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SWAT talk: Number of standoffs is ‘out of the norm’

The overall goal of any SWAT team is to save lives, says Lieutenant Steve Upman with the Charlottesville Police Department. The January 5 standoff between city, county and university police and a suspected bank robber marked the second standoff of the year.

“The two callouts over the last few days are out of the norm for Charlottesville,” Upman says, adding that the city and county have their own SWAT teams, but they have a mutual aid agreement to help each other out when needed. Both teams were at each incident this year.

According to Upman, SWAT members are specialists trained as a team to handle incidents that require additional tactics and weapons beyond the realm of a regular police officer, such as barricaded people, hostage situations, dignitary protection, sniper situations, high-risk search warrants and high-risk arrest warrants. He says the use of these specially trained teams has been proven to reduce the risk of injury or death to suspects, citizens and police officers.

John Whithead, president of the Rutherford Institute and author most recently of Battlefield America: The War on American People, has spent a lot of time examining the use of SWAT teams in America.

“In 1985, there were 3,000 SWAT team raids in America,” he says. “Now there are over 80,000.”

A large portion of SWAT team activations are for “marijuana and victimless crimes,” and Whitehead says “people are getting shot and getting hurt.” He references the 2010 killing of 7-year-old Aiyana Jones after a Detroit SWAT team launched a grenade into her family’s apartment, broke down the door and started shooting. Members shot her while she was asleep on the couch and later learned they were in the wrong apartment.

But “in certain situations, they’re very appropriate,” he says, like in hostage situations or when a suspect, like a bank robber, could be armed.

The CPD’s SWAT team, which works part-time, was activated five times in 2015, Upman says.

The Downtown Mall’s Union Bank & Trust was robbed January 4, and city spokesperson Miriam Dickler says police obtained a search warrant January 5 for a house located at 504 Sixth St. SE, where the robber was allegedly staying. While police were on their way to the house, a 911 call came through for a report of domestic violence at the same address, she says.

When police arrived at the scene four out of five people were able to exit the house, but one refused and remained inside—the suspected bank robber later identified as Cole Franklin Nordick.

A number of city, county and university police blocked off the street and surrounded the entire area around 1:30pm. Police and city and county SWAT teams made telephone contact with Nordick, and he threatened harm to anyone who tried to enter the home, police say. About two hours into the standoff, police began shooting tear gas into the Sixth Street home. One bystander reported counting at least 12 shots, with more fired afterward.

Homeowner Marcus Shifflett was not pleased with having dozens of tear gas rounds lobbed into his property during the standoff.

“Everything in that house will be ruined,” he said during the incident. “Furniture, clothes, everything.”

Bystanders gathered on a nearby sidewalk, and cars slowed when they passed the commotion. Many had cell phones out, filming the action.

Around 4:25pm, Nordick emerged from the front door of the home, hands in the air and holding a cell phone and a cigarette, and wearing a white T-shirt and sunglasses. He was arrested for armed bank robbery and taken to the Albemarle-Charlottesville Regional Jail where he is being held without bond.

Nordick has arrest records dating back to 1996, with at least two charges for petit larceny, multiple probation violations and drug charges.

On his Facebook page, Nordick says he studied locksmithing at a trade school.

The city delayed school buses for nearby Clark Elementary School, as well as some buses from Walker Upper Elementary, Buford Middle School and Charlottesville High.

During the standoff, Shifflett said he suspected Nordick was blockaded in the windowless bathroom where the gas wouldn’t reach him.

“I don’t know what [the tenants] are going to do tonight,” Shifflett said on the day of the incident. “They’re going to have to find a home. They don’t have no place to go.”

Just two days earlier, Charlottesville resident and Internet celebrity Bryan Silva blockaded himself inside his home on Jefferson Park Avenue for several hours while SWAT members attempted to coax him outside. He eventually exited the house without incident and was arrested for abduction and possession of a firearm by a felon.

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Three locals missing in one week

Last week, three locals were reported missing and only one has been found.

Joseph Carroll Breeden, 38, was last seen at the Hollymead Town Center Five Guys Burgers and Fries, where he works, at 7:30pm Wednesday, January 6. At 8pm, he was captured on video at a UVA library.

