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Bloom time: Chris Greene Lake dodges algae so far

By Eileen Abbott

In the serenity of an early June morning, while mountain mist embraces the treetops, pilot Mandy Baskin’s hot air balloon gently floats above Chris Greene Lake Park, off U.S. 29 North, her favorite scenic launch site.

“The water looks so clean and inviting lately. It’s absolutely beautiful,” observes Baskin, owner of Monticello Country Ballooning. “We’ve seen a big difference from the air. It looks much cleaner, with less algae growth and less murkiness.”

On the ground at the beach, Michelle Oehmke ventures into the water with her paddleboard. “I didn’t come here last year due to the closing,” she says. She’s delighted she can enjoy the lake again. “It’s gorgeous and a good way to get away from it all.”

Nearby, teenagers Landon Shackleford, Cole Shackleford, and Bri Smiley splash in their favorite swimming spot, while others, like Bill Robbins and his 10-year-old daughter Melody, fish on the pier.

Things were not so bucolic last summer, when the lake was closed for almost two weeks due to harmful algae levels, nor in 2017, when an algal spike shut it down for three months.

“It’s super important for the water to be clean and healthy for swimming, fishing, and dog playing” says Baskin, who grew up going to Chris Greene. “When the bloom was going on, I wouldn’t even want my dogs in that water. Ick!”

The harmful algal blooms that lurked in the lake are not expected to be a problem this summer, according to SOLitude Lake Management, the company recently contracted by Albemarle County to proactively treat and monitor Chris Greene Lake.

Shannon Junior, SOLitude ecologist, says the company will be taking regular samples to test oxygen levels, temperature, and algae species to make sure there are “no water quality problems or dangerous cyanobacteria in the lake.”

Ick factor: Algal blooms were a problem in past years. SOLitude Lake Management

Cyanobacteria, also called blue-green algae, have the potential to produce toxins that can be harmful to humans and wildlife, says Junior. Its toxicity has been associated with diseases like ALS and Parkinson’s.

“Some algae are actually helpful for the aquatic community, but cyanobacteria, in particular, can be a sign of water quality issues and undesirable nutrient loading,” says Junior.

There are thousands of cyanobacteria species. Some are distinct in appearance—depending on the water body—and may manifest in parallel streaks or clumped dots. “Other blooms may look like spilled blue, green, or white paint, or turn the water a bright pea-soup green,” she says.

Tim Hughes with Albemarle Parks & Rec says the blooms are a concern, not only because they interrupt recreation operations, but because they pose a health risk. Symptoms can include upset stomach, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, skin rash, tingling or burning, and coughing.

“Children and pets are most vulnerable because they are more likely to swallow the water,” he says. “Even a small amount can cause illness.”

Why the blooms appeared is still a bit of a mystery. The county is requesting bids for a complete lake profile and watershed study, says Hughes.

“Nutrients flow into water bodies from stormwater runoff, fertilizer, agricultural runoff, and from regulated facilities like sewage treatment plants,” he says. “Sunlight, nutrients, and warm temperatures are perfect conditions for an algae bloom. Blooms are more likely to occur during hot, dry weather from June to September. Unfortunately there is no way to predict when a bloom will occur.”

SOLitude uses an EPA-registered “water-quality enhancer” and algaecide called SeClear that Junior says is effective and safe for use in recreational waters and even in drinking water.

The product helps improve water quality by reducing the concentration of phosphorus, which is the primary fuel for cyanobacteria, she says.

John Murphy, Albemarle’s watershed stewardship manager, says it’s not just Chris Greene Lake that’s dealt with harmful algal blooms.

“We know these blooms are increasing around the country and the world, he says. “This is a complicated problem made even more complicated by the potential additional factor of a warming trend. Higher temperatures must be considered as one of the culprits.”

In the meantime, Baskin and guests on her hot air balloon are savoring Chris Greene Lake’s renewed, clear water. “Usually we launch at the waterside and drift feet, sometimes inches, above the water and mist,” says Baskin. “It’s magical.”

