Posted by Danville River District News
on April 26, 2017
Uncategorized / Comments Off on River District Tobacco Mural
Uncategorized / Comments Off on River District Tobacco Mural
Posted by Danville River District News
on April 26, 2017
Uncategorized / Comments Off on River District tobacco mural ‘a great reminder of the history of this area’
Uncategorized / Comments Off on River District tobacco mural ‘a great reminder of the history of this area’
A mural highlighting Danville’s tobacco history was dedicated in the River District on Friday morning.
The 20-by-30-foot Tobacco Heritage Mural was painted in December on the side of 308 Craghead St. that faces Patton Street and is visible from the River District’s busiest intersection at Main and Craghead streets.
Community leaders, city officials and those active in historic preservation attended the dedication held in front of the mural painted by artist Wes Hardin, who also painted the transportation and Wreck of the Old 97 murals in the River District.
“This gift makes our city a better place in which to live,” Danville Mayor John Gilstrap said during the dedication. “This gift educates, inspires creativity, beautifies and promotes interest in our community.”
The mural is the third commissioned by the River District Association, which raised $20,000 over several years for the artwork.
Jerry Amburn, River District Association board member and chairman of its mural committee, said the group has worked to implement the mural program to showcase the city’s heritage through historic public art.
JTI Leaf Services and others donated money and contributed to the project.
Preservation Virginia Field Representative Sonja Ingram praised the rendering of the tobacco barn image in the mural and connected it to Preservation Virginia’s tobacco barns preservation project, which will have repaired more than 60 barns in the Dan River Region by the end of 2018. JTI has been funding the project.
William Gentry Jr., whose father William Gentry Sr. is depicted in the mural as a tobacco auctioneer, owns the building at 308 Craghead St. and gave the association permission to use the side of the structure for the project. The building houses Gentry Lofts and offices that face Craghead Street.
JTI President Steve Daniels called the mural “a great reminder of the history of this area.”
The mural includes a flue-cured tobacco barn at the top, a man in a bateau transporting tobacco and a tobacco auction featuring William Gentry Sr. as the auctioneer.
“I appreciate my Dad letting me put his face up here,” William Gentry Jr. said.
The tobacco industry has changed over the years and the auction system no longer exists, but U.S. tobacco – especially tobacco from the region including Danville and Southside Virginia – is the best-flavored tobacco in the world, Daniels said.
“Tobacco put Danville on the map, and it served as an economic catalyst for our city,” Gilstrap said.
Billy Yeargin Jr., a tobacco historian, pointed to tobacco’s role in Virginia since the early 17th century, when John Rolfe introduced it as a commercial crop.
Ernecia Coles, executive director of the River District Association, said the mural is something people can connect with.
“We’re hoping this will be part of people’s visits downtown,” Coles said.
The association’s next mural will honor Wendell Scott, the Danville native who became the first African-American NASCAR racecar driver.
John Crane reports for the Danville Register & Bee. Contact him at jcrane@registerbee.com or (434) 791-7987.
Posted by Danville River District News
on April 26, 2017
Uncategorized / Comments Off on ‘Danville Hokie Nation has come together’ Several dozen gather in River District for VT remembrance service
Uncategorized / Comments Off on ‘Danville Hokie Nation has come together’ Several dozen gather in River District for VT remembrance service
For Emily Ragsdale, the Virginia Tech shootings are hard to talk about.
The 2010 VT graduate was in her dorm when the tragedy happened 10 years ago. Ragsdale, then a freshman majoring in public and urban affairs, had just left her 8 a.m. class, near where the shootings occurred.
“It was a terrible tragedy and it was really hard on everyone,” said Ragsdale, facilities and services planner with Danville Parks and Recreation.
Seung-Hui Cho killed 32 students and faculty members on the Virginia Tech campus in Blacksburg before taking his own life on April 16, 2007. He was a senior, majoring in English.
The horrific event brought the entire Hokie Nation together, Ragsdale said.
Local officials and Virginia Tech alumni and fans gathered at the JTI Fountain Monday morning for a public remembrance service for the victims of the shootings. About 50 to 60 people attended the event – most dressed in the school’s colors of burnt orange and Chicago maroon.
Pat Daniel, who graduated in 1979, organized the ceremony after Virginia Tech President Timothy Sands asked that victims be commemorated.
“I took the challenge on because we need to be serious about this,” Daniel said, adding she wanted to honor those who died. “The Danville Hokie Nation has come together in order to commemorate this loss.”
Daniel pointed out the school’s motto, Ut Prosim, meaning “that I may serve,” and said she hopes to have commemorations in the future.
Del. Danny Marshall, R-Danville, spoke during the ceremony, reading part of poet Nikki Giovanni’s “We are Virginia Tech” convocation address from April 17, 2007, and urging everyone to keep those affected by the tragedy in their prayers.
