The family of the man killed in a May 25 Barracks Road traffic accident is now suing the driver police say caused the crash in a wrongful death lawsuit.
Andrew Middleditch, 55, was turning left when officers say Lonnie Branham, 78, attempted to pass him. The cars collided and Branham crashed into a ditch. He died at the scene.
The suit by Branham’s family alleges two counts of negligence by Middleditch, who is currently charged with driving under the influence for his 0.18 BAC on the morning of the crash. Middleditch also has a DUI on his record from 2011 and completed VASAP for his first offense, which, as the suit says, made him acutely aware of the illegality and danger of his actions.
“Nevertheless, he still chose to get behind the wheel despite being severely intoxicated at 8am on a Monday morning, Memorial Day, and his choices resulted in Mr. Branham’s death,” the suit says.
The family is asking for $1.5 million in compensatory damages and $350,000 in punitive damages. Middleditch still faces involuntary manslaughter and DUI charges and will appear in Albemarle County General District Court September 24.
U.S. citizenship meant a new beginning for Tilahun Goshu and his family—one where they would no longer live in fear and they could begin building their dream home, which Goshu envisioned being passed down to his children and his children’s children. But no sooner than he moved into his new place, he learned that a proposed 20-lane open-air firing range could be located just a stone’s throw away from his backyard.
“I was rescued,” Goshu says, “and then I found myself in the middle of a battleground.”
Goshu, an Ethiopian ex-prisoner, businessman, writer and registered nurse fled his country to avoid a third imprisonment and another violent persecution. His crime? Writing books that criticized his country’s culture.
“Right after my first book published, there were protests in every city,” he says. “There were petitions to the government to take action in my life.”
Between 250 and 500 people showed up at Goshu’s various court hearings to protest his publications, which openly criticized the practice of female genital mutilation and encouraged members of his community, who he says are historically not self-sufficient, to work hard and be productive, rather than participating in many non-working religious holidays and relying on aid from developed countries.
Already twice-imprisoned for a total of three years, Goshu faced a third prosecution that would have incarcerated him for another five years when he fled to Kenya. After he left, his wife and kids were targeted. Protesters threw rocks and fired guns at their home, and one flashed a pistol at his wife, Meseret Workelul.
From the time Goshu escaped to Kenya, it took seven months for him to find someone in Nairobi who could rescue his family, the seven most stressful months he can remember. But what happened next changed everything—Goshu was granted U.S. citizenship five years after he resettled in Charlottesville through the International Rescue Committee in 2007.
Now that he’s had some time to adjust, Goshu says he sees no difference between the fear he felt in Ethiopia and the fear he’ll feel in Greene, if the firing range is approved.
He worries for the safety of his four children, who won’t be able to play in their own backyard because of the chance of being shot by a ricocheting bullet. His older children suffer from post traumatic stress disorder from their experiences in Ethiopia, he says,“They are doing well right now,” he says, “but when the gunshots start, the memories kept down in their mind will start working through.”
Lyle Durrer, the owner of Big Iron Outdoors gun shop who wants to open the shooting range, says assessments show that noise from the range will be no louder than ambient noise in the neighborhood.
Though many neighbors aren’t convinced this is the case, Goshu says it’s about so much more than noise. Not just for him, but for the 340 other homes within a mile of the proposed range—165 of them being only half a mile away.
“What are you going to do?” says Carolyn Politis with Greene County Neighbors. “From 10am to 8pm, [stay] out of your homes because there could be a bullet coming in, or do you put flak jackets on your kids?”
The Greene County planning commission meets tonight, August 19, at 6pm in the William Monroe High School auditorium for an open public hearing. The location has been selected to accommodate the mass of people expected to attend, according to Jay Willer, the commission’s chairman.
Commonwealth’s Attorney Denise Lunsford has requested the denial of almost all 12 of the latest motions filed in Jesse Matthew’s capital murder case for the death of Hannah Graham, having no objections to only one and requesting to deny in part only four.
Lunsford didn’t object to a motion requiring the commonwealth to give written notice of its intent to introduce unadjudicated criminal conduct in the event of a sentencing proceeding.
