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New program guides homeless in starting their own businesses

Becky Blanton became invisible 10 years ago. She shared her story—how she went from working as a newspaper editor to living out of her van and eventually identifying as homeless—with her fellow entrepreneurs in a Community Investment Collaborative program in the fall of 2015.

CIC runs a 16-week program for local entrepreneurs in Charlottesville, as well as Fluvanna and Louisa counties. It caters to small businesses, determining whether each idea is viable and then educating participants on the ins and outs of running a business.

Toward the end of the class, Blanton was asked to talk about what motivated her to join. She said she had previously experienced homelessness, living in her 1975 Chevrolet van for a year and a half while in Colorado. Afterward, four people approached her and confided that they, too, had been homeless—and a few still were.

“I was surprised,” Blanton says. “It can happen to anyone. Sometimes it’s just for a week, sometimes it’s a couple of months until you find an apartment. You couch surf or you sleep in your car, or a hotel room if you can afford it.

“After people came up to me and told me they were homeless, that’s when I came up with the idea to write [The Homeless Entrepreneur],” Blanton says. “I thought, ‘If I could put what I just told the class into book form, maybe I could touch other people, too.’”

It took her just a few weeks to put the story together. She then reached out to her CIC instructor, David Durovy, to get his opinion.

“Becky sent me the PDF she had just written on the book and had asked me to go through it, make some comments and suggestions,” Durovy says. “I was very impressed with it. Not only was it good for people who are down and out and need help, or are broke or homeless, but I thought it had a lot of great wisdom in there for anybody. I said she should do a class for the homeless.”

The book followed Blanton’s experiences in Colorado more than a decade ago, in 2006. She was working seven days a week, 12 hours a day as an editor for a small newspaper in Craig, a town of about 9,500 people, less than an hour from the Wyoming border.

Her father died of a brain tumor a month prior to her start at the paper. Blanton says her dad’s biggest regret was that he worked all the time. So she quit her job, bought a van and became a freelance photographer.

“When that job ended, I tried to find another one and I couldn’t,” Blanton says. During this time, she packed up and moved to Denver. She landed a job at Camping World, making $11 an hour, but it wasn’t enough to afford an apartment.

“It’s like trying to find an apartment in Charlottesville on $9 an hour,” she says. “So I said, ‘Well, I’ll just live in the van until I find something.’ For me, it was like camping. I’d been an RV-er and camper most of my life. Living in a van was no big deal, but when you’re 50 years old and you’re female, people see that as ‘you’re homeless, poor you.’”

She wasn’t able to find an affordable place for another 18 months, despite having jobs.

Showering and parking were difficult, but she became creative. While working at a temp agency, she got off on the wrong floor and discovered the office building had showers in the bathrooms. So, she started using those. She also washed up in truck stop bathrooms, and took advantage of a local YMCA.

“When I got the Camping World job, they had a gym and a shower for their employees so I could go in the morning and before I left work at night,” she says. “If it was really hot, I could take a shower to cool off before I got in the van.”

Then, the challenge became where to park.

“You have to change where you park every night,” Blanton says, listing the various places she would hide the car. Parking lots, parking garages, Walmarts, rest areas, truck stops, even hospital parking lots housed her van. “Police officers get used to seeing a car in a certain place, so you have to change (it) up.”

Blanton says she was working in one of the richest suburbs of Denver—Rolls-Royce, Mercedes-Benz and Lexus dealerships were just down the street from the Highland Ranch Walmart where she parked her van.

She said although those months were challenging, things were okay until her coworkers at Camping World found out about her situation.

“[They] were calling me ‘that homeless woman,’” Blanton says. “I started to believe it. I mean, everything I know about psychology and social experiments—I shouldn’t have believed. …I should have just kept thinking ‘I’m an RV-er,’ but I started to believe it.”

The bullying from her coworkers, the names and the looks they would give her, began to take its toll.

“When you start to believe other people’s perceptions about who you are and what you are, you change,” Blanton says. “You become that. I started seeing myself as a homeless woman. I started avoiding people’s eyes.”

Blanton admits she was suicidal.

