09-19-13 FR - Fluvanna Review
Transcription
September 19-25, 2013 | One Copy Free FluvannaReview.com Principals Pledge Progress Fluvanna REVIEW Page 10 Fluvanna Remembers 9/11 Page 12 Obamacare 101 page 6 Quarles vs Ware In Fluvanna House Race Page 14 Lake Board to Supervisors: Delay Water Vote Page 8 Quote of the week: Photo of the week Send your best Fluvanna photo to carlos@fluvannareview.com “We have to teach expectations, not just expect children to behave.” – Jen Valentine. Page 10 F OUNDED IN 1979 BY L EN G ARDNER www.fluvannareview.com Inside A 9/11 flag ceremony held at the sheriff ’s office drew about 40 people. Letters............................. 4 Photo by Lisa Hurdle. Fluco sports in review... 16 Calendar .......................18 Property transfers .......20 Classifieds.....................21 CIRCULATION AUDIT BY 942 Jefferson - Lake Monticello SEPTEMBER 19-25, 2013 • VOLUME 33, ISSUE 38 General: The Fluvanna Review is published weekly by Valley Publishing Corp. and covers Fluvanna exclusively. One copy is free. Additional copies are $1 each payable in advance to the publisher. Subscriptions: Copies will be mailed for the subscription price of $135 per year or $70 per 6 months. Please mail a check and a note with your name and address to: Subscriptions Dept., P.O. Box 59, Palmyra, VA 22963. Deadline: Advertising and news items due by Wednesday 5 p.m. for the following week. Display and web ads: For information including rates and deadlines, call Lisa Hurdle at 434-591-1000 ext. 29. Classified ads: $10 for two weeks for 30 words or less. Mail to the Fluvanna Review, P.O. Box 59, Palmyra, VA 22963 or stop the office at 2987 Lake Monticello Road. Deadline for print is Monday by noon. Legal ads: The Fluvanna Review is the paper of record for Fluvanna County. Call Lisa Hurdle at 434-591-1000 ext. 29 to place a legal ad. Weddings, engagements, anniversaries: Call Lisa Hurdle, 434-591-1000 ext. 29. Paid obituaries: $50 for 300 words plus photo. Call 434-591-1000 ext. 24. News hotline: 434-207-0224. If you see news happening, call us! Submissions, tips, ideas, etc.: The Fluvanna Review encourages submissions and tips on items of interest to Fluvanna residents. We reserve the right to edit submissions and cannot guarantee they will be published. Keep calendar submissions to 50 words or less and letters to the editor to 300 words or less. E-mail: carlos@fluvannareview.com or mail to: Fluvanna Review, P.O. Box 59, Palmyra, VA 22963. Publisher/Editor: Carlos Santos 434-207-0224 / carlos@fluvannareview.com Advertising: Jacki Harris 434-207-0222 / sales@fluvannareview.com Accounts Manager: Edee Povol 434-207- 0221 / edee@fluvannareview.com Advertising Designer: Lisa Hurdle 434-207-0229 / lisa@fluvannareview.com Editorial Designer: Lynn Stayton-Eurell llynn@fluvannareview.com Designer: Marilyn Ellinger Staff Writers: Page Gifford, Duncan Nixon, Kristin Sancken, Christina Dimeo Guseman, Ruthann Carr and Valerie Davis Photographer: O.T. Holen, Photography Intern - Devan Doublestein Mailing Address: P.O. Box 59, Palmyra, VA 22963 Address: 2987 Lake Monticello Rd. (434) 591-1000 Fax: (434) 589-1704 Member of the Virginia Press Association Circulation 6,200 COVER Fluvanna County honors the fallen with a flag that bears the names of those who died on Sept. 11, 2001. Photo by Lisa Hurdle Cover design by Lynn Stayton-Eurell and Lisa Hurdle. Call for your FREE Property Management Consultation Property Management $1,100/month Walk to Marina home w/ 3 bedrooms, fireplace, 2 baths,first floor master, deck 28 Tanglewood - Lake Monticello 3 Tara Court - Lake Monticello $1,200/month Home w/ large $1,795/month Waterfront home w/ finished basement, 3 bedrooms, wrap deck, fireplace, close to pool & beach. 3 bedrooms, dock, finished basement, large kitchen, first floor master 67 Woodlawn - Lake Monticello 1292 Shores Road-Fork Union Commercial Space in Shopping StripLake Monticello with Favorable Terms We cover all your rentals needs. • Ideal location next to Food Lion • Long established businesses as your neighbors • Favorable lease terms 607 Jefferson - Lake Monticello 11 Piedmont Lane -Lake Monticello 200 Jefferson -Lake Monticello $1,050 month $975/month $1,795/month $1,200 month $1,195/month Ranch w/ 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, deck, private. Ranch on 2 acres with 3 bedrooms, shed for extra storage, private. Waterfront ranch w/ 4 bedrooms, kitchen w/ island, dock, finished basement Ranch w/ garage, fenced yard, 3 bedrooms, open living room, fireplace Ranch w/ 3 bedrooms, sun room, garage, fireplace, close to gate. Lisa McCormick Owner/ Realtor and Property Manager (434)-589-6386 FirstVirginiaHomesRentals@yahoo.com 2 | FLUVANNA REVIEW | September 19, 2013 View our Available Rentals at www.firstvirginiahomes.com Delila Stone OFFICE MANAGER (434)-589-3958 dsnote2u@yahoo.com. September 19, 2013 | FLUVANNA REVIEW | 3 McAuliffe is the answer Which candidate for governor has the right skills, experience, and policies to create jobs? Terry McAuliffe’s platform emphasizes “Mainstream solutions” like encouraging junior colleges and businesses to work together to develop work skills. His platform emphasizes transportation improvements, business incentives, diversifying our economy, improving healthcare, supporting public schools, and positioning Virginia to take advantage of emerging markets. Ken Cuccinelli’s platform resembles the “voodoo economics” foisted on us by Reagan: cut taxes and expect miracles. He claims that cutting corporate taxes by 1% to 2% will lure business away from other states. He opposed Governor McDonnell’s transportation improvement program. He opposes the Affordable Healthcare Act but has no plan for improving healthcare. McAuliffe fixed troubled companies and started new businesses. (Greentech, his startup, now has 100 employees – it takes time to grow in the tough automobile market.) Cuccinelli worked in private practice and government offices. Cuccinelli supports the coal industry and proposes to deregulate mining. (His campaign received $111,000 from power companies.) McAuliffe has managed energy businesses, and his platform balances support for nuclear, oil, coal, and alternative energy. Businesses and their employees want to live where state government seems friendly and modern. McAuliffe’s business experience and salesmanship, plus his forward-looking policies, will lure businesses and employees to Virginia. Cuccinelli doesn’t understand that no major business will spend the time, expense, and disruption of relocation only to save 1% or 2% on state taxes. Deregulation may benefit coal and uranium company profits, but doesn’t attract other businesses. Most employees won’t want to move to a state that disregards worker safety and public safety, governed by a right-wing radical who denies the science of global warming and opposes birth control, abortion, homosexuality, and gay marriage. – Dave Miller, Palmyra Coming home On Sept. 20, the family of Ms. Lila Roland will be bringing her back home after over 70 years to celebrate her 93rd birthday. We plan to take our mother, grandmother, great- grandmother, and great-great-grandmother to her hometown, Fluvanna County, to visit her old high school, S. C. Abrams, if it still exists. Please post as we hope that any family members who are in the area will come to greet her. I can be reached at 443-851-1066. Ms. Roland currently resides in Baltimore, Maryland with her daughter and granddaughter. – Dr. Jeannette Taylor, granddaughter of Ms. Lila Roland Sarvis to visit I wanted the Fluvanna community to know that Robert Sarvis, the Libertarian candidate for governor this year, is making a stop in Cartersville which is right across the river. On Sept. 21 around 6 p.m. there Authorized Shipping Center #1 in Service We do copies to canvas prints and yes mailboxes too. For ALL Your Packing & Shipping NEEDS!! Bring ring in your photo/art file and we’ll make a canvas print, ready to hang We Can Print Your Stuff... Really Big! Get your Wine Festival banners here. 434-589-9602 Fax: 434-589-9603 265 Turkeysag Trail, #102 Lake Monticello Across from Food Lion Canvas Prints Photo Prints Document Shredding Copying Blueprints Mailbox Rentals Faxing Laminating Landscape Design GBC Binding Notary Public Copying(b&w/color) Large Format Professional Packing Specialty Boxes Bubble Wrap Packing Peanuts Mon.-Fri. 9-6 Sat.10-2 www.mailboxexpresspalmyrava.com • E-mail: mailboxexpress102@gmail.com 4 | FLUVANNA REVIEW | September 19, 2013 will be a meet and greet at the Cartersville Ruritan club located at 2168 Cartersville Rd. This will be good for citizens in the neighboring counties to get out and meet Mr. Sarvis and hear his ideas for the state in person. If you or members of your community are fed up with the status quo and do not favor Cuccinelli or McAuliffe then they should definitely give Robert Sarvis a listen. Also I believe it is every Virginians right to be as educated as possible on every candidate that is running. – Kory Clayton, Cartersville Vote local Eat Local has become a popular catch phrase. But vote local should be at the top of our mind in this coming state and local elections. The stakes are every bit as high as our choices for national offices. The folks we elect for state wide and county wide offices have a dramatic effect on our daily lives. Education is important for our local social and economic development. County supervisors and School Board members set the stage that determines whether our schools maintain quality or begin a decline that becomes hard to reverse. Don’t have kids? School quality is one of the biggest factors in real estate values. Good schools attract quality housing construction that adds to the tax base and helps keep taxes low. We need to elect board members who recognize the importance of improving schools. Fluvanna’s recent test scores indicated a strong position at the high school level. But, scores for lower grades were not nearly so positive, in many cases ranking below state averages. This is a clear wake-up call – if corrective action is not taken a downward trend can only follow. The budget for the schools is controlled by the county supervisors. Without economic and financial support, the school board and school administrators are limited in their corrective actions. Some supervisor candidates seem to have just written off development in Fluvanna County. “Do nothing, invest nothing” is their mantra. But this is a self-fulfilling attitude. I have spent years as a professional researching companies as investments. One clear lesson is that companies that don’t grow are on the way down. It is less expensive to fix potential problems today when they are small than to have to repair badly broken systems in the future. So turn out and vote local. The issues are important. – Stephen Schoene, Palmyra Vote Franklin I am a recent transplant to Fluvanna from Fairfax County, where I was born and raised. I was attracted to Fluvanna by the fresh air, outdoor activities, and star-filled night skies. We had much of this in Fairfax when I was a small boy but over-population, noise and air pollution, and over-development were the side effects of progress. Fluvanna was a welcome change – the people were friendly, the pace of life was slower, and the quality of life was far richer. After moving here and getting settled I decided to get involved any way I could to preserve the rural lifestyle, fresh air and unspoiled country living. One of the first people I met was Elizabeth Franklin through Fluvanna Taxpayers Association. I was impressed by her dedication and service to the citizens of Fluvanna while harnessing her journalistic background to ferret out the facts and make sure the county government was not going to repeat its recent missteps of overbuilding and overspending in the name of progress. Understandably so, this resonated well with me. It was an easy decision to lend my support to Elizabeth when I found out she would be running for the Columbia District’s Board of Supervisor seat. I know that Elizabeth will always have the interests of the citizens and taxpayers in mind. She does the research, gets the facts and asks the tough questions. She not only is a great communicator but passionately cares that citizens be fully informed about county policies and actions affecting their lives and wallets. She already has alerted affected citizens in my district about possible mandatory public water hookups. Elizabeth is a true public servant and I know that I will sleep more comfortably at night once she is active on the Fluvanna Board of Supervisors. I invite all Columbia District residents to get to know Elizabeth in the coming weeks and decide for yourselves. She will be at Old Farm Day, the wine festival, and various meet and greets to reach out to her fellow constituents. – Jake Keck, Palmyra More on health care The Fluvanna Coalition for Affordable Health Care wishes to