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Between the sheets

The actual e-mail, like so many others, is gone. It was from Frank Dubec, the publisher of this newspaper, who is a little more Yahoo in the Swiftian sense than you’d think for a guy charged with balancing budgets.


Bobcattin’: The Rivanna Solid Waste Authority’s Paper Sort Facility takes in 4,000 to 5,000 tons of recyclable material each year. Last year, it recycled 429 tons of office paper.

The first time I read Frank’s e-mail, it bothered me. I was at home, and I printed it out. I’m not sure exactly why I needed to see it on paper; it was already there on the screen, and would be until the time I deleted it weeks later. Holding that piece of paper, seeing Frank’s words static on a page, made it more real, documental, easier to understand and then dismiss, never mind the same words glowed on the screen not 2′ away from my head. The next morning at the office, I printed it again, took a pen and marked it up with notes in my own vaguely third-graderish scrawl.

His e-mail began something like this: “Unless this is an experiment in forced obedience….” In so many words, he said I was a dumbass for trying to get everyone in the office to spend a week emptying every scrap of paper they used into two large cardboard boxes.

My initial nervousness that I had already sunk this project dissipated after mapping out my plan with a pen on Frank’s e-mail. Suddenly, his was just another electronic missive from a boss, not assignment-killing criticism.

Like the e-mail, those two print copies are long gone. They could be in the bucket of a Bobcat, or in one of the many mountains of paper just off of Meade Avenue. The two sheets could be in a tractor-trailer, crumpled tight amongst tons of other workday clutter, rocking their way to Richmond. Or they could already be there, fibers ripped asunder, drying into pulp, waiting to be put together again, a fresh sheet of paper, ready for the next time you or I hit “Print.”

Western promise

I sit by the printer at work and, seemingly without pause, the yellow light blinks and gives way to its green counterpart. Something deep inside the plastic casing clicks, and then there’s a whir. The beige box spits out page after page, which, if retrieved quickly enough, still hold the warm smell of ink, a scent that, if one were to close eyes and lift it to nose, smells vaguely ripe, moist, even a little post-coital. Most of the time I don’t notice.
 
But sometimes I do, and on those days certain promises made 10 years ago come to mind. We’d been promised a paperless office, a workplace devoid of the scattered, cluttered clumps of paper humpbacking everyone’s desk. Everything, a voice deep from Silicon Valley seemed to whisper, was changing. E-mail would replace the letter, the PDF the fax. Entire libraries were being put online. Copiers soon would have their place alongside Archie Bunker’s chair in the Smithsonian, another relic from a time that had, thankfully, passed.

If that voice were right, then why this constant mechanical chugging 2′ from my head? Why this rolling range of papers forever changing the topography of my desk, just to the left of my computer, that smallish gray machine sent to eliminate the wave of waste now threatening to crest and bury it?

If this voice were to be trusted, then what about the four cardboard boxes—not two—tucked away in the dark corner of the newsroom? For weeks they’ve sat there, boxes full to their tops of the best tactile argument against this paperless office myth. Roughly 140 pounds of paper, 6′ if stacked from the floor. That’s a welterweight boxer. That’s a fat supermodel.

There are around 5,000 sheets of paper that, if laid end to end, would stretch farther than 10 miles. Combine that with the approximately 800 envelopes and beginning Downtown, you could damn near walk out of the city on a path made from a week’s worth of our paper.

Years after technology promised to save us from drowning in a sea of paper, most of us are still bobbing along, swirling eddies of faxes, printouts, handwritten notes surrounding us, copies of copies of copies. So why is paper—everyday, foldable, analogue paper—so integral to the work we do? And what happens to all that paper when, like the vast majority of people riding the desk rodeo, we toss it away after its use has come to its end?

Pulp and the paperless fiction

It wasn’t always supposed to be this way. Back in the mid-1970s, the kernel of the idea that would later grow into the Paperless Office formed in the unlikeliest of spots—Xerox, the heart of the paper business. While the main of the company was pumping out copy machines, a small research team was looking at the possibility of an office that didn’t run on paper.

This wasn’t new intellectual ground. The county had already seen the advance of the telegraph and phonograph almost a century before—two devices meant to vie for the informational supremacy that paper had long held. Edison, when he first invented a cylinder that could record a human voice, suggested one of its main uses to be dictatorial, a replacement of the business letter.

Eventually, the paperless ideal was reshaped by the technological forces of the 1990s: Ethernet-connected computers, the World Wide Web and Hypertext Markup Language, better known to geeks workwide as HTML. All of these transmitted information between users without the need or burden of paper. Instead of reams of office stock, information could now reside virtually, in the form of word-processed documents or online. Paper, as informational currency, was on its way out.

Or so some thought. The idea of the Paperless Office began to spread from geeked-up information architects to soft-bellied middle managers looking to save the company on paper costs. But the advent of the World Wide Web increased paper consumption not only in the office but at the homes of the now-wired workers. Abigail Sellen and Richard Harper, in their book The Myth of the Paperless Office, show that in 2002, the peak of the Silicon Valley boom, the output of the paper industry was greater than ever, and that the introduction of e-mail into organizations increased paper consumption by 40 percent.

That increase becomes real on a recent Friday morning when Bruce Edmonds and I roll into the Paper Sort Facility about 20 minutes ahead of a massive, three-axle truck bearing a mixed-paper bin from the McIntire Recycling facility. All of McIntire’s paper comes here. So does the paper from the city governmental buildings and commercial haulers, paper from the sundry city businesses, C-VILLE among them. If the two printed copies of Frank’s e-mail found their way into a recycle bin, they would have passed through here.

And all of this is overseen by Edmonds, whose official title with RSWA is Recycling & Litter Manager, but who describes himself as “kind of a Greenpeace guy.” Whether real or imagined, he carries himself as a man under constant scrutiny, shoulders hunched in anticipation of another barrage of criticism. It’s a little over 40 degrees today, and he’s wearing a Pittsburgh hoodie, hair pulled back in a ponytail with a purple band.

