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Datablog

College campuses, big-selling liquor stores and under-age buyer busts can go hand-in-hand

Virginia has 332 state-run liquor stores flung into all corners of the state. Some do big business. Others, not so much. The busiest ones, you'd guess -- mostly correctly -- are in the most populated places: Virginia Beach, Richmond, Fairfax County.

sales_mapBut, at No. 7 on the list, the store on South Main Street, Blacksburg, Va, less than a mile from the Virginia Tech campus. The two other liquor stores in Montgomery County combined didn't do the volume of that store. That's just one example of the noteworthy juxtaposition of a number of those top-selling stores (as measured by gallons sold) with college campuses.

We put the top 50 stores on a map to see how many lined up near Virginia's 42 four-year residential colleges.

Check out the University of Virginia. Just down Emmett Street are two of the top 50 stores.

And it's not just the big universities. Longwood University, in Farmville, has about 4,000 students -- and one of the top 50 stores just a little ways down Main Street.

Along with the top liquor stores, we also mapped licensed alcohol sellers busted for selling to under-age buyers. State ABC agents routinely conduct under-cover inspections of places licensed to sell beer and wine by sending in operatives who are actually 17-19 years old to buy alcohol. The inspections are essentially random, but where they're conducted can be influenced by the availability of under-age operatives and they can also be prompted by citizen complaints.

Between July 2008 and June 2009, licensees failed inspections 483 times. In the same period, nearly 4,200 inspections produced no violations, so the mass of sellers are following the law.

With nearly 500 of those violations on our map, naturally they're all over the state, but you can see on the map that quite a few of the red Xs marking them are, again, near college campuses.

The smokiest places in Virginia

Come Dec. 1, Virginia will join a growing number of states banning smoking in restaurants (except for private clubs, outdoor seating, and designated smoking areas in a separate room from the main dining area, in Virginia's case).

My colleague, Jenny Kincaid Boone, has a story on what the change means in the Sunday, Sept. 27, Roanoke Times.

smoking_mapAs part of that, we decided to look at which places had the farthest to go to become smoke-free. I obtained from the Virginia Department of Health, the agency that inspects restaurants, data including the smoking status of more than 16,000 full-service and fast-service restaurants in Virginia.

And it turns out that statewide, some 70 percent of those restaurants are already non-smoking. And the Roanoke and New River Valleys are just about there, too, with about 68 percent of restaurants smoke-free.

(One caveat about the data: the smoking status is based on what was recorded during a health department inspection, and some of the dates on these status are months old, and might have changed.)

We took the data and stuck it on a map to see just where the stragglers are. Now, 16,000 restaurants is a lot of points to map, so we rolled the data up into percentages for each city and county, and that's what you'll find on the map. It's a cool interactive, and you can make all sorts of changes to it, including changing which data is shown on the map. There are instructions at the bottom of the page.

It struck me that, really, there aren't any dramatic and obvious patterns to where non-smoking restaurants are. I thought maybe rural areas would have fewer non-smoking places. But look at Craig County. It has five restaurants, and all are smoke-free. Look at the Shenendoah Valley. The whole spine of it has a high percentage of non-smoking restaurants. My best guess on that is that it's influenced by Interstate 81, and the number of fast-food restaurants near interchanges. Fast food restaurants are routinely smoke-free these days.

Switch the map over to the percentage of restaurants which allow smoking in all areas. No great pattern there, either. I thought that the high percentages might correspond with heavy tobacco producing communities, but except for Pittsylvania County, that theory isn't really born out.

But maybe you'll see things that we missed. As always, let us know.

Virginia's favorite poisons: the latest liquor sales data

The Virginia Alcohol Beverage Control Board's annual report came out recently, and the latest data on the top selling liquors was featured in The Roanoke Times today in a story by your favorite data delivery editor.

0112_liquor_150x150 Bubble graph of Virginia's top selling liquors

And, like last year, I've offered the data as interactive graphics in the DataSphere.

Here's the top of the story:

Thirsty, Virginia?

Apparently so. Virginia ABC stores sold about 9.2 million gallons of liquor in fiscal year 2008.

That's more than a gallon and a half for every person of legal drinking age in the state. That's 795,412,236 shots. That's enough to fill 14 Olympic-size swimming pools and still have enough left over to keep a football team schnockered for a good chunk of the off-season.