But one day a friend called her while she was sitting in the back of her van. The friend said the late Tim Russert, the longest-serving moderator on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” was talking about her on television. Before she was a newspaper editor she had written a story competing to be in his latest book. Out of 60,000 submissions, hers was chosen.

When the book, Wisdom of Our Fathers: Lessons and Letters from Daughters and Sons, was published, Blanton picked up a copy and read it. When she saw her name, it clicked—she was not a homeless woman, she was a writer.

“Then, I changed my own mindset,” Blanton says. “It was instantaneous.” She vowed that whenever she made it out of the rut, she would help people just like her.

Blanton and Durovy were planning to teach an entrepreneurship class after the CIC program, but it didn’t have enough students. So the pair decided to use Blanton’s book as a basis for the Suitcase to Briefcase program for homeless entrepreneurs in Charlottesville. The pilot project came together quickly, in a couple of weeks.

“You can literally change your mindset and change who you are, what you want and how you feel about yourself in an instant with the right input, and that’s what’s important to me,” she says. “It’s not that I’m going to teach people how to start a business. It’s that I’m touching them on a deeper level and I believe in them. People don’t believe in homeless people. They think they’re lazy and they’re crackheads. I want to be, to them, what that book was to me.”

Durovy says they had two major goals: Change the way homeless people see themselves and change the community’s perception of homeless people. The pair partnered with The Haven, a local homeless shelter, to bring their program to life.

The Suitcase to Briefcase pilot program, led by Becky Blanton, was held at The Haven, a local homeless shelter. Photo by Keith Alan Sprouse
The Suitcase to Briefcase pilot program, led by Becky Blanton, was held at The Haven, a local homeless shelter. Photo by Keith Alan Sprouse

Samantha Wood is a housing stabilization case manager for The Haven. She worked closely with Suitcase to Briefcase, and helped recruit participants.

“Their model and mission fit with our model and mission,” Wood says. “We put the word out. I reached out to some of my clients, other staff reached out to people they know.”

While the program ran independently, Wood says The Haven supported it through each step. It provided a home for participants to meet in, as well as let them use resources like computers at the shelter. The program’s orientation was held in the sanctuary room, and open to anyone who was interested. The rest of the classes were held in the lunchroom.

Durovy says the first session was the most nerve-racking. “I was hoping at least one person would come, and we had about 10 people show up. Of that group, all but three joined the class, and right off the bat my expectations were exceeded.”

The outline of the class was simple, Durovy says. It was loosely based on Blanton’s book, but they followed some of the ideas that CIC uses. They planned field trips and had local community members come in and speak.

“Mostly, we were trying to create a foundation so we could get some of the basic mindset in place, and an understanding of what they are getting into,” Durovy says. “[Focusing on] more of the soft skills, which are working on business ideas, learning their pitch.”

During the course of the eight weeks, Suitcase to Briefcase connected with various organizations and businesses in the community. Nursing students from the University of Virginia came every week to take basic health stats. And during field trips the group visited a local glassmaker, as well as the i.Lab incubator at UVA’s Darden School of Business, among other places.

“We went to the i.Lab coffee espresso event one morning, which is filled with professors and entrepreneurs and students,” Durovy says. “To have us walk in there was just a treat. Being able to take these folks places that normally they would be shunned, but all of a sudden they were starting to appear places and be recognized and addressed by people with a whole different level of respect.”

Originally they wanted the class to be three hours long, but there were some concerns about keeping people’s attention for that long. But they quickly discovered two hours wasn’t enough. Once the conversations got going, participants would hang around afterward talking.

“At first, folks were just getting used to the class, their classmates, Becky and David,” Wood says. She sat in on about half of the courses during the eight-week program. “Sometimes with our folks, they’ve been burnt so many times, it may take them a little bit to gain trust. They can be a little skeptical. It took time to warm up, then it started to feel like a cohesive group, very supportive of each other.”

All of the topics covered were focused around the basics of business. A couple classes dealt with money and finance. Some of the participants’ ideas included an online gaming website, a T-shirt business and an urban fashion line.

“We emphasize that they are responsible for themselves,” Blanton says. “They can make poor choices or wise choices. We’re there, not to rescue them, but for advice. We’re mentors, not social workers.”

