings. 

Albemarle seeks input on AC44 goals and objectives for environmental stewardship, two other chapters

There are still aspects of Albemarle County’s Comprehensive Plan update that I would like to write about, such as the Board of Supervisors discussion of growth area management at their meeting on September 6.

In the meantime, the official community engagement continues.

Albemarle County has unveiled three new questionnaires related to the AC44 process. These are related to draft goals and objectives that have been formulated for three chapters of the Plan. What’s the difference between the two? 

“A goal is a high-level and long-term direction to fulfill the vision and framework,” reads common language in all three questionnaires. “An objective is a specific outcome or target that accomplishes a goal.” 

There are five draft goals for Environmental Stewardship and several proposed objectives for each one. The format of the questionnaire allows the participant to review each before making their views known. (review the Environmental Stewardship questionnaire)

The other surveys are for:

If you’re interested in talking to staff about these questions, they will be available outside Lane Auditorium from 12:30 p.m. to 2 p.m. on October 4 as part of the ‘chat with a planner’ series.  

The first of five goals. 

Albemarle microtransit pilot slated to launch on October 30 

The head of Charlottesville Area Transit had a message to the Albemarle Board of Supervisors earlier this month about the status of a long-awaited transportation initiative. 

“We are working in earnest to get your microtransit project up and running,” said Garland Williams, CAT’s director. 

In a few months, vehicles branded as microCAT will begin to carry passengers on an on-demand basis within two specific Albemarle growth areas. The service is expected to launch on October 30 according to a project manager with the firm VIA 

“We are not only going to make sure that the service is at 100 percent when we launch on the 30th but we’re also going to work very closely with the county and CAT to make sure that we are analyzing data and making improvements and being as flexible as possible to adjustments and needs of the community,” said Alejandro Miranda. 

This project has been in the works for several years.

“The county funded a study several years ago in partnership with [Charlottesville Area Transit] and the [Thomas Jefferson Planning District Commission] around microtransit,” said Deputy County Executive Trevor Henry. “We evaluated three areas including the two we moved forward with.”

They are U.S. 29 north of Rio Road and Pantops. The county opted not to pursue microtransit to Monticello. The study led to a grant from the Virginia Department of Rail and Public Transportation to run a one-year pilot.

“And it’s called a demonstration grant,” Henry said. “The county certainly has skin in the game with just under $400,000 as a local match. All of that work has been funded with Charlottesville Area Transit as our program manager.” 

Charlottesville put out a request for proposals for firms to run the operation and there were four responses. Henry said three of them were national companies and the city selected VIA to deliver the project. Williams said the firm suggests they may be able to exceed the original scope without additional cost to the community. 

“VIA has come on board and basically looked at it and said that with the available vehicles that they’re going to supply, they believe they can make connections not just in the two areas but the two areas will be connected,” Williams said. “So if you’re in Pantops you will be able to travel to the 29 North corridor. And from the 29 North Corridor to Pantops.”      

As part of the contract, VIA will provide vehicles, drivers, and the software needed to route the vehicles to where passengers want to go. 

“In addition to the software, our operational expertise which comes from operating over 50 services across the world and over 40 in the United States comes with our marketing team expertise,” said Jake Bortz with Via. “Marketing is a big focus and we know that can a challenge in starting a new service.”

VIA has been commissioned to run on-demand microtransit in other parts of the Commonwealth (Credit: VIA)

Bortz said the user experience with booking rides needs to be as easy to use as possible and will look like the interface used with Uber or Lyft.

“We know folks are familiar with that type of interface and so what you would do is either tap on the screen or put in your pickup address or it can take your current location and automatically input that, select where you want to go,” Bortz said. “Assuming that’s in the zone or in the other zone and a ride what we would to serve, you will receive a proposal. You can accept the proposal which of course will be fare free at the launch of the program with flexibility later down the line.” 

