The city of Charlottesville has shrouded two of its Confederate monuments in a show of mourning for the woman killed in the violent white nationalist protest there earlier this month.Workers draped statues of both Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson on Wednesday after a city council vote earlier this week. The gesture was to memorialize 32-year-old Heather Heyer, who was killed when a car plowed into pedestrians following the Aug. 12 rally. The suspect is reportedly a white nationalist.Sandy Hausman of member stationWVTFtells our Newscast unit that "it took eight men with ropes and poles, a truck and a cherry picker to lift and drop black tarps over" the nearly 30-foot monuments.Hausman goes on to report that supporters of this decision include the city's vice mayor, Wes Bellamy."Some individuals are going to be upset, and that is okay, but progression must be at the forefront of everything we do — creating equity in all of our public spaces. This allows us to move one step further in the right direction," Bellamy told Hausman in an interview.Charlottesville City Council voted unanimously to cover the statues early Tuesday. At the same meeting, however, residents and activists expressed anger, turning it into an hours-long town hall over the city's handling of the rally.Charlottesville's Daily Progress described the meeting as "a total takeover" with audience members demanding Mayor Mike Signer's removal: