Categories
News

Not guilty: Trash truck driver acquitted in fatal train crash

Garbage truck driver Dana Naylor was found not guilty for his involvement in a crash that made headlines last year, when an Amtrak train carrying GOP congressmen smashed into his truck in Crozet.

The crash killed Naylor’s friend and coworker, Christopher Foley, who was one of two passengers. The other, Dennis Eddy, was severely injured.

Naylor, 31, was charged with involuntary manslaughter. The prosecution contended that he was criminally negligent and alleged he drove his truck around the downed gates at the Lanetown Road crossing, and that statements he made to police and medical responders in the immediate aftermath—that he was trying to beat the train, and that he had ruined his life and killed his friend—proved guilt.

But defense attorney William Tanner said prosecutors didn’t have sufficient evidence to prove how Naylor got on the tracks. Tanner told jurors they should believe the driver’s original statements that he saw the crossing’s warning lights flashing, tried to cross, and got caught in between the gates that came down around him.

Albemarle County Circuit Court Judge Cheryl Higgins struck an additional DUI maiming charge after hearing expert testimony from a forensic toxicologist, who said the level of THC, the psychoactive component in marijuana, in one’s blood does not correlate to the level of impairment.

The commonwealth initially intended to argue that Naylor was impaired during the crash because a blood test found marijuana in his bloodstream. A cop, claiming he smelled beer on Naylor, obtained a search warrant, but the test turned up no traces of alcohol.

Outside of the presence of the jury, prosecutor Juan Vega asked Dr. Jayne Thatcher, from the Virginia Department of Forensic Science, to explain a 2006 study by a behavioral oncologist that related THC levels to impairment. But his plan to link the two backfired when Thatcher said she couldn’t rely on the THC level alone. And the prosecution didn’t have any other evidence from witnesses who observed Naylor at the time of the accident.

Commonwealth’s Attorney Robert Tracci had this explanation: “You can imagine fewer buzzkills greater than a trainwreck.” Had Judge Higgins allowed the charge to move forward, he said he would have presented evidence to the jury that investigators found weed in a tube of Carmex lip balm, which was inside Naylor’s lunchbox in the cab of the truck. He also said there was a “marijuana pipe” found right next to the vehicle on-scene.

Outside the courthouse, after the jury deliberated for several hours to reach the not guilty verdict on the remaining involuntary manslaughter charge, reporters questioned Tracci about whether he thought he would have been able to get a conviction if he’d been able to introduce the additional evidence.

“I think the jury wasn’t able to consider the totality of circumstances supporting the commonwealth’s charging decision,” he said. “They made their decision. We respect that outcome.”

In most states, including Virginia, it’s illegal to drive with a blood alcohol content over 0.08 percent, but states vary when it comes to THC levels and impairment. Currently, Virginia does not have an established limit, and Tracci told reporters he hopes the General Assembly will reconsider establishing one.

In Colorado, you could get a DUI if a blood test reveals five nanograms of THC in your system. Naylor’s test revealed nearly seven nanograms. But because THC can linger in one’s system for weeks, Naylor’s THC levels do not prove he was high at the time.

Over the course of the three-day trial, jurors heard from nearly 30 witnesses, all but one called by the prosecution.

Greg Gooden, who oversees railroad signal maintenance at that crossing in Crozet, said before a train passes, lights and bells will blink and ring for approximately four or five seconds, and then it takes about 12 or 14 seconds for the gates to descend. They must be fully horizontal for at least five seconds before the train crosses, and they’re “not very hard” to drive through in the event of an emergency, he said.

Gooden added that there haven’t been any reported malfunctions at the Lanetown crossing, as far as he’s aware.

Sole defense witness Mandy Snow contradicted Gooden’s testimony. The lifelong Crozet resident said she’s lived in the immediate vicinity of the tracks for two years, crosses them four or five times per day, and that it’s not unusual for the gates to malfunction.

“I’ve also noticed that they don’t come down in time,” she said, adding that she’ll often drive over the crossing and then hear a train barrel past her within seconds. “In my opinion, there’s not enough warning.”

In Tracci’s closing argument, he said her testimony wasn’t reliable, and that Naylor acted with total “reckless disregard for human life” when he decided to try to beat the 60mph train that day in January 2018.

Tanner encouraged the jury to use their common sense in his closing, and asked, “Why would he endanger his crew? …Why in the world would he do that to save about a minute?”

Then Tracci closed out the trial with his own question: “If this isn’t a crime and this isn’t criminal negligence, I ask you again, what is?”