thank the many Fluvanna citizens (and a few from neighboring jurisdictions) who came out to learn about the various options available under the new Affordable Care Act at our Sept. 11 health care forum. Our two panel members, Rod Manifold (executive director of Central Virginia Health Services) and Carolyn Englehard (director of Health Policy at the University of Virginia School of Medicine), made excellent presentations and were full of useful information in response to the many and varied questions from the audience. For folks unable to attend, we suggest you view the eight minute Kaiser Foundation video and watch it multiple times to get an overview of the complexity of healthcare: http://kff.org/health-reform/video/youtoonsobamacare-video/. You can get more information going to: https://www.healthcare. gov/families/. The health insurance marketplaces will be open for business on October 1 through March 2014. We will be planning a follow-up meeting this winter after the details of the new health insurance marketplaces become available on Oct. 1, and to assist our citizens by providing further information about the options. – Mozell Booker, Overton McGehee, Kathy Swenson Miller, Marvin Moss and Linda Parker Corrections: The concluding sentence in last week’s article about the school library’s lack of new books was inadvertently left off. It was: “Likewise, one could donate new or gently-used books (before donating, contact Lucas at llucas@apps.fluco.org to make sure books are relevant and age-appropriate).” The concluding sentence in an article about Charles Allbaugh winning a health care award should have read: “In addition to his work at CVHS, Allbaugh has mentored other health center Chief Financial Officers, and has served on various finance committees with the Virginia Community Healthcare Association, health center’s statewide membership organization.” The FlucoFinder column was contributed by Sandra Carlson. The name was incorrect in last week’s column. Also, the date for the middle school fundraiser is Sept. 23 - Oct. 4. The dates were incorrect in the column. Also, the new school news site is called “The Fluco Beat” and it can be found at www.theflucobeat. com. The name of the site and web address were reported incorrectly. We strive for accuracy. The policy of this newspaper is to promptly correct errors of fact brought to our attention. We encourage readers to notify us of errors or the need for clarification in any of our content. Please email the editor at carlos@fluvannareview.com. September 19, 2013 | FLUVANNA REVIEW | 5 E W THOMAS , INC. SUPERMARKET 13027 James Madison Hwy. in Palmyra at Rt. 15 & Rt. 53 434-589-8412 • Open Mon. - Sat. 6:30 am - 7 pm DMV2GO is here from 9-4 on September 25. It can do all the things we can’t do, so please take advantage of this great service. DELI SPECIALS Hormel Cooked Ham ................................... $2.99 lb. Boars Head Everoast Chicken Breast .... $6.89 lb. Land O Lakes Sharp American Cheese . $4.99 lb. Homemade Macaroni Salad ............... $3.99 lb. Toufayan Flat Bread 14 oz. ..................... $1.99 lb. MEAT DEPARTMENT SPECIALS Boneless Top Sirloin Steaks ................. $4.99 lb. Boneless Sirloin Tip Steaks ................. $3.49 lb. Boneless Sirloin Tip Roasts ................... $3.29 lb. Freshly Ground Extra Lean Ground Beef 93% . $3.49 lb. Fresh Pork Tenderloins ........................... $2.99 lb. Fresh Pork Spareribs .......................... $1.99 lb. Daisyfield Smoked Pork Shoulder Picnics . $1.79 lb. Fresh Chicken Wing Drummettes ........ $2.79 lb. Fresh Boneless Chicken Thighs ......... $1.99 lb. Perdue Fresh Ground Turkey or Chicken 16 oz. . $2.79 lb. Mission Home Bakery delivers freshly baked goods every Friday morning. Beautiful Mums and Pansies ready to plant. MEAT SPECIALS Bob EvansPork Sausage Rolls 1 lb. ...... $2.79 Bob Evans Sausage Gravy 20 oz. ........... $2.79 Bob Evans Oven Baked Side Dishes 20 oz.$3.49 Hebrew National Beef Hot Dogs 12 oz. .$2.99 IQF Bagged Whiting 2 lb. ....................... $4.99 Jumbo Frozen Frog Legs 5 lb. box .......$24.95 Kegs of Beer available with 48 hours notice. DAIRY SPECIALS Yoplait Yogurt 4-6 oz............................... 2/$1.19 Essential Everyday Shredded Cheese 8 oz. 2/$3.00 Essential Everyday Cottage Cheese 15 oz. ....$1.99 Pillsbury Biscuits 4 pk............................. $1.99 FROZEN SPECIALS PRODUCE SPECIALS Bartlett Pears 1 lb. ..................................... 99¢ White Potatoes 10 lb. bag .......................... $2.99 Green Line Green Beans 12 oz. .............. $1.99 Red Raspberries 6 oz..................................... $2.49 Ellios Pizza 4 varieties ............................................ $2.99 Gortons Grilled Tilapia 6.3 oz. .................. $3.99 Green Giant Boil n Bag 7-9 oz. ............ 2/$3.00 Klondike Bars all varieties .......................... $2.99 GROCERY SPECIALS Armour Vienna Sausages 4.75 oz. .................2/$1.00 Essential Everyday Peanut Butter 18 oz...... $1.39 Hanover Blue Lake Green Beans 38 oz........ $1.69 Pillsbury Flour All Purpose, Self Rising and Bread 5 lb. .$1.99 Superchill Spring Water 24 pk. .................... $2.99 Velveeta Cheesey Potatoes 2 flavors ........... $1.99 Greased Lightning 32 oz...............................2/$5.00 Barilla Pasta Many Varieties/12-16 oz. ........................... .99¢ Windex Window Cleaner ....................... .2/$5.00 Bumble Bee White Chicken 5 oz. .................$1.29 Shout or Scrubbing Bubbles ..................... .2/$5.00 Lucky Leaf Apple Pie Filling 21 oz. ...............$1.99 Play Here! DVD Rentals Available 24/7 Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles Vehicle Licensing Center License Plates, Decal Renewals, Titles DMV Hours: Monday – Friday, 9 am – 5 pm Saturday 9 am – 12 noon VIRGINIA LOTTERY Fluvanna gets the news on Obamacare BY RUTHANN CARR, CORRESPONDENT First things first – the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, will not affect those on Medicare. Nearly 100 people crowded into a Fluvanna County Library meeting room Wednesday (Sept. 11) to hear how the ACA could change the insurance game for them. Rod Manifold, executive director of Central Virginia Health Services and Carolyn Engelhard, a University of Virginia Health Policy Analyst, spoke to the group and answered questions. Open enrollment for the health care exchanges – a marketplace where people age 64 and under can buy healthcare – begins Oct. 1 and lasts through March 31, 2014. While the ACA will make things different for some employers – mainly requiring businesses with more than 50 employees to offer health care to full-time employees or pay a penalty – the emphasis on Wednesday’s presentation was for the estimated 1.2 million Virginia adults without insurance. The night started with a short video by the Kaiser Family Foundation that explained the ACA in the simplest terms. ““I’ve watched this video at least five times in the past couple days and I see something new every time. It’s helpful to listen to it and watch it again,” Manifold said. “While you can get deep into the weeds of this policy, we’re going to try and keep it simple.” In short, beginning Jan. 1 2014, health care insurance should become cheaper for millions of Americans who are either under- or uninsured, Englehard said. That’s because one aspect of the ACA requires all health insurers to provide coverage in basic areas such as: • Hospital visits • Maternity care • Doctor visits • Mental health care • Prescription drugs Englehard said right now, health insurance companies charge up to 7 percent more to insure women than men. The ACA makes that illegal. Depending on a person’s income, tax subsidies are available to pay for health care. A person can make up to 400 percent of the federal poverty level and still receive the tax credits, Englehard said. Many in the audience questioned if more choices of coverage will be available. Rivanna Hearing Aid Center elps Yo u Yo u r Hea ring H oment... Enjoy Every M We service all makes & models of hearing aids Beer Kegs Available with 48 Hours Notice Available Everyday Propane Tanks Available for Sale or Exchange E W Thomas is not responsible for typographical errors. We accept WIC & Food Stamps. We reserve the right to limit quantities SALE DATES SEPTEMBER 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 2013 6 | FLUVANNA REVIEW | September 19, 2013 FREE Hearing tests FREE in-house repairs on most models FREE video otoscopic view of ear canal 434-244-3277 Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m-5 p.m. On Pantops-182 Spotnap Rd. A-2 Charlottesville, VA. 22911 Englehard said it’s an unfortunate fact that it’s harder to get a lot of insurance companies to offer plans in rural areas. At the minimum, she said she hoped at least two companies will compete for Fluvanna dollars so there will be a choice. There will be four plans: bronze, silver, gold and platinum. The bronze plan would have the cheapest premiums, but pay less money toward health care costs. The converse is true of the platinum plan, Manifold said. Mary Ridgwell was in the audience. She is self-insured and pays about $900 per month for health care. “I am definitely going to the website,” Ridgwell said. “I am concerned that a doctor will not continue accepting the insurance plans.” Lois Fulks is a nurse practitioner at the University of Virginia and came because she will be dealing with patients who have new coverage. “It’s terrible that monthly (insurance) premiums are so steep in an age when student loans are on the rise,” Fulks said. “My advice is ‘Don’t smoke. Exercise and watch what you eat. Diet and exercise are the cheapest insurance.” Minel Foss came to learn more about the ACA and said she did learn a lot. Foss is concerned; however, the government will not be able to afford it. To watch the video and work on interactive insurance calculators, go to www.kff.org The numbers According to the Virginia Health Care Foundation “Profile of the Uninsured” (completed in March 2012) Between 2009 and 2010, the number of uninsured Virginians soared by 10 percent, significantly higher than the increase in the nation as a whole (US average increase: 7%). Nearly 15 percent of Virginians under age 65 are without medical insurance (14.6%). The vast majority of Virginia’s uninsured are U.S. citizens (78.6%) The Commonwealth Institute for Fiscal Analysis reports in part: • Virginia is one of the 10 wealthiest states in the country, yet fails to provide adequate support for those who cannot access or afford health coverage. Despite its high per-capita income, Virginia ranks 23rd nationwide in the number of uninsured. • Individuals in Virginia pay a higher percentage of the premium cost for employer-provided insurance than workers in any other state in the country and are in the top 10 in the percentage paid for family workplace insurance. (Prior to health reform implementation.) • The percentage of Virginians who get health insurance at work has steadily declined over the last decade. • While the number of uninsured nationally has fallen, the number of uninsured Virginians continues to climb. To see the information for yourself, visit www.vhcf.org/ Elect MIKE SHERIDAN Supervisor, Columbia District Come to the Second Annual A L L I F U N D AY A D AY O F F U N A N D G A M E S I N LO V I N G M E M O RY OF ALLISON BUCK October 19th 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Pleasant Grove Soccer Complex Featuring MIKE SHERIDAN • Dedicated • Experienced • Professional A fire truck and fireman on display Palmyra Volunteer Fire Company. Expressions Face Painting will be on site with beautiful creations. Bouncy slides • Funnel Cakes Kettle Corn Vendors: Makeup, Jewelry, Bags, Crafts and Food. The Fluvanna SPCA The Kona Ice Truck Silent auction of creative baskets and donated gift certificates from local businesses. T-shirts will be on sale as well as hamburgers and hot dogs, water and soda. Serving Fluvanna as: • Teacher, 25 years at Fluvanna Middle School • Coach, 25 years Fluvanna Baseball, Basketball and Football • Fireman, 29 years Volunteer at Kents Store Fire Dept. • Rescue Squad Member, 15+ years Volunteer Kents Store Rescue Squad • Youth Director, 5 years at Byrd Chapel United Methodist • Hometown Hero Award from Allen & Allen, 2012 • Community Builder’s Award, 2013 • Mike, his wife, Kristie, and their two sons, Ben and Luke, make their home in Kents Store. Paid for and authorized by Friends of Mike Sheridan A l l i Fu n R u n 5. K S t a r t a t 8 a .mic ip a te d in e d a n d p a rt e rs o f A 5 K o rg a n iz e Rocha own li Ju d n a n d b y A lf re . R e g is tr a ti o ra y lm a P s s e t A n y ti m e F it n e a v a il a b le a fo rm s w il l b e s s. A n y ti m e F it n HELP SUPPORT THE ORGANIZATIONS THAT WERE DEAR TO ALLI’S HEART Proceeds from these fundraisers will benefit the Fluvanna Youth Soccer Association and will fund two college