Last year, like the year before it, and the year before that, a foldable, marked up, dog-eared tidal wave washed through this facility tucked away in the corner of a Meade Avenue scrap yard. In a corner of Coiner’s Scrap Yard, two men work for eight hours a day, five days a week, and do nothing but deal with the incredible, never-ending amount of paper we produce.

A part of the Rivanna Solid Waste Authority, the Paper Sort Facility at Meade Avenue serves as the last port of call for paper leaving the city on its way to be recycled. In 2007, the facility processed roughly 429 tons of office paper alone, the equivalent of more than six M1 Abrams Main Battle Tanks, the kind used in the first Gulf War.
 
Paper here is classified in five categories. There is office paper, the six tanks. The facility also recycled 763 tons of mixed paper, the wrapping paper found on nearly every product, the paper six-pack holders of beer, the paper packaging around the reams of office paper that we tear into nearly every other day. It also moved 2,323 tons of newsprint and magazines, 818 tons of cardboard. All of it recycled.

From here, the five grades of paper make their way to plants in Richmond, Danville and Lynchburg, depending on where space is available. There, tons of paper are turned into pulp, and that pulp is turned into recycled paper, and that paper is sold to various companies that will sell it back to us, which we will, in all probability, stuff in a recycling bin and ship off to the Paper Sort Facility.

“Maybe it’s my personality and I don’t do a real good job of being real nice, but I tell people everything we take at McIntire, we’re recycling it or reusing it,” Edmonds said the first time we talked. Though he talks like a man on a drip coffee IV, he is exceedingly amiable, his tossed-off comments aimed at some ethereal, perpetual recycling critic stand as strange non sequiturs.

“I visit all of these plants because I trust no one,” he continued. “We just started taking those compact florescent bulbs, and last Thursday I drove down to Richmond and spent the entire day down there at the factory learning how they’re being recycled. And I paid for my own lunch, by the way. That’s the kind of guy I am. I’m one of those nut cases. And I tell people—and I’m going to be honest—they’re not overpaying me.”

Where is my mind? (On your desk)

If it’s easy to trace the path of paper once it’s outlived its institutional usefulness, it is hard to know just how much paper is being used. The city is reluctant to disclose the amount of office paper it buys. They work with three vendors, and while they have the numbers from two, they are unable to get quantities from the third. Since giving the two numbers would be an incomplete picture, says city spokesperson Ric Barrick, the city won’t release any numbers.

It’s the same story with Albemarle County, though they will say the county recycled 63.05 tons of paper last year. The city, with its single-stream recycling program that lumps all recyclable materials together, is unable to quantify the amount of paper it recycles.

UVA, on the other hand, runs its own recycling center and keeps record of the amount of paper that passes through. In 2005, UVA recycled 1,745 tons of paper—four times more than what the entire county recycled last year. In 2006, the total jumped nearly 200 tons to 1,937. From 2000 to August 2007, UVA has recycled roughly 13,402 tons of paper.
In the age of e-mail, PDF and wireless everything, UVA’s tonnage equivalent of a battleship hardly points to a paperless future. Where did the Paperless Office go so wrong?

Proponents of the Paperless Office saw paper as a simple medium for information. What they missed was paper’s functionality as a tool for managing and creating the information it transports. They saw costs to buy, store and deliver, but didn’t recognize what Sellen and Harper dubbed its “affordance”—what paper helps us do.

Paper can be marked up, shuffled, spread out, passed between different people, folded, thumbed through and left on our desks as a physical reminder. Sellen and Harper found that our desks serve as snapshots of our minds. The way we order the paper on our desks tells us which particular thread of thinking we were following after we return from lunch, and the papers at the tops of our piles show us what our mental priorities were. The notes, underlinings and marked-up pages give us a stop-motion shot of our mind at work.

Five years ago, I worked at a Washington, D.C. nonprofit. Like most of these operations, ours was powered by under-25 desk jockeys, we who traded low pay for the promise of work days capped at eight hours and the right to wear wrinkled jeans unbothered by the suited higher-ups. We quickly came to realize two things. First, the length of your title was precisely and reversely proportional to your actual importance. Second, those of us who had the cleanest desks didn’t do shit.

Our desks were monuments to output, real or, on some days, feigned. Some of us cultivated piles of papers like giant bonsai trees, tending them daily until they shattered the dichotomy of perfection and imperfection, crossing into some sort of office zen. We also noticed our boss, the man charged with the organization’s day-to-day activities, had as much paper on his desk as he did hair on his head.

He would often come and stand by our desks, making noises about mess and inefficiency. We kept quite. He had a furious temper and not a social skill at his disposal. None of us were surprised to learn, I’m sure, that after he left, the organization’s books were found to be in disarray. The board of directors saw his clean desk and felt confident in a man who was so obviously organized and well be-suited. We compared his desk with our own and stared into his windowed office from our cubes, silently judging.

These internal landscapes spread bare across desks mean little to anyone but us. Even now, I know exactly what “tour = vid” and “thurs paper w/ Cathy” means, notes scribbled from a meeting on a printed to-do list. But if I begin to dig through the stacks of other people’s paper that I’ve collected from the office, little of it means anything to me.

On top of a three-line memo titled “The Wonders of Winter” is the figure, written in black ink, 23/10. I don’t know if those numbers (a fraction? a ratio?) are related to the words below, or were scribbled completely independently in a moment of hurried work.

There is a yellow post-it, the size of a thumb, that says, “Follow-up. Idea: Flesh out: Get done.”

There is a list of our local entertainment picks—Sharon Jones, Tim Reynolds, UVA tennis—with check marks by some entries, others crossed out entirely. A name is circled, and a line in red ink drawn to the handwritten words “speculate; board chair.”

Paper haze

As facilities go, the Paper Sort isn’t much. Five tractor trailers sit at the wait in back of a large concrete slab where the large metal bins of paper are dumped. From there the cardboard and mixed paper gets baled. The office paper is kept loose because of its lack of heft and the fact that a good lot of it comes to the facility shredded.

Every Wednesday morning, for example, the city drops off its shredded documents. “Faithfully,” says Edmonds. “They’ve never missed it. It’s 9 o’clock, here the boys are.”

The truck from McIntire rumbles in, backs up to the slab, and its back hydraulic lifts come to life, unsheathing the bright chrome bars as the truck’s bed tips up. A small amount of paper trickles out, and then gravity kicks in and a seemingly endless pile of paper disgorges itself from the bin. Because the paper inside the bin is loose, the haul is probably only three or four tons. Cardboard loads, because they are compacted at McIntire, weigh more than five tons.

The driver stops the bed mid-tilt and backs up the truck, pushing the paper on the concrete into a semi-compressed pile. The bed starts up again with a hydraulic whine, and more paper tumbles on top of the pile.

This is the mixed paper, the Diet Coke 12-packs and Raisin Bran boxes, and it will be sorted through and baled. Larry begins to warm up the compactor. Once the truck leaves, Bobby will jump in the Bobcat to dump the loose paper into the humming, shaking mouth of the compactor. Every couple of minutes, a loud pop, gun-shot-like, will ricochet off the concrete floor and around the three walls. It’s the sound of a metal band being shot around the massive brick of compressed paper.

All the paper, loose or compacted, is stuffed into the trailers by Bobby with the Bobcat, a small front-end loader that is driven with two handles, the bucket of which is operated with foot pedals. It is a nightmare for an unseasoned operator; everything about it is reversed. Bobby, in his late 30s or early 40s and bearded, is to the Bobcat what Jimi Hendrix was to the electric guitar.


Waste not: “I’m under this environmental management system that Rivanna instituted at the cost of tens of thousands of dollars, meaning that we’re reducing our carbon footprint,” said RSWA’s Bruce Edmonds. “Every trailer that leaves here is fully loaded.”

Edmonds walks inside a trailer filled with loose office paper. It is packed tight against the back wall, floor to 10′ ceiling, as if an enormous hand had flattened it all to an end. This is Bobby’s work. Sheets and sheets of paper form a wall in front of me, starting at my feet and gradually reaching the ceiling. Intermixed with the regular sheets are the confetti-like strips of shredded documents, presumably from the city.

“See how good my guys are?” asks Edmonds, pointing to the trailer’s ceiling. “Notice they haven’t busted my trailer. These men, Larry and Bobby, are very trained.”

He looks over the stack of paper up to the ceiling.

“That’s tight,” he says. In my hour or so here, it becomes obvious Edmonds thinks about paper stacking the way a museum curator might think about the layout of a new exhibit. “See how tight that is? You get the wrong guy in here, I walk in here and in two seconds I can judge their work. One, I could see the sun. Two, it would only be about this high,” he says, hand at his chest.

Edmonds moves back to the bales. “Think about how tight that compaction is,” he says.
Think about it. You can tell Edmonds does. Not look. Not notice. Not ponder. Think.

End of the paper trail

In this wall of paper, single sheets stick out. Most look similar: inked over, marked up, margins filled with phrases, numbers and words with a collective meaning amounting to a dada poem. And here is what the Paperless Office people didn’t figure on—rarely do we read anything in the office without a pen in hand.

Paper allows us to read and write at once, as well as navigate through large documents. As Sellen and Harper discovered, at work we rarely read in a linear fashion. Instead, people page through documents, skim and skip, get a sense for certain sections. Ironically, linear reading is the mode that digital technology best facilitates. Begin to read a PDF longer than two pages, and a feeling arises that is akin to walking down a sewer pipe.

Technology hasn’t eliminated paper from the office—it’s simply given us another medium in which to work: dual use. And here we now stand, one foot firmly planted in the land of paper, the other put forward into the benefits and limitations of digital technology. The question, then, is this: Is dual use, the combination of paper and technology we use to do work, a viable compromise between the way we work and the connectivity of technology?

Or is dual use just an evolutionary way station on the path to an all-digital world?

More and more of our communication outside of work has moved into the digital realm, with almost no trail of paper, no proof weeks or years from now that these conversations ever happened. Quick text messages, lives lived via MySpace and Facebook, our cultural channels are increasingly leaving paper behind. Ten years from now, when your average 22-year-old starts his or her first office job having been plugged into this digital landscape from birth, will we still leave the same overwhelming amount of paper in our wake?

Looking at our paper use today, it’s hard to imagine we won’t. But then I remember my time as a graduate assistant at a Northern Virginia university, where I taught freshmen and sophomores. Just five years removed from my own undergraduate days when pen and paper were all you needed in class, and when not everyone I knew owned a computer, it was a jarring first day when students walked into English 201, flipped open their laptops and sat prepared to type notes (while—I tried not to notice—playing solitaire and surfing the Internet).

About a third of class readings came from the Web, so imagine my surprise when the time came for us to discuss the first one. I asked the students to take out the essay, which I had assumed they had printed then dutifully marked up.

Blank looks, confusion. Only one or two people had printed the essay. The rest had read it online and, if they were to be believed, typed any notes they took on their computers.

We had a quick talk about the necessity of printing everything we read and bringing it to class, and for the most part, that’s the way it worked from there on out. But even as I was explaining all this, the looks from these newly minted college students served to point out the absurdity of what I was saying. Read something, take notes, then print everything out? It hadn’t even occurred to them not to read a dense essay on their screens. I felt so old.

In a world where technology is the means of dissemination, but paper the way in which we interact with information, how much of paper’s necessity is vestigial, waiting to be discarded with an evolutionary shake of the shoulders? If you grow up with pixels as your visual medium, then what good is paper?

Back at the facility, the truck has emptied the bin and is driving away. Bobby jumps in the Bobcat and Larry punches in the code to start the baler. It kicks itself to life, and the rumble of the departing truck begins giving way to another motorized sound, the baler, higher pitched and hollow.