It turned out to not be an easy question to answer. After the verdict, an anonymous juror told reporters the panel’s initial vote found Naylor guilty of involuntary manslaughter by 10 to two.

Categories
Opinion The Editor's Desk

This Week 2/27

Countless studies have found that parents are less happy than non-parents (who, after all, are free to spend their weekends sleeping late, pursuing activities they enjoy, and having uninterrupted conversations). But American parents, it turns out, have got it particularly bad. A 2016 study found that the “happiness gap” between parents and non-parents here was the largest of all 22 countries surveyed. In some countries, like Norway and Sweden, parents were actually happier than non-parents.

So what does it take to be able to delight in your children rather than experiencing parenthood as a life-crushing source of stress?

The researchers “discovered the gap could be explained by differences in family-friendly social policies such as subsidized child care and paid vacation and sick leave,” the New York Times reported. “In countries that gave parents what researchers called ‘the tools to combine work and family,’ the negative impact of
parenting on happiness disappeared.”

Since Nixon’s veto of a popular bipartisan bill for federally-funded, universal child care back in 1971, American parents have been struggling to juggle work and family on their own. And American child care workers (almost all of them women, and many of them also mothers) have been struggling to get by on pay that’s lower, one Charlottesville CEO told us, than working at Walmart.

In this issue, we take a local look at some big parenting issues, from the anti-vaxx movement to the question of how, and how much, to engage your kids in social justice work. But in Charlottesville, too, the child care crisis is front and center. 

“As long as people are trying to handle it individually, as opposed to looking at it as a community, the system will continue to be a jumble,” says Gail Esterman of ReadyKids.

That’s one mess we all need to clean up. —Laura Longhine

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Tracy Howe, Rev. Sekou, and The Nashville Freedom Fighters

New trails: Tracy Howe’s social gospel soul album Things That Grow honors marginalized communities while celebrating beauty and resilience. Tracks like “Frack Me” and “Our Strength” are rallying cries against misogyny and predatory capitalism, and “Bury Me,” a protest song about white supremacy, has gained traction around the country. Howe is co-headlining with Rev. Sekou  and The Nashville Freedom Fighters, who celebrate the release of Sekou’s Live At The Shell, recorded last July in Memphis. Sekou made local impact during the events of August 2017 when he performed in C’ville and trained people in non-violent civil disobedience.

Monday 3/4. $10, 7pm. The Haven, 112 W. Market St. restorationvillagearts.brownpapertickets.com.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Mojo Parker

Amped up: With his acoustic duo Parker & Gray, Staunton-based vocalist and guitarist Daniel Parker took home a first-place award for Best Solo/Duo in the
River City Blues Society of
Richmond’s Blues Challenge in 2017, and made the semifinals at the 2016 International Blues Challenge in Memphis.
When Parker wants to plug in, he uses his soul-based rock act Mojo Parker to crank up
the amps and get a groove on.

Saturday 3/2. $10-12, 8pm. The Front Porch, 221 E. Water St. 806-7062.

Categories
Arts

March gallery shows

The first unit Francesca Grazioli’s American studies class tackled was one on the history of Confederate statues “and how they affect surrounding communities,” says the St. Anne’s-Belfield junior.

Impressed by how her classmates engaged in these difficult conversations, “especially in the context of August 11 and 12 [2017]…I thought that their voices, along with all the teenagers in Charlottesville and Albemarle [County], needed to be heard,” says Grazioli, who gathered those voices together for an exhibition. Throughout the month of March, the mixed-arts gallery show and juried competition, “Through Our Eyes: Teens Respond to August 12th and its Aftermath,” is on view at The Bridge PAI.

More than two dozen students submitted work that, among other things, confronts racism, examines inequality and diversity, and addresses “feelings of fear, disgust, and confusion,” says Grazioli–as well as what it’s like to live in a city whose image has been so altered.

Charlottesville High School student Sahara Clemons will show a mixed-media piece that is “an homage to the American flag, jagged, and layered” with strips of Dutch-wax (Ankara) print fabric upon which Clemons has written phrases from signs held up August 11 and 12, 2017. She chose to reference the flag, she says, because “in the past few years under the Trump administration, there has been a change in my perception of patriotism as a force that means to shut me out as a black woman.”

Maryam Alwan, whose poem “charl-loves-ville” is featured in the show, wants those who read her poem to “feel compelled to spread love…no matter how cliché it sounds, and to learn and grow from the infamous date rather than brush over it and pretend it never happened. Ignorance and attempts to minimize or forget warning signs helped to cause it in the first place.”