scholarships for a Fluvanna female and male athlete Vendors and volunteers needed. For information, to rent vendor space, to volunteer or to donate, email: allifunday@yahoo.com Look on Facebook for “Alli Fun Day” September 19, 2013 | FLUVANNA REVIEW | 7 BINGO! Lake Monticello Fire & Rescue Thursdays! Progressive Games Now $1400* Purple $700* Red * As of date 09-19-13 Doors Open at 5:30 p.m. Early Bird 6:45 p.m. $1000 Jackpot* 80 or more players to pay $1000 pot. All Regular Games PAY $100 - with 80 or more players - Serving Large Food Menu Snacks, Burgers, Hotdogs, Fries & Desserts 10 Slice Rd. Palmyra (Off Rt. 600, near CVS & Dogwood Rest.) Questions? Call 434-591-1018 Lake tells supervisors: wait on water BY RUTHANN CARR, CORRESPONDENT The Lake Monticello Owners’ Association unanimously approved a resolution asking Fluvanna County Board of Supervisors to suspend a vote on any water resolution until many questions are answered and made available to county residents as soon as possible. As Board member Charles Harrelson said, “Basically we’re asking them to come up with better proposals because these stink.” The vote was taken Thursday (Sept. 12) at a special meeting. County Supervisor Joe Chesser (Rivanna) told the audience economic development can’t wait and the county needs to get water to Zion Crossroads one way or the other. Chesser outlined three plans: • With the help of Louisa County and the oversight of the James River Water Authority, getting water from the James River; • Contracting with Aqua Virginia to build a pipeline from its plant near Lake Monticello; • Getting water from the Fluvanna Correctional Center for Women on Rt. 250. Chesser fielded questions from both the LMOA board and the audience. Two things were clear: most were against doing anything and Chesser didn’t have all the answers. A champion of economic development, Chesser said something had to be done to get water to Zion Crossroads, You Need Us designated in the county strategic plan as a growth area. “What I’ve found is it is difficult to get anything done in this county,” Chesser said. “When you see an opportunity, you go after it. I think there’s a better chance at economic development with the Aqua Virginia proposal.” For the group assembled, the Aqua Virginia proposal was a hard sell. Aqua Virginia provides water to Lake Monticello and many during the evening said they pay the highest water and sewer rates in the state. At a Board of Supervisor meeting held weeks earlier, County Attorney Fred Payne advised the Board to not sign the Aqua Virginia proposal. Rick Kelly, Republican candidate for the Rivanna seat being vacated by Chesser, said he looked over the Aqua proposal and decided it “violates a constitutional prohibition against eminent domain.” “That should end it right there.” Tony O’Brien is also running for the Rivanna Board of Supervisor seat. While he did not weigh in on one proposal, O’Brien echoed Chesser in saying getting water to Zion Crossroads is essential to economic development. “Our county resolve to make big decisions is very small,” O’Brien said. “If you’re worried about taxes in the long run you have to change the trajectory. Core services will continue to deteriorate and property values will decrease while taxes increase. If we always look for the very best deal, we’ll continue to lose.” We Need You ANNUAL FUND DRIVE IS UNDERWAY LAKE MONTICELLO VOLUNTEER FIRE DEPARTMENT & RESCUE SQUAD, INC. O’Brien criticized the administration and the other supervisors for not being at the meeting and leaving Chesser to present alone. “This isn’t a one-man show,” he said. “The county hasn’t done a good job of presenting this to the people.” Len Gardner said he’s been a resident of Fluvanna for 37 years and has watched the county deal with water issues for 20 of those years – as a supervisor and as a reporter and editor and part owner of the Fluvanna Review. He said the mains issue is getting water to Zion Crossroads and summed up the situation as a chicken and egg scenario. “The reason there is no development up there is there is no water,” Gardner said. “I think getting water from the James River is the best plan. While we do not have an immediate need, Louisa County does have the need and the resources to do it. I believe they’d have it done in rapid order and we would have access. We would pay nothing except for withdrawal in Columbia and have to buy it from Louisa – but you have to buy it from someone.” Marilyn Kozak said the problem as she sees it is caused by “shortsightedness.” “There seems to be no strategic planning,” Kozak said. “Do we learn from past mistakes or do we continue to make the same ones?” Chesser said “the community needs to answer that.” Delilah’s Hair Designs Family Hair Salon Open: Mon., Tues., Fri: 9 to 5 Thurs: 9 to 7 Sat: Appointment only Call for an Appointment 589-4579 941 Lake Monticello Rd. Located off Route 53 on 618 We are all volunteers. THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT! We are a 501 (c) 3 corporation. Look for info on the County-wide EMT class starting in January CUSTOM FRAM E BAY made online at www.LMVFR.org, use PayPal or credit card. RY ER CO. Look for our fund drive mailing and respond ASAP Donations may also be B We are available any time, any day, all year! We are here to serve you. Art Supplies & Scrapbooking We carry FCHS scrapbooking paper and stickers Look for us at FCHS sporting events this year! NEW LOCATION 1187 Shiloh Church Road, Palmyra Off Haden Martin Road Now is a great time to become a member! 8 | FLUVANNA REVIEW | September 19, 2013 Open Wed., Thu., Fri. 10-4 & Sat 9-1 or Call for an Appointment 434-996-1354 Next to the Main Gate Fluvanna’s Only Certified Residential Brokerage OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK #1 in Fluvanna Sales Since 1984 MONTICELLO COUNTRY REALTORS 434-589-3539 • 800-825-LAKE THANKS FOR VOTING US #1 REAL ESTATE FIRM 4 YEARS IN A ROW OPEN HOUSES SUNDAY, 9-22-13 FROM 1-4 PM 1099 Willow Ridge Rd., Troy $449,900 Beautiful waterfront home on 4.85 acres. Bright & spacious throughout w/gorgeous upgrades. 3 car garage. Directions: From Charlottesville take 250 East. Go left on Zion Rd., Right on Campbell Rd., right on Willow Ridge to end. 1046 Tepee Town Road, Bremo Bluff $149,000 Historical home located on 2.07 near Fork Union. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, several fireplaces & high ceilings. Directions: From Palmyra, take 15 South to Fork Union. Turn right on Winnsville Road & left on Tepee Town Rd. Home about 1 mile on right. NEW LISTINGS 35 Old Homestead, Lake Monticello $469,000 Nice waterfront with amazing views & gentle walk to water. Gorgeous master suite, 2 car garage & boat dock. 29 Long Leaf Rd., Lake Monticello $324,900 Walk to the beach! Custom home w/ numerous upgrades, in law suite, screened porch, 3 car garage & workshop. Directions: Lake Monticello Main Gate: Right on Jefferson for approx 1 mile & take a left on Old Homestead to home on left. Directions: Lake Monticello Main Gate: Left on Jefferson; right on Forest; left on Colonial; right on Long Leaf to end. HOMES FOR SALE 757 Jefferson Drive, Lake Monticello $183,000 Charming home w/3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, high ceilings & skylights. Screened porch & an oversized garage with workshop. Backs to wooded area & close to the main gate. 3 Highland Rd. – $163,000 Immaculate ranch w/full finished basement. Fenced yard. 14 Ponderosa Ln. – $175,000 New price! Spacious one level, screened porch & workshop. 1 Marina Point B1 – $225,000 Water views from every window. End unit w/boat slip. 111 Turtle Creek Rd., #5, Charlottesville $101,000 Great opportunity & location for this 2 bedroom, 2 full bath condo. Nice sized bedrooms, balcony & storage area. Located within walking distance to shopping & restaurants. MONTICELLO COUNTRY REALTORS 4 Chippewa Ln. – $139,900 New price! One level ranch with attached 2 car garage. 10 Hawks Pl. – $274,900 6 Chickasaw Pl. – $279,900 30 Evergreen Ln. – $398,000 Quality new construction by Taylor Beautiful colonial w/full basement Waterfront to be built. Over an acre, Lyn. Choose your colors. & 2 car garage. Corner lot. boat dock & gentle walk to water. Announcing our proud partnership with First Virginia Homes. Two companies working together to provide our clients the highest quality of real estate services. FEATURED BUSINESS OF THE WEEK Vicki Wilson Owner/Broker (434)960-7044 Don & Lorraine Wheelers - Realtors (434)989-0708 (434)962-7868 Bill Lansing Adele S. Schaefer Realtor Associate Broker, GRI (434)996-7245 (434)962-1928 Craig McCormick Owner/Realtor (434)996-5119 Carl Heimlich Branch Manager Joan White Assoicate Broker GRI, CCREC (434)981-4081 Lorraine Frisina Realtor, GRI (434)981-3997 JoAnn Nordlund Associate Broker, GRI, CRS, CRB (434)962-6384 Cyndi Mylynne Realtor,GRI, ABR, e-PRO (434)981-4629 Iris Helfrich Realtor (434)981-9956 1160 Pepsi Place, Ste 300 Charlottesville, VA 22901 434-989-2274 Cell 866-587-5923 Fax 866-923-4441 ext. 7 Toll Free NMLS# 314836 VA# ML)-8067VA cheimilch@americanequity.com carl.heimlich.americanequity.com americanequity.com WWW.MONTICELLOREALTORS.COM September 19, 2013 | FLUVANNA REVIEW | 9 Principals lay out plans to improve schools BY KRISTIN SANCKEN, CORRESPONDENT Carysbrook Elementary and Fluvanna Middle School are hoping to be in the same stratospheric rankings as Fluvanna County High School in coming years. While the high school has consistently ranked among one of the top ten high schools in the state according to SOL scores, Carysbrook and FMS are still struggling to make it above the fiftieth percentile – particularly in mathematics. Principals Don Stribling and Yardley Farquharson presented their plans for improvements of the two schools to the school board on Wednesday (Sept. 11), which defended the use of frequent testing to monitor student progress. “We need meaningful assessment. Assessments are not tests. They’re not grades. Assessments give us information,” said Stribling, principal of Carysbrook Elementary which serves grade three and four. “When you take assessments with teacher insight and dedication, that leads to meaningful instruction.” “If we don’t look at data, then we can’t drive instruction,” said Farquharson, principal of the middle school. “At the beginning of the year there were a lot of conversations about whether or not we’re testing kids too much. If we don’t test, we don’t know what we need to teach. If we start off the year and we don’t do a pre-assessment, we’re just randomly throwing things out. We need to know what we need to spend just a little bit of time on and what we’re going to spend a lot of time on.” A slew of acronyms were thrown at the school board including MAP, IA, AIMSweb, LDS, and RTI, each of these representing an assessment, monitoring program, or intervention used with students. While the recent focus on literacy in third and fourth grade has paid off, making English SOL pass rates increase, the new focus will be on math and science. Only 50 percent of Fluvanna fifth graders passed the math SOL this year. “The SOL tests have gotten harder, we need to adjust our expectations,” said Carysbrook teacher Jennifer Flood. Flood will be using a new mathematics curriculum called ‘Math Investigations’ which will focus on hands-on learning. “Children will be developing their own survey question, test their survey question, and go out to collect data,” said Flood. “Then they will determine what’s the best way to present that data – should I used a bar graph, a line plot? What’s going to be best?” In addition to concentrating on making test scores better, administrators have put a heavy emphasis on citizenship and personal responsibility. Some of the more creative rewards include hanging a golden plunger from the ceiling if students keep the bathrooms clean, or a golden broom in front of the classroom the janitors have deemed to be the best cared for by students. “We have to teach expectations, not just expect children to behave,” said Carysbrook Assistant Principal Jen Valentine. Farquharson echoed much of what the Carysbrook administrators had to say, but also mentioned her particular focus on ‘gap groups.’ “We know that there are disparities between our gap groups,” said Farquharson. “We want to make sure we’re catching our black students and students with disabilities and meeting and exceeding state and national academic expectations.” School Board Member Bertha Armstrong asked for specific ways the school district is focusing on diversity issues. To which Brenda Gilliam, Director of Curriculum and Instruction, replied that the next October staff day will feature a presentation from Donna Ford from Vanderbilt University on “Creating Culturally Responsive Classrooms.” Administrators will also begin a book study on identifying and retaining minority students in gifted programs. “We want to make sure we’re catching our black students and students with disabilities and meeting and exceeding state and national academic expectations.” – Yardley Farquharson Look forward to seeing you! Join Us for Our Kids Consignment Sale! September 26th, 27th and 28th Sale location at 4 Centre Court outside the gates of Lake Monticello near Dogwood! We are excited to bring you a fantastic way to buy and sell high quality, new and gently-used children’s items - anything kid related from infancy through juniors including maternity! This season there will be a small section of Women’s clothing and accessories! To register to sell or for sale information, please visit us at www.beautifulconsignments.com 10 | FLUVANNA REVIEW | September 19, 2013 Henry Chandler & Company Tree & Landscape Care Your Professional Tree Doctor • Pine & Hardwood Mulching • Careful Tree Removal • Stump Grinding • Emergency Tree Removal Henry A. Chandler Ed.D Dr. of Arboricultural Science P.O. Box 15 Fork Union, VA. 23055 Free Estimates • Fully Insured for 2 Million Dollars 3rd Annual Fluvanna County Chamber of Commerce Wine Festival Professional Member of International Society of Arborists www.henrychandlerandcoinc.com • info@henrychandlerandcoinc.com Over 30 Years Serving Lake Monticello & Central Virginia 434-842-5300 • Cell 434-996-8889 Worship and Sing with All God’s Children Chip Richter Saturday, September 28, 2013 11:00 AM - 6:00 PM Pleasant Grove in Palmyra 1730 Thomas Jefferson Parkway Ten Wineries including: arts & crafts • Jefferson Vineyard • Thistle Gate Vineyard specialty food vendors • Mattaponi Winery live music • Elk Island • Horton Vineyards children’s entertainment • Stone Mountain plus more • Delfosse • Byrd Cellars • Reynard Florence Vineyard • Burnley Vineyards Sunday, September 22 9:30 am Another Level Cunningham United Methodist Church 3389 Thomas Jefferson Parkway, Palmyra 434-591-1363 www.cunninghamumc.org Tom Frost, Pastor Orthodontic Care In Fluvanna Offices in Palmyra, Dillwyn & Charlottesville William G. Horbaly, Call Today for a FREE Evaluation 434-973-6542 DDS, MS, MDS Palmyra office is located on Rt. 600 at Village Dental next to Domino’s Limo Bus rides by Camryn Limousine will be available from various Fluvanna locations to the festival. Visit the website to reserve your 1st Class seats. Full Ticket (valid photo ID required at gate) $15 in advance | $20 at gate $5 – Non-drinkers & children age 5 and over FREE – Children under age 5 NEW - Attendees can rent a 10x10 space for your own tent or canopy $20 payable online. Questions? 434.589.3262 www.fluvannawinefestival.com Hosted by: 240 Hydraulic Ridge Road #202 Charlottesville, VA 22901 www.HorbalyOrtho.com Special Thanks to Our Sponsors September 19, 2013 | FLUVANNA REVIEW | 11 Remembering 9/11 Crowds gathered all around Fluvanna to remember the victims of the Sept. 11 2001 attack. BY RUTHANN CARR, CORRESPONDENT On the anniversary of that terrible morning 12 years ago, Fluvanna County gathered to remember and to dedicate. At 11:30 a.m., the Fluvanna Sheriff’s Office dedicated a flag pole in the center circle of the library/sheriff’s complex on Commons Boulevard. At 6 p.m., Lake Monticello Volunteer Fire and Rescue held a memorial and tribute to those who lost their lives in the terrorist attacks. Close to 3,000 people died when 19 terrorists hijacked four planes intending to crash them into monuments of U.S. power: the Twin Towers in New York City, the Pentagon and a fourth, suspected bound for the White House or the Capitol, crashed in a Pennsylvania field when those aboard the plane charged the cockpit trying to overtake control. At the flag dedication ceremony, Fluvanna Volunteer Fire Department Chaplain David Jewell opened with a prayer. “We take this opportunity to honor our brothers and sisters fallen in service to you and those who died on this day 12 years ago,” Jewell said. “As we dedicate this flag pole, we remember not only the horror but the joy we get from the dedicated first re- Photos by Lisa Hurdle sponders who saved those they could. Let us keep in our thoughts the families of those who lost people on this day.” Nora Johnson stood at the back of the crowd. She came, she said, to honor her friend and Lake Monticello neighbor whose husband died in the South tower. “I just happened to be here checking out some books and she’s been on my mind,” Johnson said. “I thought I should stop. She’s on vacation because she tries to forget. I was thinking about her.” Bill Hughes, who is challenging Charles Rittenhouse for the Cunningham School Board seat, came to the ceremony and, like many, recalled what he was doing 12 years ago. Hughes lived in Nassau County, New York and worked for the county workforce services. He was supposed to have a meeting in Tower Two, he said, but was running late, having just finished a vacation. “I saw the TV at the rental place and saw the plane hit,” Hughes said. “I thought it was science fiction.” From Jones Beach on Long Island, Hughes said you could see straight into Manhattan at the Twin Towers, even though its more than 20 miles away. It was from there he saw the towers fall. 12 | FLUVANNA REVIEW | September 19, 2013 His secretary, who was riding the Long Island Railroad to cover the meeting for him, was turned back as authorities cut off all transportation into the city. “Now today we’re still in wars that emanated from 9/11,” Hughes said. “Freedom isn’t free.” Sheriff Ryant Washington told the crowd gathered at the dedication the story of how the flag pole came to be. He said when ground was broken in 2002 for the new building there weren’t plans in place for one. “I didn’t know any other government building without a flag pole,” he said. So after a little searching, Washington contacted an organization called Woodmen of the World that provides flagpoles. “They said, we donate them but we don’t put them up,” Washington said. Lt. Tom Brennan knew of a Boy Scout, Alex Lockey, who was working on becoming an Eagle Scout and looking for a project. Lockey planned and erected the pole. Then the Fluvanna Garden Club asked Washington if they could landscape the area. “I told them I don’t own the land, but they’re welcome to do what they want,” he said. The group mulched the area and planted small bushes and flowering plants. They also keep the spot weeded. If a flag is flown at night, it has to be illuminated. In stepped Lou Persinger, who donated the labor and materials to make that happen, Washington said. After the crowd heard the story, an Honor Guard was called forth to raise the flag. It stopped at half staff to commemorate those who died in the 9/11 attacks. Board of Supervisor Mozell Booker (Fork Union) attended. “I think every time there is a ceremony on this day, you relive where you were,” Booker said. “I watched TV so much I had to eventually turn it off. I had family and friends who lived in New York who were desperately trying to find loved ones. It became personal very quickly.” Board of Supervisor Bob Ullenbruch (Palmyra) was also in the crowd. “That dedication shows the amount of support the county gets from within - individual contractors who are willing to step up. Landscapers. Trades people. It’s really a wonderful thing,” Ullenbruch said. Woodmen of the World displayed an American flag during the ceremony on which was printed the names of those who died in the terrorist attack. September 19, 2013 | FLUVANNA REVIEW | 13 Candidates for 65th District answer questions BY RUTHANN CARR, CORRESPONDENT William Quarles (D) is challenging incumbent Lee Ware (R) to represent citizens in the 65th District of the Virginia House of Delegates. The 65th District lies east of Rt. 15 and consists of Fluvanna’s Columbia and Fork Union districts. The Fluvanna Review sent the same questions to both candidates. Below are their answers. Quarles 1. What have you done to help Fluvanna in our floundering business climate? We are a bedroom community with very little business base. Quarles: Like many rural communities, Fluvanna has struggled through the recession to establish a solid, enduring business base. If elected, I want to help local leaders and citizens of Fluvanna create an atmosphere where businesses new and old thrive. This would include working closely with the Fluvanna Chamber of Commerce to establish economic incentives for businesses to locate to the county. I would also make it my mission to improve the longterm sustainability of businesses by investing in business-related education and the infrastructure of existing commercial centers. Unfortunately, many residents of Fluvanna are unaware of what their current representation has done for them on the business front. 2. Getting water to the Zion Crossroads area has dominated economic development talk in Fluvanna for at least 10 years. What would you do to help Fluvanna in that quest? Quarles: Getting water to the Zion Crossroads area has been a constant issue for the people of Fluvanna. Although this is primarily a local issue, there are ways that the General Assembly can assist with upgrades to the infrastructure necessary for providing water. When elected, I will work with county officials, the board of supervisors and interested organizations and individuals to determine exactly what the needs are and how we can best support the county’s plan. 3. What are your recommendations regarding the water issues in Fluvanna? Quarles: None of the proposed solutions to the county’s water issues have stuck, but the needs of the people are too great to continue doing nothing. When elected, I will make sure that I am always available William Quarles (D) is challenging incumbent Lee Ware (R) to represent citizens in the 65th District of the Virginia House of Delegates. to discuss these concerns with a critical and pragmatic eye, and then do whatever can be done at the state level and within the House of Delegates to help solve this problem. While this is primarily a local issue, as your delegate, I will advocate on your behalf to move this process forward. When I served as the chairman of the Goochland Board of Supervisors, I often found that out-ofthe-box thinking was the key to solving complex problems just like this one. 4. Why should someone vote for you? What are your credentials? Quarles: I’m asking for your vote because I think that you deserve better. You deserve a delegate that will advocate for common-sense policies, not an extreme social agenda. I began my career as a public school teacher in Richmond and Varina, and I’ve spent the last 30 years working as a supervisor and instructor of nuclear chemistry at North Anna. I served on the Goochland Board of Supervisors for eight years, including three as chairman, and currently serve as Vice President of the Goochland Education Foundation. Now, I’m running to give you a say in the General Assembly. 5. What is your vision as to the role a state delegate plays in helping people at the county level? Quarles: A delegate must meet, see, speak with and get to know his or her con- stituents on a very personal level. They are called to hear your stories, internalize your grievances and make it a point to listen to the issues that matter most to you. A delegate is the people’s conduit, and as such, it is their job to be your voice in the legislature. If they are willing to put people above politics, it is my firm belief that a dedicated, hardworking, common sense delegate can be a force for positive change in any county. Ware Del. Lee Ware answered the questions in this manner: Your questions numbered 1, 2, 3, and 4 allow for a combined answer, as follows: The principle service that a legislator provides to local communities is to ensure that the state maintains a stable, as low-as-possible rate of taxation and spending to foster both business development and fiscal wellbeing – and opportunities, for individuals and families. The state government’s foremost responsibilities are to provide for a quality public education (including college), safe and effective public transportation systems, and the public safety, i.e., enforcement of the laws, etc. Thankfully, the House of Delegates has, for many years, paved the way in each of these respects. For example, Virginia remains one of the top three states in which to operate – or to begin – a business, thus fostering job-creation for Virginians – and tax revenues for state services. As a ranking member of the Finance, Commerce & Labor, and Agriculture, Chesapeake, & Natural Resources committees, I have cast hundreds of votes to help us achieve these objectives. (By the way, for all of our diverse industries, agriculture, including forestry, remains the principal engine of our private-sector economy.) That the state just concluded the fiscal year with a healthy surplus testifies to the legislature’s – and the Governor’s – prudent stewardship of the public purse. Without question, the nationwide economic recession of recent years has dramatically affected the state’s ability to assist localities in capital investment. Water-line projects such as that proposed for Zion Crossroads are, while largely a local responsibility, eligible for some state assistance. My decade-plus contribution to fiscal policy for the Commonwealth, coupled with my delight in assisting local officials throughout the 65th District, has resulted in funding for a water-line project in Goochland and development of a new state park in Powhatan – both this past year. For Fluvanna I cooperate with Del. Rob Bell, who represents the western portion of the county, in numerous ways in the House to further the county’s best interests. It bears remarking in this vein that, unless the federal government reins in its outrageous deficits, Virginia, and all the states, will find it increasingly difficult to share fully in funding projects for localities. What happens – or does not happen – in Washington, D.C., has serious, immediate repercussions for Richmond, that is, for Virginians’ state government, and what the state must bear from Washington all too inevitably impacts our counties, too. My service in the legislature began in 1998. In the fifteen years since, I have been endorsed by virtually every major voters’ association, such as Farm Bureau, and by leading business groups – such as the National Federation of Independent Business. More important, owing principally to my attempt to respond to every constituent’s and every locality’s request for assistance with a state program or agency, I have been re-elected by the voters every two years. I pledge to continue, and to expand upon, this demonstrated record in asking voters to re-elect me to the House this November. 