At 5 feet 9 inches and approximately 180 pounds, he was wearing jeans, a white Five Guys T-shirt and a brown Big Lebowski hoodie. Authorities do not suspect foul play. Police ask anyone who has seen Breeden to call CrimeStoppers at 977-4000.

Police are still searching for 31-year-old Vincent Michael Leonardi, who was reported missing at 9pm Friday, January 8. Police say he may be suicidal and should not be approached if seen. He is white with a light complexion, brown hair and brown eyes and weighs about 155 pounds. He is 6 feet tall and has a red and green tattoo on his lower leg.

Police also say his last known location was Charleston, West Virginia, where he likely drove a white Ford F-350 truck with Virginia license plate TX239002 and a Leonardi Tree Service bumper sticker on the back.

Call Detective Sergeant Jim Mooney at 970-3280 with information about Leonardi’s whereabouts.

Kathryn V. Pace, 53, was reported missing Wednesday, January 6, but was found in Fluvanna County on Saturday.

Augusta County police are investigating the death of a Nelson County man whose body was found at the bottom of Ravens Roost at 1pm Saturday. Ravens Roost is a 120-foot cliff on the Blue Ridge Parkway.

Investigator Caleb Spence with the Augusta County Sheriff’s Office said the man’s family requested his name not be released and, though no foul play is suspected and police are still investigating, they say they don’t believe the man’s death was an accident.

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Welcome to the club: Common House takes over former Mentor Lodge space

The space for a 7,000-square-foot private club on West Market Street was purchased in 2013, and what plans call a “brick and mortar establishment” may be one step closer to becoming a reality.

A joint public hearing between Charlottesville City Council and the City Planning Commission was held Tuesday night after C-VILLE went to press, to discuss a special use permit for the space, which the city requires for private club-type dwellings. Beforehand, Brian Haluska, the principal planner with Neighborhood Development Services who was scheduled to present the report, said he didn’t think he’d see much public concern at the meeting.

Derek Sieg, Josh Rogers and Ben Pfinsgraff are the men behind the club at 206 W. Market St., called Common House in their application submitted to the city November 24. The application states it will be social in nature and “where individual members can meet to dine together or simply for personal connection sometimes lost in the days of online social media.”

Common House will go into the building that was constructed for Mentor Lodge in 1913, a social club intended for the then largely African-American neighborhood of Vinegar Hill, and for which the building provided “a venue for dances, political meetings and music for more than six decades,” the men cite in their application. The space has housed different businesses over the years, including Studio 206, a fitness studio.

Amenities planned for Common House include a banquet hall, lounge, tea room, library, bridge room, billiards room, bars, kitchen, office and rooftop terrace.

An introduction letter from the club to prospective members of both sexes describes a contemporary social club “built to meet the substantial and growing desire in our culture for true, meaningful connection with likeminded people.” There’s mention of bridge and chess leagues and all-day “well-crafted” food and drink, too.

Sieg says the club won’t be invite only, but he and his partners initially sent out fewer than 100 invitations.

“We’re trying to build a place that’s going to be very inclusive,” he says, adding that there will probably be a limit to the number of people who can join.

“We want it to be a place that’s lively,” Sieg says, “but one where you can count on getting a table when you go in.”

Membership to the club will also include special programming, such as a Common Knowledge Series, an ongoing series of seminars by local craftsmen ranging from home craft brewing to “whole hog butchery,” as noted in the application. The owners declined to disclose how much a membership will cost.

According to Planning Commission meeting minutes, city staff says the proposed private club would not be out of character for the downtown area and would complement nearby businesses, but they do have concerns about the potential for a new owner to change the club’s business model in the future. For that reason, staff imposed the condition that there should be no noise, vibration or odor beyond the confines of the building between 1 and 8am.

In a December 15 meeting, the Board of Architectural Review recommended approval of the special use permit in a 7-0 vote.

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Space issue: Rescue squad sues city over variance

The Charlottesville-Albemarle Rescue Squad hopes to increase the size of its building, which has been nestled on McIntire Road since 1964, to give volunteers more space to meet and make it possible to accommodate the increasing size of emergency vehicles.

“The trucks don’t fit,” says Chief Dayton Haugh. “It’s 2015.”