Teen artists in the show also want adults to know that young people should be part of the bigger conversations, too. “We know what’s happening, and we want change,” says Grazioli. “But we lack credibility and social power, for no good reason.”  Says Alwan: “We’re anxious to be heard.”

Openings

The Bridge PAI 209 Monticello Rd. “Through Our Eyes: Teens Respond to August 12th and its Aftermath,” a mixed-arts exhibition that highlights the voices of teens, who are often excluded from the conversation. 5:30-9:30pm.

CitySpace 100 Fifth St. NE. An exhibition of student artwork from Albemarle County Public Schools. 5:30-7:30pm.

C’ville Arts Cooperative Gallery 118 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. “Spectra,” featuring works by Diana Branscome that explore the inspiring and magical aspects of glass. 6-8pm.

C’ville Coffee 1301 Harris St. Various original works by Kris Bowmaster.

Dovetail Design & Cabinetry 309 E. Water St. “Blue Ridge Watercolors,” featuring work by Ryan Arnold. 5-7pm.

Fellini’s 200 Market St. “Owned,” an exhibition of pastels by Cat Denby. 5:30-7pm.

McGuffey Art Center 201 Second St. NW. In the Sarah B. Smith Gallery, “Local Impressions: Plants, Pigments, and Place,” Lotta Helleberg’s botanical works on textile and paper, using prints and dyes derived from local plants; in the Downstairs North Hall Gallery, “Moments,” a show of works in ink, acrylic, and oil; in the Downstairs South Hall Gallery, “Woman: Self & Other,” a selection of paintings by Lindsay Heider Diamond that explores women’s quiet
moments; in the Upstairs North and South Hall Gallery, “The Process of Creating Art for Books,” an exhibition of art created for books from a variety of artists, as part of the annual Virginia Festival of the Book 5:30-7:30pm.

Milli Coffee Roasters 400 Preston Ave. “Winter Light,” an exhibition of works in oil on canvas by Lauchlan Davis. 7-10pm.

New Dominion Bookshop 404 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. “Debris,” featuring multi- media drawings and watercolor by Susan Patrick. 5-7pm.

Roy Wheeler Realty Co. 404 Eighth St. NE. “Ashley Sauder Miller’s Heirloom-Inspired Mixed Media,” a show of works that explore, among other things, interior spaces. 5-7pm.

Second Street Gallery 115 Second St. SE. In the main gallery, “Inside the Artists’ Studio,” a group exhibition featuring the work of local artists; and in the Dové Gallery, Jessica Burnam’s artist-in-residence exhibition. 5:30-7:30pm.

Spring Street Boutique 107 W. Main St., Downtown Mall. “Spring Whispers,” featuring oil paintings by Jane Goodman. 6-8pm.

Studio IX 969 Second St. SE. “Flow + Nature,” featuring works inspired by nature and movements of groups and individuals, by Juan Manuel Granados. 5:30-7:30pm.

Top Knot Studio 103 Fifth St. SE. “Northern Neck Nature,” a show of works in acrylic by Pete Morris. 5:30-7:30pm.

VMDO Architects 200 E. Market St. “Flow,” an exhibition of fluid works in acrylic, resin, and alcohol by Cassie Clawson. 5:30-7:30pm.

Welcome Gallery 114 Third St. NE. “Titania’s Fairies,” featuring oil paintings by Mineko Yoshida. 5-7:30pm.

WriterHouse 508 Dale Ave. “Reflecting,” an exhibition of oil paintings by Lee Christmas Halstead. 5-7pm.

WVTF RadioIQ 216 W. Water St. “Poetry of the Landscape,” featuring works in oil by Meg West. 5-7pm.

Other March shows

Annie Gould Gallery 121B S. Main St., Gordonsville. A show of acrylic and collage works by Judith Ely, and watercolors by Chee Ricketts. Through March 11.

The Batten Institute at the Darden School of Business 100 Darden Boulevard. “Celebrating Creativity: Works by Local Women Artists,” featuring work from 27 women in Charlottesville and the surrounding areas.

Buck Mountain Episcopal Church 4133 Earlysville Rd., Earlysville. An exhibition of multi-media artwork by Philip Jay Marlin. Opens March 3.

Commonwealth Restaurant 422 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. “Linear Motion,” featuring illustrations by Martin Phillips.

Crozet Artisan Depot 571 Three Notch’d Rd., Crozet. A collection of leather work by artisan Penny Sipple. Opens March 9.