The truck will be back here again Monday, says Edmonds, full. In fact, he’s seen an increase in all grades of paper coming through here. All of it except newsprint. “The 30-and-under crowd,” he says, referring to the decline in daily newspaper subscriptions, “are going Net.”

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News

New hospital to serve long-term patients

In the face of what UVA Executive Vice President Leonard Sandridge called “a very heavy patient load” at the UVA Hospital, there are plans to break ground this summer on a long-term, acute-care hospital just west of the city. The 40-bed hospital will cost around $24 million, according to Thomas Harkins, the director of UVA’s Health System Facilities Planning and Capital Development.


UVA wants to begin construction in June on a new long-term, acute-care hospital on the grounds of its North Ridge facilities on 250W.

UVA officials laid out preliminary plans for the hospital at the February 21 Planning & Coordination Council (PACC) meeting with leaders from the city and county. Those plans could include a fire station on the North Ridge Grounds, approximately a mile and a half west of the city on Route 250. If the county gives its approval, construction would begin in June.

The hospital would care for patients with a minimum stay of 25 days. At the main UVA Hospital, the average stay is about six days.

“It could be a patient who’s on a ventilator for a long period of time,” says Harkins. “That’s a large portion of that population. It could also be a post- or pre-transplant patient.”

With the heavy patient load, having a facility to treat long-term patients will mean quicker bed turnover at the main hospital.

“When [long-term patients] are in a bed at the main hospital, it minimizes the turnover of that bed,” Harkins says. “You could get four of five patients in that same bed in the main hospital.”

UVA Health Center spokesperson Peter Jump says the Medical Center will resubmit a revised site plan to the county in the coming two weeks. The hospital, with about 40 beds, could also get long-term patients from Martha Jefferson, Augusta and Culpeper hospitals.

The hospital will employ approximately 100 staff, most of them nurses. Sandridge said that the majority of the staff would come from new hires. And this would mean new jobs, good news for the county and city, though Sandridge added that they would also be hiring from outside the local community.

C-VILLE welcomes news tips from readers. Send them to news@c-ville.com.

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Lifeguards and physicists wanted

Looking for a job? Although we’re facing the prospect of an economic recession (just saying the word will make it come to pass, some experts tell us, so our apologies for tanking the economy), the Charlottesville area has the economic cushion provided by UVA, which, it seems, is perpetually hiring.

So not to worry, job seeker. The University’s jobs site is full of opportunities, and we’ve cherry-picked the best jobs just for you.

Do you look fabulous in a bathing suit and don’t mind living on $25,000 a year in Charlottesville? Is there a primo job for you! UVA is looking for lifeguards, 40 hours a week, hourly pay. Just two major requirements: Better be up on your CPR, and your name had better not pop up on the Sexual Offender Registry. After all, you are working semi-naked.

Looking to put that Ph.D. in media studies to good use, but don’t want a job in the media (and who does, when it comes right down to it)? The Department of Media Studies is looking to hire a tenure-track assistant professor. According to the site, the department seeks “candidates who will generate innovative and interdisciplinary scholarship in global or comparative media.” If you know what that means, you’re well on your way to landing the job!

Or if you want a more hands-on approach to the media, specifically the local variety, why not apply for the Director of Media Relations position? You’ll be overseeing a staff of nine, alternately pushing good news and stonewalling bad. The ability to multitask is a must.

If all of this sounds like too much commitment, and you really just need some money to support your songwriting/sonnet writing/Guitar Hero addiction, then this is the job for you: Temporary Telephone Interviewer. It pays $10.14 to $19.81 an hour, and all it requires is “a clear voice, pleasant telephone manner and ability to fluently read an interview script aloud from a computer screen.” Which, as we all know, is employer-speak for, “Just please don’t come to work high.”

And finally, on the other end of the UVA job spectrum, is the opening for an Assistant Professor of Physics—Experimental. It involves work in the “CMS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider and in the NOVA neutrino experiment at Fermilab.” Now, we don’t know exactly what this is, but it if you repeat these words 10 times very quickly, it starts to sound suspiciously like “Department of Defense.” At least that’s what our friend the Temporary Telephone Interviewer said.

C-VILLE welcomes news tips from readers. Send them to news@c-ville.com.

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City sees three random attacks in four days

Coming home from catching a movie on UVA Grounds, Chris Martin pedaled his bike up the hill on W. High Street, heading east. It was just after 11:30pm, and as he got to the first blinking stop light, a man got out of the back of a Ford Explorer and said to Martin, “Hey, I got a question for you.”

As Martin rode past him, the man knocked him from his bike as three other men jumped out of the Explorer. They ran over to Martin, who was lying on his back.

“Two of the guys were hitting me in the face,” says Martin, roommate of a C-VILLE staffer. “One of the guys was digging his hands in my pocket, I assume looking for my wallet. The other guy didn’t touch me. I think he must have been some kind of a look-out guy.”


Four white men pushed a man from his bike around here and beat him in the middle of High Street in an attempted robbery at around 11:30pm on February 19, according to the victim.

For about 10 seconds, Martin lay on his back, trying to fend off the blows from the two men. And just as suddenly as the first man had knocked him from his bike, a car appeared on High Street, headlights shining. The men scattered in different directions, the Explorer still running. Martin took this as his opportunity. He got to his feet, grabbed his bike and sped off.

Looking over his shoulder as he raced to his home on Locust Avenue, he came to 10th Street and faced a red light.

“I just blew through,” says Martin. “I realized once I made the left turn onto Locust Avenue that I was probably all right. I hadn’t seen any cars around me.”

According to the police report, the four assailants were white males, 18 to 25 years old. Nothing was taken from Martin, a fourth grade teacher at St. Anne’s Belfield. Since September, 400 assaults have occurred in the city, 44 of them in the greater Downtown area, according to city police.

The High Street attack was the second of three city incidents in the span of four days in which people traveling alone at night have been robbed, assaulted or both. On the night of February 18, a man was robbed of his wallet at gunpoint near the 300 block of Robertson Avenue, near Jefferson Park Avenue.