In May, CARS submitted an application to the Board of Zoning Appeals to request an increase of the maximum building height from 35′ to 45′ and a variance from the building setback to make several modifications including demolishing the north wing of the structure and rebuilding a five-bay garage with two stories of added space above it.

In recent years, Haugh says the number of volunteers has doubled to about 200. Vehicles the squad owns have nearly quadrupled, and the rescuers have to have somewhere to keep all of the ambulances, trucks and boats.

Members of the Board of Zoning Appeals granted a variance to CARS, however not the total amount of requested space (the proposed side and rear setbacks were granted, but the front setback going from 25′ to 0′ was set at 5′, and the building height was set at 40′). The board ruled that Mary Joy Scala, secretary to the city’s Entrance Corridor Review Board, must review and approve any future modifications.

CARS sits beside, but not within, an entrance corridor overlay district. In the petition for an appeal of the BZA’s variance decision, the volunteer rescuers say the board lacks the power and legal authority to designate petitioners’ property as a part of the entrance corridor and they maintain the board erroneously applied the law and imposed corridor design review obligations on city staff not authorized to perform them.

Read Brodhead, secretary of the BZA, says he can’t discuss pending litigation. (C-VILLE co-owner Bill Chapman is also a BZA board member.) Because the board is appointed by the city, CARS filed suit against the city.

According to Haugh, once the BZA approved the variance June 18, CARS appealed the ruling and the case went “to the back burner for a couple months,” he says. Deputy City Attorney Lisa Robertson says she cannot discuss the matter and a court date has not been set.

“We’re waiting to see if we can reach some sort of agreement with the city and we probably can do that,” Haugh says. “And then we can all dismiss this suit.”

The rescue squad is in a residentially zoned area, which is intended primarily for single-family use. In the suit, the city says CARS’ current use of the property is not permitted under the zoning ordinance, but also says the board’s ruling “was not within the authority of the BZA and was otherwise not appropriate,” adding that the board has no authority to grant a variance of setback or building height regulations or to authorize the expansion of a nonconforming structure.

The biggest issue with reaching a settlement, Haugh says, will be the city’s stance on nonconforming use.

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Trail runner offers safety tips after Running Man’s death

Following the December 29 death of 55- year-old Philip Weber III, known as Charlottesville’s “Running Man,” an ultra marathoner and running club board member makes suggestions for safe running.

Weber was struck and killed by a 2001 Isuzu Trooper on Ivy Road around 7am. At the time of the incident, police closed the westbound lane of Ivy Road for several hours. While the investigation is ongoing, the name of the driver has not been released and no charges have been filed.

Ivy Road isn’t an optimal road for joggers, says Charlottesville Area Trail Runners board member Andy Jones-Wilkins. Club members tend to avoid it, he says, adding that trail runners in the club often choose to run Dick Woods Road, which has less traffic.

“Most of our running is on trails but it’s an inevitable fact of modern life that you find yourself on the road from time to time,” he says. He is familiar with Weber, a prominent member of Charlottesville’s running community.

Jones-Wilkins says many runners do, and should, take a lesson from cyclists who wear high-visibility clothes—such as construction worker-esque reflective vests and specially made shoes—even though they’re “kind of silly-looking.” Sportswear companies even make headlamps with an extremely bright bulb in the front and a blinking red light on the back.

Drivers, he says, should always be alert and aware that while most cyclists ride on the same side as vehicular traffic, joggers often run against traffic.

“We, as runners, trail runners, road runners, whatever—we ultimately are responsible for our own safety and that’s how we live our lives,” he says.

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SWAT standoff: Local Internet celeb behind bars

Not one to shy away from a camera, a Charlottesville man and Internet celebrity had a more somber cameo than he’s used to during January 4 video appearances in Charlottesville General District Court and Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court.

A day after a police standoff, which lasted several hours and required the presence of a SWAT team, 25-year-old Bryan Silva was denied bond until he meets with his attorney. At the first hearing, Judge Robert Downer asked Silva at least twice if he was previously out on bond for other charges, but the wavy, brown-haired Silva said he wasn’t sure.

Silva said he has, however, met with a probation officer and taken two anger management classes for pending assault charges from October.

When the judge asked where he was employed, Silva answered, “Facebook,” and said he has more than 1.5 million followers.

