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Jonas in Charlottesville

Winter storm Jonas descended upon the area last week, blanketing Charlottesville in 15.5 inches of snow, according to weather.com. Here are some other numbers to know:

About 63 power outages in Albemarle County

5 calls to Charlottesville Police Department for car accidents

3 calls to CPD for disabled vehicles

41 calls to CPD for hazards, namely calls about disabled vehicles in the roadway

3 cars towed for road hazards in Charlottesville

31 cars towed from emergency snow routes in Charlottesville

0 fatalities in Charlottesville and Albemarle

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Streets closed due to roof collapse

Around 2pm Monday, the Charlottesville Fire Department responded to a call about a possible roof collapse at 206 W. Market St—the site of a proposed private club.

Battalion Chief Richard Jones says the department arrived, checked the power inside the building and sent officials from Neighborhood Development Services up in the fire truck’s bucket lift to view the top of the building and evaluate whether or not the roof will collapse.

NDS will take over from there, with the help of the building contractor, according to Jones. But to an excited young boy who stopped to see the fire truck in action, he didn’t mince words.

“We’re going to go up there on top of that building and make sure it doesn’t fall down,” he said.

Josh Rogers and his business partners talked to C-VILLE about the club, Common House, earlier this month.

“The roof is completely caved in now,” Rogers says, adding that he and his team are currently meeting to discuss possible remedies. His focus is to prevent any further damage and to make sure surrounding people and businesses are protected, but in light of things, he says, “We’re obviously going to move forward after this setback.”

Charlottesville police are currently directing traffic around what the city has called an “unstable structure” and have closed Market Street from Old Preston to First Street. Second Street is being closed from High Street to Water Street.

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Little information released about UVA student arrested in North Korea

A University of Virginia student is currently detained in North Korea for allegedly committing a “hostile act” against the country.

Otto Franklin Warmbier, a third-year commerce student, Echols scholar and Theta Chi fraternity brother, was visiting North Korea with the Chinese travel agency Young Pioneer Tours, which markets itself as providing “budget tours to destinations your mother would rather you stayed away from.”

The agency did not respond to an inquiry, but confirmed on its blog January 22 that one of its clients is being detained in Pyongyang. Young Pioneer Tours also said the agency has been in contact with the Swedish Embassy, which acts as the protecting interest for U.S. citizens and is working with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to address the case.

The U.S. Department of State has confirmed that it will work with the Swedish Embassy to ensure the student’s welfare.

The Washington Post reported Warmbier was detained January 2 at a Pyongyang airport as he was leaving North Korea after a five-day New Year’s Eve trip. Spokesperson Anthony deBrun says UVA “has been in touch with Otto Warmbier’s family and will have no additional comment at this time.”

A statement from the Korean Central News Agency, released January 22, says Warmbier “was arrested while perpetrating a hostile act” against the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea “after entering it under the guise of tourist for the purpose of bringing down the foundation of its single-minded unity at the tacit connivance of the U.S. government and under its manipulation,” but did not release any specifics.

Several of Warmbier’s family and friends did not immediately respond to an interview request.

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Cow knob salamander reroutes Atlantic Coast Pipeline

 

The Atlantic Coast Pipeline’s proposed route through the George Washington and Monongahela national forests has been scrapped—a very big deal for the future of the pipeline, according to opponents—and Dominion must now begin looking for an alternate.

The U.S. Forest Service rejected the ACP’s application for a special use permit January 21, requiring a new path or system alternatives to the 550-mile natural gas pipeline, which would run through West Virginia, Virginia and North Carolina. Almost 50 miles of the previously proposed route cut through two national forests.

Citing “highly sensitive resources” such as West Virginia northern flying squirrels, red spruce ecosystem restoration areas and Cheat Mountain and cow knob salamanders, the U.S. Forest Service wrote in its denial that the new path must avoid assets with “such irreplaceable character.”