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In brief: Shifting precincts, hefty raise, murky water and more

Know your polling place

It’s been an eventful couple years, and if you want to speak up when it matters (by voting in the midterms on November 6) your deadline to register is October 15. With that in mind, we also want to remind 15,000 voters in Albemarle County that their polling places have changed.

The county has added three new precincts and folded the Belfield precinct into Jack Jouett, says Albemarle registrar Jake Washburne.

Split are Cale, which begat the new Biscuit Run precinct; Crozet and Brownsville, which gave birth to Mechums River; and Free Bridge, which adds Pantops precinct.

And voters in the University precinct who had cast ballots at the soon-to-be demolished U Hall will now do so at Slaughter Rec Center.

The splits will make Election Day lines more manageable, says Washburne, and there’s another deadline he’s considering: “After February 1, 2019, we can’t change any precincts until after the 2020 presidential election.”

Some are predicting massive turnout in November. Compared to last September, Albemarle has added 2,000 voters. And Washburne mailed over 700 ballots on the first day of absentee voting, compared to 94 on the first day of the last midterm election in 2014. 

In the city, registrar Rosanna Bencoach says there’s always a surge of registrations in September and October from the student population. But according to the state elections website, Charlottesville has 922 more active voters as of October 1 than it did a year ago.

Bencoach issues a caveat to would-be voters: Don’t wait until the last minute to register or to request an absentee ballot, which must be applied for by 5pm the Tuesday before the election.

“With the current postal delivery practices, that’s way too late,” she says.


Quote of the week

“The Court is not typically in the muck and the mire of partisan politics. But this throws it right into the swamp.”—Barbara Perry, Miller Center director of presidential studies, on the Kavanaugh hearing


Lucrative gig

staff photo

City Council appointed Brian Wheeler interim clerk of council at its October 1 meeting. The current city spokesperson and former editor of Charlottesville Tomorrow temporarily replaces Paige Rice, who resigned last month. Since starting with the city in February at $98,000, raises have upped Wheeler’s pay to $116,438, an 8 percent increase in less than a year.

A12 anniversary costs add up

Charlottesville spent $921,334 over the August 12 anniversary weekend putting downtown on lockdown, and the University of Virginia reports its costs were $422,981. Adding the Virginia State Police’s expenses of $3.1 million, that puts the police-heavy weekend at around $4.4 million—and that’s not including Albemarle County’s costs.

Mayor tops duchess

Mayor Nikuyah Walker is No. 51 on the Root’s list of 100 most influential African Americans ages 25 to 45, coming in ahead of No. 52, Meghan Markle.

Chris Greene closed again

After a dog swam in the lake over the weekend and then died suddenly, Albemarle County officials have closed it for water recreation until results from new water quality tests are available.

Pot arrests surge

Despite decriminalization and legalization around the country, Virginia’s marijuana arrests hit their highest levels in a decade last year. Arrests statewide spiked 20 percent and convictions still carry the possibility of a six-month driver’s license suspension and up to $800 in fines, according to the Virginia Mercury.


Indigenous Peoples Day

Karenne Wood. Publicity photo

“We have been categorized as people of the past,” Karenne Wood, an enrolled member of the Monacan Indian Nation, told C-VILLE in March. She pointed out that in school textbooks, American Indians are often written about in the past tense: They lived in this type of house; they ate squash and corn; they wore feathers.

But she also hopes those textbooks will tell the story of Virginia Indians present and future. For Wood, director of Virginia Indian Programs at Virginia Humanities, that means working with textbook writers to tell a fuller—not just colonist—history of Native Americans. “We have adapted to live in this century along with everybody else,” she says.

To acknowledge their history on Indigenous Peoples Day, and to give a native perspective on how the story of Virginia’s first people can be expanded, Wood will give a talk called “Stone, Bone, and Clay: Virginia Indians’ History of 18,000 Years” on Monday, October 8, from 6:30-8pm at Lane Auditorium in the Albemarle County Office Building.

Monacan tribal dancers will perform immediately following her presentation.