Firefly 1304 E. Market St. An exhibition of work full of hidden images by Flame Bilyue.

The Fralin Museum of Art at UVA 155 Rugby Rd. “Pompeii Archive: Recent Photographs by William Wylie”; Vanessa German’s installation, “sometimes.we.cannot.be.with.our.bodies”; “The Print Series in Bruegel’s Netherlands: Dutch and Flemish Works from the Permanent Collection”; and “Oriforme” by Jean Arp.

Jefferson School African American Heritage Center 233 Fourth St. NW “Deborah Willis: In Pursuit of Beauty” examines how beauty is posed, imagined, critiqued, and contested.

Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection 400 Worrell Dr. “Kent Morris: Unvanished,” a series of digitally constructed photographs that explores the relationship between contemporary Indigenous Australian identity and the modern built environment; “Beyond Dreamings: The Rise of Indigenous Australian Art in the United States.”

Les Yeux du Monde 841 Wolf Trap Rd. “Surrealities: The Art of Ed Haddaway and Russ Warren,” a show of sculpture and paintings that coincides with Second Street Gallery’s “Inside the Artists’ Studio” exhibition, through March 10; and “Picasso, Lydia and Friends, Vol. IV,” opening March 16.

Martha Jefferson Hospital 500 Martha Jefferson Dr. “Calm Reflections,” featuring the work of the BozART Fine Art Collective.

McIntire School of Commerce Connaughton Gallery UVA Central Grounds. “Seasons of Color and Light,” featuring work by Chuck Morse and Steve Deupree, through March 12.

Piedmont Virginia Community College V. Earl Dickinson Building 501 College Dr. “Look Out: A Collection of Community Portraits,” featuring images of Charlottesville residents by artists Eze Amos, Aaron Farrington, Jae Johnson, Greg Antrim Kelly, Jesús Pino, Sanjay Suchak, and Guillermo Ubilla, curated by Stacey Evans; and “Skyward,” featuring botanical works by John Grant.

Shenandoah Valley Art Center 122 S. Wayne Ave., Waynesboro. “40Under40,” featuring work by contemporary Virginia artists. Opens March 2.

UVA Medical Center Main Lobby 1215 Lee St. “Plant Life Up Close,” featuring 36 of Seth Silverstein’s close-up photographs of plant life, seeds, flowers, and more. Through March 8.

Vitae Spirits Distillery 715 Henry Ave. “Inspired Art,” a show of multi-media works in crayon and fabric paint by Sara Gondwe.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Stick Fly

Cross examination: In Lydia R. Diamond’s Stick Fly, tension builds over the course of a weekend family getaway to Martha’s Vineyard, where debates about race and privilege cause destructive secrets to be revealed. Director Jennifer L. Nelson says she appreciates the play’s focus on a segment of African American society not frequently seen onstage. “You don’t often see stories of middle class, or upper middle class, highly educated people dealing with human, relatable issues,” she says. “It allows us to see them in a different way.”

Through 3/7. $8-14, times vary. Ruth Caplin Theatre, 109 Culbreth Rd. 924-3376.

Categories
News

Not immune: Vaccine-preventable diseases are coming back

As measles make a comeback in pockets of the United States, a resurgence of vaccine-preventable diseases in Charlottesville in recent years has some local health experts worried that messages about the importance of immunization are not sinking in.

In just the first two months of 2019, the U.S. has seen five outbreaks of measles–a highly infectious disease that killed millions of children each year before a vaccine was introduced in the 1960s. It was declared eradicated in this country in 2000, but has been reintroduced as travelers pick up the disease abroad and then spread it among unvaccinated groups here in the U.S. (In Clark County, Washington, which had more than 50 cases this year, one in four kindergartners were unvaccinated before the outbreak.)

So how vulnerable are we here in Charlottesville?

“We have not had any cases of measles yet at UVA, but I’m concerned,” says Dr. Ina Stephens, a pediatrician and specialist in pediatric infectious diseases at UVA Health System. “There are measles outbreaks all over the U.S.”

Stephens calls non-immunization a “huge issue” globally, particularly in Europe, where there were more than 41,000 cases of measles last year. Much closer to home, she notes, “we are seeing other vaccine-preventable diseases cropping up all over the place here in Charlottesville.” That has included outbreaks of pertussis (whooping cough) that have led to hospitalizations and infant deaths; mumps; severe cases of chicken pox with complications and secondary infections; and several cases of Haemophilus influenzae type B meningitis, which is “almost unheard of,” she says. “We haven’t seen that in 20 years.”