Durovy says the passion and commitment of the entrepreneurs inspired him. “Right up to graduation and continuing on—the desire to do something with their lives was evident, obvious and they were motivated.”

Success story

The first time Robin Houser was homeless was as a 29-year-old college student in Alabama in 1986. After getting her GED, she headed south from her parents’ home in Stafford County, and enrolled at Calhoun Community College with funds she received from the Department for Aging and Rehabilitative Services. She worked on the weekends as a certified nursing assistant for hospice patients, but found that the money she made was not enough to pay for housing, so she slept in her car. Eventually, she also began taking classes at Athens State University and qualified to live in a dorm room, but her college experience wasn’t all positive. She discovered that she had severe learning disabilities—which had gone previously undetected in high school—and after five quarters she had a C+ average. After needing to go back to work full-time, she quit taking classes and moved north, back to her parents’ home, and worked as a home health nurse.

Fast forward a couple decades, and Houser again found herself living in her car—this time a van, from which she had removed the seats to allow herself more room. She had been living in Section 8 housing in Charlottesville, and had applied for a housing transfer to Waynesboro. She thought the process would take 30 days or less, but found herself without a home and nowhere to go. She would park her van at various places: a campsite in Waynesboro, Walmart parking lots in Charlottesville, Ruckersville and Waynesboro. She moved around because she didn’t feel safe staying in one place. It was wintertime, and she kept warm by covering herself with several blankets. Soup kitchens became a source for food.

Last November, two years after her five-month homeless stint, she was back at the First Baptist Church which runs a soup kitchen, not out of necessity but out of fellowship. She had loved listening to the sermons and music and talking with other people. It was during this visit that a church staffer told her about the Suitcase to Briefcase program, and that she thought Houser would be a great candidate for it. Although the class had been in session for a couple of weeks, and although she lived in Waynesboro at the time, Houser decided to join.

The best part of the program, she said, was the guest speakers. She especially remembers Paul Yates, Gordonsville branch manager of Woodforest National Bank (which also has branch locations in area Walmarts), who opened a checking and savings account for every program participant—the checking accounts each had $9.50, and the savings accounts had $10. Beyond the money, Houser appreciated Yates’ tips on how to manage money, and even how to use the accounts. Walmart also gave each attendee a gift card with $10. Houser used hers to put gas in her car so she could keep attending the sessions.

Houser plans to open her own lawn care business. But first she needs seed money for items such as a hitch for her car, a trailer to house her equipment and tools like a lawn mower. To get the money, she wants to make and sell wooden boxes for kindling. She’s bought the boards and nails, but is now looking at ways to trade items or work for tools—such as an electric saw—to make the boxes.

Houser looks at her time being homeless not as something to pity her for, but something that has made her stronger. She uses the analogy of weathering a storm, and how you can be changed by the experience for having endured it. She says she has met homeless people throughout her life who see themselves as victims, and it’s those people who are difficult to help, because they are not actively doing anything to get out of their situation. She says action is paramount—which is why she is confident she’ll have her lawn care business operational by the spring. She works every day at getting what she needs to move forward, she says.

“It will happen,” she says. “There is no shame in being homeless; the shame is staying there.”

Continuing education

Blanton says the graduation ceremony in December was bittersweet. The participants were proud of themselves but were sad to see the course come to an end. But she says she and Durovy are committed to the group for the next year. Everyone is still active in developing his or her business—Blanton says she receives calls, texts or e-mails almost every day. They let her know how they are doing, or how the business is going—just recently someone reached out with questions about a potential logo.

Each received a special gift when the class ended.

“They don’t have anywhere to hang a certificate, so we created these 3-by-4-inch certificates with inspirational sayings on the back and a certificate of completion on the front,” Blanton says. “We laminated them and three-hole punched them so they could hang them from their backpacks.”

Blanton and Durovy have also learned a lot, and plan to make the course a little different the next time around.

“We’re trying to get a spot on the Downtown Mall,” Blanton says, “where our entrepreneurs can sell their wares. Instead of all these homeless people sitting around with cardboard, you can go to a stand and say, ‘Tell me your story,’ and you can buy their products.”

