Categories
News

Charlottesville arborist gets international honor

Rob Springer has been climbing trees his whole life. As an arborist, he’s been doing it professionally for the last 30 years.

A certified arborist with Bartlett Tree Experts, Springer was honored for his work earlier this month by the International Society of Arboriculture. The Stanardsville resident was one of five arborists (including one from Hong Kong) named a True Professional of Arboriculture by the ISA at its annual conference in Portland, Oregon.

Now an elder statesman in the field, Springer was once a wide-eyed Boy Scout with a passion for the woods. In high school, his troop took camping trips led by a forester from the Bureau of Land Management. The forester impressed Springer with his ability to identify trees, even in the middle of winter, and his skill with an axe.

Those trips, even more than the countless hours spent climbing trees as a boy, sparked Springer’s interest in pursuing tree work professionally. He studied forestry in college, but difficulty landing a job in that field led Springer to arboriculture—essentially, the care of trees, from pruning and fertilizing to complicated “tree surgery.”

“Tree work is a hard dollar,” Springer said. “It’s not for everybody, but it’s very rewarding. You feel good at the end of the day and you can see the fruits of your labor.” Every tree and every job is different, he said. “Sometimes we get the opportunity to work on some pretty neat properties.”

And some pretty historic properties.

Springer and his crew once spent two nights, working on cranes by spotlight, removing a large poplar tree beside Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello home. He’s done extensive work at Mount Vernon with trees planted by George Washington himself.

One of those trees was an old ash along the bowling green which Springer made the unpopular decision to remove.

“It looked green and healthy, but the structure was starting to fail,” he said.

Before Springer and his crew could return to Mount Vernon to do the work, a large limb from the tree snapped off and landed on a part of the green where visitors often walk. Luckily, he said, it fell in the middle of the night with no one around.

Danger is inherent in arboriculture. Many jobs involve sharp tools and precarious heights, and safety precautions are a must.

“When you take trees down, there’s a
lot of risk involved, and it’s got to be planned out carefully,” he said. “Gravity never takes a day off. You gotta be thinking, and you gotta be focused on the work you’re doing.”

For veterans like Springer, proper instruction is the name of the game. He conducts workshops and seminars throughout Virginia to share safety information that wasn’t available to him when he was starting out in the ‘80s.

In his first year, Springer broke his ankle in a tree and cut three fingers with a chainsaw.

“Some of us learn from the school of hard knocks,” he said. “You try to take those experiences and share them with others so they don’t make the same mistakes.”

Thirty years and hundreds of trees later, Springer’s still enjoying the ride—or rather, the climb.

“Even though I’m older, I still enjoy climbing trees very much. As a kid, who knew one day somebody would pay me to climb trees?”

Or give him an award for it.

Categories
News

Got an Obama ticket? Get there early

If you picked up a ticket to see President Obama at the Pavilion during his Charlottesville visit Wednesday, don’t wait until the last minute to head Downtown.

As with previous presidential visits, the Secret Service essentially owns the east end of the Downtown Mall starting Wednesday morning, said interim Charlottesville Fire Marshal Gary Whiting. nTelos Wireless Pavilion spokesman Kirby Hutto said his company will let go of all crowd-control duties. (See this previous post for street closures and other logistical details of the day.)

That means it’s not clear exactly how many people will make it through the gates into the actual event area, because for security reasons, the campaign is staying mum on how many tickets it’s given out and at what point it plans to cap the crowd. Tickets clearly state they do not guarantee holders access; volunteers say it’s first come, first served.

Whiting said the official occupancy load of the Pavilion is 4,997—on the high end of the number of people who could be expected to show up for a busy Fridays After Five celebration, according to Kirby.

Meanwhile, space under the tent will likely be more limited than at a typical event, because a lot of extra staging and risers are being set up.

Point is: if you want in, don’t drag your feet. There will likely be a long line at the gate when officials start letting people in at 1pm—and keep in mind that airport security measures apply.

Meanwhile, the Jefferson Area Tea Party is planning its own “Oust Obama” rally at Lee Park at noon Wednesday—no ticket required. Speakers include frequent Fox News guest Kate Obenshain, former U.S. Senate hopeful Bishop E.W. Jackson, House Delegate Rob Bell, local radio host Rob Schilling of “The Schilling Show,” former local Tea Party chairwoman Carol Thorpe, and more.