Danville Mayor John Gilstrap said he remembered where he was when it happened.
“I was in the foyer of the Institute for Advanced Learning and Research,” Gilstrap said during his speech. “‘What did they just say?’ I did not believe my ears. How could this happen, period, much less at the university that the institute had such a close relationship?”
The incident didn’t occur at a campus in a city in another part of the country, he pointed out.
“This tragedy took place in our own backyard – on the grounds of the Hokie Nation campus,” he said.
The lives taken that day were those of students and faculty who – as Pat Daniel said – “were at the top of their game,” Gilstrap said.
“They personified great promise and great accomplishment,” Gilstrap said.
Chatham businessman Ben Davenport Jr., a 1964 VT graduate, recalled that he was serving on the university’s Board of Visitors when the shootings happened. He received a call from his wife telling him about the incident.
“I got in my car and drove to Blacksburg,” Davenport said.
The victims were a cross-section of our nation and the world, Davenport said, before reading Giovanni’s convocation address from 10 years ago. “We will prevail, we will prevail, we will prevail. We are Virginia Tech.”
Kenny Lewis, who played football for Virginia Tech and the New York Jets, gave the prayer during the ceremony. His son was attending VT at the time and was in a building next to where shootings took place, Lewis said. His son had no idea what was going on, he said.
Virginia Tech alumni Chuck Vipperman and Fred Shanks read the names of the 32 victims — all “wonderful souls,” Vipperman said. He encouraged attendees to go online and learn about them.
The event included the ringing of a small brass bell 32 times and a balloon release.
Shanks, a city councilman and a 1982 Virginia Tech graduate, told the Danville Register & Bee after the event he had studied hydraulic engineering under one of the professors killed in the shootings – G.V. Loganathan, a civil and environmental engineering professor.
“He was a young and energetic professor when I was in school,” Shanks said, adding he was stunned when he heard about the shootings and Loganathan’s death.
The tragedy was especially emotional for Shanks, who grew up visiting Blacksburg because his father was from there.
“It [the shootings] was one of those moments like 9/11 where everybody knows where they were and what they were doing,” Shanks said.
Crane reports for the Danville Register & Bee.
John Crane reports for the Danville Register & Bee. Contact him at jcrane@registerbee.com or (434) 791-7987.
Posted by Danville River District News
on April 26, 2017
Uncategorized / Comments Off on Council approves purchase of White Mill property
Uncategorized / Comments Off on Council approves purchase of White Mill property
Danville City Council voted Tuesday night to appropriate $1.5 million from the general fund to go to the Industrial Development Authority toward the purchase of the White Mill property, which includes eight parcels.
Councilmen voted 7-2 for the motion, with Fred Shanks and Madison Whittle voting against the idea.
Shanks said the IDA has done a good job bringing properties back to useful life, but he is not ready to commit $1.5 million from unreserved fund balance knowing the city has critical needs.
The city has already allocated money for a football stadium renovation at George Washington High School and has a police station in dire need of replacement, Shanks said.
Also, there is no commitment in the property from a developer, Shanks said.
“How can we justify rushing into this?” Shanks said.
The IDA has $36 million in property and the purchase of the White Mill would bring that up to about $40 million, he pointed out.
Other councilmen supported purchase of the building.
Sherman Saunders said he understood Shanks’ concerns but given the momentum in the River District, “it seems like a good time to make an investment.”
“We are seeing progress in Danville,” Saunders said. “I think this investment is a good choice to make. Nothing in life is guaranteed.”
Lee Vogler said he is in favor of private sector investment, but he asked everyone to think about what downtown looked like before IDA investment. The River District’s progress didn’t happen without IDA investment, Vogler said.
“The demonization of the IDA is not warranted,” Vogler said.
Larry Campbell Jr. said downtown was “dark and gray” six years ago. Now money has been invested in the area, and the city is seeing possible development of a river front park.
“We want to make sure we get the right clientele in the building,” Campbell said.
He added that he was thankful for the IDA.
“This will be a major piece of turning this community around,” Campbell said.
The White Mill property is going to become very valuable to develop with a downtown river front park just below it, said Councilman Gary Miller. It’s imperative the city gets control of the property so Danville can control what goes into that property, he said.
Shanks said his feelings about the purchase of the White Mill property are not meant to be disrespectful toward city staff and the IDA.
“I just don’t see the hurry to do this,” Shanks said.
Vice Mayor Alonzo Jones said he was thankful the Economic Development Director Telly Tucker, the IDA and City Council are working to provide answers to citizens about what will be done with the White Mill building.
Whittle said the decision whether to purchase the property needs a little bit more thought.
Mayor John Gilstrap said of the proposal, “Opportunity involves risk. You can’t steal second by keeping your foot on first.”
The purchase agreement calls for a $1.5 million payment the current fiscal year and a second $1.5 million payment next fiscal year.