This experience has also taught the pair that the program needs to be longer. The idea is to extend it to an eight-week boot camp, followed by a six- to 12-month follow-up program. Blanton says approximately 30 people have said they are interested in a future program, and Wood says she has been approached by almost a dozen people at The Haven for more information.

Blanton says there’s no concrete start date for the next program. She and Durovy are still waiting on funding, and they both have full-time jobs. Blanton is a ghostwriter and Durovy is president and partner of the Post Institute.

Right now, Suitcase to Briefcase has a number of sponsors, such as Best Western Hotels and Dollar Shave Club, Blanton says. They’ve been in talks with Piedmont Virginia Community College about scholarships and free classes for course participants. And there is talk of expanding the program to different cities.

“Being homeless is not who you are, it’s where you are,” Blanton says. “You are who you think you are, and you can do anything you put your mind to.”

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Safe and sound: New locks, ID scanners at county schools

Walking into an Albemarle County school, a parent may notice new security measures. Although some are subtle, others, like a new identification scanning system, are hard to miss. In an era in which deranged gunmen have been known to target school children, local administrators say they are working to make sure students and teachers are as safe as possible.

In early September, Governor Terry McAuliffe awarded $6 million in school security equipment grants to schools across the commonwealth, and Albemarle County received $83,914. The funds will go to upgrading security cameras at the three high schools—Albemarle, Western Albemarle and Monticello—and to making improvements to classroom doors at Brownsville, Hollymead, Stony Point and Woodbrook elementary schools, according to county schools spokesman Phil Giaramita.

“In the elementary schools, we are expanding a program that began last year—improving locks on classroom doors and installing protective film on classroom door windows,” Giaramita says in an e-mail. “Both of these measures increase the difficulty of an intruder being able to enter a classroom.”

Lindsay Snoddy, assistant director of building services for environmental, health and safety for the school district, says the button locks are an extra protection for teachers or administrators.

“It makes it easier for teachers to lock down, if they are in that situation,” she explains. “It just takes out that one extra step of needing to know where your key is and having it on your person.”

The emphasis on efficiency and a quick response is central to this new technology shift, and Snoddy says the new security measures were carefully selected. The district keeps an eye on what area schools are doing, and it runs a pilot program before instituting a new initiative district-wide.

One new security measure, the identification-scanning system, is becoming operational at all schools, but is not part of the state funding, Giaramita says.

The system asks visitors to provide a government-issued identification. Then their name is run through the sexual offenders database to make sure the visitor isn’t prohibited from entering the school.

Crystal Myers has children who attend an elementary school in the district. She says she is onboard with all the changes being implemented, and she believes the ID scanning is beneficial.

“I think it’s important that the school systems remain up to date with safety,” Myers says. “You want to know who is sitting next to your child at lunch.”

Others, such as former school board member Gary Grant, have raised questions about the program and how undocumented parents—who may be in the country illegally—will be able to gain access to schools.

Snoddy says there are different ways a parent can enter, such as with a Social Security card or military or work ID. She also says if the visitor is known to the office staff and can answer a series of questions about the child, then access will be granted.

In all, the school district says it has gotten positive feedback about the new safety measures. Snoddy says the district has received this type of state funding for the past four years and has continued to improve its safety system.

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House calls: Finding shelter for local homeless vets

It’s been almost one year since Governor Terry McAuliffe announced that Virginia was the first state in the U.S. to functionally end homelessness among veterans—and while it may not seem that way when residents drive through Charlottesville and see people begging, evolving housing programs are having positive effects on the city and surrounding counties.

Partnerships between Veterans Affairs medical centers, programs that support veterans families and local homeless organizations such as The Haven continue to piece together a complex, and often sensitive, puzzle.

Functionally ending homelessness does not mean it is eradicated. It means programs are in place to ensure a veteran’s experience with homelessness now—or in the future—will be “rare, brief and non-recurring,” according to McAuliffe. Rapid Re-Housing and Homelessness Prevention are two examples of programs available.

The Haven is often considered the homeless point of entry in Charlottesville and its five surrounding counties: Greene, Nelson, Fluvanna, Louisa and Albemarle.

Situated in a former multi-story church donated by Evan Almighty director and UVA alum Tom Shadyac on the corner of East Market and First Street North, The Haven has been addressing the needs of the area’s homeless community since opening its doors in 2010.