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In brief: Fried chicken, flinging the mud, Long on Nike, and more

County boots Trump chicken

Albemarle County said the state of emergency declared for the August 11-12 weekend was still in effect after Indivisible Charlottesville brought an inflatable chicken with a Trump-like coif to its August 28 Flip the 5th demonstration in front of the County Office Building. Police declared the lawn off limits and parking restricted. No word on when the supes plan to lift the emergency orders used against protesters.

Pro bono council defense

National law firm Jones Day will represent city councilors Wes Bellamy, Kathy Galvin, Mike Signer, and former councilor Kristin Szakos after Judge Rick Moore ruled they did not have immunity for their votes to remove two Confederate statues. Jones Day has assigned 15 attorneys to represent the councilors pro bono, according to a release from plaintiff Buddy Weber.

Rent-a-cop

Confederate monument-loving Virginia Flaggers posted an appeal for donations to hire off-duty cops from a private security firm to patrol Market Street and Court Square parks to keep an eye on the Lee and Jackson statues over the Labor Day weekend after protesters in Chapel Hill toppled Silent Sam.

Golf cart sentence

Peter Parrish and Tyler Sewell on the beach at Bald Head Island. Photo Pete Clay

Ivy resident Tyler Sewell, 52, pleaded guilty to one count of felony death by motor vehicle August 27 for the August 3, 2017, golf cart accident on Bald Head Island that killed his friend Peter Parrish six days later. Sewell was given a 51- to 74-month suspended sentence and placed on supervised probation, according to Brunswick County, North Carolina, Assistant District Attorney Jason Minnicozzi.

Labor Day issue

Albemarle’s Chris Greene Lake was closed on the September 3 holiday because of an “unforeseen staffing shortage,” the county announced after C-VILLE tweeted the closing. 

UVA settles

Former assistant vice provost Betsy Ackerman’s gender and pay discrimination lawsuit against the university was dismissed August 24 and UVA declined to disclose the settlement, according to the Cav Daily.


 

Quote of the week

“There is no way to describe this, except to call it what it is—a legislative impasse.”—House Democratic Leader David Toscano on the futile August 30 General Assembly special session to redraw 11 district lines a federal court has deemed unconstitutional.


5th District mudslinging

Clergy members and Congregation Beth Israel’s Rabbi Daniel Alexander have refuted claims that 5th District congressional candidate Leslie Cockburn has spread anti-Semitic propaganda.

month after 5th District congressional candidate Leslie Cockburn accused opponent Denver Riggleman of being a “devotee of Bigfoot erotica,” the Republican Party of Virginia has fired back at her with an image much more sensitive to the folks in the district it’s vying to represent.

A mailer sent out last week superimposed an image of Cockburn above one of the angry white men who marched with lit torches across the University of Virginia on August 11, 2017, chanting “Jews will not replace us” along the way.

The mailer accuses Cockburn of spreading anti-Semitic propaganda in her 1991 book Dangerous Liaison: The Inside Story of the U.S.-Israeli Covert Relationship, and says it has been “praised by white supremacist groups.”

Her supporters, including many clergy members and Rabbi Daniel Alexander of Congregation Beth Israel, quickly rushed to combat the claims against Cockburn.

“It is deeply dismaying to see Virginia’s Republican party follow the debased example of the current occupant of the White House by engaging in ad hominem attacks and appeals to fear,” Alexander said in an August 26 statement posted to Democratic news site Blue Virginia. “Leslie Cockburn stands against all of that and that is why I enthusiastically stand with her.”

On Twitter, Cockburn called the attack “disgusting and ludicrous,” and says, “I am deeply grateful to members of the clergy who stand with me against the abhorrent use of the Unite the Right Rally to fling mud. Virginia Democrats are not fooled by dirty tricks.”

However, Democrats used similar images in last year’s gubernatorial race, affixing Republican candidate Ed Gillespie’s photo to those of the torch-carrying mob.

And Cockburn’s campaign continues to call former Jason Kessler associate Isaac Smith, who attended a Riggleman event, a white supremacist, despite Smith’s disavowal of Kessler and the alt-right.