But for the motion to bar any tokens and insignia inside the courtroom, one of the most talked about in the case, Lunsford requested to deny it in part, citing two Virginia capital murder trials during which people wore buttons on their clothes that supported the victims and the Court of Appeals did not find anything prejudicial about those tokens.
“The risk of prejudice to the defendant from any of these tokens is virtually zero—the jury is unlikely to even notice them…” Lunsford wrote in her response, also saying that she supports the removal of tokens or insignias if they become so numerous or obvious that a risk of prejudice is created.
She requested that the motion for Matthew to not appear shackled in public to be denied in part, saying he should not appear before the jury in restraints or a jail or prison uniform, but should appear shackled otherwise.
See a full list of her responses here, courtesy of the Daily Progress.
Judge Cheryl Higgins will hear the motions August 20 at 1:30pm in Albemarle Circuit Court.
The July 1 killing of the now-famous lion, Cecil, sparked a global outcry. Even away from Zimbabwe where Cecil was killed, or Minnesota where his killer resides, the rest of the world has followed constant media coverage and taken to social media to mourn or shame or defend Cecil’s killer. A local animal rights controversy hasn’t made headlines like Cecil, but some Virginia activists hope to garner support for an issue that hits a bit closer to home.
Right off Interstate 81 in Natural Bridge, a zoo owned by Karl and Debbie Mogensen has racked up a number of federal citations and fines from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries, which issues exotic animal exhibition permits, has its own issues with the zoo.
On a recent visit to the zoo, two small deer called muntjacs had visible scratches on their faces and monkeys with balding fur could be heard whimpering like scared dogs. Llamas grazed the gravel outside of their pen, a flightless bird called a double-wattled cassowary had a broken casque on his head, fallow deer had ripped ears and three camels had unkempt, mangy-looking fur that dangled in thin strands. One python was fully submerged in a shallow plastic tub of dirty water while the rest of his cage was scattered with clumps of shedded skin. A nameless bird ingested a piece of flimsy plastic that blew into its cage.
Some animals had grass in their cages—thick and overgrown—and some had only gravel, dirt or cement to walk or lay down on.
“Everybody is dedicated to the animals,” Debbie Mogensen says after teaching a younger staff member how to trim a bird’s overgrown wings. The zoo is family-owned and the staff is well-trained, she says. A vet comes twice a month while another is always on call for emergencies.
According to Mogensen, the trend ofanimal rights activists relentlessly filing complaints has persisted over the past 10 years and these groups will “file a complaint about anything.” She says they’re against all zoos, not just Natural Bridge Zoo
But at Natural Bridge, the DGIF has suspended its license twice in the past for violating the minimal conditions of its required permit issued by the state—most recently in March with a reinstatement at the end of May. Though the owners say they spent the three months of the zoo’s closure fixing all things the USDA cited and paying federal penalties, it wasn’t long before People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals struck again.
On July 21, PETA filed two new complaints with the USDA for neglect and cruelty and a new investigation is underway at both Natural Bridge Zoo and its non-affiliated Virginia Safari Park, which is owned by the Mogensens’ son, Eric. PETA’s ultimate goal is to have both facilities closed permanently with the animals relocated to a sanctuary, according to Rachel Matthews of PETA’s captive animal law enforcement division.
PETA’s complaints routinely document abuse and neglect at Natural Bridge Zoo with reports and videos of capuchin monkeys languishing with hair loss and skin issues, giraffes and a llama with overgrown hooves, a mandrill ingesting a toy ball and zebras, kudus and other animals confined to filthy enclosures.
Some activists focus solely on retiring the zoo’s only elephant, Asha, who was taken from Africa when she was 1 year old and kept in what activists refer to as “solitary confinement.” Elephants, especially females like Asha, are known for being social animals. In early 2015, an animal welfare group called In Defense of Animals voted Natural Bridge the worst zoo for elephants in America.
“What did they pay for her?” says Mieke Zylstra, a Charlottesville resident and member of a group called “Voices for Asha the Elephant,” which currently has almost 2,000 followers on Facebook. “Can’t we buy her and bring her to the sanctuary?” A petition to have Asha removed from the zoo currently has almost 40,000 signatures on Change.org. Among supporters for retiring Asha to a sanctuary is United Nations Messenger of Peace, Dr. Jane Goodall.