Caleb Fox, veterans case manager for The Haven, says the change towards housing programs has been monumental.

“The Rapid Re-Housing program is based on this notion of housing first,” says Fox. “In the last three years the approach to homelessness has really shifted on its head. It used to be getting folks into a shelter, addressing their physical and mental health, substance abuse, income issues and then getting them into a house. Now it’s get them into housing and then working on the other things through individual case management.”

Former Charlottesville mayor Dave Norris is another influential figure in the fight against chronic homelessness. During his time in office from 2008 to 2011, he was instrumental in getting The Crossings—a permanent supportive housing community for formerly homeless people—funded, developed and officially launched. He’s witnessed firsthand the changes to the system.

“There’s been this real focus nationally of addressing homelessness,” Norris says. “The consensus was that we were doing a decent job of putting a Band-Aid on homelessness, but not doing a very good job of actually ending it.”

He attributes a lot of the progress in reducing veteran homelessness to the Rapid Re-Housing thrust. “We saw a considerable increase in both state and federal resources that funneled through organizations such as The Haven and others,” says Norris.

The increased funding for these programs is based on statistical data, says Fox. Evidence suggests that getting someone off the street and into a stable situation generates better outcomes—and there are only slight differences between the programs for vets and non-vets.

The VA-funded Rapid Re-Housing program is more time-limited, providing a maximum of nine months of rental assistance, compared with two years for non-veterans, says Fox.

Since 2015, Fox says 54 veterans from the Charlottesville area have been enrolled in vet programs. He estimates the local homeless population at 185 to 220 people, which means about a quarter of them are veterans. Of the 54 veterans, 13 were enrolled in the Supportive Service for Veterans Families Homeless Prevention Program, which is intended for people who are not homeless but are imminently at risk, and the remaining 41 vets were enrolled in the SSVF Rapid Re-Housing program.

Fox says the support service programs spent approximately $79,000 to assist 24 veterans in these two programs with security deposits, rental assistance, utilities and deposits, transportation costs and moving expenses.

For the 30 remaining veterans, some decided to leave the area. Others declined services. Fox says he continues to work with the veterans who have not yet been housed to address any barriers they might have, including criminal background or credit issues.

“The goal the VA has set is that it’s a handup, and not a handout,” Fox says. “We send veterans on their way once they are in a stabilized situation, and ready to pay their own housing costs.”

While the need and desire for more funding are ever-present worries, he credits the increased focus on veterans over the past several years for some of the positive changes across the nation.

“Officials have spent a lot of money since the start of the Obama administration to address veteran homelessness, and it’s working,” says Fox.

Norris concurs that the cooperation across party lines really propelled the fight into the national spotlight. Getting vets into homes was a rallying point in Washington, and beyond.

“The least we can do is make sure our men and women who served this country in uniform never find themselves out on the streets,” Norris says. “In a city like this, in a state like this… we are showing that we can honor that commitment.”

 

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Bear necessities: Sightings in Shenandoah National Park up this year

Although increased bear sightings this year in Shenandoah National Park are causing some visitors to worry, park officials are offering insight into why that’s happening, as the height of black bear activity winds down during the late summer months.

Rolf Gubler, a wildlife biologist at the SNP, estimates there have been between 30 and 60 incidents involving bears this spring and summer, about twice as many as normal, all varied in nature and severity.

“It could be anything from a food incident or a persistent bear that follows a hiker or approaches too closely or the dog-bear incident in the Dickey Ridge area,” Rolf says.

Rolf is referring to an encounter in early August that left one dog dead on Snead Farm Fire Road near the Dickey Ridge Visitor Center. According to a press release, a hiker was walking with two dogs on retractable leashes when the three encountered a mother bear and cubs. When confronted by the bear, the hiker ran. That’s when, according to the release, the mother bear attacked the trailing dog, which later died of its injuries.

The Snead Farm Fire Road and Loop Trail were closed to visitors for two weeks as park staff kept an eye on the area. While hikers can now access those trails, dogs are still not allowed.

Gubler estimates between 300 and 600 bears roam the park during the year. While bear attacks might be rare, encounters do happen. Gubler has been monitoring some of the high-profile confrontations.