Despite available vaccines, she says, “These diseases are coming back.”

Dr. Ina Stephens

“Vaccine hesitancy”—the delay or refusal of available vaccines—was identified by the World Health Organization as one of the top 10 threats to global health in 2019. In the U.S., increasing numbers of parents have been refusing vaccines for their children, although overall vaccination rates remain high.

A strain of anti-vaccine sentiment has run through Charlottesville’s discourse for years: In 2005, The Hook published a cover story suggesting that thimerosal, once an ingredient in the MMR vaccine, caused autism. Andrew Wakefield, the British doctor who fueled the anti-vaxx movement with a paper also linking the MMR vaccine to autism, was later barred from practicing medicine in the UK, and no other researchers were ever able to replicate his findings. In 2008, the medical journal that published Wakefield’s paper retracted it, and the journal’s editor declared it “utterly false.

Still, in 2016 Wakefield’s anti-vaccine film, Vaxxed, screened in Charlottesville. A member of the Parenting Network of Charlottesville listserve touted the screening, declaring that it revealed a “vast conspiracy at the CDC” and that “millions of people” have been “injured or killed” by vaccines. The forum’s moderators declined to post a response, saying they try to “steer away from contentious subjects.”

Stephens, at UVA, says the spread of misinformation had an effect that can’t be taken back.

“The problem is, this is 10 years in the making of fearing vaccines,” she says. “Once the fear is out there, the fear is out there.”

Marcia Hornberger, the epidemiologist for the Thomas Jefferson Health District, which includes Charlottesville and Albemarle, says the district is always concerned about vaccine-preventable outbreaks, “particularly right now.”

Even in a population with a high vaccination rate, diseases can spread among pockets of unvaccinated people. “The message of not getting vaccinated is prevalent,” Hornberger says,  “And that’s certainly concerning.”

The religious exemption loophole

Like most states, Virginia requires children to be adequately immunized to attend school, even private school. Yet parents can get an exemption simply by signing a waiver claiming that immunization conflicts with their child’s “religious tenets or practices.” Few religions expressly prohibit vaccinations, but it’s an easy loophole for parents who don’t want to vaccinate.

It’s difficult to know how many families use the religious exemption to avoid vaccination. Charlottesville public schools report high rates of vaccination, but there is no data available for the area’s preschools and private schools, and rates can vary widely from school to school. In 2011, a student at the Charlottesville Waldorf School contracted measles, and 40 people who were not adequately vaccinated against the disease were quarantined, although it’s unclear how many of those people were CWS students.

Andrea Bostrom, interim administrator at CWS, said in an email that she had “not heard any chatter” among parents regarding the current measles threat, but declined to share information on how many CWS students are unvaccinated or whether exemption rates have gone up.

One Charlottesville preschool director said a “very small number” of families use the religious exemption, and that it is not a concern. Another said the number of families taking the exemption at her school had recently gone up, to five or six families out of a total of less than three dozen.

“We do worry about this,” she wrote in an email. “Although we have not had recent issues at school, in the past we have seen an occasional issue like chicken pox, which puts some of our pregnant moms in possible danger. We have had both children and parents at the school who have actual immune issues, so children who are not vaccinated can be risking the health of others.”

Years ago, she added, a student came down with whooping cough. “It’s a horrible thing to put a child through, with serious complications,” she wrote. “I think anyone who witnesses something like that would not hesitate to get a vaccination for their child.”

The fact that many parents have not witnessed the reality of these diseases may be part of the problem.

“Parents these days are not scared of these preventable diseases because they’ve never seen them…they don’t understand how big of a threat this is,” Dr. Stephens says.

Whooping cough, for example, can be fatal for infants, who typically aren’t vaccinated before age one. There were 18,975 reportable cases of whooping cough in the U.S in 2017, according to the CDC, and the only way to protect infants is to protect older children. Mumps, meanwhile, can cause sterility in older adolescent males, Stephens adds, noting that there was an outbreak of the disease at UVA last year. 

In her practice, Dr. Stephens encourages parents to talk to her about their concerns. Then she addresses them one by one. “You want the parents to know that you’re willing to work with them and you want to protect their child the same way they want to protect their child,” she says.

A mother herself, she tells patients she never gives a child a vaccine that she’s not willing to give her own children. “I let them know that I’m with them,” she says. “I understand.”


Mythbuster: the facts  on vaccines

Here are some of the questions and concerns Dr. Ina Stephens hears from parents, and her response.