In June, Zylstra was among a group of 25 people, organized by In Defense of Animals and One World Conservation, who traveled from all over Virginia and Washington, D.C. to gather near the zoo and raise awareness of the poor conditions in which Asha lives.
“Drawing from what I have read of the zoo’s conditions, and from what the owners have said in response to criticisms,” Zylstra says, “I don’t believe that they have the means, the knowledge, or most importantly, the will to operate the facility in a way that would provide humane treatment of the animals.”
The former Albemarle County supervisor who once served jail time for sexual battery, resigned from his position representing the Scottsville District and is currently a wanted fugitive has been found in the Philippines, according to a Rob Schilling report.
In what seems to be a trend of those convicted of crimes changing their names [Kurt Kroboth has a new moniker, too], Chris Dumler, now known as Taylor Hendricks, L. Taylor Hendricks III or Taylor Despojo, resides in Mandaue City, which is located in the Cebu Province of the Philippines, according to Schilling. He runs a brewery called the Cebruery with his wife, Toni Marie Despojo, who names herself Toni Marie Dumler on her LinkedIn account.
Schilling says the Orange County Sheriff’s Department, which has a warrant out for Dumler’s arrest, has confirmed that although Dumler is still a fugitive, any motion for extradition would be handled by the commonwealth.
Three weeks ago, former grocery store manager Mark Weiner, who was convicted of abduction with intent to defile in 2013, had his conviction vacated and was released from the Albemarle Charlottesville Regional Jail after spending two-and-a-half years behind bars.
The attorney for another local man locked up for years for a crime many believe he didn’t commit is taking hope from Weiner’s release.
“The Weiner case shows that justice can be achieved when adequate and careful scrutiny to fairness and common sense overcomes ego and poor judgment,” says Steve Rosenfield, attorney for Robert Davis, who was convicted of the 2003 murders of a Crozet mother and son and has served 12 years of a 23-year sentence. His clemencypetition is under review by Governor Terry McAuliffe’s administration, and Rosenfield says he’s been told the review will be complete in August.
“We’re in a sort of a sit and wait mode,” says Rosenfield.
Davis’ ordeal began on the morning of February 19, 2003, when firefighters raced to Cling Lane in Crozet to respond to a house fire. Inside the charred remains of the home, they made a gruesome discovery. They found Nola “Ann” Charles face down in her son’s bunk bed, bound with duct tape, her throat slit and a charred knife protruding from her back. Her 3-year-old son who died of smoke inhalation was found in his mother’s room.
Within two days of the murders, Rocky Fugett, 19 at the time, and his 15-year-old sister, Jessica, were arrested and charged with murder. They named two other Western Albemarle High School students as accomplices, but while police dropped charges against one, citing insufficient evidence, then-18-year-old Davis was left to take the heat. He was arrested, and over the course of a five-hour interrogation, denied involvement dozens of times before he finally confessed after being promised he could see his mother. The Center on Wrongful Convictions of Youth at Northwestern University School of Law has called it a “textbook” false confession, and Davis’ accusers—serving 75- and 100-year sentences respectively— have since filed affidavits included with his petition admitting they lied about his involvement.
Rosenfield sought clemency in 2011, but on Bob McDonnell’s last day in office, the former governor denied Davis’ clemency petition and Deputy Secretary of Public Safety and Homeland Security Tonya Vincent later revealed the McDonnell administration had never investigated the petition. As Governor Terry McAuliffe took office in 2013, Rosenfield sent a second clemency request.
Secretary of Public Safety and Homeland Security Brian Moran did not return phone calls requesting comment on the status of the petition by deadline.
For Davis’ mother, Sandy Seal, the painful wait continues.
“Me and Robert, we just have a bond like no mother and son has ever had,” says Seal, who has health conditions that require a nurse to stay with her. Her doctor wrote a summary for Davis’ clemency petition that said Seal’s health has rapidly declined with the added stress of Davis being in prison.
“If Robert was here to help me, I could possibly get better,” she says. “It would be the best day of my life.”
Seal taught her son not to fight and she worries about his safety in prison.
“Dear God, I don’t care what happens to me, but don’t let that happen to my boy,” she says. “He’s been through enough already for something that he hasn’t done.”