6. What is your favorite flavor of ice cream and why? Quarles: My favorite ice cream flavor is vanilla, because vanilla ice cream mixes well with all the other flavors. You can create endless varieties! Ware: Ice cream? Mint chocolate chip. To find out more about each candidate visit their websites. Quarles: www.quarlesfordelegate.com Ware: www.delegateleeware.net SAVE ENERGY AND FUEL COSTS We’re Local-Come See Us Now Offering Expert Tire Service at Great Prices • ENGINE - TRANSMISSIONS • EXHAUST SYSTEMS • COMPUTERIZED 4 WHEEL ALIGNMENT • FUEL INJECTION • A/C CERTIFIED SERVICE • ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS • TRANSMISSION FLUID EXCHANGER • VA. STATE INSPECTION • TOWING • COMPUTER DIAGNOSTIC ANALYZER • TUNE-UPS • SHOCKS & STRUTS • HOSES & BELTS • CERTIFIED ASE TECHNICIANS • BRAKES & BATTERIES • LUBE & OIL CHANGE Since 1978 ALL MAKES & MODELS Home of All Star Auto Parts 14 | FLUVANNA REVIEW | September 19, 2013 AUTOMOTIVE CENTERS Hours: M-F 8:00 - 4:30 • Most Major Credit Cards accepted 434-589-1405 Lake Monticello 107 Crofton Place 434-589-8652 Zion Crossroads 9654 Three Notch Road Cutting the ribbon at Ace Hardware International Day of Peace Dear Neighbors: May Peace prevail in your hearts, in your homes, and on Earth! Saturday, September 21st is the International Day of Peace. To mark the day, Grace and Glory Lutheran Church will dedicate a Peace Pole on church property, 683 Thomas Jefferson Pkwy., opposite Fluvanna County Library. The Pole bears the Peace message inscribed in 8 Debra Lucado, Renny Megahan, Jeff Craig and Joe Chesser cut the ribbon. Photo by Page H. Gifford different languages. BY PAGE H. GIFFORD, CORRESPONDENT A brief dedication service at 3:00 p.m. will be Attracting shoppers locally and supporting the newly stocked Fluvanna Ace Hardware (formerly Do It Best) was Joe Chesser’s message to the group of well-wishers gathered at Friday’s (Sept. 12) ribbon-cutting ceremony. Among the spectators cheering co-owners Renny Megahan and Jeff Craig were members of the Fluvanna Chamber of Commerce: Scott Valentine, Debra Lucado, Jonathon Oliver, Tracey Williams, Vicki Karabinus and Karen Bowles. Tony O’Brien and Rick Kelly, candidates for Board of Supervisors, were also on hand to give support. Valentine, President of the Fluvanna Chamber of Commerce, also stepped forward before the ribbon was cut to give a few words of support for local businesses in general and praise Megahan and Craig for being proactive in business and retail. The store is located at 114 Crofton Place, under the big red Ace sign that can’t be missed. For more information, call 591-0670. What you don’t see in the store can be ordered online at www.acehardware.com and shipped to the store for pick-up. followed by refreshments and fellowship in the church. The community is cordially invited to join us in this significant event! The Rev. Ken Albright, Pastor (434) 531-3551 Visit our website:www.graceandglory.org Office: (434) 589-2217; gglcelca@embarqmail.com 683 Thomas Jefferson Pkwy., Palmyra • (Rte. 53, opp. Fluvanna Public Library) a Jim’s P a P We’re beside the Troy Market & Deli Soft Serve Treats Starting On Sunday September 29th We will be CLOSED on Monday’s Open: Tuesday – Sunday: 1 pm till 8 pm 19289 James Madison Hwy • 540-421-7867 Located on Rt. 15, Three miles south of the Rt. 250 Traffic Light September 19, 2013 | FLUVANNA REVIEW | 15 WE TWO CAN DO MORE FOR YOU! B U YI N G • S E L L I N G • R E N T I N G • C A L L U S Lorraine Wheeler 434-989-0708 Don Wheeler 434-962-7868 The Wheelers MONTICELLO COUNTRY REALTORS See ent on advertisem Page 9 lordonwheeler@gmail.com Fluco sports in review BY BROOKE COLEMAN AND CHRIS HAISLIP, FLUVANNA COUNTY HIGH SCHOOL JOURNALISM PROGRAM Brooke and Chris compiled this information with the oversight of journalism teacher Elizabeth Pellicane Golf For the Fluco golf team, last week brought a storm of matches, with events on Sept. 9, 10, and 12. The week started off on a challenging note with the team losing a home match against Stuarts Draft and Louisa. The Flucos held a score of 188, compared to Louisa’s score of 177. Senior Zach Hubbard continued to be the top scorer for Fluvanna, finishing the match with 43 strokes. The next day, the golf team faced off against Louisa again, this time at Louisa. The result was the same, unfortunately, bringing its only hope for a win during the week to the Sept. 12 match against Powhatan. The Flucos’ desire for a win remained fruitless there too, as they fell to Powhatan, one of the top golf teams in the state. Although the Flucos didn’t snag a win last week, they have been more successful than in years past. “We’ve improved a lot from last year, but we still have a lot of improvement to do. We’re getting better, slowly but steadily,” said junior Christian Baber. The Flucos looked to improve during their next match against Charlottesville on Sept. 17. Volleyball The Fluvanna varsity volleyball squad continued its winning streak Sept. 9 when they defeated the Waynesboro Little Giants 3-1. “We’re just getting to learn how to play with each other in some new spots and we’ve done well so far,” said returning player Maddy Kline. The Flucos continue to play a smart and agile game and have been keeping the ball alive on their side. “We’re only going to get better,” said Kline. Junior varsity volleyball also had a successful night as they beat Waynesboro in the first and last match, winning 2-1 overall. “We had good communication,” said sophomore Avery Haislip. The Lady Fluco matches for the week of Sept. 16 include Albemarle High School, Orange County High School, and Harrisonburg. Middle school cross country The Flying Flucos put up a fight Sept. 11, and brought home a victory against the Louisa Lions. The top three middle school girls to score were Kristen Cabrera, coming in at 13:39, Saige Haney at 14:20, and Haley Kennedy at 14:41. “They did an outstanding job,” said Coach Rose Brogan. The boys reciprocated the win, with Chris Newton, Bradley Holtz, and Jack Easter finishing in the top three slots for Fluvanna. Both girls and boys Middle School cross country teams competed against the Lions for the second time on Sept. 17. Girls’ high school cross country On Sept. 14, the cross country team participated in the Woodberry 5K Invitational. The junior varsity team placed 1st in their division with a total of 44 points. The top three Fluvanna runners included Kristen Cabrera, Haley Kennedy, and Saige Haney. “I think the team did very well, considering the toughness of the course,” said sophomore Mia Scalzo. The varsity cross country team did a fantastic job as well and finished in fourth place with a total of 137 points. “I think the rest of the season will go really great because of the strong team we have, and our great coaches,” said Scalzo. The top three runners in the varsity race included Nicki Douma with 20:14, Devon Burger with 21:27 and Ellie Smialek with 22:51. The next cross country meet will be a districts match at Charlottesville High School on Sept. 25. Boys’ high school cross country The cross country boys also participated in the Woodberry 5K, and had a successful day. The boys’ junior varsity cross country team was represented by Josh Carlton and Jamie Fletcher. It was a strong finish with Fletcher finishing 18 seconds ahead of Carlton. “This year’s team is growing a lot and we have made a lot of improvement,” said sophomore Keegan Campanelli. Meanwhile, the boys’ varsity team finished tenth out of 18 teams. Travis Moe led Fluvanna with a time of 18:02, followed by Jonathan Corbin and Andy Guess with times of 19:03 and 19:15 respectively. “I think we have been pretty successful and will be able to become faster and stronger though hard work and dedication,” Campanelli said. The boys’ next meet will be at CHS on Sept. 25. Home by Seniors Seniors HomeCare Carefor by Seniors Seniors for There’s a huge difference in the kind of home care you can receive from someone who really understands what your life is like as a senior. The concerns you have. The need for independence. Someone who like you, has a little living under his or her belt. Our loving, caring, compassionate seniors are there to help. We offer all the services you need to stay in your own home, living independently. t Companion Care t Housekeeping Services t Meal preparation/cooking t Personal Care t Overnight and 24-hour Care t Transportation t t t t t Shopping Doctor Appointments Yard Work Handyman Services and more rving Fluvanna. Se n in New Office Opello Lake Monce Like getting a little help from your friends. Call today: 434-990-0145 • 24 River Ridge Dr., Palmyra, VA. ©2010 Each office is independently owned and operated. • All trademarks are registered trademarks of Corporate Mutual Resources Incorporated 16 | FLUVANNA REVIEW | September 19, 2013 Huddle Up Fundraiser BORDERLINE NOTICE JUDICIAL SALE OF REAL PROPERTY On October 21, 2013,or as soon thereafter as papers can be done, proceedings will be commenced under the authority of Section 58.1-3965 et seq. of the Code of Virginia 1950 (as amended) to sell the following parcels for payment of delinquent taxes in Fluvanna County, Virginia. 2.0 acres located in the Cunningham Magisterial District, 2440 Thomas Jefferson Parkway Fluvanna County, Virginia Tax Map Parcel: 29-A-105 listed in the name of Roger Lee Crawford All proceeds collected at the door benefits the Huddle Up Fund 1.584 acres located in the Palmyra Magisterial District, 2318 Troy Road Fluvanna County, Virginia Tax Map Parcel: 5-5-1 listed in the name of Roger Lee Crawford Providing Full Service Veterinary Care for Cats and Dogs! Friday, September 20th • 10 pm $5 Cash Cover at the Door Benefits Huddle up MUST BE 21 TO ENTER VALID ID REQUIRED FOR ENTRY, 434-589-1155 dogwoodrestaurant.net WiFi 10 Centre Court South Boston Road (Rt. 600) Near Lake Monticello Fire Dept.& CVS (540) 832 - 1751 www.xroadsanimalhospital.com TUESDAY NIGHT IS SENIOR CITIZEN NIGHT! Walk-In Rabies Clinic $10 Rabies Vaccines Saturday, October 12th 8 a.m. - 12 noon Are you up to date on your shots? You’re never too old to be carded! Yikes...no! Be 5yo5ur to g e t ! % 0 5 Pets must be in carriers or on leashes. One year vaccines will be given if owner does not have proof of a previous rabies vaccination. If you have more than 5 pets, you may call or stop by to pre-register. Wellness exams • Puppy/Kitten visits • Spay/Neuter •Microchipping, Surgery, Dental cleanings & Dental surgery•Digital X-ray•Laser therapy In-house lab blood results while you wait Welcomes Dr. Ashley Zeni A graduate of Texas A&M University, where she received both her bachelor’s degree and her veterinary degree. She graduated Texas A&M College of Veterinary Medicine in 2004, alongside Drs. Davis and Bejar! Dr. Zeni has spent the last 9 years practicing in Northern Virginia. However, her heart was always drawn to Charlottesville. Dr. Zeni is very excited to be joining the Crossroads Animal Hospital team, and looks forward to serving the Charlottesville community. Dr. Zeni’s professional interests include feline medicine, internal medicine, cardiology and ultrasound. In her personal time, she enjoys running, yoga, cooking and traveling, both locally and internationally. She shares her home with two furry cats, Tutu and Mo. Purchase a dinner special at regular price then receive 50% off the second special Open 7 Days a Week Like us on Facebook! Dr. Jesse Bejar Dr. Ashley Zeni Dr. Erin Davis Sun. 7 a.m. - 4 p.m. • Mon. - Thurs 7 a.m. -9 p.m. Fri. -Sat. 7 a.m.- 10 p.m. Located at Zion Crossroads across the street (Rt.15) from Walmart/Lowes 265 Turkeysag Trail, Palmyra • Located across the street from Food Lion 434-591-0209 • 434-591-0208 Gordonsville, Va. 22942 65 Jefferson Court Exit #136 OFF I64 September 19, 2013 | FLUVANNA REVIEW | 17 Community Calendar _______________________________________ Art association The Fluvanna Art Association will conduct its Annual Art Show and Sale Sept.18 – Oct. 28 at the Fluvanna County Library. Meet and greet the artist at the awards reception Sept. 21, from 1 to 3 p.m. also at the library. For information on materials see FluvannaArt.com or call 434-589-6284. Primary school A fall festival fundraiser will be held for West Central Primary school on Sept. 21 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Look for food, games, raffles and vendors. Beulah homecoming Beulah Baptist Church in Kents Store, VA will celebrate their 153rd Homecoming on Sunday, Sept. 22. Sunday school begins at 9:45 a.m., followed by the worship service starting at 11:00 a.m. A covered dish lunch will be served after the worship service. Law enforcement academy The Fluvanna County Sheriff’s Office is hosting a Citizens Law Enforcement Academy program starting on Sept. 24 at 7 p.m. at the sheriff’s office at 160 Commons Blvd. The deadline to enroll is Sept. 20. The academy is held 2 ½ hours each Tuesday for 10 weeks. For more information call 434-589-8211 or email dkarr@fluvannasheriff.com. (The classes do not certify an individual as a law enforcement officer or auxiliary deputy.) Free estate planning On Thursday, Sept. 26, JABA in partnership with the law firm of Williams Mullen will host Central Virginia Wills for Seniors. The day-long event – for Fluvanna County residents also – is designed to provide local people of low income who are 60 or older the opportunity to complete a basic estate plan for free. This Featured Properties service includes a basic will, power of attorney, and advance medical directive. The event marks the sixth time that JABA and Williams Mullen have partnered to make these critical services available at no cost. The event will run from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at JABA at 674 Hillsdale Drive, in Charlottesville. Appointment required. For more information or to apply for an appointment, please contact Rose Farber at (434) 8175253, rfarber@jabacares.org. Fields of Faith The Fluvanna County High School Fellowship of Christian Athletes invites you to their annual Fields of Faith on Friday Sept. 27, 2013 at the completion of the Varsity Football game with Albemarle. This year we will have athletes from UVA as our speakers along with great music for the event. We hope you plan to come spend a great evening in fellowship with us. Visit fieldsoffaith.com for more information. See you at the field! Bybee Church tutoring Bybee’s Road Baptist Church will provide tutoring in reading, writing and math for kindergarten through 5th grade children each Wednesday from 5:30 to 7:00 p.m. starting on Oct. 2 and ending on Nov. 20. Dinner will be provided for the children. Registration is required by calling the church at 434-589-8529. The church is located at 4989 Bybee’s Church Rd. in Troy. www.bybeechurch.org. Singleton show Stylish Contemporary Ranch • Lake Monticello, Fluvanna • $319,000 #504755 • Hrdwd flrs, prof lndscp, pool • Betsy Gunnels, 434-996-9797 Farmette near Gordonsville • Louisa • $205,000 # 513609 • Inground Pool • Tom Woolfolk, 434-242-1991 Richard Singleton, local Scottsville photographer, will be showing a series of photographs titled “Water, Earth, Sky: Light” at Thistle Gate Winery (about 5 miles East of Scottsville on Rt. 6) during the month of October. The opening will take place on Friday, Oct. 4, from 5-7 p.m. Pictures included were taken in Ireland, England, Nova Scotia, and the USA, including Virginia. Yeck talk Author Joanna Yeck will be signing books, drinking coffee, and chatting informally with many Buckingham and Scottsville friends and cousins at Baine’s in Scottsville on Oct. 5 from 1 to 3 p.m. She is the author of The Jefferson Brothers and an expert on Buckingham history. Yeck was awarded a Jefferson Fellowship at the International Center for Jefferson Studies (2010) and her regional history, “At a Place Called Buckingham”… Historic Sketches of Buckingham County, Virginia (Slate River Press), was published in 2011. Computer classes Wade Built 4/3 Bedrooms • Forest Lakes • $459,000 # 513073 • Bsmt,2 car grge, cul de sac • Pat Arndt, 434-981-2650 1st Time on the Market! • Dick Woods Rd, Ivy • $269,900 # 511815 • 3Br, bsmt, garage, 3 acres • Tracey McFarlane, 434-882-0067 Providing Resources to Inspire, Develop and Empower (PRIDE), Inc. will be offering computer classes for beginners including: Introduction to Computers on Monday, Oct. 7, from noon to 2 p.m.; Introduction to Searching the Internet on Tuesday, Oct. 8, 2013 from noon to 2 p.m. Classes have been developed for beginners of all ages to learn computer Registration is required. All classes are held at New Fork Baptist Church in Palmyra. Contact Barbara Cary, at 434-842-3095 or a4pride@ gmail.com for more information. Visit PRIDE’s Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/A4pride. Stroke clinic The Rotary Club of Fluvanna County is sponsoring a stroke clinic on Saturday, Oct. 19 at Saints Peter and Paul Roman Catholic Church on Rt. 53, south of Lake Monticello. The clinic is presented by the Martha Jefferson Hospital Neuroscience Center. Nurses will be present to test glucose levels, take heart pressure and answer questions. This the first time that Martha Jefferson has taken this program off-campus. Game day Play your favorite game: Mahjong, Canasta, Hand & Foot, Bridge and Board Games and more at Sts. Peter & Paul Church in Palmyra on Sunday, Oct. 20 from 2 p.m. until 6 p.m. Call Joan at 434-589-6269 or Betty at 434-589-3231 for tickets or information. Tickets are $12 per person and no tickets will be sold at the door. Reservations must be made before Oct. 15. There will be raffles, door prizes and refreshments. Market bazaar The Kents Store Volunteer Fire Company is hosting a Market/Craft Bazaar on Nov. 9 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. The bazaar is looking for vendors. Contact Sarah @ 434-589-2852 or kentsstorefire@gmail.com. Craft fair Save the date for another great annual “Holiday Arts and Craft Fair” to be held Nov. 9, 2013 from 8 a.m. until 2 p.m. at Sts. Peter & Paul Church in Palmyra in conjunction with St. Joseph’s Shrine of St.Catherine Drexel. There are tables still available so call Patricia Amato at 434-589-7811 to apply or for more information. Hair show Salon DeShano will hold its 10th anniversary hair show event on Nov. 9 from 6 to 9 p.m. The goal is to raise $10,000 to benefit Valley Mission. Tickets available at Salon DeShano. Drivers needed Fluvanna Meals on Wheels is looking for regular or substitute route drivers in the Kidd’s Dairy Store area (Rt. 6-West River Road) Monday-Friday during the lunch-time hour. Meals are shuttled to Kidd’s Dairy Store for pickup by route driver for distribution to clients. The route takes approximately one hour to complete so won’t you consider helping a neighbor in need? Please call our office at 434-589-1685 or send us an email at www.fluvannamealsonwheels@ embarqmail.com. Syrian relief collection Local Anglicans are inviting churches of all traditions, charities and community organizations to join them in sending emergency relief to Syrian refugees. Offerings will be collected this Sunday and throughout the month in participating congregations. Collected funds should be sent to the attention of Bill Bray, Missions Chair, All Saints Anglican Church in Charlottesville. For details contact Bill at 434-227-0811 or 295-6488. THIS WEEK’S PET Large Wooded Lot • Lake Monticello • $164,500 # 513574 • 3br, 3B Home Large deck too! • Connie Fairchild, 434-466-8660 Would you like to rule the world, but are unsure of how to do it? Gage will show you the way. Handsome and intelligent, he appreciates the finer things in life, and is happy to show you just how he likes things. Gage would like a quieter home with humans who will happily cater to his whims. 2 Acre parcel, ready to build • Fair Oaks, Scottsville • $49,950 # 512888 • Home site cleared, w.o.bsmnt • Joseph Griffin, 434-327-2554 Gage 434-589-0777 • 434-589-1882 18 | FLUVANNA REVIEW | September 19, 2013 Fluvanna SPCA 5239 Union Mills Road, Troy, VA (434) 591-0123. S PONSORED BY A SBESTCO SERVICE DIRECTORY Quality Roofing ARM-STRONG LANDSCAPING, LTD. Residential Specialist “Our Strength is Serving Your Needs” and Seamless Gutters Serving the Fluvanna and Charlottesville Area for Over 29 Years FREE Quotes References Licensed & Insured 434-531-1561 • Tear-Off & Replace Old Roofs • New Roof Construction • All Roof Type Repairs • All Shingles Types • Epdm Rubber • Fascia Board Repair, Replacement & Painting • Gutters & Downspouts • Gutter Guards (multiple brands) • Choice of Colors • Chimney Repairs • Skylight Installation & Repair Custom Home Builder Edward B. Peed, Owner Mowing Trimming, Mulch, Retaining Walls, Walkways, Patios, Leaf & Snow Removal CecilLCobb@gmail.com 3535 Carys Creek Rd. Fork Union, VA 23055 Fast Emergency Service ISION C E R P N Starlite Rachel Taylor FREE ESTIMATES • (434) 589-7800 Rachel@arm-stronglandscaping.com www.arm-stronglandscaping.com One-Stop Home Beautification Heating & Air LAW ICE, LLC SERV Superior Lawn Care for Lake Monticello & surrounding Areas at an Affordable Price CANʼT KEEP UP WITH YOUR LAWN? CALL US TODAY! Let us take care of it. Donʼt forget to ask about all our landscaping & lawn care services. Free estimates Monthly, weekly, or one time service Locally owned & operated • Fully Insured 434-989-4152 www.precisionlawn.info • • • • • Service & New Installation Air Cleaners & Humidifiers System Upgrades Licensed & Insured Financing Available D&L REMODELING 434-589-1413 31-B Conestoga Way Zions Crossroads www.starliteheatingandair.com Affordable Handyman Services & Home Improvement 540-894-4745 Decks & Porches Kitchens & Bathrooms Finish Basements & Additions Power Washing • Interior & Exterior Painting • Gutter Cleaning & Guard Installation Decks & Screen Porches • Electric & Plumbing • Tile Installation Basement Finishing • Shelves & Bookcases • Window & Door Replacement Drywall Installation & Repair • Hardwood Floors • Roof & Siding Repair Kitchen & Bathroom Remodeling • Remodeling • Or just ask J.J. Bevilacqua 434-589-8825 jjb@yourmanfridayva.com www.yourmanfridayva.com NOW OFFERING WINDOW CLEANING! CALL FOR OUR SPRING SPECIAL Highlight your business here! Service Directory For information including special rates and deadlines, call Lisa Hurdle at 434-591-1000 ext. 29. Licensed Bonded & Insured Free Estimates References Available Lake Monticello Resident VA Approved Builder New Homes Finished Basements Additions Remodeling Kitchen & Bath renovations A.T. BESECKER CONSTRUCTION INC. www.atbesecker.com 434-286-2627 Class A License Since 1988 434-589-5075 www.taylorlynhomes.com email: tlhomesinc@gmail.com Mountain Laurel Landscaping Locally Grown Quality Plants Available for You to Purchase Local Company 434-589-8218 Lehnert Home Home Improvement • Repair • Handyman ONE LIST, One Call - We Do It ALL Testimonials mtnll10@gmail.com www.dandlremodeling.com YOUR MAN FRIDAY inc Visit Our Website for Client Landscape Design & Installation Trees, Shrubs, Annuals Retaining Walls, Picket Fences Walkways & Patios Licensed & Insured • Free Estimates OVER 25 YEARS EXPERIENCE Kurt Serving Fluvanna County & Surrounding Areas Jeff O’Dell Landscape Contractor Whole House Generators When the power goes out, your standby generator goes on - automatically - protecting you and your home 24/7. 1989 Call to book your lt Landscaping consu 434-842-3953 Cell: 434-962-4626 Cecil L. Cobb Est. Improvemen ts Professional Licensed Contractor Carpentry, Electrical, Plumbing, Tile and More... Back to School Special $275 Behind the Wheel for teens September 28 434-242-4634 Fluvanna Hardware IS NOW Same Employees and Still Locally Owned coming soon Online Shopping: acehardware.com Free Shipping to Store! Mon – Fri, 7am – 6pm Sat, 8am – 4pm • Sun, 10am – 4pm 434-591-0670 114 Crofton Place-Outside the main gate, Lake Monticello Locally Owned September 19, 2013 | FLUVANNA REVIEW | 19 Drivers – HIRING EXPERIENCED/INEXPERIENCED TANKER DRIVERS! Earn up to $.51 per Mile! New Fleet Volvo Tractors! 1 Year OTR Exp. Req. – Tanker Training Available. Call Today: 877-882-6537 www. OakleyTransport.com Property transfers Property transfer deeds are provided by the Fluvanna County Circuit Court. 