Bortz said the interface will provide an estimate time until the vehicle arrives, the color of the vehicle, and the name of the driver. These will not be buses, but Toyota Sienna hybrids some of which are wheelchair accessible. 

A good portion of the marketing will be through social media according to Miranda.

“Then we’re going to continuously drive optimization of engagement through a website that we are going to create for the county and that’s going to be one of the main four pillars of how to put the word out there,” Miranda said. 

The second pillar will be to work with community organizers to get the word out. Another pillar is to talk to the press.

The system will be tested through October 22. 

“It’s when we make sure that we’re doing quality assurance and that the launch we’re about to put out to the community is in perfect shape before it goes live,” Miranda said. 

People will also be able to call in to ask for service to a call center located in the United States. 

A slide from the presentation depicts what will be happening in the run-up to the launch of MicroCAT (Credit: Via) 

Second shout-out: WTJU Jazz Marathon October 2 through October 9

In today’s second subscriber-supported shout-out: From October 2nd to 8th, WTJU’s Jazz Marathon will fill the airwaves with a full week of round-the-clock jazz and blues specials. This is a great time to support the station with a donation to keep a platform for living and breathing jazz! 

WTJU’s Jazz Marathon celebrates our local music scene every weeknight at 8 p.m. with five live jazz and blues performances. Don’t miss the Charles Owens Trio, Tina Hashemi Quartet, The Hard Modes, Afro Asia, and Baby Jo’s Boogie Band.

To learn more about what’s playing when, visit WTJU for a schedule and details about this event and to learn more about what your donation might yield. 

Chief Kochis refutes charges of police brutality in Market Street Park

 

Charlottesville Police Chief Michael Kochis took to the podium in CitySpace on Thursday to address allegations that were made at City Council’s second regular meeting of September. 

“So on September 18th while at the City Council meeting, several disgusting and disturbing allegations were made about Charlottesville police officers while dealing with unhoused individuals,” Kochis said.

Chief Kochis said there were two specific allegations with one from September 12 and one from September 16. 

“Both interactions involved officers being dispatched to Market Street Park after someone called and complained about people sleeping in the park and pitching tents,” Kochis said. 

Let’s go back now and hear the way the allegations were made at that meeting. To set the tone, there were no major items on the regular agenda after Council heard two items at their work session. 

Here’s how Charlottesville Mayor Lloyd Snook described the first section after Cultivate Charlottesville made a presentation on the Food Equity Initiative and before the Charlottesville Redevelopment and Housing Authority presented their sustainability plan. 

“We have a robust 4 o clock agenda but the 6:30 agenda is a whole lot of nothing,” Snook said.

About two hours later, the second public speaker picked up on Snook’s comment. 

“I’m going to yield my time to Mrs. Deirdre Gilmore but since you all were joking in your earlier session about how this session is a bunch of nothing, I hope you’ll see fit to extend the public comment so everyone here who has something to share can do so,” said Donna Gasapo.

Gilmore is a former chair of the Public Housing Association of Residents who has spoken to Council frequently over the years. 

“There was an incident at the park where one of the officers kicked the young man that was sitting here,” Gilmore said. “He was trying to wake him up but instead of gently touching him or maybe using a nightstick, he decided to kick him.” 

Gilmore also accused police of singling out a man named Roscoe Boxley when he was arrested on September 12 because he was Black. Arrest records available through the city’s open data portal show Boxley was charged that night with both trespassing and violating the terms of his probation. 

Gilmore also blamed City Council for an overall societal problem.

“And I’m going to say this to you, you all should be ashamed yourself for there to be 260 people sleeping on the streets of Charlottesville with all this development going on,” Gilmore said.

Later in the public comment period, Gasapo returned to speak for a second time. 