In the early morning hours of February 21, according to the Charlottesville Police Department, a female UVA student was robbed and sexually assaulted on the 1600 block of Grady Avenue. Police arrested city resident Christopher Allen Noakes, 39, and charged him with robbery, attempted rape, forcible sodomy and abduction. The victim was taken to the UVA Hospital, where she was treated for non-life-threatening injuries.

As for Martin, who suffered bruises on the left side of his face, a black eye and a swollen lip, he says that he was lucky that a car scattered his attackers so quickly. He had taken that route home at least 50 times, he says, and never had any problems.

“I hate to say it, but I doubt I’ll be taking the bike out at night for a while,” he says. “I’m a little gun shy right now.”

C-VILLE welcomes news tips from readers. Send them to news@c-ville.com.

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Crime, blood and a guy named Locard

After forensic detective Mark Fields finishes hanging a piece of cloth from the blackboard, he peels off his latex gloves and turns to face the classroom of PVCC students. “Does anybody care if I wear a tie?” he asks them. Nobody cares. “Good,” he says, and snaps the clip-on tie from his collar.

Fields is here to give a lecture on forensic science, a field recently made popular by TV shows like “CSI.” The audience is made up of students from PVCC’s “Principles of Criminal Investigation” class, taught by Brian Flick. For the next three hours, Fields runs through a presentation on how to approach and secure a crime scene, how to document a scene and, perhaps most importantly, the words of Edmond Locard.


Shows like “CSI” have made juries smarter, says Detective Mark Fields, but “criminals watch that stuff too, and they learn.”

Locard is widely known as the founder of forensic science. The idea that has come to be known as Locard’s Principle is the fundamental idea on which forensic science rests. It states that no matter what we do, we leave traces of physical evidence in our wake. “Physical evidence cannot be wrong, it cannot perjure itself, it cannot be wholly absent,” wrote Locard. “Only human failure to find it, study and understand it, can diminish its value.”

Fields joined the Charlottesville Police Department’s forensics unit in 1996, and he is the lone detective in the unit. With his straight black hair and round glasses, Fields more than resembles the incendiary comic Bill Hicks, though his first couple jokes bomb in front of the less-than-energetic class. But that is before Fields begins the presentation. When he does, hands constantly shoot up in the air with questions. He is a walking encyclopedia of forensic knowledge, and he meticulously demonstrates just how he would approach and work a crime scene in a place familiar to all of the students: this particular classroom.

Fields acknowledged that a lot of interest in his job has lately arisen from the popularity of the “CSI” TV franchise. And that, he says, is both good and bad.

“It has made our jobs harder because criminals watch that stuff too, and they learn,” he says after the presentation. “They pick out little tidbits.”

But what he dubs the “‘CSI’ effect” also has its upside.

“Juries are getting smarter, because they’re asking better questions,” says Fields. “When it comes time for jury deliberation, and they come out and ask for diagrams or sketches…if they ask for clarification, that to me says they’re getting smarter, they’re listening, they’re paying more attention.”

In his 12 years in the unit, there perhaps has not been a higher-profile case than that of the serial rapist, a 10-year case that ended with the August arrest of Nathan Antonio Washington and his subsequent guilty plea. Fields processed some of the crime scenes. Watching seven assaults pile up without an arrest took its toll.

“It got frustrating,” he says. “A lot of things run into your mind when weeks drag into months and months drag into years. I can’t tell you how many clues or leads that were given to us that we constantly worked on.

“The emotional effect on me—it would be like going to work every day, and ‘Are we going to get a new scene, are we going to get that phone call from the lab?’ I can tell you from having talked to some of the victims, there is a tremendous wave of relief all the way around.”

C-VILLE welcomes news tips from readers. Send them to news@c-ville.com.

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Green groups splinter over water plan

A 50-year water supply plan that includes the expansion of the Ragged Mountain Reservoir and the construction of a pipeline received approval by the state Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ), though people opposing the plan say that it is not yet a done deal. The DEQ issued the Rivanna Water and Sewer Authority (RWSA) a Water Protection Permit on February 11, a major step forward for a plan that detractors call overly expensive and unnecessary.

Previous coverage:

Flood of water repairs
Area system needs $190 million—guess who pays?

Water may be low, but blame’s high
RWSA weathers stormy comments on water supply plan

Flowing toward the future
RWSA approves $118M five-year plan to ease strained infrastructure

Uncharted waters
What happened to our water supply plan?

The plan, unanimously approved by the city and county in 2006, was once seen by environmentalists as a victory, though recently they have splintered, with voices of opposition emerging. The plan authorizes the construction of a new dam at the Ragged Mountain Reservoir, raising the water’s elevation by 45′. According to the RWSA, this would increase the reservoir storage to 2.19 billion gallons from 464 million. The price tag: $142 million.

To pay for both the dam and the pipeline at the same time, RWSA estimates water rates would annually increase 7 percent for the city and 11.7 percent for the county over the next five years, according to Charlottesville Tomorrow. In the county, that would mean an average monthly bill would rise to $44 in 2013 from $25 today.

Rich Collins, former board chairman of the RWSA, calls the permit “no big deal” and says the plan is a bad idea for a number of reasons. “Those who pay water and sewer rates, especially city residents, they’re getting a disproportionate share of the cost, and it is producing water at high risk of failure and contamination,” Collins says.

And, Collins says, it is water that the area doesn’t need. According to Citizens for a Sustainable Water Plan, of which Collins is a member, the plan supports area growth of 100,000 more people. Collins is also a member of Advocates for a Sustainable Albemarle Population (ASAP), an anti-growth group. The plan would undoubtedly support further growth in the county.

“Right now, more and more people feel that [growth] isn’t a good idea, and that more importantly, we now understand at certain points of growth, the costs become disproportionate to the benefit,” he says. “If you were not to increase the water supply to meet demand from new residents, then you could very well get along without any new reservoir supplies.”