It’s too many vaccines at once! I’m worried it’s more than my child’s immune system can handle

“Each individual vaccine has approximately 10-15 different antigens that the body will make a reaction to, so it will remember it,” Stephens says. A typical virus, like the common cold, carries about 10,000 different antigens. An average child gets about eight or 10 viruses the first year of life—that’s hundreds of thousands of antigens, and nobody’s afraid of that, Stephens says. “[Children’s] bodies are very, very well-equipped to handle making an antibody response to 10-15 antigens.”

Too many needles! I don’t like my child getting so many shots at once.

Many providers will work with parents to space out the shots if that is a concern. “You need to meet the parent where they are,” Stephens says.

Why should we bother? My child is not going to get diphtheria or polio.

Stephens reminds parents of how quickly diseases we thought were eradicated can come back. “I tell them—we didn’t see any measles, and then all of a sudden in 2014 there were 657 reportable cases just in the U.S. alone.” Worldwide, she notes, there were over 173,330 cases of measles in 2017. “That’s crazy, that’s huge.”

How do we know vaccines are safe?

“The public has the right to safe vaccines,” says Stephens, who spent 15 years at the Center for Vaccine Development and Global Health at the University of Maryland. While false information abounds on the internet, parents don’t always have access to the medical research, to actually see the science behind why immunizations are safe and why they are so important. “I also let them know that the vaccine reporting system for adverse events is very active. It’s monitored by the minute, and any adverse effect is looked into.”

Categories
News

Testimony/cross-examination questioned in rape cases

An Albemarle County physician facing 11 charges related to sexually assaulting 10 female patients was in court February 19 for a motions hearing.

Mark Hormuz Dean will be tried on multiple counts of rape, object sexual penetration, aggravated sexual battery, sexual battery, forcible sodomy, and abduction, all from his time as a doctor of osteopathic medicine at the Pantops-based Albemarle Pain Management Associates Clinic.

He’ll be tried separately for each victim’s accusations, with the first jury trial scheduled for April. At Dean’s most recent hearing, defense attorney Rhonda Quagliana expressed concern that her client won’t have a fair trial if the victim’s testimony at that trial alludes to other victims in the case.

The defense implied that the accuser will likely say she decided to come forward after hearing about Dean’s January 2018 indictment, and if she does, the jury will know there are multiple accusers, said Quagliana.

Prosecutor Darby Lowe said she didn’t intend to question the victim about any other cases, and Judge Humes Franklin said he will allow her to ask why the victim chose to speak out.

Quagliana also said she should have the right to cross-examine the victim, ask why she waited a year to file a police report, and inquire about her mental health history, prior complaints, and the civil suit she has also filed against Dean “to get money,” as the attorney put it.

The judge said he will limit the cross-examination on a case-by-case basis to ensure its relevance. Another motions hearing is scheduled for March 8.

Categories
News

The gunfire next door: Police response uneven in Fifeville neighborhood

In the early morning hours of February 10, Julie Bargmann woke up to the sound of gunshots. She laid still.

“Unfortunately, I’ve gotten kind of used to it,” says the Fifeville resident who’s lived on Sixth Street Southwest for four years. Over the last two, there have been multiple shootings and other incidents that drew a massive police response.

Every time it happens, she says, “I hunker down low and I stay in my bed.”

Police presence in the immediate area of Sixth, 6 ½, and Dice streets, in the neighborhood across Cherry Avenue from Tonsler Park, seems to be all or nothing. While community members say they don’t usually see any cops patrolling, when law enforcement does respond to the area, it’s quite a show—multiple squad cars line the narrow, one-way roads and driveways, and at times that’s been accompanied by a heavily militarized SWAT team that has terrified residents.

Bargmann and other neighbors say they’re aware that the Charlottesville Police Department is currently understaffed, and they’re sympathetic to its officers, who are currently down 18 co-workers, according to police spokesperson Tyler Hawn. But residents say a regular patrol is necessary in a neighborhood that has seen drug dealing and gunfire—and that a steadier police presence would make those SWAT raids unnecessary.

On this particular February morning, Bargmann waited until she saw the red and blue lights reflected onto her bedroom walls, then watched as the apparently naked victim of the shooting was hauled off in an ambulance.

Back in 2017, she’d witnessed a SWAT raid at the same house. An officer in military-style gear popped out of the top of a BearCat, a tank-like armored vehicle. He scanned the area with his gun drawn as other cops climbed a ladder leading to a window above the front door, bashed it in, and hurled a flash grenade through it, she recalls. 