Dominion has already proposed several pipeline routes, all of which have been denied. Opponents say the latest denial is likely to set the project back even further.

“We’re thrilled the forest service followed through on its duty to protect the forests,” says Ben Luckett, attorney with Appalachian Mountain Advocates in a release. “Dominion’s arrogance in trying to force its project into an entirely inappropriate area is shocking.”

Dominion spokesperson Jim Norvelle says the ACP will continue to work with the forest service.

“Today’s letter is part of the permitting process as we work cooperatively to find the best route with the least impact,” he says. “We appreciate the USFS’s examination of this option and remain confident we will find an acceptable route.”

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Dominion to dump in Virginia rivers

The State Water Control Board officially approved Dominion’s permit to dump wastewater into two Virginia rivers January 14.

The wastewater will come from coal ash pits at the Bremo Power Station on the James River and the Possum Point plant on the Potomac River. The board took two separate votes, tallying 5-1 for each permit.

In a previous C-VILLE report about the Bremo Power Station in Fluvanna County, Dominion spokesperson Dan Genest said as soon as the permit was issued, the company would start building two treatment facilities on the property. All wastewater will be treated before it’s discharged, he said.

The Department of Environmental Quality had previously issued the permit, but allowed public comment until December 14.

“We are disappointed that the board voted to approve a lax permit that fails to protect the health of the James River,” says Brad McLane, a senior attorney at the Southern Environmental Law Center in Charlottesville. “We are seriously considering an appeal of the permit.”

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Local haunt: Protected farm has paranormal history

A 324-acre historic farm in Albemarle County will be adopted into the county’s Acquisition of Conservation Easements program, which will permanently protect the land from any future development. But perhaps a bulldozer isn’t the only entity the property needs protection from.

The Twisted Paranormal Society, a Virginia-based ghost hunting group, took two trips to Mount Eagle Farm in 2014, at the request of a current owner, Debbie Kavanaugh. In case files on the TPS website, the group says owners of the 12-room plantation home have experienced “many unexplainable occurrences of activity,” including cabinet doors knocking in the kitchen, sounds of footsteps coming from the second floor and reported sightings of apparitions, with the most notable evidence being the report of an owner waking up to a man standing over a baby’s crib in the room. When he approached the figure, it allegedly vanished.

The main dwelling at Mount Eagle was built in 1850, according to the National Register of Historic Places, and though many families have come and gone, it was once inhabited by Charles L. Lewis and his wife, Lucy Jefferson—Thomas Jefferson’s sister. The house has been vacant for several years.

Lyle Lotts, a TPS member who edits the footage captured by the team, says Mount Eagle Farm will be featured on episode four of “The Twisted Realm,” a DVD series that will debut in the next couple of weeks.

On the first trip to Mount Eagle, investigators heard a loud moan coming from somewhere inside the house, and during the second investigation, “a lot of stuff happened on the second floor and the basement,” Lotts says. Aside from that, he’s not giving away any spoilers.

Carol Sweeney, a current owner of the property, says she’s felt the presence of a spirit in her home.

“I always just feel something,” she says.

Sweeney says she’s “very, very pleased” with the way ACE coordinator Ches Goodall handled the acquisition. “Not that I’m against development,” she says. “I just feel like once a farm is gone, it’s gone forever.”

Goodall says Mount Eagle is one of the best easement acquisitions the county has ever made—and that paranormal history is not considered when selecting a property to enroll in the ACE program.

“I guess I heard Mrs. Sweeney joke about the ghost in the old house,” says Goodall. “But having ghosts in haunted houses is not one of the criteria we use to rank and score a property for conservation value.”

The property at Mount Eagle Farm was the second-highest scoring applicant in the program’s history with 72 points. Any property that scores at least 20 points is eligible for consideration.

Mount Eagle was particularly attractive to the ACE program because 6,900 feet of the property lines the Rivanna River, 9,000 feet adjoins other easements, 1,000 feet fronts Route 53, which is a major entrance corridor, and it has about 250 acres of fertile bottomland, according to a county release.