The fate of the Charlottesville Police Department’s K-9, which attacked a 13-year-old girl on the 700 block of Prospect Avenue on June 25 after it was accidentally released from a police vehicle, remains uncertain, according to Charlottesville Police spokesman Lieutenant Steve Upman. The Dutch shepherd named Ringo had a recent surgery that was unrelated to the attack, delaying the assessment and overall review from the police department.
The handler, still unnamed by the police department, has been off duty for a vacation and unrelated police training while the dog was sent back to its original trainer for an assessment, according to Upman.
Hospital bills related to the incident should be covered by the Charlottesville Police Department’s insurance, says Upman, but he says the department has not received any bills yet.
A dozen new motions were filed on July 29 in Jesse Matthew’s capital murder case.
Among the motions are requests to stop any additional state evidence testing or examination without notifying the defense for approval, as well as one to preserve all evidence, including biological evidence, physical evidence collected from the crime scene and alleged weapons. A full list of the motions can be found here.
A motions hearing will take place at the Albemarle County Circuit Court on August 20 at 1:30 pm.
On July 29, three Phi Kappa Psi fraternity brothers and UVA graduates filed a complaint against Rolling Stone, Wenner Media and journalist Sabrina Erdely in U.S. District Court for the now-discredited and retracted November 2014 story titled “A Rape on Campus,” which described the alleged gang rape of a girl called “Jackie” at the fraternity house.
George Elias IV, Stephen Hadford and Ross Fowler were members of UVA’s class of 2013 and members of the fraternity at the time of the alleged rape.
Their complaint says the statements and accusations of the events that occurred at Phi Kappa Psi are “categorically false and have been disproved by publicly available information,” and “the article contained sufficient identifying facts to match plaintiffs as the rapists.” The men are suing for three counts including defamation and negligent infliction of emotional distress and asking for at least $75,000 for each count.
In 2012, the year of the alleged rape, Elias lived in the first room at the top of the first flight of stairs and at Phi Kappa Psi. The complaint says vivid evidence from the story shows that his room was likely the scene of the crime and as a result, Elias was interrogated, humiliated and scolded by family, friends, acquaintances, coworkers and reporters.
Hadford and Fowler suffered similar attacks, according to the complaint, and all three of the men’s names and hometowns were listed on blogs, such as the notorious FairfaxUnderground.com, by anonymous users, identifying them as participants in the alleged rape. Hundreds of horrific comments and accusations still exist, and the full names of Elias, Hadford and Fowler will always be associated with the story, says the lawsuit.
“I think it’s a really hard lawsuit to win,” says legal expert Dave Heilberg. Defamation lawsuits are hard to win in general and, unlike UVA associate dean Nicole Eramo, who is also suing Rolling Stone for defamation, these men were not named in the article by Erdely and are not considered public figures. In fact, Heilberg says, now that they’ve filed the lawsuit, more people probably associate their names with the alleged gang rape than ever before.
On April 5, Rolling Stone retracted the article and its managing editor, Will Dana, issued an apology to the readers and “to all of those who were damaged by our story.” After 19 years at the magazine, Dana announced July 29 that he is resigning from Rolling Stone and his last planned day is August 7, according to the New York Times.
When asked by the Times if his resignation was linked to the suits or the story, he said only via a spokesperson that “many factors go into a decision like this.”
It’s affordable, actually sustainable and certainly not the modern American lifestyle most have become accustomed to, with multiple cars per family, smart phones for everyone and streaming video on demand. The 5-year-old project called Living Energy Farm is an off-the-grid, zero-fossil-fuel-emission community in the works in Louisa County, described in two words by its creator: real sustainability.
“Opposed to the fake version,” says Alexis Zeigler, the primary man behind the design, who believes the word “sustainability” is both overused and misused. His project aims to define real sustainability by developing 127 acres of land into a self-sufficient, income-sharing community, education center and farm that employs the best of old and new technologies, while using no fossil fuels and leaving no carbon footprint. It’s an ambitious project, but for Zeigler, it’s the natural progression of a life that’s been long focused on treating the earth kindly.