 

Categories
Living

Fruit of the Vine: August 28

Barboursville

Season Reveal
When: Sunday, September 9 at 5:30pm.
www.barboursvillewine.com
Virginia Opera presents The Season Reveal, the opening event for our 2012-13 season. An intimate private concert with the principal artists of Virginia Opera’s 2012-13 production of The Pearl Fishers. Reception and three-course dinner by Palladio Restaurant’s Executive Chef, Melissa Close Hart, with wine pairings & commentary by Winemaker Luca Paschina. The event takes place in the Vineyards’ enclosed Arcade, overlooking acres of arbors and the Blue Ridge Mountains. $125 per person, all inclusive. Please call Tracy Berry at (540) 832-7848 for reservations/payment – seating is quite limited. Lovely overnight accommodations are available onsite at the 1804 Inn’s gorgeous suites and cottages. For information and reservations, visit the 1804 Inn website or call Lisa Morgan at (540) 832-5384. A comprehensive list of other area lodging can be found here.

Cardinal Point Winery
(540) 456-8400
cardinalpointwinery.com
September 7-8
The First Shakespeare Winery Tour
9423 Batesville Rd., Afton
Hamner Theater presents A Midsummer Night’s Dream!

“Lord, what fools these mortals be!”
-William Shakespeare
(A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Act III, Scene II)

Too true, especially if you miss attending this wonderful production of this Shakespeare favorite. Two shows only at Cardinal Point; Fri., Sept. 7, and Sat., Sept. 8. In case of rain, the show goes on at the Hamner Theater, in the Rockfish Valley Community Center, 190 Rockfish School Lane, between Nellysford and Afton.
Grounds open at 5:30; performance begins promptly at 7pm.
$10 at the gate; children 10 and under are $5.00.
www.hamnertheater.com/shakespeare-winery-tour-2012

Delfosse
www.delfossewine.com
263-6100
VIP Wine Club Pig Roast and Concert August 25 from 5-10pm.
Dear Wine Club Member,
In recognition of your support for the winery as a Wine Club Member, you are invited to attend a double event at no charge at the Winery on August 25 from 5 PM to 10 PM. Come mingle with other wine club members and share experiences. We will have:
Harvest Vineyard Tour from 5-5:30pm.
Tours will be with Paul Mierzejewski, the Winemaker of Delfosse Vineyards and Winery
Pig Roast from 5-7pm
We will have a whole pig with the appropriate sides.
Free attendance to hear The Collectors Item play in our outdoor plaza from 6-10 pm. Reservations are Required for the event. As the Wine Club is getting quite large (over 700) we need to know how many guests to expect – Use the buttons below to tell us how many are coming. Free attendance is limited to 2 persons per wine club membership. You can also bring guests for $25 per guest which includes both the Pig Roast and attendance at the concert.

Glass House Winery
glasshousewinery.com
975-0094
All below music events are from 6:15-9pm.
Friday, August 24: Scuffletown
Friday, August 31: Carl Anderson
****August 25th and 26th SPECIAL EVENT***7-10 pm
The Hamner Theater will put on A Midsummer Night’s Dream at Glass House
This is part of A Shakespeare Winery Tour:
Tickets are $10 dollars (tix available at door and online)
Call The Hamner Theater at (434) 361-1999 for reservations or information.
www.hamnertheater.com/shakespeare-winery-tour-2012/

Keswick Vineyards
keswickvineyards.com
244-3341
Fluvanna SPCA Fundraiser
Saturday, September 15, noon-3pm
The Fluvanna SPCA will be holding its 4th Annual Wine Tasting Fundraiser at Keswick Vineyards. The event will feature a wine tasting of Keswick Vineyards wines, a refreshment bar and a silent auction. Volunteers will be on hand to answer questions about the SPCA. Tickets are $15 in advance and $20 at the door. All proceeds from the event benefit animal care at the SPCA. Tickets can be purchased at FSPCA or online at www.fspca.org.

Mountfair Vineyard
4875 Fox Mountain Rd., Crozet
mountfair.com
823-7605
September 1, 2012
Music on the Patio: Billy Caldwell from 2-5pm.
September 15, 2012
Music on the Patio: Ashley McMillen from 2-5pm.
Open for complimentary tastings March -Nov. Fri-Sun. Noon-5 pm or by appointment.