Statewide, vodka is the big seller, with 28 percent of all liquor sales by volume. But around the southwestern part of the state, it's dark spirits, not clear ones, that rule.

"You're going to skew a lot more brown goods than in an urban area," said John Knutson, director of marketing for Jim Beam bourbon maker Beam Global Spirits & Wine.

Liquor sales representative Michelle Brooks sells Jack Daniel's whiskey products to every one of 130 clients she has in the Roanoke region. Her colleagues elsewhere in the state say "it's like water in these parts. Everybody's got it." (more)

Roanoke real estate sales data updated

Hey gang, it's been a while, but I finally updated our Roanoke real estate sales search. It now has sales through mid-December for all 45,000 or so parcels in the city of Roanoke. This is the same data that's behind Roanoke's GIS, just re-tooled for a simpler search so you can find sales history on a particular home or parcel, or on a street or in a certain neighborhood.

Search by buyer, seller, address, neighborhood, a date range or a price range.

And your results are matched. Happy searching.

Southwest Virginia layoffs: Nearly 1,000 and counting

Since the already shaky economy began to rattle to pieces in October, about 1,000 people in Southwest Virginia have been laid off by 16 companies across 32 locations.  See the shape of where jobs are disappearing on our layoffs map. Get the number of jobs lost, the number left, and links to stories in The Roanoke Times about the layoffs.

layoffs_grab_1

Click the map to go to the interactive layoffs map.

The bulk of the jobs lost are in manufacturing, but some are in technology. Most are rank-and-file workers, but some are management. Word of other layoffs, sent by readers who don't see them on the map, is still coming in. I added two layoffs to the data today that were confirmed after hearing from readers about them.

I put the map together after watching -- with horror, like most people -- the rash of layoffs being reported in The Roanoke Times. I thought it would be useful to track the job losses, and see what it looks like when you plot them on a map. What areas are getting hit the hardest?

WVTF, our local public radio station, ran a story on the map Friday. Rick Mattioni did the interview and put together the story. He was also gracious enough to send over the audio. Here it is if you want to give a listen:

So, I ate at the Market Building yesterday

And I lived to write about it.

Candidly, I wasn't sure for quite a while if I could go back after seeing the pictures and reading the reports from the health department after a well-documented mouse-infestation and general disrepair caused the city to shut the building down.

But yesterday, with a fair amount of forethought, I made the trek down Campbell Avenue and had one of my faves, a bowl of pho soup from the Hong Kong restaurant.

Why? you might wonder. Partly I missed some of my favorite food. Partly, just habit.

And then there's this: I found I didn't care as much for the other options out there in downtown when I didn't have the market building. Don't get me wrong, there are more great restaurants serving lunch within walking distance of my building than I could name here from memory. But I rarely have the time or the do-re-mi to eat at those places.

In the Market Building, there's a great range of stuff, moderately priced, no waiters to tip, and I can get in and out fast.

I wonder how many others -- including those who want to change the Market Building one way or another -- came to this same realization, that the place as it is serves an important role for downtown diners, and is the only place serving it.

I went back to a place that, while seemingly less-crowded, was more pleasant than before. It's cleaner and the dinged-up old furniture is gone. I looked around and saw an anchor and reporter from Roanoke's two tv stations, a federal judge, and a high-powered local banking muckety-muck.

I ate my pho sitting in chair with a back on it -- a nice improvement from the old benches -- and never once thought about the kitchen where it was cooked, or what might be in it that isn't in the recipe.

With all that's gone on, the hard-scrubbing the whole place got, the damage to reputations and everyone's heightened awareness of cleanliness, there's probably no eating establishment in Roanoke that's cleaner right now.

Plus, I find I'm really back where I started with all this, eating food I like, and because I want to keep eating it, preferring my ignorance of how that food got to my plate.

City Market restaurant inspections: Do not eat before you read this.

Well, the evidence is in. It's not a pretty picture.

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The health department released reports from the latest inspections of the Roanoke City Market Building's 10 restaurants on Tuesday. What emerges is not the image of a small rodent issue. Mouse "excreta" - poop to us regular folks - was found in essentially every corner and every stall of the building.

The building was shut down and all its vendors' licenses suspended after a health department inspection Friday. Read the reports yourselves here. Links are on the left side of the page about half-way down.