Lifelong dream
A longtime environmentalist, activist, author and farmer, 47-year-old Zeigler grew up on a self-sufficient Georgia farm and moved to Twin Oaks, a cooperative community in Louisa County, when he was 18. In the mid-’90s, Zeigler moved to Charlottesville where he led a campaign to build bike lanes, fought the construction of a Walmart on Fifth Street, published a few books and built conventional buildings and renewable energy systems, as well as a cooperative house that runs on less than a tenth of the energy an average American household uses. He had a grander vision, though: Create a community that uses zero percent grid-tied energy. The idea for Living Energy Farm was born.
A project like Living Energy Farm is a massive undertaking, and Zeigler knew he couldn’t do it alone. Fortunately, he found ample support from like-minded volunteers, interns, friends and family who were ready to get their hands dirty and who, like him, envisioned living and working together in a self-reliant community. The group met for several years to develop a plan for the community, which is classified as a 501(d) or “quasi-nonprofit” corporation, and in 2010, they bought the land in Louisa for $218,000, with half the money raised by the planners and Zeigler taking out a mortgage for the remainder.
When the farm is completed, Zeigler says, only $100,000 more will have been invested in building the community that could support over a dozen people. This low price comes from the number of donated and refurbished materials being used to complete the project, as well as its design, which uses simple, cheap materials. In a few years, Zeigler imagines building a couple of houses on the property, but for now, he says they’ll stick with the three-bedroom house and kitchen building with a bathroom, plus an array of fields where over 25 fruits, nuts and vegetables are farmed. The aesthetic emphasizes fresh air and light and minimizes costly trim and detail.
With financial support from the nonprofit Virginia Organizing Project for educational programming, Zeigler’s ultimate goal is to introduce Americans to the truly sustainable cooperative lifestyle, and to say, “Hey, it’s not so hard. This is OK.”
Old and new
Right off Bibb Store Road in Louisa, passersby are greeted witha sign for Living Energy Farm and, upon pulling off, another one that reads No Vehicles Beyond This Point. Guests are then expected to leave their cars parked in a makeshift lot on the edge of the farm and from there, it’s about a quarter mile hike up a beaten gravel and dirt path to the kitchen, the first finished building on the property. To get around, Zeigler, his family and his crew of volunteers and interns rely heavily on their feet and bicycles, which are stationed throughout the community. For transporting materials, they have a couple of tractors, one from 1939 and one from 1961, designed to run on woodgas and biofuels.
The kitchen is separated from the house, and its roof is decorated with a grid of flat plate solar hot water collectors that are connected to the storage tank inside. “It’s like every bad pattern from the ’70s and ’80s combined,” says Zeigler about the floor which is slated with refurbished tiles in reds, blues, greens and yellows with a wood stove sitting against a wall. He plans to use a solar ammonia loop refrigeration system that has no electronics, no moving parts and can be built out of low-cost materials, but for now, there’s a mini-fridge in the corner to store his daughter’s antibiotics.
A shiny, silver metal table looks like something found in a factory. And, kind of like a factory, this space doubles as a community food processing facility where no fossil fuel is used to heat or cool the building, or to cook and preserve food. Since the kitchen stands apart, food canned in August doesn’t dump heat into the house, and in the winter, the active and passive solar features will provide warmth, and the buildings will need almost no supplemental heat, Zeigler says.
Active features include solar panels and other technologies, but passive solar is all about design and thermodynamics—windows often face south to collect more sunlight; this way, heat is easily transferred into a room. The passive design is commonly seen in greenhouses and sunrooms. For extra heat, they’ll burn wood as a last resort.
And for cool air, the farm’s irrigation system—a bundle of water pipes—runs under the kitchen and the unfinished house beside it. The water in the pipes provides a cooling that is almost free, thus achieving “air conditioning,” Zeigler says. They use surface water pumped from creeks for irrigation.
Both the kitchen and main house are super-insulated with 18-inch straw bale walls, so once they’re filled with warm or cool air, they will maintain that temperature for days.
The lighting at Living Energy Farm comes from DC-powered LED bulbs, which are powered by nickel iron batteries that are low-output and not toxic or explosive like standard lead acid batteries. The nickel iron battery in the kitchen is 80 years old, Zeigler says, and though obtaining one is a bit of an investment, he says it’s well worth the money and it will last a lifetime.
And the bathroom? Composting toilets built with a simple, two chamber design can be found down a hallway flanking the kitchen. The waste is used as fertilizer—it’s buried under fruit trees on the property.