Stinson Vineyards
www.stinsonvineyards.com
823-7300
Thursday, August 23 from 6-9pm Tailgate Thursday with Sally Rose
Thursday, August 30 from 6-9pm Last Tailgate Thursday of the year with Hot Twang

Trump Vineyards
Festival at Skyland Resort, Shenandoah National Park
September 8, 11am-5pm: Skyland Resort, Shenandoah National Park
Come out and taste our award-winning wines from the top of Virginia at Skyland’s First Annual Pig Pickin’!
Tasting Room Hours: Sunday – Friday 11am-6pm, Saturday 11am-8pm Tasting Room, 434.984.4855
3550 Blenheim Road, Charlottesville, Virginia 22902

White Hall Vineyards
5282 Sugar Ridge Rd., Crozet
whitehallvineyards.com
823-8615
White Hall Vineyards is open for tours and tastings, Wednesdays through Sundays from 11am-5pm.

Categories
News

Local stonemason continues maintenance of historic Monticello wall

Shelton Sprouse has never worked a day in his life. That’s how he feels, anyway, because the Monticello stonemason loves his job. Sprouse’s work has revolved around all things Thomas Jefferson since the 1980s, when he built the stone wall that surrounds and retains the 1,000′ garden Jefferson cut out of the east side of the hillside at Monticello. Now, Sprouse’s life as a stonemason has come full circle, and he is back to renovate and restore the wall he built 30 years ago.

The wall was an essential aspect of the grounds at Monticello, evident in Jefferson’s sketched renderings, but had been dismantled over the years. According to Sprouse, stones were removed from the wall in the 1940s, spread out around the area, and used to line nearby roads.

“During the age of great bulldozer discoveries, they were able to move most of the stones from the original wall,” he said, shaking his head. Sprouse wasn’t impressed with the decision to use physical pieces of history for road development, but said he contributed to recovering at least 80 percent of the material.

In the late 1970s, Monticello underwent a restoration Renaissance. Under groundskeeper Peter Hatch, there was an increased focus on returning Jefferson’s gardens to their original layout—right down to the stone wall that was an integral part of his beloved terraced vegetable garden. Sprouse was part of a team of expert craftsmen assembled by the Thomas Jefferson Foundation to reclaim the lost stone and rebuild the wall using Jefferson’s own copious and meticulous notes. Working side by side with archeologists as they uncovered the old foundation, Sprouse and others brought the scattered rock back from all over the estate and reconstructed a critical, if humble-looking, remnant of Jefferson’s grounds.

Sprouse and his business partner and close friend, John Apperson, constructed the massive wall—16′ tall at its highest point-—over the course of three years in the early 1980s. It required strenuous physical labor, but according to Sprouse, his job is more than hauling and lifting.

“It’s a consciousness experience that requires the utmost attention,” he said, and compared it to both football and ballet. A high school coach taught Sprouse the importance of isometric exercises, and he said the core strength and balancing techniques he developed are the only reason he’s standing today.

Thirty years after stacking the last stone, Sprouse is back. Under the supervision of new groundskeeper and Virginia wine godfather Gabriele Rausse, he is providing maintenance on a portion of the wall, a project he expects to last until the first week in September.

Sprouse’s knowledge is evident in the way he slowly examines the wall, stone by stone, pulling out any pieces that appear damaged or loose. He then clears out any debris, carefully pieces the stones back together, and bangs them into place with a sledgehammer.

“I’m hugely proud of this work,” he said, biting into a freshly picked tomato and leaning against the stones. The job is gratifying not only because he is restoring something truly historical, he said, but also because he gets to see tourists experience Monticello on a daily basis.

Sprouse said he’s not much for taking time off, and would rather just be doing what he’s loved for the past three decades. And with an office like his, who wouldn’t want to come to work every morning?

Categories
Arts

WTJU’s back to school concert goes beyond UVA Grounds

In the world of radio, WTJU is something of an anomaly: a community station owned by a university, a college station whose staff includes locals, teachers, grad students, and alumni. And while WTJU can boast decades of support from the local community, it faces the challenge of attracting new listeners in the digital age.

“I just read about a study that said more young people are now finding out about new music through YouTube than radio,” said WTJU General Manager Nathan Moore. “And it’s true—a lot of college students don’t even own a radio. So we’re taking our radio station out into the public.”

On Saturday, September 1, WTJU will host a rock concert at the UVA Amphitheater, a welcome for new and returning University students. The goal is to increase student awareness and listenership, as well as to inform the student body that it has the opportunity to get involved with the station. “Sharing this music gives people a chance to have a great experience,” said Moore. “This is one of the ways we try to enrich the cultural life of the UVA community and connect people to the music scene.”