The Board of Supervisors established the ACE program in 2000 in response to growth and urbanization. With the addition of Mount Eagle Farm, the program has protected almost 9,000 acres of land.

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Cast your vote for Tom Sox mascot

The Charlottesville Tom Sox, a team in the Valley Baseball League, wants fans to cast their vote for the team’s new mascot.

The mascot options, which were also suggested by fans, include the Declaration of Independence, a mockingbird, a prairie dog, a tomcat and a sock monkey.

A Declaration of Independence mascot would be called Indy and would look like the bill from the “Schoolhouse Rock!” cartoon, and the tomcat would be a “cougar-like cat dressed up like Thomas Jefferson in colonial outfits,” according to the team’s website.

Fans can go to the Tom Sox website to cast their vote and view the description of each mascot. The voting ends January 22.

The Tom Sox home field is the C-VILLE Weekly Ballpark at Charlottesville High School.

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Running community remembers Running Man

Members of Charlottesville’s running community have come together to create a tribute to Philip Weber III, the jogger known as “Running Man” who was hit and killed on Ivy Road December 29.

Mark Lorenzoni, owner of the Ragged Mountain Running Shop, says the collection of running shoes represents more than just a sport.

“It represents the number of people that were touched by him,” he says. “There’s hardly any two that are the same.”

The colors of the shoes, he says, represent the rainbow of runners in the community—from fast, to slow, to marathoners, to ultrarunners, to weekend warriors.

After a Sunday morning group run on January 3, Lorenzoni says he and a group of athletes drove by the tribute to hang their own shoes. At that time, only about 20 pairs were strung on the tribute. Now, he says the number has at least tripled.

He says each pair of old shoes also represents the number of miles Running Man ran.

“They’re all worn out,” he says, “and that’s appropriate because each pair represents maybe four or five hundred miles.”

Lorenzoni says most pairs of shoes aren’t actually tied to the structure.

“Most are hanging onto one another, suspended by the weight of the other shoes,” he says. “That’s a sign of community right there.”

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UVA Associate Dean Nicole Eramo seeks Jackie’s text messages

The University of Virginia dean suing Rolling Stone for more than $7.5 million after a now-discredited story about a university gang rape at a fraternity house, which she said painted her as the “chief villain” in the case, is asking for access to the alleged rape victim’s text messages and other communications.

Associate Dean Nicole Eramo’s legal team filed documents January 6 that say Jackie, the alleged victim in the 2012 story titled “A Rape on Campus,” should not be protected from having to reveal her texts because there’s no evidence that a rape actually took place.

“What Jackie is refusing to produce is not evidence of a sexual assault, but evidence that she lied,” Eramo’s lawyers wrote in a submitted document, the Richmond Times-Dispatch reported.

The associate dean’s attorneys call Jackie a “serial liar” in the filings and seek documents related to Haven Monahan, the student Jackie says she was on a date with the night of the alleged rape and whom officials later learned was never a student at UVA. A person by the name of Haven Monahan has never been found or linked to the case.

A January 8 Washington Post article, “‘Catfishing’ over love interest might have spurred U-Va. gang-rape debacle,” suggests that Jackie created Monahan, a fake suitor, to spark love between herself and fellow university student Ryan Duffin. She encouraged Duffin to text Monahan, whom she said was in her chemistry class, and Duffin told the Post that Monahan seemed “infatuated” with Jackie. In a later investigation, photos of Monahan, which he purportedly sent to Duffin, were determined to be photos of a person from Jackie’s high school, who was not Monahan.

Monahan once told Duffin in a text message that he should have more sympathy for Jackie because she had a terminal illness. Duffin says he asked Jackie about the illness and she confirmed to him that she was dying.