“And then I saw Sam, my neighbor, being taken away in handcuffs,” she says. Court records show that Sam Henderson, who owns the house, was arrested November 16, 2017, for possession of a controlled substance and found guilty seven months later.

But she and other neighbors still see him come and go, and they’re wondering why police don’t shut down this known “drug abode”—or the other known drug operation in the immediate area. “You’d think it would be a pretty high priority,” she says.

At Henderson’s house on a recent Thursday morning, the front door is cracked open and there appears to be a bullet hole in a window next to the door. No one answers when this reporter knocks multiple times, nor did Henderson respond to a note left by the ashtray on his porch.

Police spokesperson Hawn didn’t respond to an inquiry about Henderson or the house, but says the department “actively patrols and engages the members of the Fifeville neighborhood on a continual basis.”

Edward Thomas, a longtime Fifeville resident with properties on Sixth and 6 ½ streets, says many residents are wary of talking to police, but he and Bargmann met with an officer in December to air their concerns after their houses were paintballed. He was left “flabbergasted” when the cop suggested they start a community watch.

“Community watch programs can be a resource multiplier and a system of support for the community and the CPD,” says Hawn.

Says Thomas, “I remember saying, half joking, ‘This week it’s paintballs, next week it’s going to be real bullets.’ Well, sure enough.”

About a week later, on December 29, Thomas woke up to the sound of gunshots on 6 ½ Street. Six days after that, around 6am, neighbor Stephanie Bottoms says Charlottesville police deployed another SWAT team to arrest the culprit.

As she watched from a window, she counted 30 officers, approximately 20 of whom carried what appeared to be automatic weapons. They broke down the front door of the house in the 300 block of 6 ½ Street. With two BearCats surrounding the home, they also busted through second-floor windows on its front and back sides, she says.

That day, Ernest Anderson was arrested and charged with shooting in a public place, a misdemeanor, and felony possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.

“Thank God they got the guy that shot up the neighborhood,” says Thomas, because that isn’t always the case. After the February 10 shooting, police say a gunman in a black ski mask got away.

Matt Simon, who lives on Dice Street where it intersects Sixth, recalls hearing “a ton of gunshots” back in December 2016, when two people were injured by gunfire. Two weeks later, he pulled a record out of the bin he keeps in his living room and found it broken. He realized one of the bullets had barreled through six of his discs.

“I think we warrant a patrol car coming through every now and again,” says Simon, who says things haven’t improved.

“Nothing happens until it gets really bad, and then all of a sudden, it’s like a war zone here,” says Thomas. “It’s the scariest it’s ever been.”

He says he saw a kid shot to death several years ago, which was undoubtedly frightening, but now with the somewhat regular militarized SWAT response, “it’s like we’re scared of the police.”

This type of showing from the cops “makes the neighborhood even less desirable and scares people away from buying and potentially leasing the vacant property,” Thomas adds. Three people interviewed for this story mention neighbors who have moved or started renting their properties because they don’t feel safe.

“There is definitely an overuse of SWAT teams and military vehicles [in town],” says local attorney Jeff Fogel, who’s been known to criticize the cops. “They are incredibly intimidating, not only to the occupants of the house being attacked, but the neighborhood as well. I suspect they are used for that very purpose.”

Says Hawn, “The Charlottesville Police Department takes concerns about safety in the Fifeville neighborhood and throughout the city seriously. While we understand the presence of a SWAT or tactical team may feel overwhelming, we are committed to providing a safe response to incidents for our officers, the public, and any persons involved.”

The city’s general upkeep of the neighborhood also leaves much to be desired, Thomas notes. On any given day, neighboring lots are overgrown, and beer bottles and other trash can be found strewn across the lawn of the historic Benjamin Tonsler House, which was built in 1879 for Tonsler, a prominent African American teacher and principal in town. His friend Booker T. Washington once stayed there, according to the city’s website.

There have also been cables lying on the ground since a storm last spring, complemented by a nearly-collapsed telephone poll in front of Thomas’ house. He says some crime in his area could be attributed to the broken windows theory, which suggests visible signs of disorder and crime can lead to more of it.

“I used to worry about the gentrification destroying the character of the neighborhood,” Thomas says. “Now, I kind of want the gentrification to happen, because I’d rather have gentrification than bullets and trash everywhere.”

 

Updated February 28 at 3:54pm with an addition comment from CPD spokesperson Tyler Hawn.