It’s the third year WTJU’s rock department has hosted a welcoming event, and the number of student volunteers has been steadily growing. Past concerts have featured local groups that have since gone on to wider acclaim and fame, including Andrew Cedermark and Eternal Summers. This year’s line-up features the energetic art-rock of Invisible Hand, the dreamy, country-flavored shoegaze of the Fire Tapes, and the charming pop rock of Dwight Howard Johnson.

The concert was largely organized by volunteer DJ Liz Lowenstein. “I went to UVA for three years without really knowing about WTJU. I had no idea the music they played was as diverse as it is,” she said. “But it’s really dynamic, and there’s a lot of room for advancement, and room for students to get involved.” Lowenstein has been volunteering for the station for one year, and has now become the rock department’s program director, as well as the host of Saturday’s 11pm program “Must Be the Buzz Talking.”

In organizing the concert, Lowenstein said, “These are all bands that we’ve worked with in the past. They’re all local bands, bands that you hear about a lot in town. Hopefully we can show students that there are things in the community that they can get into, that it’s not all just life on Grounds.”

The bands are also excited about the opportunity to connect with students, as well as to solidify their relationship with the radio station. “The studio is always really welcoming, every time I’ve been there,” said Invisible Hand frontman Adam Smith. “I had a great time recently when I sat in (as a guest DJ) with Don Harrison,” host of Sunday night’s “Radio Wowsville.” “We just traded off songs, playing back and forth for the whole show.”

“The last time we played at the Amphitheater in 2010, we had a lot of kids that were just excited to hear live music,” said Smith. “They really wanted to talk to us afterwards about ‘the scene’—all of the how, what, why, where. UVA brings people from other parts of Virginia, other parts of the country, and from around the world,” Smith said. “It’s refreshing for them to hear live music when they arrive. But it’s inspiring for us, too—to have that positive reaction—to get to see everything from a new perspective.” Smith is also relishing the opportunity to help support the station. “In the face of everything that’s happened with WTJU, it’s proven itself to be more than necessary. It’s a confident juggernaut that just needs to keep going.”

“None of us went to UVA, so that isn’t a built-in connection for us,” wrote Rob Dobson of the Fire Tapes. Nevertheless, the Fire Tapes have forged a strong relationship with the station. It’s performed live in the studio for the rock department’s fundraisers, and the station broadcast the band’s live performance from the Tom Tom Founders Festival in May. “We’ve been embraced by the DJs at the ’Teej, namely Nick Rubin (co-host of ‘Radio Freedonia’) and Dave Moore (of ‘Ye Olde Tuesday Afternoon Rock Show’),” said Dobson. “Hopefully this will be a good way to get our name out there on campus. Maybe we’ll play some frisbee on the Quad. ”

The concert begins at 5pm and is free and open to the public.

WTJU’s next big outreach will take place during The Bridge PAI’s month-long series of events, Audio September. Several concerts will be streamed live on-air from the gallery space, and Bridge volunteer Dave Moore is planning to host his weekly Tuesday afternoon show from a remote studio housed in a geodesic dome in the Bridge’s parking lot, visible from the Avon Street bridge.  The station is also preparing for the weeklong jazz marathon fundraiser beginning September 24.

Categories
News

UPDATE: Charlottesville closures for Obama visit

The city has offered up the following info on logistics and road closures for President Obama’s Wednesday visit. We’ll be updating regularly as we receive more details.

UPDATES as of noon:

  • The 2nd and 4th Street crossings at the Downtown Mall will be closed to all vehicular traffic beginning at noon.
  • A map of all road closures can be found here.
  • Parking will not be allowed on closed streets. Enforcement of restricted parking will begin at 12:01 am on August 29th.  Cars parked in violation of no parking signs will be towed.
  • The Downtown Transit Center and the Charlottesville Albemarle Convention and Visitors Bureau will close at 11am.

City schools will close around midday. Pre-K classes let out at 11:30 a.m., Walker Upper Elementary and Buford Middle schools at noon, elementary schools at 12:30pm and Charlottesville High School at 1 p.m. All after-school activities are also cancelled, according to the announcement.

The City Hall Annex Building will close at 11am. This closure will affect the following city offices:

  • Parks and Recreation
  • Social Services
  • Voter Registrar
  • Information Technology

City Hall will remain open; however access to the building will only be available via the Market Street entrance or the 6th Street entrance. The main entrance to the building located on the downtown mall and the 7th Street entrance will be closed all day.