Jackie has not been named as the defendant in any of the three lawsuits the retracted story has spawned. Along with Eramo’s suit, one has been filed by the UVA chapter of Phi Kappa Psi, where the rape allegedly took place, and by a smaller group of men from the fraternity who say they were alluded to in the story.

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Doggy dilemma: What effect does pet waste have at Ragged Mountain?

Pets may be strictly prohibited at Ragged Mountain Natural Area, but some say wanton disregard of the rules could cause serious health effects for those in Charlottesville and Albemarle County.

Albemarle resident Marlene Condon says she sees several dogs each time she visits Ragged Mountain, with about 50 percent of them not being held on a leash. To Condon, what’s more important, she says, is what those four-legged friends leave behind after their day at the nature area.

“A lot of people think that it’s okay to leave behind their dog droppings because they don’t understand the difference between dog scat and wildlife scat,” she says. Simply put, while animals in the wild aren’t medicated, pets can be—and they pass that medication through their urine and stool.

“There is certainly concern about pharmaceutical compounds making their way into the environment,” says Dr. Mike Fietz, a veterinarian at Georgetown Veterinary Hospital. “Doctors worry about it all the time with the rise of antibiotic resistance.” The same goes for household pets, he says.

According to Fietz, passing medication through urine may be the largest threat because some medications are eliminated that way. Pet owners are able to pick up stool droppings, but Condon says, in her experience, a lot of dog walkers don’t.

City and county water is stored in a 1.8-mile watershed at Ragged Mountain. Lifting the prohibition on recreational use at the park was heavily debated in October and then-City Councilor Dede Smith said one of her main apprehensions to lifting the ban was preserving drinking water in the reservoir. In a previous C-VILLE report, Smith said some areas should not only be banned to pets and bikers, but to hikers, too.

Tom Frederick, director of the Rivanna Water and Sewer Authority, says he does not oppose dogs being allowed at the park, but hopes pet owners will be responsible and clean up after their pets. If they don’t, though, he says people who drink the water RWSA stores at Ragged Mountain still have no need to worry.

To ensure clean water, RWSA uses a multiple-barrier approach beginning with the natural barrier of the forest floor, which filters water through underbrush, plants and trees. The reservoir itself provides some purification through sunlight and the settling of water. When water is transferred to the treatment facility, professionals treat the water through several processes including advanced filtration and, finally, disinfection with chlorine.

Though the watershed may not be negatively impacted by the presence of dogs, it doesn’t eliminate the fact that they’re not supposed to be there.

In Condon’s correspondence with city and county officials, Albemarle Board of Supervisors Vice Chair Diantha McKeel was sympathetic. In a trip to Ragged Mountain last fall, McKeel says she was alarmed by two large, off-leash dogs running toward her own pup. She also noticed there were no receptacles in which to put her “doggy bag” after picking up her pet’s waste. At that time, she says signs prohibiting pets weren’t posted.

Brian Daly, the director of Charlottesville Parks & Recreation, says signs have been posted at the park’s lower parking lot for years, but were moved to the new lot in late November or early December. He says there is still an issue with people bringing pets to the park and the city has notified Animal Control, which patrols the area about every other week to notify dog walkers that they are breaking the rules and to ticket repeat offenders.

According to Daly, the rules prohibiting pets have been in place since the Ivy Creek Foundation controlled the park in the late 1990s and are still in effect while new rules are discussed and finalized. Dogs are not allowed because “the trails were originally built for hikers only and it was felt that dogs would disturb the quiet enjoyment of the natural area,” he says. The city now controls the park.

Condon feels that the city’s Parks & Recreation Department policing is inadequate.

“Residents are fortunate to have such clean water as well as a natural area where folks, including children, can experience the wonders of nature,” she says. “It’s beyond my understanding why the people in charge don’t seem to appreciate the true value of both. I, for one, do not care to be stepping in dog droppings, courtesy of people who are rude and thoughtless enough to not properly take care of their pets’ droppings.”