Ridge Schuyler of the Nature Conservatory calls the anti-growth argument against the plan “simplistic.”

“It sounds good on its face, but when you dig deeper, it doesn’t make a lot of sense,” he says. “The public water supply provides water for Charlottesville and the designated growth areas of Albemarle County…the places where we are encouraging the growth.” If you constrain growth there, says Schuyler, you move it to rural areas, where new residents simply sink wells. “Rather than stopping growth, it’s going to promote sprawl.”


To fund the $142 million dam and pipeline for the Ragged Mountain Reservoir (above), RWSA estimates water rates would increase annually 7 percent for the city and 11.7 percent for the county.

Some local environmentalists thought they had scored a green coup in 2006 when they were able to tank a previous water plan to pump in water from the James River. With the current plan, they succeeded in using water from the local watershed while accommodating a growing population.

“Once they said, ‘We’re going to go with this local plan, and we can get just as much water,’ we were all high-fiving this great victory,” says Jeff Werner of the Piedmont Environmental Council. “If we want to stay in the local watershed, we have to prove that we can get just as much water as the projection says we need. We can’t argue for less water. The numbers have to work.”

The plan will need another permit, this time at the federal level from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. According to RWSA, this permit is expected in the spring. But former City Councilor Kevin Lynch—who was a member of the Council that approved the 50-year plan—says he has “serious concerns” about where the plan is heading, calling it “environmentally irresponsible.”

“You can’t very well call yourself sustainable if you go and build a big reservoir, and then as soon as it silts up, go build another one,” he says. Part of the reasoning behind expanding the Ragged Mountain Reservoir hinges on the diminishing capacity at the South Fork Reservoir due to a build-up of sediment at its bottom. Lynch supports the idea of dredging the South Fork, which the RWSA has rejected, arguing that the cost—up to $145 million over 50 years, it says—doesn’t justify the expanded capacity.

Lynch also questions the urgency with which RWSA is pushing the plan. “We’re not in an immediate crisis here,” he says. “There’s another subtext that [the RWSA’s] been putting out there, and they truly have people scared that there’s some kind of crisis going on. And it’s simply not true. We have plenty of water here.

“Why do we need to spend $142 million? Really the only redeeming feature of this plan is that Rivanna’s engineers get to play Tonka toys for the next 10 years. That’s a lot more sexy than dredging.”

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AccessUVA almost at “full implementation”

In a September 17 editorial column in The Cavalier Daily, Josh Levy bemoaned the financial help some students receive to attend college. “Financial aid encourages people who have no business being in college to attend,” wrote Levy, pointing out two perceived problems. First, he argued, bad students drag down good students. Second, “our workforce will actually be too qualified to function properly. America needs factory workers and waiters just as it needs medical researchers and lawyers.”


John Blackburn, UVA’s dean of admissions, hit the road with the likes of Harvard and Princeton, touting the AccessUVA program.

Previous coverage:

A very strong commitment
What AccessUVA, an ambitious aid program, has to offer

Not surprisingly, Levy’s no fan of AccessUVA, the 4-year-old program that meets 100 percent of financial need for all admitted undergraduate students with loans and grants. It goes so far as to replace loans with grants for students coming from families that earn at or below 200 percent of the federal poverty level.

At the February 7 Board of Visitors meeting, questions were raised about students attending UVA under the $58.8 million AccessUVA program being stigmatized. There are 848 students in the current class covered by AccessUVA, with 180 of those students receiving full scholarship support.

Milton Adams, vice provost for academic programs, said that the University didn’t “spotlight” AccessUVA students like the “state to the south of us,” a reference to the University of North Carolina’s “Carolina Covenant,” the first public school program that promised to meet all student financial aid needs. Adams referenced “occasional comments in The Cav Daily,” but said that students under the program were not identified as such.

But he pointed out that some students under the AccessUVA program have formed their own University-funded student group, Hoos’ for Open Access. It publishes the blog AccessUVA.

“We wanted that to come from [the students],” Adams said, “and it happened.”

In recent years, UVA has stepped up its recruitment of minority and lower-income students. Its class of 2011, officials are quick to point out, is the most diverse in the University’s history. Roughly 11 percent of the class is African American, which ties UVA with Columbia University as the leader in percentage of first-year black students, according to the Journal of Blacks in Higher Education.

UVA President John Casteen, in his State of the University speech, said that after beginning the program in Febrary 2004, “we are pretty close at this point in seeing AccessUVA at full implementation.”

A link for detailed information on AccessUVA is now on the online application. Over 5,000 prospective students clicked it this year, with 1,320 completing the questionnaires to determine eligibility for enrollment.

In September 2006, UVA announced that it was dropping its early decision program, which officials saw as an obstacle for minority and low-income students in attending UVA. Last semester, John Blackburn, UVA’s dean of admissions, toured the county with officials from Harvard and Princeton in an effort to recruit more lower-income students. A large part of that effort was talking up AccessUVA.

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Bill would move costs from developers to residents

After a 101′ proposed building on W. Main Street laid bare the murky process of proffers—those extra improvement or bundles of cash offered by developers to offset their project’s impact—the city is working to create proffer guidelines for developers. But if a bill that would kill the state’s proffer system is passed in Richmond, the city may as well toss its guidelines out the window.


Supervisor Dennis Rooker says that under impact fees, the county would be left footing the bill to mitigate a new project’s impact on the county’s infrastructure.

Senate Bill 768, which the senate finance committee passed on February 6, would scrap the current proffer system in favor of impact fees. This change would drastically reduce localities’ power to mitigate the impact of large developments that require rezoning. The impact of the change would be relatively minimal in Charlottesville. Most of its construction is by-right, meaning that developers are rarely beholden to the city to build. The most recent exception—the 101′ W. Main building—proffered $300,000 toward affordable housing before City Council approved rezoning.