In his most recent arrest, Silva is charged with abduction and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. Since 2009, he has been charged with assault, shoplifting or altering the prices of merchandise, destruction of property and possession of marijuana in Charlottesville, and in Albemarle and Orange counties.

Police say Silva’s 17-year-old girlfriend left his home on Jefferson Park Avenue Sunday and went to the house of a neighbor, who called the police. The victim told police Silva held her against her will and threatened her with a handgun. She said he also threatened to shoot the police.

Officers went to Silva’s residence in the 2500 block of JPA and made contact with him by telephone. Silva, who posted first-hand videos of the standoff to his mass of followers, would not cooperate and refused to leave his home. The SWAT team joined police because of the presence of a firearm and Silva’s alleged threats.

Eventually, police shot tear gas into Silva’s home and he emerged, hands in the air and pants around his ankles. He was then taken into custody. Police seized a handgun from his residence.

In one video of the standoff, he can be seen drinking a clear liquid from a Grey Goose bottle and bopping up and down while spewing profanity and phrases such as “gettin’ money.” The video is accompanied by the caption, “Broke fufu lames and I are not the same.” The video had 2,089 likes and nearly 1,400 shares at press time.

He got even more likes—3,276, to be exact—on a minute-long video he took of the police outside his house, in which he makes lewd comments about the officers and brags about his “drop top Mercedes Benz.”

Silva told the judge at his first bond hearing of the day that he would be able to afford his own attorney. At his second hearing, Silva said his current attorney Scott Goodman will represent him, though he hadn’t been able to contact him about his most recent arrest. He was appointed temporary counsel.

Silva is probably most well-known for his appearance on Comedy Central’s “Tosh.0,” in which he spends the day with comedian and host Daniel Tosh, who prompts Silva to discuss how he gained his following and pokes fun at Silva’s well-known 2014 video in which he filmed himself shirtless in front of a mirror, singing and making gun noises (hence the word he coined, “gratata,” which is supposed to sound like a gun firing and has been imitated by his followers).

His next hearing will be February 11 at 1pm in Charlottesville General District Court, followed by a Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court appearance on February 19 at 11am.

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UPDATED: Suspect taken into custody after 6th Street standoff

“Everything in that house will be ruined,” homeowner Marcus Shifflett said when police began shooting what appeared to be tear gas into a 6th Street Southeast home he rents to a tenant. “Furniture, clothes, everything.”

The Downtown Mall’s Union Bank and Trust was robbed January 4, and city spokesperson Miriam Dickler says police obtained a search warrant January 5 for a house located at 504 Sixth St. SE, a few blocks away from the bank, where the robber was allegedly staying. While police were on their way to the house, a 911 call came through for a report of domestic violence at the same address, she says.

When police arrived at the scene four out of five people were able to exit the house, but one refused and remained inside—the suspected bank robber later identified as Cole Franklin Nordick.

A number of city, county and university police blocked off the street and surrounded the entire area around 1:30pm. Police and city and county SWAT teams made telephone contact with Nordick and he threatened harm to anyone who tried to enter the home, police say. About two hours into the standoff, police began shooting tear gas into the 6th Street home. One bystander reported counting at least 12 shots, and more were fired afterward.

A police K9 on the scene rapidly wagged its tail and whimpered after some of the shots.

Bystanders gathered on a nearby sidewalk and cars slowed when they passed the commotion. At least five people had cell phones out, filming the action.

Around 4:25pm, Nordick emerged from the front door of the home, hands in the air and wearing a white T-shirt. He was arrested for armed bank robbery and taken to the Charlottesville Albemarle Regional Jail where he is being held without bond.

Nordick has arrest records dating back to 1996, with at least two charges for petit larceny, multiple probation violations and drug charges.

On his Facebook page, Nordick says he studied locksmithing at a trade school.

The city delayed school buses for nearby Clark Elementary School, as well as some buses from Walker, Buford Middle School and Charlottesville High.

During the standoff, Shifflett said he suspected Nordick was blockaded in the windowless bathroom where the gas wouldn’t reach him.

“I don’t know what [the tenants] are going to do tonight,” Shifflett says. “They’re going to have to find a home. They don’t have no place to go.”