The Key Recreation Center will be closed all day Wednesday.

The Downtown Transit Center and the Charlottesville/Albemarle Convention and Visitors Bureau Visitors Center will close at noon.

Charlottesville Area Transit (CAT) service will be detoured as follows:

  • The downtown station (Transit Center) will close at noon and will reopen once the event is over and roads are open to traffic.
  • All stops on Market Street between Ridge/McIntire and 9th Street NE will not be serviced beginning at noon.
  • All stops on Water Street between Ridge/McIntire and 10th Street NE will not be serviced beginning at noon with the exception of the Omni Hotel stop on Water Street.
  • Routes affected will be the FREE TROLLEY, 1A, 1B, 2A, 2B, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10.
  • Due to heavy traffic, delays are expected.

Road Closures will begin at noon and are as follows:

  • Water Street at 4th Street SE
  • Water Street at 10th Street NE
  • 9th Street SE at Graves Street
  • 9th Street SE at Levy Street
  • East Market Street at 9th Street NE
  • The 700 Block of East Market Street at 7th Street NE

The Market Street and Water Street Parking Garages will operate as normal. Visitors are encouraged to park in the garages as street parking will be limited.

Categories
Living

Teaching pets the difference between your home and a toilet

Watching a happy puppy or kitten bounce around the living room, it’s hard to imagine anything that isn’t perfectly adorable about your new friend. Of course, the first time you find a pile of poop under the coffee table, you might adjust your assessment. And then you step barefoot in a warm puddle on your way to make breakfast. And then you have to throw out the ruined throw pillow. And…why did we get one of these things again?

It doesn’t have to be this way. Housetraining may take some time, and there are bound to be a few mistakes along the way, but a few simple pointers can help prevent eight months of frustration and carpet-cleaning.

Litter training a kitten is generally straightforward. Put a litter pan out, and show your kitten where it is. That usually does it. Honestly. It may be worth limiting your kitten’s range for a few days so she doesn’t discover any alternatives (flower pots are a common favorite). Cleaning the box every day will help make sure that she doesn’t get disgusted with her accommodations. And if you have more than one cat in the house, extra litter pans can prevent messy turf wars.

Dogs, as you’ve probably guessed (or experienced), are a bit trickier. The good news is that they inherently want to do the right thing. If your dog is still relieving himself in the dining room, it’s not that he hates you. It’s that he genuinely doesn’t understand what you want him to do. The old standbys of yelling and rubbing his nose in it are not only ineffective, they are entirely counterproductive. He isn’t making the connection you think he’s making. All your dog will learn is that you can sometimes be really mean for no apparent reason, and that’s an awful lesson to teach your new friend.

In most circumstances, crate training is the best way to get dogs squared away on bathroom etiquette. Many people are turned off by crate training out of a misunderstanding of what it is, so let’s clarify something straight away: The crate is not a punishment for making a mistake. That, in fact, is the last thing you want the crate to be. A dog’s crate should always be a peaceful resting place, and not a threatening prison.

The logic of crate training is simple. Dogs generally don’t want to soil their own beds. A properly-sized crate (one which gives them just enough room to stand up and turn around) keeps them from having accidents when you aren’t looking. This means that the only time they get a chance to go is under your supervision, which means you can focus more on praising them for doing it right, and less on getting angry when they do it wrong.

Younger puppies really shouldn’t be left in their crates for more than three hours or so. Those tiny bladders can’t hold much, and while your puppy may not want to soil her bed, she eventually won’t have much choice. And a word on leaving “pee-pads” available indoors—it’s best not to use them at all. They may seem convenient at first, but they will inadvertently train your dog to go whenever she sees fit, and that confusion makes housetraining more difficult in the long run.

If a pet seems unusually resistant to housetraining, it may be a signal that something is wrong. Bladder infections and intestinal parasites are common in puppies and kittens, and can make it much more difficult for your pets to control themselves. These problems are easy to diagnose and treat, and a call to your veterinarian may prevent a great deal of unwarranted frustration.
Nobody could ever accuse housetraining of being fun, but keeping the process clear, consistent, and fair will help make sure it doesn’t last any longer than it has to. The sooner you get through this, the sooner you and your pet can relax and focus on enjoying each others’ company. Not to mention all the money you’ll save on cleaning supplies.

Dr. Mike Fietz is a small animal veterinarian at Georgetown Veterinary Hospital. He received his veterinary degree from Cornell University in 2003, and has lived in Charlottesville since.