07/19/13 • Cardinal Point, LLC to Ryan, Christopher & Karin Ann; 113 Ironhound Court, Troy, Lot 9 Mountian Meadows Sub.; $173,500. 07/23/13 • Bomberger, John C. TR & Boomberg to Nataro, Salvatore A. & Monica D.; 22 Fairwood Place, Lot 204, Phase 12, Lake Monticello, $220,000. • Sycamore Square, LLC to NVR, Inc.; 172 S. Pantops Drive; Lot 10 Phase 4, Sycamore Square, $60,000. • Berry, Keith Mitchell to Sheler, Monty Lee; 16 Turkeysag; Lot 91, Phase 8, Nahor Lake Monticello, $155,000. • Atlantic Trustee Services, LLC to The Farmers Bank of Appomattox; Lot 7, Antioch Estates, 2 Acres; $110,891.94 Deed to foreclose. • Booysen, Lilian Beatrice to McLaughlin, Renica S. & ET AL; 202 Miles Jackson Road, 0.96 Acres; $145,000. • Joppaz, LLC to Hydraulic, LLC; Lot 305, Phase 9, Knollwood Lake Monticello, $170,000. 07/25/13 8/02/13 • Boothe, Virginia Anne to Fitzgerald, James P.; 2936 Jefferson Drive; Lot 4, Phase 8, Nahor Lake Monticello; $186,000. • Monarch Land, LLC & Liberty Homes to Frye, Helen D.; 54 Carriage Hill Road, Lot 16, Needham Village, $150,750. 07/26/13 • Surety Trustees, LLC to Beneficial Financial I. Inc.; 2 Acres (Lawson) $64,927.46 Deed to foreclose. • Wheeler, Patrick D. & Natasha A. to Nichols, Calvin & Diane S.; 464 Humminghbird Road, Scottsville, 3.947 Acres.; $68,000. 07/29/13 • Kitchen, Ivey B. & Margaret S. to Hamm, James A. Jr & Anita C.; 1725 Haden Martin Road, 3 Parcels, Cunningham Mag. District; $56,000. • Fannie Mae to Mitchell, Melanie C.; 262 Stage Junction Road, Columbia, 2.03 acres; $44,000. • Surety Trustees, LLC to Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp.; Lot 2, Beales Lane Subdivision, $119,000. Deed to foreclose. • Surety Trustees, LLC to JP Morgan Chase Bank, National, Lot 241, Phase One, Lake Monticello, (Heather H. Buglia and Ryan K. Buglia) $196,872.64. Deed to foreclose. 8/05/13 • Minnis, Kristen M. to Carpenter, Daniel G. & Kelly Re.; 60 Bolling Circle; Lot 49, Phase 2, Shadwell, Lake Monticello, $223,000. • Bennett, George E. & Clime, Kar. to Dugger, Clark Terrell & Kate A.; 1305 Broken Island Road, Lot 11, 10.383 Acres; $410,000. 07/30/13 8/06/13 • Liberty Homes, Inc. to Fincham, Logan E.; 49 Partridge Berry Lane, Troy, Lot 11, Sycamore Landing, $188,665. • Pace, Nancy Gentry FKA Gentry to Watson, Frances M.; 15 Wildwood Drive; Lot 326 Phase 3, Montpelier Lake Monticello, $115,000. • Sigmon, Mary H. to Walther, Brandon D.; 723 Nahor Manor Road, 2.01 Acres; $155,000. • Eager, Patricia Bentz to Holt, Russel M. & Martha G.; 1086 Broken Island Road, Lot 27, .82 Acres, Lot 28, .90 Acres, $77,000. • Federal National Mortgage Assoc. to Spradlin, Jennifer L.; 774 Jefferson Drive; Lot 151, Phase 2, Shadwell, Lake Monticello, $155,000. • Federal National Mortgage Assoc. to Stewart, Amy Johnson; 28 E. Point Road, Lot 76, Phase 6, Riverside Lake Monticello, $144,000. • Mercogliano, Anthony J. to Sinclair, Thomas W. Patrick, 233 Miller Road, Troy, Lot 21-38 Hunters Lake, $235,000. 07/31/13 • Grisser, Michael S. & Tracy R. to Sanders, Charles R. Jr. & Neil S.; 7460 Pepers Ferry Blvd., Fairlawn, VA; Lot 14, Phase 3, Broken Island Sub.; $414,000. 08/01/13 • Bennett, Neil R. & ET AL to Secretary of Veterans & Affairs; Lot 408 Phase 5, Tufton, Lake Monticello, $9,341.78 Deed to foreclose. • Eager, Patricia Bentz, TR to Meade Construction, LLC; 300 Preston Avenue; 0.74 Acre, Lot 11 Two Rivers Subdivision; $42,000. • NVA Properties, LLC to Liberty Homes, Inc.; Lots 71, 72, 73, 74, 75 & Sycamore Landing; $125,000. 8/07/13 • Eveland, Richard T. and Linda to Bessett, Steven James and Mich.; 142 Ruritan Ridge Lane, Scottsville, VA; Lot 1, Ruritan Ridge Sub.; 10.382 Acres; $562,500. 8/08/13 • The Secretary of Housing and Urban to Ginger Investments, LLC; Lot 241, Phase 8, Lake Monticello, $81,587. 20 | FLUVANNA REVIEW | September 19, 2013 AUCTIONS ATTENTION AUCTIONEERS: Advertise Your upcoming auctions in Virginia Newspapers for one low cost of $300. Your 25-word classified ad reaches over ONE MILLION Virginians! Call this paper or Adriane Long at 804-521-7585 (Virginia Press Services). Drivers – HOME WEEKLY & BI-WEEKLY Earn $900$1200 wk BC/BS Med. & Major Benefits. No Canada, HAZMAT or NYC! SMITH TRANSPORT 877-705-9261. LOTS AND ACREAGE ANTEBELLUM ALBEMARLE MANSION on 200 acres. Totally restored historic landmark, candidate for conservation easement. $3,995,000. 540-448-0393 AUCTION: 4 BR Home in Spotsylvania. RESERVE: $180K. Sept. 26 at 6 PM. 2,923 sq. ft., 0.96 acres. 9702 Courthouse Rd. CottonwoodAuctions.com 540.437.9500 VAL #877 LAND DEAL! On Sontag Road in Franklin County Unrestricted acre lot. $19,900 and I’ll finance. NO closing costs - NO credit check - 540-294-3271 ON-SITE ESTATE AUCTION Saturday, September 21 - 9:30 a.m. Amelia, Va. Woodworking Machinery, Guns, Antiques, 100’s of Antique Tools. For Pictures, Listings, & Info Visit: www.tilmansauction.com 804-347-4963 VAL #348 AIRLINE CAREERS begin here – Become an Aviation Maintenance Tech. FAA approved training. Financial aid if qualified – Housing available. Job placement assistance. SCHEV certified. Call AIM 888-245-9553. Auction, Granite & Marble By Malave’, Inc., Equipment, Vehicles, Inventory & More Greensboro, NC– Guilford County, 9/26/13 at 9am, Auction at Greensboro Coliseum Special Events Center Meeting Room 3, Iron Horse Auction Co., Inc., 800.997.2248, NCAL3936, ironhorseauction.com AUCTIONS – Roofing Company Liquidation, Online Auction Only, Bid September 17 thru September 26, Items Located in Maryland & Florida. Motley’s Auction & Realty Group, 804-232-3300, www.motleys.com, VAAL #16. EDUCATION Medical Billing Trainees Needed! Train to become a Medical Office Assistant. No Experience Needed! Training & Job Placement available at CTI! HS Diploma/ GED & computer needed. 1-888-424-9419. UNEMPLOYED? VETERANS? A SPECIAL TRAINING GRANT is now available in your area. Grant covers Computer, Medical or Microsoft training. Call CTI for programs details. 1-888-528-5546. HELP WANTED / DRIVERS ADVERTISE YOUR TRUCK DRIVER JOBS in Virginia Newspapers for one low cost of $300. Your 25 word classified ad reaches almost ONE MILLION Virginians! Call this paper or Adriane Long at 804-521-7585 (Virginia Press Services). DRIVERS-CDL TRAINING now offered in Roanoke 540857-6188 or Spotsylvania 540-582-8200! Attend 4 Weeks or 10 Weekends. Guaranteed Financing and Job Placement Assistance Available. 1-800-646-2374. 65 Driver Trainees needed! No experience needed! Learn to drive a truck at Shippers Choice! Job ready in 4 weeks! Good pay & benefits! 1-800-874-7131 ATTENTION REGIONAL & DEDICATED DRIVERS! Averitt Offers Excellent Benefits & Hometime. CDL-A req. 888-362-8608. Recent Grads w/a CDL-A, 1-5 wks Paid Training. Apply online at AverittCareers.com Equal Opportunity Employer CDL-A Drivers: Looking for higher pay? New Century is hiring experienced company drivers and owner operators. Solos and teams. Competitive pay package. Sign-on incentives. Call 888-705-3217 or apply online at www.drivenctrans.com MISCELLANEOUS SERVICES DIVORCE – Uncontested, $350 + $88 court cost. No court appearance required. Estimated completion time twenty-one days. All telephone inquiries welcome with no obligation. Hilton Oliver, Attorney. 757-490-0126. DIVORCE WITH OR WITHOUT children $125.00. Includes name change and property settlement agreement. SAVE hundred. Fast and easy. Call 1-888-733-7165, 24/7. SMITH MOUNTAIN LAKE / HOMES FOR SALE Vintage Country Charmer w/acreage! 4-Large Bedrooms, 2-Baths, 4-Fireplaces, Huge Kitchen, New Appliances, Awesome Setting, REMODELED & UPDATED! Near Smith Mountain Lake $199,900. Rob @ReMax 540-420-2922 STEEL BUILDINGS STEEL BUILDINGS Blowout! Best savings & possible clearance buildings. Used for Garages, Workshops, & Shelters. Various Sizes Available and LOW payments. CALL NOW 1-800-991-9251 Heather Classified: $5 We Can Help Sell Your S tuf f! 30 wor ds or less. per Week For $10 your ad will appear for TWO WEEKS on FluvannaReview.com (with FREE PHOTO) and in the next two printed issues of the Fluvanna Review Deadline for print ads is MONDAY BY NOON. TO PL ACE YOUR AD OUR WEBSITE with free photo: 1. On FluvannaReview.com click on “Classifieds” 2. Click on “Post an Ad - $10” 3. Login or click on “Register” 4. Select a category 5. Write your ad and upload photo 6. Pay with your credit card via Pay Pal. OR Phone: Contact Edee @ 434-207-0221 e-mail: Contact Edee at edee@fluvannareview.com FAX: 434-589-1704, attention Edee Payment: In advance. We accept: Visa, Master Card, Discover, checks and cash. All real estate advertised in the Fluvanna Review is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin…” The Virginia Fair Housing Law also makes it illegal to discriminate because of elderliness (age 55 and over). The Fluvanna Review will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All real estate advertised in this paper is available on an equal opportunity basis. REAL ESTATE BUILDING LOTSBuilding Lots Liquidation, LOVIN’ RIDGE SUB., RT. 659 Columbia, 2+ Acres Each, Paved Road, No Restrictions, Modular & Prefab Homes OK, Construction Services Available, From $15K, Owner Financing 434-531-0671 SPECIAL NOTICES: CRAFTERS NEEDED: The Zion United Methodist Church, 1674 Zion Rd., Troy, VA is hosting the 5th. annual Harvest Bazaar on Oct. 26th., 9 to 2PM. Crafters of wood/soft goods/flower pots/arrangements/garden items, etc. needed. Call Kim Fawcett (434) 591-0848 or email: klf662@yahoo.com HELP WANTED Optometric Assistant: Team player interested in a career in eye care. Eye care, medical office, computer , and or optical dispensing experience preferred. Lake Monticello/Palmyra. P/T or F/T. Fax resume: (434) 591-0111 or call 591-0262. EOE. Drivers – Quality company wants quality drivers! $1K sign on. Home weekends. CDL-A, 2 years verifiable OTR experience, good MVR. Call: (540) 832-7615, ext. 1118 SERVICES MUSIC or ART LESSONS: For ages 16 +, in or near Lake Monticello. Learn realistic watercolor, acrylic, or oil painting – study guitar, mandolin or electric bass with Lake Monticello teacher, Troy Weidenheimer. $25 per one-hour weekly lesson in your home, in four-week sessions. Visit www. rakun.com or email: rakun@rakun.com or call Troy: (434) 326-6635 A PRISTINE CLEAN now has openings for new clients. Free Estimates! Residential and Office Cleaning Monthly, Weekly, Bi-Weekly, One time, As Needed, Move in/out. We cater our services to your needs! Insured and Bonded. Locally owned and operated. Many local references. Contact: info@ apristinecleaning.com or 434-962-2762. Visit us at www.apristinecleaning.com BAYBERRY CUSTOM FRAMING: We carry Fluco scrapbooking paper, books, plus art supplies. Our hours are Wed, Thurs, Fri 10am-4pm and Sat 9am-1pm. NEW LOCATION: 1187 Shiloh Church Road, Palmyra, off Haden Martin Road. 434-996-1354 Support Local Business: Monticello Country Realtors supports local businesses. See our “Featured Business of the Week” on page 9. www.monticellorealtors.com, (434) 589-3539 GRAVITY’S EDGE: Computer repair, networking, training, data recovery. Free pick-up and drop-off (subject to location). Complete PC Care Optimization Package $99.95. Call 434-589-6600. AMMO: 223 Ammunition for sale. PMC 55GR ball. 1000 rounds. $540.00 tax and shipping included. 5 cases in stock. Contact www.lock-and-load-consignments. com. Or call Dennis at (877) 394-5867 INSIDE/OUT PAINTING PLUS: Interior/Exterior Painting, 2500 PSI Powerwashing, renovation and restoration. Locally owned/operated for 25+ years. Lake resident since l995. Fluvanna County Chamber of Commerce member since 2001. Call 434-906-1898. email info@insideoutpaintingplus.net. Visit my website to view portfolio - www. insideoutpaintingplus.net Hair Care in the Convenience of Your Own Home. Wet Serving Men $22 KIDS $15 12 & Under Personal Attention Affordable • Saves Time Great for Non-Driver Less Anxiety with Kids Cuts Late Hours Available Clean-up after ALL Services 32+ years experience Call Hours: Mon-Fri • 9 a.m.-9 p.m. Pat Tatum - 434-589-2210 bob’s p o t k c bla l sea Since 2006 Accredited by the Better Business Bureau Friendly, Personal Service Free Estimates Environmentally Safe Water Based Sealer Large Capacity Equipment Makes Long Driveways My Specialty! 434-589-1975 * Ask me about horseshoes! DRIVEWAY STONE: 9-ton Slate Crush Run $150, Stone $200 (Average). Granite stone available up to 12 ton loads. Includes delivery and spread. Call 434-420-2002. WANTED CUTS $24 BUSINESS FOR SALE: Retail Party, Toys, Crafts. Turnkey, established in 2006. Inquire at Lake Emporium. Food Lion SC, Lake Monticello. 434-589-5482 FURNITURE Not too late to get your wrought-iron heavy-duty swivel chairs. Have never been outside, not your ordinary patio furniture. Come and see and make an offer—no reasonable offer refused. Call 434-589-1433. airs to You HMobile Hair Service Lake Monticello & Vicinity Women FOR SALE DOWNLOAD THE FREE FOOD LION IPHONE APP For Weekly specials and more on the go! itunes.apple.com FEATURES INCLUDE: • View weekly specials & coupons • Manage your shopping list • New product & special event alerts • Find the nearest Food Lion locations, directions & hours • Get recipes, ingredients, nutritional information & more! Through Box Tops for Education, schools can earn money for their school by shopping and saving Box Tops from hundreds of participating General Mills products. (434) 589-5538 264 Turkeysag Trail # A Hours: 7 a.m.