But the impact to Albemarle County, with its proffer policy of $17,500 per single-family detached house, would be huge. Along with capping the amount of money that localities receive from developers, the bill would also eliminate off-site transportation improvements, one of the major issues in recent county proffer wrangling. Not surprisingly, the Board of Supervisors unanimously opposes the bill.

Supervisor Dennis Rooker sent an e-mail to Creigh Deeds, Emmett Hanger, Rob Bell and David Toscano urging them to fight the bill. In his e-mail, Rooker wrote that with impact fees, the $41 million Biscuit Run proffers would have been reduced by more than half—$25 million.

Under the new system, wrote Rooker, the county would lose $12,500 per single-family detached unit, cutting the county’s current standard of $17,500 to just $5,000. With that money staying in the developers’ pockets, the county would be left footing the bill to mitigate a new project’s impact on the county’s infrastructure (think roads and utilities) and services (police, schools, etc.).

John Cruickshank of the local Sierra Club says passing the bill would be a “disaster.”

“It would make it very difficult for localities to get developers to pay for the true cost of their new projects,” he says. “The result will be that current residents will have to pay for new growth with increased taxes.”

Sponsored by Republican Senator John Watkins, the bill came out of committee on the last day possible. “The bill has been a moving target,” wrote Rooker, “with each iteration being a worse deal for localities.”

The timing of the bill coincides with the downturn in the housing market. So it should come as no surprise that, according to the Virginia Public Access Project, Watkins’s second-biggest donor (behind Dominion Power) for his 2007 re-election was R.F. Ranson, a real estate developer, who gave him $10,500. In 2003, Watkins received $5,300 from the Virginia Association of Realtors in Glen Allen, $4,850 from R.F. Ranson and $3,150 from R.F. Ranson General Contractors Incorporated.

“I think the developers view this economic downturn as an opportunity to get something done that they’ve wanted to get done for a long time,” says Rooker. “What you’ve got is several people who’re carrying the water on this bill who are big recipients of developer money.”

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Dem fundraiser draws Obama and Clinton on cusp of primary

Two girls, probably in their early 20s, get in the line that has formed in front of the concession stand. It is past 6pm on Saturday evening and all of the big-money Dems have been escorted to the floor of Richmond’s Alltel Pavilion, where they are no doubt enjoying a dinner of steak and salmon right now. The girls look over the menu—popcorn, nachos, hotdogs—usual basketball-game fare. Now that the moneyed and old have been seated, it’s almost nothing but Barack Obama supporters up here, as far as the eye can see.


Where the streets have a new name: In Richmond, young Dems spell out their support for the Illinois Senator.
Links to video from the Jefferson-Jackson Dinner:

Hillary Clinton

Barack Obama

Previous coverage of Obama and Clinton in Virginia:

Obama packs Pavilion
Democratic candidate blasts Bush, calls for change

Pro-Health care, anti-war: Obama Rocks Pavilion [with video]
Branding himself an outsider, Obama calls for a change to D.C. "game"

Clinton packs Paramount, raises dough
Crowd verdict: warm, with ass and feet

Obama, where art thou?
State Democrats eat dinner with the Illinois senator and hope he can make Virginia a Blue state

Both Obama and Hillary Clinton will speak shortly, three days before the Virginia primary’s 103 delegates go up for grabs. Even now, a week past Super Tuesday where the race is still anyone’s, it is hard to say what the major differences are between Clinton and Obama. They are relatively alike on most main policy issues: the war, economy, energy, environment and the perpetual idiocy of the sitting president.

While it became easy to pick out male Clinton supporters in the money crowd by their superfluous amounts of hair gel, so too did it get easier to distinguish Obama supporters later by their youth, and at times, orthodontic braces. (Though what to make of the Obama man in the ascot, three shirt buttons undone?) Surely, the thinking goes, if there were a real difference in the candidates, one would be able to find it among their supporters.

The girls turn away from the menu. The first one, straight black hair, smallish features and quiet, says she’s for Obama. The second, black party dress and pearls, is more aggressive.

“Obama is inspiring,” she says. “Hillary Clinton is more in it for the politics. He’s in it for the real change.”

She goes back to the menu, but then whips around.

“If Hillary wins the nomination,” she says, “I won’t vote for her.”


Clinton told the crowd that the GOP had selected “more of the same” with McCain, a criticism that was leveled at her, too, by Obama’s backers.

This is a surprising sentiment, especially since this is the 2008 Jefferson-Jackson Dinner, the annual shindig for the Virginia Democratic Party. But it’s one that I’ll hear throughout the night as I wander the halls outside the arena, searching for random and anonymous Clinton and Obama supporters to ask, What is the biggest difference between Clinton and Obama?

A UVA English major sporting a Clinton sticker says about Obama, “I’ve heard a lot of talk. But there’s nothing really behind it.” It’s hard to find men her age that are for Clinton. As I turn to walk away, she tells me, “I’m also majoring in Women’s Studies.”

The common refrain from Clinton supporters concerns her experience, her years in the White House as the First Lady, her lost scrum over health care reform, her current tenure in the Senate. That’s what two 20-somethings in floral-print dresses, holding Clinton signs, cite when asked about why they chose Hillary. It is what a thin, curly-haired woman from UVA says she likes about Clinton: a direct, one-word answer. “Experience.”

Then she looks down at the Clinton sticker on her shirt. “I came here with the Hillary Club,” she says, maybe a bit sheepishly. “I’m still undecided.”

An hour later, Clinton herself takes the stage amid screams and applause to tout her experience. And she wastes no time in launching broadside attacks at George Bush. For seven years, Clinton says, “we have missed seizing opportunities and addressing our problems.” And, “We cannot get serious about the economy and security until the two oil men leave the White House.”

Clinton gets downright pugilistic about John McCain, now seen as a lock for the Republican nominee. About the Arizona senator she says, “The Republicans have chosen more of the same.” After pointing out that she is the only candidate left—Democrat or Republican—with a health care plan that will cover everyone, she leaps to the attack. “You don’t have to worry that I’ll get knocked out of the ring,” she says and the applause and cheers swell. “I’m ready to go toe-to-toe with McCain wherever and whenever.”