 

UPDATED 1/6 at 9:30 with information identifying the suspect.

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Red Onion sued: Coal tower shooter’s guardian seeks $23 million

The man charged with killing two people at Charlottesville’s coal tower in August 2001 was found unresponsive and unconscious in a blood-smeared, solitary confinement cell at Wise County’s Red Onion State Prison in April 2014, bound by a makeshift rope tied around his neck and ankles and with a three-quarters-inch slit on his left wrist. The legal guardian of Craig Nordenson (who changed his name to Craig Verdier-Logarides after being adopted) is now suing the state, the Virginia Department of Corrections, the prison, the warden and correctional officers on five counts for a total of $22.85 million.

The DOC called the death of Verdier-Logarides, 32, a suicide. But Daniele Verdier-Logarides, who adopted him since he’s been in jail, and her attorney, Richard Kennedy, fear they may never know what actually happened to the inmate.

A lawsuit filed in federal court on December 21 states that on the last day of his life, Verdier-Logarides covered his cell window with cardboard, which prevented officers from monitoring him—even though they are required to check on inmates in segregated housing every 30 minutes.

“This is especially troubling as the Department of Corrections and Red Onion State Prison already designated Craig as a possible danger to himself and potentially suicidal with a history of being institutionalized at Southwest Virginia Mental Health Correctional Facility in 2008-2009 for what was described as an attempted suicide,” the suit says. “This certainly indicates a tolerated routine and pattern of officers intentionally permitting inmates to cover the cell without windows to prevent visual inspections in direct violation of prison policy, even where the inmate is housed in segregation and heightened observation and scrutiny are mandated by prison policy.”

According to the suit, correctional officer Warren Smith said he checked on the inmate at 9:23am and Verdier-Logarides peeled back a corner of the cardboard, allegedly saying he was washing up and didn’t want the officers to see him naked. This conversation has been reported only by Smith, and no other witnesses have confirmed it.

At 9:52am, officer Aaron Duke Deel stopped by Verdier-Logarides’ cell for approximately five seconds, and signed the daily log sheet without making any effort to monitor, inspect or communicate with Verdier-Logarides, according to the suit. Without checking on him, the suit alleges Deel signed the log outside Verdier-Logarides’ cell again at 10:25am, and no other inspections or checks on his cell were made until an hour later.

At 11:15am, an unnamed officer opened the food tray slot on the cell door, peered inside and spotted Verdier-Logarides unconscious on the floor.

“The cell was awash in what appeared to be blood and blood smears,” the suit says. “The bed, mattress and pillow were soaked with an inordinate volume of what appeared to be blood. Craig had a pulse and blood pressure, but was unconscious, bleeding and unresponsive.”

Verdier-Logarides was then taken by ambulance to Dickenson Community Hospital, and though he maintained some vital signs throughout the ambulance ride, he never regained consciousness and remained unresponsive.

Dr. Amy Tharp from the office of the chief medical examiner ruled the suicide as a ligature asphyxiation, or strangulation. In the official investigation, the rope that Verdier-Logarides allegedly strangled himself with was determined to be a 6-foot nylon three-strand cord, with no known origin and not used anywhere at Red Onion. The suit also says no razor or cutting tool was found in his cell.

Kennedy, the Wise County attorney representing the inmate’s estate, calls those occurrences “the two mysteries of the case.” Though he says he can’t discuss much about the case, he says the segregated cells are known for being difficult to access and it would take hard evidence to prove that someone else ever entered his cell. The two correctional officers named in the suit have never given sworn statements.

“The family of Craig obviously has doubts and questions as to what really happened,” says the suit, “be it suicide, assisted suicide, coerced suicide or other foul play.”

It also states that the failure to monitor Verdier-Logarides every 30 minutes and the two-hour lapse of no inspection during which the injuries were inflicted were the reason his death occurred without detection. For this reason, according to Kennedy, the state should be held responsible.

“This creates a strong inference that such monitoring violations were the reason all the facts will never be known,” the suit says.

Daniele Verdier-Logarides, administrator of his estate, and her husband, Jacques, want nearly $23 million for the mental anguish, distress and pain at the loss of their son’s companionship, communications, visitation, comfort, guidance and advice that they will continue to suffer.