A short walk down a dirt path from the kitchen and house leads to the other side of the property where Zeigler and his crew have set up a camping facility. This is where he and his family sleep while staying at Living Energy Farm, though theyusually stay in a local house called Magnolia. Regulations prevent them from living at the farm until they receive a certificate of occupancy, which will be at the end of this year or the beginning of 2016, when the community is operating.
At this camping facility, 33-year-old Debbie Piesen—the mother of Zeigler’s children—and guests are chatting and preparing lunch while the kids play and rummage for firewood.A shack-like structure built off the tractor barn has been turnedinto a temporary cooking facility with fresh foods, water jugs, a table, dishes and a couple things bought from a grocery store, like coffees and sweeteners tucked away neatly.
“Nothing is over the counter for us,” Zeigler says. “Or almost nothing.”
Piesen is cooking rice in a hay box, or insulation cooker, which retains the heat and uses it to cook the grain thoroughly. It will be eaten for lunch and dinner.
On a nearby wood stove, Piesen heats carrots and oil to fry the rice. When she takes a break from the cooking, Zeigler picks it up and adds kale and some other veggies to the mixture. It smells fantastic and the two, along with their kids, guests and laborers, get in line for a communal lunch before anyone has the chance to sound the cornet—the Living Energy Farm way of signaling workers on the other side of the property that lunch is ready.
“We call this the death ray,” Zeigler says, standing next to a solar parabolic cooker. He holds a thin piece of kindling in front of the cooker’s dome to demonstrate the intensity of the cooker by showing how quickly the stick starts smoking when placed in the sun’s direct ray.
On this side of the property, there’s also a batch collector. It’s a tank inside an insulated box with a glass cover, tilted to catch the sun. Pressurized water comes in the cold side of the collector and passes out the hot side to the tap, without using any pumps or electronic control systems. Water can remain in the collector for long periods of time, and for six months out of the year, Zeigler says, it stores all the hot water they need here.
He says batch collectors are by far the most common means of water heating on the planet, but Americans don’t seem to know much about them. The pressurized water comes from the same pressurized source used for cold water, which in Zeigler’s case, is a hand pump, but he says city water would work just as well for urban dwellers.
To wash clothes, the crew is tinkering with an exercise bike hooked up to an old washing machine. Doing a load of laundry could take a few miles of spinning; four or five clotheslines are hung up to dry damp clothing.
When Zeigler, Piesen and family camp out at Living Energy Farm, they’re not quite roughing it. Their camping facility is built from scraps from the Habitat for Humanity dumpster in Charlottesville, and instead of insulating with straw bale like the kitchen and main house, this cabin has 12 inches of fiberglass wrapped around it. It has a passive solar design with its windows on the south side and is lit by DC LED lighting and nickel iron batteries, like the other side of the property. Zeigler says anyone could copy the passive solar design, but most don’t, since American culture is more apt to focus on appearance than sustainability.
Some Americans aren’t too keen on the unsightliness of decorating their properties with solar panels, either, but that hasn’t stopped the folks at Living Energy. They have solar photovoltaic, or PV, panels in four locations—two near the main house, one at the tractor barn and one small set used to run an irrigation system in a remote location near a field.
A solar shower is outside the camping facility, facing the woods, but the kids have stripped down and are splashing around in a small pool to cool off.
Community
Most parents are proud of their offspring, but Ziegler and Piesen believe their way of life is giving their children certain advantages. Both of their children, Rosseyanka, 4, and Nikita, 9 months, are named after persimmons—Zeigler’s favorite trees.
Though Zeigler and Piesen agree that Nikita is primarily focused on learning how to walk, they’ve seen Rosseyanka, who goes by Rosa, perform in ways that are different than that of most 4-year-olds: She understands grafting trees. She knows which weeds are edible. She likes bugs. She names the wild rabbits on the property like they’re her pets.
“It’s good for my kids to be exposed to [environmentalism] from a really early age, that it’s not just this kind of abstract thing,” says Piesen, who grew up in New Jersey suburbs, but moved to Twin Oaks, where she met Zeigler. “When I was a kid, it was like ‘I’m reusing toilet paper tubes for a project and I’m saving the earth!’”