-11 p.m. www.foodlion.com Professional Personal Property Liquidation Saturday, September 21, 2013, 9:30 a.m.-4 p.m. Sunday, September 22, 1-4 p.m. Monday Bargains! 9 a.m.-1 p.m. FSPCA SPONSORS NEEDED for our “Pet of the Week” ad in the Fluvanna Review. Your name and/or business name will be printed in the ad as sponsor. You may also have a special person named or remembered in the ad. Call Edee at the Fluvanna Review, 434-591-1000, Ext 21. OLD COINS: I BUY OLD COINS. 434-4667968, 322 Warren Ferry Rd., Scottsville, VA 24590 Directions: Rt. 20 South to Scottsville. Continue over bridge to right onto Rock Island Rd. (Rt. 678) for 4 mi. to right on Warren Ferry Rd. (Rt.627) for 1.2 mi. to house on right. Enjoy the beautiful drive to this sale to be greeted by a 3-ft. tall resin “fisherman” bear plus 2 kayaks/life jackets/oars, Bolens 17 HP/42”-cut riding mower, 2 pull-behind wagons, Riobi Weedwhacker, Rototiller, Minnkota electric trolling motor on “Bass Tracker” Bantam 2X w/2 swivel seats, oakFormica-topped dining/kitchen table, 5 vintage oak chairs, sofa, end tables, coffee table, TVs, bedroom suites, lamps, art works, collectibles & so much more! Beverly Smith • 434-960-4865 www.estatesalesunlimited.net CountrySide Upholstery Home & Marine Carroll Morse 434-589-4106 P.O. Box 8, Rt. 603 Kents Store, VA 23084 September 19, 2013 | FLUVANNA REVIEW | 21 Happiness in the Children’s Garden BY RUTHANN CARR, CORRESPONDENT Kids love to play in the dirt and Nancy Beum’s six special education students are no exception. With a lot of help from Fluvanna Master Gardeners and donations from Ground Effects, their garden at Carysbrook Elementary is coming along. “The children learn about the growth cycle of plants, what is involved to grow their own vegetables and plants and that they can even sell them to make some money,” Beum said. Every Tuesday morning the children don boots and grab garden tools to work alongside Master Gardener volunteers. Most recently the students shoveled topsoil donated by Ground Effects into two new raised beds. The garden started more than 10 years ago and was first located at Central Elementary. After the new high school opened in 2012, Beum’s class shifted to the old middle school building on Rt. 15 north of Fork Union. The site chosen for the garden was the north side of the building where several instructional trailers once stood. That proved to be quite a hurdle to overcome, as the soil was dead and compacted. The solution? Volunteers built raised beds and filled them with healthy soil. The beds are spaced far enough apart to allow wheelchair accessibility and paths are covered in mulch. The rainy summer revealed low spots in which water stood. Volunteers brought in two truckloads of what Extension Agent John Thompson referred to as “good, old, Virginia red clay” and filled in the low places. Some students helped shovel dirt into buckets while others dumped the dirt onto the paths. Everyone enjoyed tramping down the dirt to compact it. Aides Heath Hughes and Chuck Taylor helped guide the work. Soon students will plant cold weather crops of spinach and broccoli. The beets planted weeks ago are already peeking out of the dirt in one of the raised beds. Lynn Snyder began working with the students the year Photo by Ruthann Carr after she became a Master Gardener – at least 10 years ago, she said. “The kids are so endearing, I guess that’s why I kept doing it,” Snyder said. “The stories I could tell you about their surprise at pulling turnips out of the ground or digging for sweet potatoes. We try to change it up a little every year just so they can experience new things. We’ve even had field trips to my house when they wanted to do watermelons and there was no room in the garden. They planted them at my house, came back in August to mark their names on them and then I brought them in for them to enjoy.” Beum said a few years ago, volunteers urged her to apply for a grant for a greenhouse. They erected it at Central Elementary and students started several seedlings which made it into the garden. It was taken down and will be put up at the new location once Beum decides the best place. One of the students who works in the garden isn’t an official member of Beum’s class. “She earns the privilege to work out in the garden by doing her homework and completing class work,” Beum said. “Since its inception, I would say around 60 students since I have been here have benefited from the garden.” The lessons gleaned from the garden are endless she said. “They learn that there are fun and not so fun parts of gardening, such as weeding, hoeing, and being out in the heat but they can eat of their ‘fruits’ too,” she said. “We have had strawberries and cherry tomatoes that the kids could eat and pick. One year we grew a massive sunflower that was over 10 feet tall and we saved the head and when it was dried the children could see how it was made with all the sunflowers packed together in a pattern. They also learned that the birds liked them.” Master Gardener Lucretia Blythe has worked with the students in the garden for years. “The greatest joy is working with the kids and seeing their fascination with worms, insects, caterpillars, frogs - and dirt,” she said. Blythe recently led the children in another garden activity: writing thank you cards to the people at Ground Effects. “The kids all completed the sentence, “What I most love about gardening is..,” Blythe said. “The responses were mostly predictable, ‘planting beans, picking peppers,’ except for one indecipherable single-word response which I studied and examined. At last I determined she had intended the word ‘HAPPINESS.’ That says it all, no?” Come by & check out our 25 meter pool! Where else would you have a pool party? Call for more details! 434-589-6100 www.healthnutzfitness.webs.com 434-589-6100 109 Crofton Place, Palmyra 22 | FLUVANNA REVIEW | September 19, 2013 September 19, 2013 | FLUVANNA REVIEW | 23 CENTURY 21 AGENTS ® SMARTER. BOLDER. FASTER. Spring into action to take advantage of these great deals & low interest rates while they last! Our Team: Helping Your Family to Attain Your Goals Tom Morace 434-962-1625 Morace@ sprintmail.com Diane Miller 434-960-5856 DianeMiller@ earthlink.net THIS WEEK’S FEATURED RENTAL PROPERTY 705 Terre Haute Lane $19,000 Call Tom 434-962-1625 3876 Bleinhem Road Lisa Rogers 434-531-0064 Lisarogers86@ msn.com Jen Sample 434-989-9246 JenSample@ Century21.com Awesome 2+ acre building lot on Blenheim Road near Trump and Blenheim Vineyards. Lot is nearly level and has existing well and 3 bedroom gravity fed septic from previous home which was destroyed by fire. Great opportunity to build your own home or consider a brand new home. $64,000 Call Lisa 434-531-0064 516 Jefferson Drive Mike Rogers 434-981-8764 Mikerogers69@ msn.com Queen of Sold 434-962-2095 queenofsold@ comcast.net The strength of teamwork, The reputation for results Monticello Properties 434-589-SOLD 1-800-765-3570 Wondering where all the open houses are this weekend at Lake Monticello? www.LakeMonticelloOpenHouses.com The Website for your real estate needs www.lakemonticellohomes.com Call for Mortgage Rates & Updates Like new MOVE-in Ready All new paint All new carpet Hardwood laminate in The Living Room,Gas Fireplace, Screened in porch,Formal dining room, walk to Beach 4. $219,900 • Call Tom 434-962-1625 $1600 • Call Rachel 434-589-7653 Great Location at Lake Monticello. Walk to Beach 4. Perfect basement lot. Easy Access to Turkeysag and Monish Gates. Quiet Street. Minutes to Shopping and Restaurants. Larry A. Miller 434-960-9479 LarryAMiller@ earthlink.net 21 Xebec Rural setting with breathtaking views of the blue ridge mountians. Near elementary and middle schools. 2.5 Miles south of Palmyra. 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, hardwood floors, central ac, open kitchen. Zephyr Kyle Miller 434-981-0799 Kyle.MillerC21@ yahoo.com THIS WEEK’S WEEK S FEATURED LISTING 1 Highland Road 202 Village Blvd. You can’t go wrong at this price! Such a huge amount of living space at such a small price. Step inside to this wellmaintained home with 3 spacious floors of living space not including the finished walk up attic, 2 master suites on 2nd level and a wonderful teen/in-law suite on the ground level. Tastefully decorated, hardwood floors, carpeted bedrooms, open bright kitchen, 2 zone heating and air. Convenient location to Beach 4. Private yard with exterior storage shed. Never do yard work again! This is a MaintenanceFree Adult Community w/ Amenities-Enjoy The Life of Leisure! Beautiful, well maintained, One owner. Open Floor plan, Very Bright, One-Level Living NEW LISTING w/2nd Fl. Guest Ste & Bonus/Storage is almost completely finished. 1st Fl. Master, Maple Cabinets, Stainless Appliances, Sun room. Walk-out Private Patio. Community Amenities Include: pool,clubhouse & picnic area. Close to Lake Monticello. Shopping, restaurants, many other amenities are within minutes. $149.850 • Call Lisa 434-531-0064 $204,000 • Call Larry 434-960-9479 398 Justin Drive 13 Blacksmith Terrace If you’re looking for top of the line upgrades, space & affordability, then this home’s for you. Granite counters, kitchen island breakfast bar, stainless appliances, gas oven,9 foot ceilings, NEW PRICE! bookshelves in large loft area, hardwood flooring, a spa shower w/imported ceramic tile, gas logs, FINISHED walk-out basement. Maintenance free TREX deck, fencing & private backyard. Custom cordless blinds, built in surround sound throughout, tremendous amount of storage. Wonderful 2 car garage and more! One level living on over an acre of land in desirable golf course neighborhood! This ranch home features three bedrooms, three and a half baths, formal dining room, large kitchen with an island and built in writing desk, hardwood flooring,sewing room and full bath in the basement with large storage area,with over an acre you could be spending these beautiful spring evening relaxing on the screened in porch. Two car garage and paved driveway. $249,000 • Call Lisa 434-531-0064 $249,000 • Call Tom 434-962-1625 7 Hawks Place Owner financing is available on this property. Call for details! Great corner building lot! Suitable for walk out basement. Priced to sell! NEW PRICE! $32,000 Call Larry 434-960-9479 Kent Store Way Over seven beautiful wooded acres waiting for your dream home! Wooded privacy convenient to I64 Charlottesville and Richmond. $10,000 in hardwoods on the property. $55,000 Call Tom 434-962-1625 FFullllll Basement! B t! Three bedroom two bath ranch on a full basement featuring an open floor plan, vaulted ceilings, hardwood flooring ,large master suite, eat in kitchen screened in porch and garage. Over half an acre of wooded privacy! Carl Heimlich • 434-989-2274 Freshly painted, new NEW PRICE! carpet & vinyl, this light filled home is like no other you’ve ever imagined! Privately situated near the end of a quiet country road, this 2 to 3BR/2BA single-wide modular home with transom windows throughout can be yours. Conveniently located in Orange County with nearby access to the historic Barboursville ruins, vineyards, & shopping. A great deal for a first time homebuyer or anyone looking to downsize. 178,000 • Call Tom 434-962-1625 $99,000 • Call Lisa 434-531-0064 117 Shawnee 130 Landover Located at the Blue Green resort at Shenandoah Crossings, Enjoy resort style living in this immaculate three bedroom two and one half bath home featuring bamboo hardwoods in the foyer, living room, formal dining room. Eat in kitchen with breakfast nook, spacious master suite with cathedral ceiling. All season sun room with 2 french doors . Two car garage with paved drive. Gutter guards. Covered front porch, 2 year old high efficient heat pump, gas fireplace, Level corner lot. Ceiling fans. $224,000 • Call Larry 434-960-9479 cheimlich@americanequity.com 5055 Thomas Hainey Road Waterfront! Beautiful three plus acre lot at Mountain Brook Subdivision. Waiting for you dream or vacation home. Five minutes to Zions Crossroads, fifteen minutes to Charlottesville, thirty minutes to Richmond, convenient to I64 and NGIC. Private and quiet. Possible owner financing. $89,000 • Call Tom 434-962-1625 We are looking for someone to join our ever expanding property management team! If you like working with people, are energetic, detail oriented and can multi task this may be the position for you! Part time with possibility of full time. Please call Tom or Diane 434-589-7653 or email morace@sprintmail.Com to inquire further.
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