Categories
Living

The wonder years: How real estate and gentrification changed Belmont for good

“One big problem is change. [The older residents] don’t understand change is happening and why it’s happening, and sometimes I don’t understand it myself.” – Jimmy Dettor, lifelong Belmont resident. From the documentary, Still Life With Donuts.

When she arrived in Charlottesville in the summer of 1976, Joan Schatzman didn’t think of herself as a pioneer. She was 24, fresh out of college, and when her best friend Debbie decided to go to grad school at UVA, she went along for the ride.

Initially they rented an apartment near Grounds, but in the spring of 1978, Joan, Debbie, and another friend decided to buy a house across town in an old, run-down neighborhood called Belmont.

“Belmont?” people said. “You can’t live in Belmont!”

“Why?”

“Nothing but trouble there.”

“What trouble?” Schatzman wondered. She’d grown up on the south side of Chicago; what was so scary about a sleepy Southern town? The only problem she could see was that the residents were kind of racist, but she didn’t think they’d bother her. Besides, the house was so cheap, $14,500 for a three bedroom place on Levy Avenue where the mortgage split three ways was cheaper than rent anywhere else in town.

In 2005, 27 years later, houses in Belmont were routinely selling for over $400,000. The neighborhood was hip, “the SoHo of Charlottesville,” “one of America’s Best Secret Neighborhoods.” Schatzman still lived there. In the intervening years she’d bought out her roommates, sold the house on Levy, and purchased four houses on nearby Douglas Avenue.

Buy the house, fix the house, sell the house. The bourgeois American dream.

Belmont’s change from a neighborhood the tonier set studiously avoided, to one where they got into bidding wars, seemed strange to people watching from the outside; if you were caught up in the madness, it could be kind of terrifying. One of Schatzman’s neighbors paid $450,000 for his house, and as both reality and panic set in, he anxiously asked Schatzman if she thought he’d paid too much.

There was a class Schatzman remembered from college titled “Urban Geography,” which she explained to me like this: “Cities go through cycles. There’s a central business district and there’s rings around it where the rich people live, so they can walk downtown. And then as they get more affluent, they want to move a little further out… The inner ring of fine, nice, beautiful homes now becomes devalued.”

It wasn’t because she was rich that Schatzman had been able to buy so many houses in Belmont. She wasn’t rich, she was in the right place at the right time, able to recognize an area filled with well-built, undervalued properties.

“I kind of identified Belmont as a place at the bottom of its cycle,” she said. “And I thought, ‘You know what? I’m gonna kill myself to buy. Whatever it takes, I’ll tighten the belt.”

Which is exactly what she did.

Until 2005, when something told her that things were going to change. The market was peaking, it was time to get out of the game. She sold two of her houses and rented out the third.

And then her new neighbor went and bought his house for $450,000 and asked her if he’d paid too much.

What she said was, “No,” but what she was thinking was, “Heck, yeah.”

Hitting bottom

“This is a rough neighborhood. The police are almost scared to get out of their cars.”—anonymous man in front of Belmont Market, The Daily Progress, 1984

“Belmont has had a boo-hiss-hiss, God-you-live-there? Reputation.” —Pat Weis, Belmont resident, The Daily Progress, 1990

In 1980 a handful of Belmont business owners and residents, determined to fight the “growing adolescent youth problem,” hired off-duty cops to patrol the small commercial section along Monticello Road at night. Spearheading the project was Bill Lanier, a self-described eccentric and entrepreneur who, despite having lived in the neighborhood for less than a year, claimed to be the unofficial “Mayor of Belmont.”

The patrols were not cheap, Lanier told the Daily Progress, but they were worth it. Local store owners, he said, were worried about more than their businesses; they were worried about their community.

It was nothing new, this sense of  worry. Around 1960, most Belmont residents began to feel like their neighborhood was changing for the worse. As older homeowners died off, commercial landlords began buying their houses to convert into cheap rental units. By the end of the 1970’s, rentals outnumbered owner-occupied houses and the neighborhood’s reputation had become one of crime and neglect.

The Charlottesville Department of Community Development sent out  a memo in September of 1979 to announce the creation of a Belmont neighborhood association. Around 100 Belmont residents showed up, only to be told that the memo had been sent by mistake; there were no current plans to set up a neighborhood group, the purpose of the meeting was simply to let residents speak their minds. And speak they did, telling Community Development head (now Mayor) Satyendra Huja about the problems they saw destroying their neighborhood: vandalism, drugs, neglected rental properties that were starting to decay, and most of all, “loitering juveniles.”