“In a city where white settler colonizer descendants disproportionately thrive in relation to everyone else who lives and works here, we are unsurprised that your police forces who we know to be here to protect the interest of the wealthy elite and not for the safety of anyone else, as you all try to claim, we are unsurprised that your police forces are targeting our Black and unhoused neighborhoods from harassment, arrest, and violence,” Gasapo said. 

Gasapo was one of three people arrested for disrupting the first City Council meeting after the Unite the Rally and subsequent aftermath in August 2017, as reported in the Daily Progress. Four months later, Council agreed to create the Police Civilian Review Board in response to emphatic public comment periods.  Gilmore would later be one its members. 

Near the end of her comments, Gasapo called for people to be vigilant of the police.

“Get trained in ‘Cop Watch’ and other forms of bystander training so you can assist your neighbors when they are being harassed by the police,” Gasapo said. 

Three days after Gilmore and Gasapo spoke, City Manager Sam Sanders temporarily eliminated closing times for Market Street Park pending an investigation

Kochis’ response

Let’s go back now to the September 28 press conference and hear from Chief Michael Kochis respond to the public comments. 

“One of the allegations that was made during the meeting was that our officers have been targeting Black individuals with violence,” Kochis said. “Another allegation was that a police officer assaulted an unhoused individual by kicking him on the ground. I heard several descriptions of this event such as the officer was ‘kicking him like a football’ and ‘kicking him in his chest.’”

Kochis noted that no complaints were made to the Charlottesville Police Department nor the Charlottesville Police Civilian Oversight Board. After hearing Gilmore and Gasapo’s allegations, Kochis contacted Commonwealth’s Attorney Joe Platania to investigate the body camera footage. 

“The allegation of an assault must be referred to the Commonwealth’s Attorney as it’s a crime,” Kochis said. “Mr. Platania and his assistant reviewed the footage and immediately determined that the contact with the individual in question was incidental to the lawful discharge of the officer’s duty, reasonable under the law, and did not rise to the level of battery.” 

City parks all have closing times and overnight camping is not allowed. This was challenged in the fall of 2011 with the Occupy Charlottesville movement. That ended with the arrest of 18 people on December 1 of that year after a temporary permit expired. 

Kochis said on September 12, officers were called to the park.  (watch the press conference)

“Officers arrived and found several tents that had been set up,” Kochis said. “Officers advised those in the park that the park closes in a few minutes and they they would need to pack up their belongings once the park closed. While waiting for the items to be packed up, one individual exited a tent and set up a chair in the walkway. The individual sat in the chair and stated ‘you’re about to make an arrest tonight.’” 

Body camera footage showing a man sitting in a chair waiting to be arrested for trespassing (Credit: Charlottesville Police Department)

Kochis said this individual insisted on being arrested.

“After 11 p.m. when the park closed, the officer advised the individual that he could avoid being arrested if he would just leave the park like everyone else was,” Kochis said. “The individual refused to leave the park at that time and was arrested without incident.” 

“We don’t got nowhere to go,” Boxley said during the encounter. “Nowhere at all.”

“Have you not tried the Salvation Army?” the unidentified officer asks.

“What are you talking about the Salvation Army?” Boxley asks. “Do you think I’d be right here if I could get into the Salvation Army.  We’re not here for no mother f**king negotiating. These are the terms. You’re going to lock me up right now because I ain’t going nowhere and the only way I’m going somewhere is if you lock me up. I’m going to be heard one way or another.”

“Sure, I get that,” said the officer. “And if it comes to that, we absolutely will but I’m asking you.”

In the audio version of this newsletter, a little more of this exchange can be heard before Boxley is arrested without further incident. He was defiant before the arrest.

“I don’t give a f**k about going to no jail,” Boxley said. “All of these people are going to witness what just happened tonight and they’re going to be my voice when I’m behind bars.” 

You can also review it yourself in video posted to Facebook at about 15:30 into the stream. (view the stream)

Kochis said a second incident took place on September 16 when police were once again called to the park. Officers encountered people there after hours. 