“The reasons we’ve been seeing so many bear encounters is a delayed and reduced soft mass crop,” Gubler says. He explains that food, like blackberries and wineberries, didn’t bloom until later. Bears eat these berries during late spring and summer then transition into a more protein-rich diet during fall, feeding off things such as hickory nuts, acorns, apples and corn.

“Bears are opportunists—that’s why they push into picnic areas. They have to be on the move to find food,” Gubler says.

It’s during these wanderings when bears are more likely to be hit by cars on Skyline Drive, get into trash or encounter hikers.

Gubler says the Rocky Mountain Wildfire, which ravaged more than 10,000 acres of the park earlier this year, is also a factor in higher bear sightings. Officials believe some bears traveled between 10 and 15 miles outside the burned area in search of food.

He connects this movement to some of the encounters in the Loft Mountain area. He says an experienced backcountry hiker reported an unusually assertive bear in the South District. The hiker told officials a bear was not responsive to normal efforts to scare it away, and only moved after being poked by hiking poles.

But, hikers can breathe a sigh of relief. Active bear months are officially winding down, and although bears don’t go into hibernation during the cold months, they do enter a “winter lethargy” in late November as they increase their diets.

If you do see a bear, the best tactic is to remain calm. Park officials stress you should back away slowly—running can trigger the animal’s prey response. Gubler suggests carrying portable air horns, walking sticks, trekking poles or bear spray for protection.

And don’t misinterpret a bear’s signals. Officials say that when a bear stands on its hind legs or moves closer, it isn’t usually threatening behavior. The animal may be curious and trying to get a better view, or smelling the air.

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Pay attention: Staying safe on the Rivanna Trail

By Rebecca Bowyer

Within the last six months, there have been three reported cases of sexual assault along the Rivanna Trail in Charlottesville. The attacks have led some to wonder—just how safe is it to run, walk or hike the 20-mile trail?

Although normally rare, attacks along some portions of the trail aren’t unheard of. Since 2011 there have been 10 reported criminal incidents, according to Charlottesville Police Department spokesman Steve Upman.

Upman says 20-year-old Brien Gray-Anderson, of Charlottesville, is facing charges in connection with the three incidents that happened between March and May. That includes two misdemeanor sexual battery charges and a felony charge of attempted sexual assault.

Between 2011 and 2015, seven incidents were reported along the trail. Five were physical assaults and two were sexual assaults.

Upman says the first sexual assault involved a woman being attacked and raped by two male strangers. The second case was a forcible fondling—a man attacked his girlfriend.

Charlottesville police say they have worked actively to bring an end to each case.

“Of the 10 total incidents between 2011 and 2016, seven resulted in an arrest being made while the remaining three were cleared, due to the victims declining to prosecute,” Upman says.

Three of the attacks happened on the trail in the area near the 1400/1500 block of East High Street, another three were near the 1100 block of River Road, one happened near Riverview Park and an additional three at Jordan Park. Upman says there is not enough information to assume a trend about where attacks are happening.

Virginia Trower, 29, and Lauren Connor, 31, have both lived in the Charlottesville area for the past several years. The pair say they run together at Riverview Park with their infant children about once a week. The women don’t often run by themselves, but when they do, they are more aware of their surroundings.

“When I learned there was an incident here (at Riverview Park), I was definitely a little wary when I was by myself,” Connor says, looking around at the trails, which are still heavily shadowed around sunrise. “I don’t usually go to the other side of Route 250.”

While the trail doesn’t have a dedicated officer, Upman says during the summer months an officer who is normally assigned to Charlottesville High patrols the trail from Riverview Park up to Free Bridge. Trower says she has seen officers in years past, and was once stopped on the trail by one.

“[The officer] made me stop running, take my earphones out and told me they were a bad idea—it was this big speech on safety,” she says. “He was saying, ‘Someone could come up behind you, and you wouldn’t even hear them, you wouldn’t even know.’ He said the same thing to every woman that was running.”

Along with increased patrols, the police department advises people to bring a partner to the trails. If someone does go by himself or herself, Upman recommends going during daylight hours, having a cell phone handy and staying on parts of the trail where you are visible to others.