Chris Long defends Nike campaign

Charlottesville native and now Philadelphia Eagles defensive end Chris Long weighs in on the campaign Nike launched over the weekend, which stars football free agent Colin Kaepernick.

If you don’t watch football—or read the news—Kaepernick has been in the spotlight since 2016 for kneeling during the national anthem on NFL sidelines for games in which he played for the San Francisco 49ers. He took a knee to protest police brutality, and now some people who criticized Kaepernick are protesting the mega sportswear brand.

“Nike is a huge business,” said Long on Twitter on September 3. “They’ve calculated risk. They may even have reason to believe this will make the brand more popular which means the guy burning his white Air Monarchs is in the minority. Bitter pill to swallow, I’m sure. Good luck with the protest. Bet they anticipated it.”

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In brief: Wes’ repulsion, Boots’ birthday, Corey’s alleged firing and more

New chief takes oath

As the city’s first-ever female police chief RaShall Brackney was sworn in June 18, she said we should all be saddened “in 2018, that my gender is a topic of conversation.”

The former George Washington University chief and Pittsburgh police commander of 35 years said on her first official day on the job, her priority is to meet with leaders of every shift at the Charlottesville Police Department. And then the obvious one: Come up with a plan for how to handle this summer’s anniversary of last August’s deadly Unite the Right rally.

Brackney only has two months to do so, and said she’s “up for the task.”

Hiring Brackney was one of Mayor Nikuyah Walker’s first major decisions.

“I’m really excited about today,” Walker said, because she believes Brackney will “bridge the divide that we currently have in our city between black citizens in low-income communities and law enforcement.”

As a female, multi-ethnic police officer who grew up as one of six children, sharing one bathroom with a family of eight, Brackney said she understands “feeling disenfranchised,” and later echoed, “I understand what it feels like to not be included.”

One of her top priorities since she’s been in law enforcement is reducing violence in African American communities, and Brackney said she’s “never disconnected from the communities from which [she’s] from.”

When asked what uniqueness she brings to Charlottesville, the new chief quipped, “besides being a Steelers fan?”


“You made several points, right, and one of the ones in which I feel is absolutely repulsive is the fact that you believe that an event like August 12, which was indeed very sad, traumatizing to our community, you say that it’s the worst thing to ever happen here in Charlottesville.”—City Councilor Wes Bellamy at the June 18 meeting, telling Pat Napoleon, who has called for councilors to resign, that he thinks slavery and lynching were worse.


Unwilling patient

“Jane Doe” is suing UVA Health System’s CEO and several medical practitioners for allegedly taking blood and urine samples and giving her medication against her will after a suicide attempt. She’s represented by local attorney Jeff Fogel, who is also alleging gross negligence, false imprisonment and assault and battery in his federal lawsuit.

The water’s not fine

Albemarle County officials and the local health department are encouraging Chris Greene Lake goers to “avoid water contact” at the beach, boat ramp and dog park, because of a toxic blue-green algae bloom that was caused by recent weather. People and pets will be prohibited from swimming there until further notice. High levels of algae closed the lake last summer, too.

University access

UVA students and visitors with limited mobility cannot currently traverse the entire Lawn. To make that possible, construction will begin on two brick wheelchair ramps this summer, though the project has been met with opposition from groups such as the Jeffersonian Grounds Initiative, which, according to the Daily Progress, said “ramps will protrude into the Lawn and do violence to [its] integrity.”

Boots’ 100th birthday

photo mo lowdon

Beloved UVA prof Ernest “Boots” Mead died four years ago. But that didn’t stop his former students, who have also established the Mead Endowment, from toasting his 100th birthday June 13 with celebrations across the country in D.C., New York, Richmond, San Francisco, Charlottesville—and Lander, Wyoming. Way to make an impression.

Missing millions

The Albemarle County School Board will no longer ask the Board of Supervisors for a November bond referendum, and has reduced its funding request from next year’s capital budget from over $50 million to $5.4 million. The money will go toward a 600-student learning center, a classroom addition and new gym for Scottsville Elementary School and renovations at a couple high schools—though completion costs for all three projects will be $81 million.