“These individuals were white, Black, and Latino,” Kochis said. “Officers approached each of them and made them aware of the park being closed and that they would need to be given some time to collect their belongings and leave the park. At one point, officers approached the individual where it is alleged that an officer had assaulted him by kicking him. The officers approached him and asked him to wake up, which he did. The officers told him the park was closed and that he needed to pack up his stuff and leave.”

The contact can be seen at 22:07 or so in the video. The exchange is also in the audio version. (view the stream)

Kochis said the officers went on tell others they had to leave the park but noticed that the man went back to sleep, but this time with a blanket over his head. 

“Officers attempted to wake him up again but received no response,” Kochis said. “At this point, one of the officers touched the heel of the person’s foot with his own foot to wake him up. He  woke up. He eventually packed his stuff and left the park.” 

Kochis said calls responding to the unhoused are complex and that he has ordered a review of training protocols related to calls to service for that population.  He acknowledged that more needs to be done by everyone to address systemic issues. 

“The officers spoke of the frustration of having to send people on their way with nowhere to go,” Kochis said. “Our officers are human beings just like the folks in that park and their frustrations with the systems and programs that continue to fail these communities palpable and I share their frustrations.” 

During the press conference, Kochis said other places in Virginia where he has in had more community services.

“I’ve worked in two other jurisdictions, the City of Alexandria and the Town of Warrenton,” Kochis said. “Both had a 24 hour shelter with wrap-around services and I’ve never been in a jurisdiction that doesn’t have either, and we don’t have them.”

To conclude this article, some pieces of information, none of which is complete. 

  • Charlottesville’s budget for FY24 includes $67,000 for a new Homelessness Coordinator, a position that will be in the Office of Equity and Inclusion.

  • A partnership between three groups is in the early stages of developing the former Red Carpet Inn on Premier Circle into an 80-unit supportive housing facility similar to the Crossings at 4th Street. As part of this project on U.S. 29, the Piedmont Housing Alliance will build an additional 60 units of below-market housing. 

  • Council approved a rezoning on August 7 that will allow the Salvation Army on Ridge Street to expand from 58 beds to 114 beds. 

  • PACEM is seeking applicants for their upcoming season of cold-weather emergency homeless shelters. The season runs through late October to April and they need between 15 to 20 people. (learn more)

  • The executive director of the Haven appeared before Council to ask for them to waive property taxes for the property so that owner Tom Shadyac will transfer the land and building to the nonprofit. That will allow them to ask for public funding for repairs and other capital improvements. 

Reading and listening material:

583 is fading away 

Another week has ended and I will aim to have the next regular installment of this show out on Monday with an update on where the city’s zoning code is following two Planning Commission work sessions and one City Council event. I still need to do that research for the Week Ahead which will come out on Sunday. 

Town Crier Productions is at this moment a one-person operation dedicated to covering what I can and to direct you the reader or listener at as many primary sources as I can include. All of this is supported by readers through paid Substack subscriptions, revenue through Patreon contributions, and a pair of sponsors. 

If you’d like to join them, your funding will go to help me keep going and to hopefully keep improving as I work towards #584, #632, #709, and the one after #909. There are a lot of stories to tell, and I’m grateful you’re reading or listening to them. 

Ting will match your initial Substack subscription, whether it be $5 a month, $50 a year, or $200 a year.

Ting sponsors Scott Stadium, the Ting Paviliion, and the John Paul Jones Arena. Maybe you’re in the market for a new high speed internet provider?

If you’re in Charlottesville, check out Ting! If you sign up for Ting at this link and enter the promo code COMMUNITY, you’ll get:

  • Free installation

  • A second month for free

  • A $75 gift card to the Downtown Mall

1 Comment
Charlottesville Community Engagement
Charlottesville Community Engagement
Regular updates of what's happening in local and regional government in and around Charlottesville, Virginia from an award-winning journalist with nearly thirty years of experience.