Despite some safety warnings, many are choosing to remain positive and take advantage of the trail. Kaitlynn Gilmore, 22, of Orange, doesn’t live in the area, but works in Charlottesville. While she isn’t a park regular, she says the recent attacks don’t change her view of the Rivanna Trail.

“It’s nice that there’s this little patch of green, where I can go and clear my mind during my break,” Gilmore says. “It’s worth it.”

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Wildfire aftermath: Shenandoah’s path to rehabilitation

By Rebecca Bowyer

When a visitor journeys up Skyline Drive and looks out over the portion of Shenandoah National Park recently ravaged by wildfire, black scars, charred trees and the smell of soot linger—but, almost unexpectedly, a majority of the area is green.

The Rocky Mountain wildfire was first reported to park officials on April 16. Windy and dry conditions contributed to its massive size; it burned 10,326 acres before being contained. With the flames officially out, the focus turns to rehabilitation and the threat of invasive species.

Stephen Paull is a biological science technician at the park who served as one of several resource advisers during the fire to make sure the suppression efforts didn’t do more harm than good. Rehabilitation began while firefighting crews were still at the park.

“When [the fire] cooled down, we were able to start rehabbing fire lines,” the man-made gaps in the vegetation dug during efforts to stop the flames, says Paull. “That involved pulling soil back into those areas and pulling vegetation back across the lines to try and conceal them so that they didn’t look like trails. We were able to take advantage of the labor on hand.”

While dozens of trails were closed to visitors during the fire, all have since reopened with no restrictions. This does not mean the work is finished. In fact, Paull anticipates the rebuilding process will take three or four years.

“We had about 23 miles of trails that were in that burned area, so we have crews that are currently evaluating them to determine what kind of work is required,” he says. “We know there are some areas where so much of the soil was burned off that we are worried about erosion. Those crews will be going in and making repairs now.”

Paull expects repairs to be completed by the end of 2016. “Going forward, we have applied for funding to do some additional work in future years,” he says, and the park is seeking $58,000 in federal funds.

Shenandoah National Park spokesperson Claire Comer estimates suppression efforts cost just over $4 million to bring firefighters and air support to the park.

“It was an intimidating sight for our neighbors,” she says. “And it was unusual because there were a lot of flames—normally fires burn low. The view from Route 340, which was west of the fire, was incredible. It almost looked liked a superhighway with the number of jam-packed cars trying to get a look at the flames.”

The concern turns now to the invasive plants and insects that could take advantage of the destruction left behind. Existing populations of tree of heaven, aka ailanthus, princess tree and oriental bittersweet love disturbances such as wildfires, says Paull. Part of the potential funding would go toward monitoring their growth.

“Crews for the next three years will perform seek-and-destroy missions,” he explains. “Basically going after specific plants and either hand pulling them or using a herbicide to remove them.”

Money would also go toward tracking the condition of native Eastern hemlock populations. The evergreens were already under attack in the forest by a sap-sucking insect that originated in Asia, and Paull worries hemlocks were further weakened by flames. Infested trees may be treated with an insecticide to help them survive.

Both Comer and Paull echo the same point —despite being daunting to control, fire can have advantageous effects on forest health.

“From an ecological standpoint, a lot of that area is going to benefit from the fire,” Paull says of the land surrounding Rocky Mountain. “There is the concern of hemlocks and the exotic plants, but most of the vegetation will be fine. It’s still alive.”

Some plants need fire to survive. The table mountain pine has cones that open to release seeds when heated. Fire also produces more nutrient rich soil, which benefits all species. 

Visitors who walk the trails in the burned area under the trees see a patchwork of colors. Ferns and wildflowers are sprouting from the blackened earth. Charred limbs remain in some spots, but the signs of rebuilding are there.

“Even though you may burn a tree to the ground—really all you’ve done is top-killed it,” Paull says. “The roots are still alive, and it will resprout.”

FAST FACTS:

  • The Rocky Mountain wildfire burned 10,326 acres
  • Its location was northeast of Grottoes in Rockingham County
  • The fire was declared 100 percent contained on April 29
  • Suppression efforts cost $4.2 million
  • It was the second-largest fire in park history
  • 350 firefighters and support personnel arrived to assist from 33 states