The city is seeking funding from several sources for the purchase, but until the sources are confirmed, the general fund balance will be used to pay for the purchase.
In another matter, City Council adopted an ordinance providing money for University of Virginia sub-recipient funding in amount of $237,832 to cover three years of spending from March 1 to Feb. 29, 2020.
The money from UVa and the Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute will be used to continue investigating child obesity treatment programs on a community level.
The city will support the grant in kind through providing workspace for staff, information and technology needs, use of facilities for programs and implementation of grant and support from the Community Recreation Division director.
Councilmen also voted, following a public hearing, to rezone 407 Holbrook St. from old town residential to transitional office commercial.
The property will be developed into the Williams Community Resource Center, a mixed use development with two residential units on the upper level and two offices, a conference room and an exhibit hall on the lower level.
Construction is expected to be complete by the end of 2018.
John Crane reports for the Danville Register & Bee. Contact him at jcrane@registerbee.com or (434) 791-7987.
Posted by Danville River District News
on April 26, 2017
Uncategorized / Comments Off on iScribes gets $250,000 boost from The Launch Place, looks to hire locally
Uncategorized / Comments Off on iScribes gets $250,000 boost from The Launch Place, looks to hire locally
The Launch Place is investing $250,000 in a company that enables doctors to record patient encounters using an app and have the medical information documented and entered into their medical records by remote writers.
Representatives with Durham, North Carolina-based iScribes and The Launch Place announced the investment Friday morning at Spectrum Medical in River District Tower.
The money is to further iScribes’ operation capacity and technology for delivering its virtual services, said Jimmy McGarry, who serves on the board of directors for The Launch Place.
“It’s an investment, which means we have confidence in their company,” McGarry said during the announcement.
Community leaders attended the event, including city officials and Delegate Danny Marshall, R-Danville.
iScribes, which started in 2014, has 27 employees in Virginia and is in eight states, said CEO and founder Dr. Jared Pelo. He hopes to hire scribes in the Dan River Region who would work from home.
“I plan on bringing lots of jobs to the region,” Pelo told the Register & Bee.
Christopher McGuire is the co-founder and head of sales at iScribes.
The company will have a satellite office at The Launch Place, Pelo said.
With iScribes, health care providers record patient encounters using the mobile app, and remote, virtual writers listen to the interaction, write medical documentation and enter it into electronic medical records for the providers. It saves physicians hundreds of hours per year of clerical work, according to Pelo.
Doctors spend 40 percent of their time documenting patient visits in electronic medical records, decreasing available time for patient care, Pelo said.
The use of medical records has been an important step in the modernization of health care, but it has posed challenges for providers. It has also affected the doctor-patient relationship, with some physicians conducting exams facing a computer instead of their patients.
“iScribes exists to make health care functional and efficient,” Pelo, an emergency medicine doctor for Centra, said in a prepared statement. “Virtual medical scribes enable providers to conduct patient encounters naturally and efficiently with exceptionally high-quality documentation.”
No dictation is required and the scribes complete documentation directly in the provider’s electronic medical records.
Two physicians at Spectrum Medical use iScribes, Pelo said during the announcement.
“The problem of time-consuming documentation for every patient office visit has been reduced,” said Dr. John Mahoney, orthopedic surgeon at Spectrum Medical, who has used iScribes since October. “I can focus more on my patients instead of spending long hours at a computer or working with dictation services.”
Dr. Jonathan Krome at Spectrum Medical also uses iScribes, Pelo said.
iScribes has continued to grow since it began in March 2014, Pelo said.
“We love this region, we love Southern Virginia,” he told attendees. “We want to grow the ecosystem in this area.”
“It’s exciting even to be in this building today,” McGuire said, referring to the new River District Tower.
The Launch Place led the investment deal in which Triangle Angel Partners II, LLC (TAP II), an angel investment fund in the Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, co-invested for a total of $410,000.
“We have had a strong relationship with TAP for multiple years and look forward to continuing our work together,” said Launch Place President and CEO Eva Doss, in a prepared statement. “iScribes’ use of technology to improve a health provider’s productivity and accuracy as well as overall patient satisfaction has shown tremendous traction in the last year by the number of customers that have selected to use iScribes for their medical documentation.”
iScribes is the 12th investment for The Launch Place, totaling $2.25 million.
As for providing jobs, Pelo said the company is hiring. A medical background is not needed for positions, he said.
Applicants must be hard workers and decent writers, Pelo said. Those interested can apply online at iscribes.co.
The Launch Place, from a $10 million grant received from the Danville Regional Foundation in 2012, helps with entrepreneurship and business development, and job creation and retention through its business consulting, mentoring and training, residential and office subsidies, and two seed investment funds in the Dan River Region.
John Crane reports for the Danville Register & Bee. Contact him at jcrane@registerbee.com or (434) 791-7987.
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