He said, she said

After the controversial conviction of Corey Long for pointing a homemade flamethrower at white supremacists on August 12, a tweet from activist group Solidarity Cville—which supported Long during his trial and demanded that the prosecutor drop the disorderly conduct charge—said Long had lost his job, and encouraged followers to send him a few bucks via PayPal.

“Community defender Corey Long was fired from his job because ‘they wouldn’t be able to hold his position for the duration of his incarceration,’” the June 13 tweet said. Against the prosecutor’s advice, a judge sentenced Long to 360 days in jail on June 8, with all but 20 days suspended. With good behavior, he’ll likely only serve 10 days, and they could be served on weekends.

Corey Long after his conviction for disorderly conduct June 8. Eze Amos

Solidarity Cville also tweeted a message from Long, who allegedly said, “It’s their loss, I was a good employee. But thanks for everything. Every bit helps!”

An anonymous caller told C-VILLE that Long worked at a Taco Bell in Gordonsville, stopped showing up a couple weeks before his conviction and was never fired.

According to corporate Taco Bell spokesperson Jacqueline Cisneros, the Gordonsville franchise said “team member” Long is still employed, and that it has reached out to him several times without any response. It is unclear whether Long was recently employed elsewhere.

Long did not respond to an interview request, but shared a Facebook post from Darnell Lamont Walker on June 15, which said, “Corey Long was just fired from his job,” and linked to Long’s PayPal account.

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In brief: Beary confused visitor, the kost of the KKK, gross algae and more

Was the four-legged visitor weeks early for its move-in date? Community members took to social media to share photos of a black bear flouncing around UVA Grounds August 1. A state wildlife biologist tranquilized it outside the Children’s Hospital, loaded it into a truck, and, after the drug wore off overnight, dropped it off on national forest property west of Harrisonburg

It gets worse

Rick Wellbeloved-Stone. Courtesy CPD
Rick Wellbeloved-Stone. Courtesy Charlottesville Police Department

CHS teacher Rick Wellbeloved-Stone, who was charged with one count of child porn possession July 27, was charged with 19 counts of child porn production and one count of aggravated sexual battery August 4. He was placed on leave and remains in Albemarle-Charlottesville Regional Jail.

Daycare distress

Classroom ratios and failure to supervise children are noted issues at Kiddie Academy, an Albemarle daycare that has racked up more than 40 violations since January 2016. It was placed on a provisional license last month and the state Department of Social Services says it has until January to prove it can comply with regulations, or it could lose its license, according to the Newsplex.

Motorcycle fatality

Twenty-two-year old Jordan Marcale Cassell died traveling west on Garth Road August 5 when his Honda bike struck a 2013 Honda Fit driven by an 87-year-old turning left onto Garth from Free Union Road, closing down both roads for three and a half hours. Cassell, a grad of Staunton’s Robert E. Lee High, is the 10th fatality in Albemarle this year. Police say no charges are pending.

Algae yucks up lake

The Virginia Department of Health continues to advise people and their pets to steer clear of Chris Greene Lake because of a harmful blue-green algae bloom that may cause rashes and other illnesses.


Teresa Sullivan. Photo: Ashley Twiggs
Teresa Sullivan. Photo: Ashley Twiggs

Quote of the week: “There is a credible risk of violence at this event, and your safety is my foremost concern. Moreover, to approach the rally and confront the activists would only satisfy their craving for spectacle. “—UVA President Teresa Sullivan on the August 12 Unite the Right rally.


The cost of a KKK visit

The July 8 Loyal White Knights of the KKK demonstration racked up a hefty bill for the city, with neighboring
Albemarle police chipping in 52 officers at a cost of $14,045. Here’s a breakdown of some of the city’s $32,835 in expenses, which don’t include the Albemarle County Sheriff’s Office bill for $2,467.