This is precisely the kind of combative stance that Obama supporters say they want to turn away from. A girl in her early 20s, wearing a tie-dyed Obama t-shirt, says that the biggest difference she sees is Obama’s ability to unify and inspire. This, like Clinton’s experience, is the theoretical backbone of what one Obama supporter called “a movement.”

The Obama t-shirt girl shakes her head. “There’s not a single Republican on the planet who will support Clinton.”

And if some of Obama’s supporters who made the trip to Richmond are to be believed, there is a significant number of Democrats who will turn away from Clinton if she does win her party’s nomination.

About 20 minutes before Clinton takes the stage, two girls in party dresses have kicked their high heels off and are leaning against a window, tearing into pretzels and Gatorade. One describes herself as a “more right-leaning moderate.” She says she is voting for Obama simply to keep Clinton out of the national race. She’ll vote for McCain before she votes for Clinton.

“You wouldn’t believe how many people are doing this.”

This is a political conundrum. Obama, according to many pundits, is actually seen as the more left-leaning candidate. But here is Ms. Right Centrist, getting behind “the movement” if only for a chance to tank Hillary.

A man easily 20 years older than most of the Obama supporters scurrying around the hall says Clinton lost him when he heard what he called a “sub-message” in the New Hampshire campaign to “vote white.”

“That was it for me,” he says as he walks away. Perhaps a bit of guilt catches him, and he stops and turns around. “I believe in misogyny,” he says, tongue in cheek. “What can I say?”

Obama is clearly the favorite of the Virginia Democratic machine. Governor Tim Kaine was one of the first public figures to endorse him last year, and former governor L. Douglas Wilder supports him. Only one of the former governors that will speak tonight, Mark Warner, hasn’t come out in favor of Obama. Warner’s got his own U. S. Senate race to worry about, he says. But backing the wrong candidate could work against him in gaining national exposure later.

When Kaine introduces Obama, who won’t take the stage until a little before 10:30pm, supporters drown him out three full times with chants—chants that Kaine joins, smiling like a boy. If the supporters I’ve talked to tonight are backing Obama because of his ability to unite and inspire, then they’ve chosen the right candidate.

While Clinton’s speech leaned heavily on voters’ disgust with Bush and the tough battle ahead, Obama takes the stage and begins by staking out that coveted Democratic turf: that of the underdog. Kaine had just announced minutes earlier that Obama had won all three of the day’s primaries. The Obama crowd in the bleachers resembles a student section at a basketball game. They chant and pump their signs in rhythm. They stand throughout his speech.

“We’ve become cynical,” says Obama. “Our standards have dropped.” He waits a beat, then says. “Not this time.” The crowd’s reaction is explosive. When you talk about hope as much as he does, every speech you give can’t help but come off as some sort of celebration. He has just won three states. By the end of the weekend, he’ll add Maine, making it four.

And maybe that’s what the Obama supporters are talking about. Easily the loudest of the two groups, they waved signs, sported t-shirts (“I rock for Barack”), chanted his name and generally made a feel-good ruckus. Tonight may well have been the first time that the JJ Dinner has seen The Wave during dessert and coffee.

Minutes before Obama took the stage, a middle-aged couple walks the nearly empty hall holding hands. They both wear Obama t-shirts.

“Obama is the best chance to unite America,” says the woman. “It’s a vote for the future, no offense to Hillary.”

She smiles at the man, who says, “It’s time for a change. Hillary Clinton would be the same that we’ve had for the past too many years.”

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Super Tuesday does little to decide Democratic race [February 6]

First, the Super Tuesday numbers. The soul-crushing, eye-glazing, existential-crisis-inducing numbers: 13, 9, 56 roughly 840, about 830, and approximately 70. Keep in mind, those are just the Democrats.

What does Super Tuesday and all its projections mean for you? It means your primary vote on February 12 is actually going to mean something.

Super Tuesday’s primaries in 24 states may have cemented John McCain as the Republican frontrunner, but they did little to sort out the two-candidate Democratic field of Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton. While Clinton carried the biggest states on Tuesday, New York and California among them, Obama won more states (13 to Clinton’s eight). Moreover, NBC News reported that Obama appears to have won somewhere around 840 delegates, about 10 more than Clinton’s projected 830.


Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton are still neck and neck after Super Tuesday.

The first Democratic candidate to reach 2,025 delegates is the winner and will likely take on McCain in the national election. While Obama came into Super Tuesday trailing Clinton, only about 70 delegates now separate them in a primary race that is one of the closest in the last 25 years.

This all makes the three February 12 primaries very interesting. Maryland and Washignton, D.C. have 99 and 34 delegates respectively. Virginia is the biggest February 12 prize, with 103 delegates at stake.

But before so-called Chesapeake Tuesday, four states (plus the Virgin Islands) will hold their Democratic primaries over the weekend. Louisiana, Nebraska, Washington and Maine have 229 combined delegates up for grabs.

Both Clinton and Obama had strong showings in the South, with Clinton kicking ass in Arkansas and Tennessee and Obama returning the favor in Georgia and Alabama and Missouri. However, Clinton showed more muscle in the Northeast, winning her home state of New York, along with New Jersey and Massachusetts, though Obama picked up Connecticut, a state in Clinton’s backyard.

All of this means that nobody knows what the hell is going to happen in the next month or two. And that makes Virginia a hot spot for both campaigns. The Richmond Times-Dispatch reported today that both Clinton and Obama are gearing up for trips to Virginia in efforts to shore up support.v On the Republican side of the ballot (you know, that other party running on a platform of change), a Washington Post headline said it all: "McCain wins big states; Huckabee, Romney live." The Arizona senator won 13 states, while both Huckabee and Romney won enough smaller states to cling to the roof’s edge of relevancy.

But Super Tuesday did one things for the Republican field that it couldn’t do for the Democrats—define a clear-cut leader.

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