Some had worse problems than others. Read more »

Restaurant inspections: Check the city market building track record for yourself

The Roanoke City Market Building and its 10 restaurants are about an 8-minute walk from my office. I eat there twice a week at least. I've never looked at the Virgina Department of Health's inspection reports for those restaurants, even though I have link to the search in the DataSphere.

I guess I preferred my ignorance of how clean the building is.

But over the weekend the building was shut down because of a rodent problem found by health inspectors. Details are thin at this point on exactly what inspectors found. Actual rodents? Droppings? What kind of rodent? And where?! One shudders at the possbilities.

2503623Now, curious, I've been looking at past inspection reports online, and thought it worthwhile to remind you, gentle reader, that you can do the same on the VDH website. There's a search box on the left side. I searched on the word "market" to get a list that included all of the restaurants in the market building. You can click down to details of the violations cited in each inspection. Some are as recent as last month. Others go back to December.

Rather than summarize the results for 10 different vendors, I'll let you see what's there for yourself. You'll find violations for pretty much all of them at some point.

Some of the violations will be called "critical." But I encourage you to read what the actual violations are, and to check out their definitions. You hear the word "critical," and you think of Band Aids in sandwiches and roaches in salads. But more often those critical violations have to do with proper storage of food with regard to temperature, or things like food workers drinking from soda cups with no lids in the food preparation area.

To be sure, there are disgusting things documented among the critical violations, but not every critical violation is something so horrifying as to make you nauseous.

That said, you might also consider not only quality, but quantity. What if a restaurant has not a couple of critical violations, but, say, ten? (And, in fact, one restaurant -- Zorba's, where the Jamaica Joe's special is one of my favorites -- did have 10 during an August inspection.)

And then there's rodents. Yeah, I think that meets my definition of critical.

None of this covers the latest inspection which prompted the building's closure. Again, what was found -- and where?

In the urge to assess blame, those things matter.

With ten vendors in one space, can you single out those at fault, or are they all partly responsible? And don't forget the building's owner and management -- the city of Roanoke. What is the the city's responsibility in all of this? Can the city totally shift blame to the tenants, when the building is under its oversight? Or vice versa?

Before deciding that, let's see what this latest report says. Keep watching roanoke.com for that.

Kid Rock or Carrie Underwood, the Wiggles or wrestling, what sells tickets in Roanoke?

Elvis, even in the paunchy, ill-advised jumpsuit era, could put butts in seats.

Ten thousand at a time at the Roanoke Civic Center back in the mid-1970s.

Even my sweet, Catholic and dearly departed mother saw The King there once. She took my grandmother and sister, too. The phony karate poses, sweaty scarves wafted into the crowd, uncountable sequins, and my mother and grandmother in the crowd You get the picture.

elvisticket1

That was in the mid-1970s. Who puts butts in seats these days?

My colleagues Mason Adams and Pete Dybhdal have been working on a package of stories about the future of our local civic centers, in Roanoke and Salem, and the extent to which they have to be subsidized because they aren't profitable on their own.

That got me wondering, of all the events held at these venues, which are the best attended?

Both host numerous events where organizations rent the facilities, but I wasn't interested in those. I wanted to know what people are willing to pay for -- and what it might say about our tastes as a community.

Is it Kid Rock, or Keith Urban? The Wiggles, or WWE? The mud bog or the symphony?

Read more »

City real estate transfers updated

Our still brand new database of Roanoke City real estate transfers just got its first update, and now has sales dated to as late as July 8, 2008.

That's about an additional two weeks worth of fresh sales data, or about 29 transfers.

The most expensive was a home in Raleigh Court for $410,000.

In all, a half-dozen properties sold in the over $300,000 range, while a total of 15 sold in the $100,000-plus range, a number of them commercial properties sold by Virginia Scrap Iron to the Roanoke Redevelopment and Housing Authority.

So go nose around, and don't forget, your results are mapped.

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Comments

    • Matt Chittum: Amy, we never published the full results, I don’t believe. The primary use of the results was for...
    • Amy: would love to know the results of the poll, where can I find them?
    • Beth Obenshain: Dear Matt, I have spent the last 7 1/2 years working with landowners across Southwest Virginia to...
    • LarryG: putting aside land that remains in private ownership without a specific public benefit in patchwork patterns...
    • Chris in Floyd: In addition, due the high demand, the VOF has put some minimum requirements such as the proposed...