Where were the cops when you needed them?

According to the police, they were in Belmont, one of the most heavily patrolled areas in the city, even though its crime rate was no higher than anywhere else. The biggest problems cops faced in Belmont were drunken fights and domestic disputes, and unless they actually committed a crime, there wasn’t much they could do about kids hanging out.

John DeK. Bowen, Charlottesville’s chief of police at the time, blamed the tensions in Belmont on the fact that the neighborhood was changing from an all-white, owner-occupied neighborhood, to a racially mixed neighborhood with a lot of renters. It’s hard to see what was mixed about it. Belmont in 1980 was 90 percent white (the rest of the city was more like 75 percent). When it came to race, it was everything around Belmont that was changing.

Between 1979 and 1981, three public housing projects opened up just beyond Belmont’s borders: Garrett Square (now Friendship Court), Sixth Street, and South First Street. Where Belmont was mostly white, the projects were almost entirely black, and as Joan Schatzman remembers it, the two groups rarely crossed over into each other’s territory.

A 1980 report by the city on conditions in Belmont noted that “[m]any residents fear that the changing nature of the Belmont area has had a negative impact upon local youth, leading to increased vandalism, drug use and general delinquency.” But the report also said that things were starting to get better. The number of rentals was leveling off and the number of homeowners rising again. The Department of Community Development said that Belmont was in a “transition phase.”

Bill Lanier didn’t need an official report to tell him things were changing; he was out there making it happen. There were the police patrols, the shirts he was selling that said “Beautiful Downtown Belmont” and the Belmont Community Fair he’d organized that year.

“Free Chicken! Free Ice Cream! Live Bands!” the poster promised.

But Lanier’s interest went beyond community PR. Where most people saw a dilapidated corner of the city, he saw dollar signs. Lanier bought two houses in Belmont and flipped both for a tidy profit, deals that helped him to facilitate the purchase of three commercial buildings for a group of investors from Northern Virginia. The dollar figures involved were nothing compared to what they’d be later, but “The Mayor of Belmont” had seen the future, and the future was good.

“Three years ago to say that any house in Belmont was worth more than $35,000 was a joke,” he told the Daily Progress. “Now you can see a relatively new Jaguar go down the street in Belmont and pull into a driveway.”

Categories
Living

Virginia Craft Brewers Fest is a soggy success

Saturday, August 25th, was the inaugural Virginia Craft Brewers Fest, held on the grounds of Devils Backbone Brewing Company in nearby Nelson County. With over 22 participating breweries, Virginia’s craft beer surge has certainly earned itself its own day in the sun. Alas, that was not to be the literal case. After moving back into my remodeled home in the rain for six hours, I decided to clean up, dust off the rain gear, and head out to Roseland. Nearly halfway there, I remembered that there was a rainout date, so I called both Levi Duncan (Starr Hill) and Jason Oliver (Devils Backbone) to confirm it was on, heard that it was, and kept plugging.

We arrived to a busy scene of mud, trucks, tents, and happy people in ponchos. A tasting package got an attendee 10 tasting tickets, each redeemable for a 4 0z. sample. Having exhausted most of the offerings from local breweries on my own time, I tried to get around to other VA beers I haven’t had before. Some of the ones I sampled (alongside a fantastic Rock Barn Bratwurst) included the River Brewing Company’s ‘Peachicot‘ (sweet, syrupy and irresistable,) Hardywood Park‘s ‘Bourbon DIPA‘ (double IPA aged in Bowman’s whiskey barrels,) Port City Brewing‘s ‘Porter‘ (robust and fitting for the drizzle,) and O’Connor Brewing‘s ‘El Guapo‘ IPA (brewed with Agave.) I used my last ticket for a safe play, and went with one of my personal favorites, Blue Mountain Brewery‘s Dark Hollow (Bourbon barrel-aged stout.)

I also encountered a few folks from the world of wine, including Nick Dovel of Pollak Vineyards, and Jim Corcoran of  Corcoran Vineyards, and recently of Corcoran Brewing, Jim’s vineyard co-located nanobrewery.

Saturday’s hosts, Devils Backbone, took home the 2012 Brewer’s Cup (Best Overall) for their ‘Schwarzbier‘ (black lager.)

It was refreshing to see so many fans of Virginia Craft Beer enduring the rain, undaunted, and on a mission for more local goodness. Seeing this much enthusiasm behind a festival that only serves craft beers made in the Commonwealth makes me very excited to man my own booth next year.