Categories
Living

Sharing activism with your kids

In 36 years of moving up and down the mid-Atlantic, I’ve never lived in a city that didn’t carry the weight of a racist past. As a teenager, I heard news of white supremacists marching through my small Maryland town. As a young adult in Greensboro, North Carolina, I marveled over stories about ’60s sit-ins, and watched as the old Woolworth building was transformed into the International Civil Rights Center & Museum. Now, in Charlottesville, parenthood has taken what I knew to be true about racism and oppression in America and propelled it to the forefront of my consciousness. As the mother of two black children, I can’t pretend I’m raising kids who aren’t targets of hate. It’s a feeling I often describe as terrifying, but experience every day as motivating.

Any parent will tell you that everything changes when a kid enters the picture, but some of us will also tell you that our need to stand up against bias and discrimination is intensified. I’ve always had an interest in activism, but there is an undeniable urgency that accompanies parenthood, a compelling need to affect change and leave the world a better place for my children. Part of ensuring my kids grow up in a world that is increasingly equitable is embracing my own power as a social justice advocate.

In late 2017, with the contributions of friends and other writers, I launched Hold the Line, a magazine that explores social justice and parenthood. HTL’s essays and articles—about race and culture, gender and feminism, being a queer parent, and parenting LGBTQ children—now have a modest but worldwide audience. We start meaningful conversations through sharing personal stories, and encourage readers to make social justice an integral part of their parenting journey. HTL it is my way of railing against the countless malignant marches of those who wish children like mine didn’t exist.

Worthy as it is, the magazine is fairly abstract to my sons, and I don’t believe I can claim to care about the world around me without raising kids who care as well. It feels crucial to make my activism clear to my kids, and help them get involved, too. I want them to know that though we may find ourselves without much, we always have something we can give. Our contributions to social equity may be in the form of our time, our friendship, or our ability to organize, but we are never without ways to help.

Together, my family toured The Haven, a multi-resource day shelter in downtown Charlottesville, to see how we could contribute. We started the Coffee + Eggs Drive as a way to help reduce The Haven’s largest kitchen costs. We collect eggs and coffee from individual donors or purchase them ourselves and periodically deliver them to The Haven. In the summer months, our donations boomed, and visiting The Haven became a normal part of my children’s daily routine. Even in the slower cold months, most mornings when my sons stumble downstairs and start foraging in our fridge for breakfast, they see dozens of fresh eggs that are awaiting a trip to The Haven. I hope my kids value that literal holding of space for the needs of marginalized members of our community. To me, the eggs are an unusual but powerful display of the small ways in which we can each make the world more equitable.

In addition to our partnership with The Haven, we recently started accepting additional coffee donations for PACEM as we learned its guests are given a warm beverage upon check-in. PACEM gives people who are experiencing homelessness overnight shelter in local churches during the coldest months of the year. As a new member of PACEM’s board, I hope that my children will take notice of my involvement with both organizations and one day mirror my commitment to community.

Also under the umbrella of HTL, my family and co-organizers host When We Gather, free public gatherings where we welcome friends old and new to join us in community-building and shared discussions about socio-political topics. With age-appropriate books and activities for the kids, and time for adults to chat, these events are a crucial part of our sustainable, visible activism. We all learn from each other as families in search of ways to effectively combat hate and discrimination in our city, state, and beyond.

Just as we question what meaningful steps we can take to help others, parents often wonder how and when to address tough topics with their kids. There’s no easy answer to this, but if we are effectively diversifying our lives, we are met with natural opportunities to tackle conversations surrounding social justice. Fill your child’s bookshelf with stories representing varying communities and identities. Respectfully attend events that inform your understanding of marginalized groups. Be age-appropriately honest when helping your children understand inequality, both historically and in the present. When I discuss racism, sexism, politics, and the like with my children, I meet them at their level and remember not to overload them with details. Talking to them is one aspect of ensuring their support of social justice, but talking is not enough. My intention is to surround them with a life representative of the values we hold close.

Inequities exist on a continuum; my adversities may not be rooted in the same tree as yours, but injustice is all fed from the same soil. I don’t know what it’s like to be homeless, but when I show my children that we house food for strangers and go out of our way to drop off donations, I am showing them that every member of our community matters. When I talk to my sons about HTL and the inclusive identities the magazine presents, I am telling them that our struggles intersect and are intertwined with the hardships of others. When we gather with friends at the library or Belmont Park and share stories and strategies for coping with the frequent unearthing of bigotry in America, my children are hearing that there are many ways one can be an activist. Above all, I hope my kids are learning an everlasting lesson: that there is no triumph in this world unless you are holding others up with you.