The Virginia State Police won’t provide its manpower costs unless we cough up $300, and it won’t release the number
of officers it sent due to tactical and safety reasons. Its
spokeswoman does say that many state police were scheduled in advance of the Klan fest as part of their 40-hour week to minimize overtime. She says the helicopter that buzzed over Justice Park costs $615 an hour to operate and ran for 3.6 hours for a total of $2,214.

So far, it all adds up to more than $51,565.

At a price

City salaries $23,352

Includes city police, fire, deputies and ECC, with CPD racking up $16,299 in overtime.

Incidentals

Flex cuffs $660

Cutters for flex cuffs $40

Trailer hitch to pull riot gear $731

Gatorade $90

Lunches $2,423

More Gatorade, water, protein bars, sunscreen $466

Gas masks $277

Taser battery packs $45

Non-lethal equipment $2,237

 

Rally together

Follow C-VILLE Weekly on Facebook and @cvillenews_desk on Twitter for August 12 rally coverage.

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In brief: Killer drug epidemic, movie money and more

Killer drug epidemic

More than 1,100 Virginians died in 2016 from the state’s opioid epidemic, with fentanyl, the drug that killed Prince, now racking up the most fatalities. And while the state hasn’t had much luck so far in slowing addiction, which often occurs after people are prescribed opioid-based meds for pain, it is a leader in fighting overdoses.

Virginia broke new ground by allowing anyone to obtain naloxone, the generic name for drugs like Narcan that are used for overdoses, without a prescription. On April 1, regulations went into effect that require opioid prescriptions above a certain dosage to include a script for naloxone.

Adapt Pharma, the manufacturer of nasal-spray Narcan, wants the drug easily available at an affordable price. “We’re never going to turn the death rate down until naloxone is available everywhere,” says spokesperson Thom Duddy. Since April 1, for every 45 opioid prescriptions in Virginia, 1 naloxone script is written. Nationally, 570 opioid prescriptions are written for every 1 naloxone script

Conflicting advice in case of an overdose

According to the Virginia Board of Medicine:

  1. Call 911
  2. Then administer naloxone

According to Adapt Pharma:

  1. Administer naloxone
  2. Then call 911

By the numbers

By Alpha Pharma, Virginia Department of Health

  • 7: Fatal opioid overdoses in Charlottesville/Albemarle in 2016
  • $75: Cost of two bottles of Narcan
  • Around $10: Cost with typical insurance
  • Free (for those insured under the ACA or Medicaid)

Early checkout

High Meadows Inn, the baby-blue B&B with green shutters in Scottsville, is headed to the auction block May 24 after current owner Cynthia Bruce defaulted on its $737,000 mortgage. Selling, crowdfunding and even trying to give the inn away in an ill-fated essay contest couldn’t save it.

Not a Hollywood ending

Confiscated movie money. Courtesy Albemarle County Police Department
Confiscated movie money. Courtesy Albemarle County Police Department

County police say 19-year-old Yahmil Deyshon Payne and two juveniles have been arrested for using fake money, which clearly says “For Motion Picture Use Only,” in local businesses and in exchange for electronics. Keep your eyes peeled—police think some of the debunked dollars are still circulating.

Media moves

Nelson native and Newsplex GM Jay Barton is departing for new Gray Television purchase, WCAX in Burlington, Vermont. Former sales manager Eric Krebs is the new GM. And over at the Daily Progress, features writer David Maurer has retired after nearly 30 years.

Quote of the Week:

Mayor Mike Signer. Staff photoAnother profile in courage here—anonymous trolls lecturing elected officials about cowardice. Yawn. —Mayor Mike Signer responds on Twitter after denouncing torch-carying white nationalists in Lee Park

Rescheduled—again

For the third time, Frayser White IV’s pre-trial motions hearing has been continued. White is charged with possession of heroin, cocaine and alprazolam, and reckless driving in the first county traffic fatality of 2016, when he allegedly collided head-on on Ivy Road with 81-year-old Carolyn Wayne, who died at the scene. A new date for his trial, originally scheduled for last Halloween, has not been set.

Don’t drink the water

Chris Greene Lake, Albemarle’s most popular recreational park and once a supplemental water supply, was officially designated not a public water reservoir.