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Alternative septic in Albemarle County: new technology, new worries

A slightly abridged version of this story appears in the August 28 issue of C-VILLE. As always, there’s more that we wanted to tell—and we’re glad we can offer it here. —Graelyn Brashear 

What to do with wastewater has long been a limiting factor in rural development. If space or soil made a septic field impossible, a would-be builder was, for the most part, out of luck. The development of so-called alternative onsite septic systems that contain and process sewage is giving landowners another option, but not everyone is welcoming the new technology with open arms.

Officials in northern Virginia started clamoring for a special set of regulations for the new systems when some of them failed, “and failed spectacularly,” said Albemarle County Supervisor Ann Mallek.

Dan Holmes, state policy director for the Piedmont Environmental Council, said the new systems are more like mini wastewater treatment plants than traditional septic fields, and they need regular maintenance to work properly. But those check-ups are costly, and sometimes didn’t happen, said Holmes.

“In certain areas they would have fairly high rates of failure,” he said. “For every day one of these things is malfunctioning, it basically could operate just like a straight pipe for wastewater.” What’s worse, he said, the systems are often in areas with compromised drainage and soils that don’t perc.

State legislators addressed some of those concerns when they adopted new regulations last December—once-yearly maintenance checks being one of them. But at the same time, the state removed local governments’ ability to impose their own restrictions. And that has some elected officials worried.

Mallek joined fellow Democratic Supervisor Chris Dumler in voting against adjusting the county’s zoning rules to bring them up to speed with state regulations—a symbolic move, she said, but one she felt was important.

“Virginia already has low requirements for percolation for a septic field,” she said. “Our water quality standards are among the lowest in the country. So when we’re talking about removing more of those rules, it’s very scary.”

The worries go beyond wastewater, though. There’s vast rural acreage in the Commonwealth that was previously undevelopable because it was unsuitable for septic fields. The state’s acceptance of alternative systems changes things.

“Localities now have to adopt land use plans, zoning ordinance language, and subdivision ordinance language for these areas, anticipating what could happen now that lands once not open to development all of a sudden become a free-for-all under their current ordinances and plans,” said Holmes.

But the technology is here—and advancing. Charlottesville-based alternative septic company Living Machine creates self-contained systems modeled after tidal wetlands to recycle wastewater. They’ve installed their plant-filled tanks all over the country, including a high-profile setup in the lobby of the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission building (yes, indoors—the plant-and-gravel filtration effectively squelches any smells). So far, Living Machine has built very few systems Virginia, said spokesman William Kirksey, but that’s likely to change.

When it comes to alternative septic, “the overall climate around the country is improving for a number of reasons,” he said. Companies like his are developing cleaner, safer systems—albeit more expensive ones—that keep sewage waste out of the ground and produce reusable water, “so you can save money by decentralizing your wastewater and water systems,” Kirksey said. “You don’t have to run a pipeline from a distant development to a water treatment plant.”

Will it impact rural development? Most likely, Kirksey said, but localities have a number of tools they can use to control growth—and putting the brakes on new technology shouldn’t one of them. “If there are reasons for wanting to limit development in an area, you have to do it for other reasons,” he said.

Republican County Supervisor Ken Boyd agreed. “I’m not afraid of the technology,” he said. “I’m a property rights person. If people have property, they ought to be able to do what they want to do with it.”

Albemarle Director of Community Development Mark Graham said there aren’t many of the systems currently up and running in the area—in part because local regulations have mostly made them feasible only when traditional septic systems fail, but also because the alternative options cost about two to three times more. But there’s reason to believe they’ll become a more popular option. Despite the added expense of installation and maintenance, they have the potential to raise some land values considerably.

“If you had a piece of property that had no development potential because it was simply not a place you could put a septic field, and now you could put one of these (alternative systems) there, all of a sudden it becomes a developable lot again,” he said. It definitely has the potential to change the dynamic of growth in Albemarle, Graham said, but in a county where supply of rural land that can be developed has so far well outpaced demand, it’s hard to predict exactly what will happen.

But Mallek said there’s good reason to remain cautious. Tested, trusted companies like Living Machine aren’t the norm, she said, and most alternative septic systems have real potential to fail without close oversight—and that could harm not just one homeowner, but many.

That’s why she intends to push for tighter state regulations. It’s the only option, she said, because when it comes to the new septic systems, “the state legislature has very effectively put the kibosh on local government.”