Kennedy says no court date has been scheduled, but he expects the state to respond to the suit by February.

Updated January 5 with comments from Attorney Richard Kennedy.

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The man who killed two at Charlottesville’s coal tower is dead, and his adoptive family wants answers

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New leases signed at 5th Street Station

A real estate firm out of Virginia Beach has signed five leases at 5th Street Station, a soon-to-be 465,000-square-foot shopping center on Fifth Street.

The 72-acre space has already promised a Wegmans, but thanks to the 66,900 square feet Divaris Real Estate has signed off on, locals can now expect a Havertys Furniture, A.C. Moore, Timberwood Tap House, Hand & Stone and CommServe, a Verizon Wireless licensee.

The development of 5th Street Station began in November 2014, and it’s scheduled to open in November 2016, according to Valerie Long of Williams Mullen law firm.

Other retailers already planned for the space include Field & Stream, PetSmart, Panera Bread, Dick’s Sporting Goods, Mattress Warehouse, Sprint, Great Clips, Hair Cuttery, Lee Nails, Jersey Mike’s Subs and the Virginia ABC.

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‘Stinky neighborhood’: Will a $9.3 million project pass the smell test?

Nauseating smells from a wastewater treatment plant have long plagued the neighborhoods of Belmont-Carlton, Woolen Mills and others nearby. After a series of semi-unsuccessful smell-combatting projects, the Rivanna Water and Sewer Authority says these odors may finally meet their match.

RWSA Executive Director Tom Frederick, a member of RWSA since 2004, says the smells from the Moores Creek Wastewater Treatment Plant have lingered since his first day on the job and, he imagines, for decades before, beginning when the city first built a treatment facility there in the 1950s.

So where do the smells come from? Frederick doesn’t mince words.

“We receive and have to treat what gets flushed from the toilets of 120,000 homes,” he says. RWSA’s 80-acre facility treats 10 million gallons of wastewater per day, which comes from city and county homes and businesses.

Jim Duncan, a realtor with Nest Realty, has sold houses in the Belmont area for 13 years and says his clients have told him the odor in Belmont is there intermittently.

“It’s a known issue that’s been discussed for many, many years,” he says, and when it comes to buying and selling houses, the seller isn’t under any obligation to make a disclosure. “It’s something that [buyers] could do their research and know about.”

He does say a good buyer’s agent should inform a client of the potential smell, but he’s never seen a Belmont house stay on the market for a prolonged period of time because of the stink.

Longtime resident Bill Emory, who purchased his Woolen Mills house in 1987, says he was unaware of the sewage plant’s proximity when he moved in.

“It later made itself known,” he says, “just through the smell.”

Emory adds that real estate agents don’t usually say, “Oh, by the way, this is known as the stinky neighborhood.” But, as Duncan says, the smell in Emory’s neighborhood comes and goes. He’s situated about three-tenths of a mile away from the plant.

Admitting that the odor does affect the quality of life in Woolen Mills, Emory still says he’s never considered moving.

Emory says RWSA’s previous odor-control efforts, such as reducing the amounts of released nitrogen and phosphorous and only operating certain machinery during the day to prevent nighttime stink, have had an effect on the strength and frequency of the smell.

As part of a two-phase, long-term master plan created in 2007, RWSA completed a number of projects, including moving a septage receiving tank away from the front gate and enclosing it, covering some channels and providing wet chemical scrubbers that vacuum air space and remove odor compounds, to finish phase one by mid-2012. The authority was allotted $2 million from a capital improvement plan in January 2014, solely for the purpose of managing odors, and the newest investment of $9.3 million (not from the CIP) will initiate the second phase of the project.

Emory is hopeful that the latest advancement will finally get the job done and applauds Frederick for working patiently over the years and investigating the odor issue with sound scientific and engineering methods.

After an odor study and sampling, a team will construct a new grit-removal facility on the property and cover or decommission some older amenities known to cause bad smells. A network of air piping throughout the treatment plant will capture the odors, which will be treated using advanced biological scrubbers, as well as existing chemical scrubbers.

While the group is still accepting construction bids for the project, Frederick says the contract should be set by January, and workers will begin ordering equipment in March or April. Once construction begins, the project will take 18 to 20 months to complete.