She says her kids are learning early on how the plants react to different weather patterns and seasonal changes. They’re learning how the weather affects them and how it affects the land, she says, calling this one of the most challenging aspects of living off the grid. They must pay close attention to what the sun is doing at all times, since nearly all of their operations rely heavily on solar power.
The Living Energy community is flourishing; long- and short-term interns and volunteers of all ages work on farming or building almost every day. Until the main house is finished, these people camp out in their own tents when not staying at Magnolia. Tom Lever, who has volunteered at Living Energy for three years, says living in the community has been an enormous growing experience.
“It’s a great life,” says Lever. “It just feels right.”
Growing healthy foods and preserving agricultural heritage is Lever’s passion. He loves orange glow watermelon with bright, golden flesh harvested in late July or mid-August. “You eat so much you get a headache, a sugar rush,” he says. He also swoons over harvesting multicolored corn cobs with purples, yellows, blues and tans.
For him, farming teaches a sort of patience, humility and perseverance that help him to become better acquainted with the sky and the earth. His favorite part of working at Living Energy has been “honchoing,” or being in charge of some seed-growing work shifts.
Piesen is the farm’s manager, however, and seed-growing is how Living Energy Farm supports itself. The community is income-sharing and its members sell open-pollinated seeds to wholesalers for profit. They sell some produce, like sweet corn, summer squash, kale, beets, watermelon and strawberries from their gardens, too. With farming and building, Zeigler says hundreds of people have probably worked on their community thus far.
A volunteer, Talis Basham, says farming in blazing heat is the most challenging aspect, and to that, another volunteer, Baccarus Foster agrees, “The sun is brutal,” he says.
They rely on it, though, and this operation would be impossible without the sun’s strong presence.
Cooperation
In the heat of the day, the volunteers sit around a table in the shade with the rest of the community, as one member arranges freshly picked flowers in a jar and chats with Rosa, and the others crack jokes and scarf down their fried rice. One would never guess that they had met each other semi-recently, as interns and volunteers, and that they hadn’t grown up together in a similar environment.
The communal lifestyle demands cooperation between its members. “People are fascinated by the technology, but it’s really the cooperation that makes it work,” says Zeigler. “You can define that however you want, but we can’t build renewable energy with 7 billion independent renewable energy systems, nor can we build sustainable renewable independent energy systems on an industrial scale. It really has to be done on a village scale. That’s how it works.”
Zeigler has plenty of local environmentally minded friends, and he’s done years worth of research on what makes environmentalism work. He’s even written a couple books about it, including the 2013 tome Integrated Activism:Applying the Hidden Connections Between Ecology, Economics, Politics and Social Progress.
While developing the idea for Living Energy Farm, he asked his friends to send him records of at least three years of their residential energy usage. In his research, the lowest number he found came from the cooperative house he owns in Charlottesville that uses 9 percent of grid-tied energy. Other local communities like Twin Oaks came in between 10 and 40 percent, he says. But he was shocked by the numbers he received from his like-minded friends who live in private houses—their energy usage was between 120 and 150 percent above average for Americans.
Most Americans live in apartments in cities, Zeigler says, and living in a free-standing house has more economic and environmental costs. His research shows that community living cuts down on energy usage tremendously. Taking the final step from 10 percent energy usage to zero, like Zeigler is doing with Living Energy, is the tough part, but living at the 10 percent mark, he says, is actually pretty easy. It only requires living cooperatively.
“I’ve given this speech to thousands of people and most people don’t want to live cooperatively, but that’s because most people don’t care much about the environment,” Zeigler says.
Americans tend to live less cooperatively than people overseas who are confined to living in villages, and therefore, projects like Living Energy Farm are more likely to spread overseas, he says.
“If we could go into villages and set up better cookers and better hot water heaters, they’ll love that,” Zeigler says, claiming that Americans are the most dominant culture, obsessed with consumption and mostly responsible for destabilizing the climate.
“We’re annihilating the planet for the sake of our own short-term consumption and all we have to do is change our lifestyle,” he says. “But we don’t want to because our lifestyle is what makes us powerful.”
Correction: The original version of this story misstated the depth of water pipes. Most are two to three feet below ground, and one descends 240 feet to a submersible pump at the bottom of the well.