Early July 25, Albemarle police responded to an industrial accident at Yancey Lumber in Crozet, where employee Floriberta Macedo-Diaz, 46, of Waynesboro, died of her injuries.
Macedo-Diaz isn’t the only workplace fatality in the region. In June, the Virginia Department of Labor and Industry finished its investigation into a job-related death last fall, and fined two companies more than $18,000 for safety violations.
Carlos Alfaro was looking at the ceiling on the top floor of a C&O Row house and following the sprinkler lines to attach sprinkler heads when he opened the door to what appeared to be a closet and fell five floors down an elevator shaft to his death last October 17, according to a labor department report.
Alfaro, 31, was a North Chesterfield resident employed by Liberty Fire Solutions, which was installing sprinklers at the $1 million home at 1073 E. Water St.
The Virginia Department of Labor and Industry initially cited Salem-based Liberty Fire Solutions $4,560 for not having some- one trained in first aid at the site and $12,471for failure to provide adequate fall protection. Those penalties were reduced and Liberty paid $9,500. Its CEO, Randy Young, did not return a call from C-VILLE Weekly.
Also fined was builder Evergreen LLC for not having fall protection systems in place. The labor department originally issued a citation for $12,471. Evergreen—through Eggc LLC—paid a $8,730 penalty, according to Department of Labor and Industry documents. Evergreen president and owner Whit Graves did not return calls from C-VILLE.
However, in a labor department narrative of events, Graves told investigators that the sprinkler work was scheduled for October 23 and the Liberty Fire Solutions employees arrived almost a week early.
During an inspection of the site after the fatal 45-foot fall, investigators saw doors that had been installed on the elevator shaft with no hardware and could be opened by wind traveling up the shaft, according to the report.
The normal procedure was to nail boards across the opening of the shaft, but after Alfaro’s fall, the boards were not there and Graves told inspectors he didn’t know when they were removed, according to the state report.
The Department of Labor and Industry recommended a “serious fatality-related citation” for both companies.
He’ll tell you it’s not haunted, but owner and developer Robin Miller acknowledges the twisted history of the new Blackburn Inn, his historic boutique hotel set to open in Staunton this spring.
Originally serving as the Western State Lunatic Asylum in the early 1800s, a hospital for the mentally ill—known for its electroshock therapy and lobotomies—the building became a medium-security men’s penitentiary in the late 1900s, until it was abandoned in 2003.
Where former residents wore straitjackets, inn guests will don complimentary bathrobes after a dip in the “luxurious soaking tubs” that will be available in four of the 49 rooms with 27 different floor plans.
“About 14 years ago was the first time I drove into downtown Staunton,” says Miller. “I looked over and saw the campus here and I fell in love with it.”
The Richmond-based developer with a second home in the same town as his new hotel has an assemblage of projects under his belt, including the recent redevelopment of Western State’s bindery, the building directly behind the Blackburn Inn, which he converted into 19 condos.
“It’s a combination of a beautiful, beautiful historic building with absolute top of the line, luxurious amenities and features,” Miller says about the inn, where he made use of the original wide corridors, hallway arches, vaulted ceilings and a wooden spiral stairwell that will allow guests to access the rooftop atrium. As for whether he expects a gaggle of ghost hunters to be his first customers: “That certainly wasn’t part of our marketing plan, but we don’t care why they want to stay here. We just want them to come and see it.”
Either way, we’re calling it a crazy good time.
In brief
Kessler clockers continued
Four people charged with assaulting Jason Kessler the day after the deadly August 12 Unite the Right rally—Brandon Collins, Robert Litzenberger, Phoebe Stevens and Jeff Winder—had their cases moved to February 2—Groundhog Day—because the special prosecutor, Goochland Commonwealth’s Attorney Mike Caudill, hadn’t seen video of Kessler being chased through the shrubbery. “These things keep coming up,” said Judge Bob Downer. “It’s like Groundhog Day.”
Another construction fatality
A construction worker died at the Linden Town Lofts site after a traumatic fall November 15, according to Charlottesville police. That was also the location of an early morning July 13 fire that engulfed a townhouse and four Jaunt buses. A worker also died from a fall October 21 at 1073 E. Water St., the C&O Row site owned by Evergreen Homebuilders.
Motion to unwrap
Plaintiffs in the suit to prevent the city from removing Confederate statues of generals Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson now want Charlottesville to remove the black tarps that have covered the statues since shortly after the fatal August 12 rally—and for the city to pay hefty fines if it refuses.
Closing the door
The grocery subscription service that bought out Relay Foods last year announced November 17 that it would cease its operations, effective immediately. Door to Door Organics says refunds will be forthcoming for those who pre-ordered Thanksgiving turkeys.
“The only way you’re going to get sexism out of politics is to get more women into politics.”
—Hillary Clinton in a speech at UVA during the Women’s Global Leadership Forum
Pay up
Florida man James O’Brien, an alleged League of the South member charged with concealed carrying on August 12, pleaded guilty November 20 and was sentenced to a suspended 60 days in jail and fined $500. He was arrested while breaking into his own car during the Unite the Right rally, and has since been fired from his roofing job for taking part in “extremist activities,” according to the Southern Poverty Law Center.
Switching hands
After 10 years of grooming, lodging and day care services, the owners of Best of C-VILLE Hall of Famer Pampered Pets have selected Pet Paradise Resort and Day Spa to take over operations, beginning November 16.
Dominion’s victory dance
The U.S. Forest Service approved plans for the the proposed Atlantic Coast Pipeline November 17, giving Dominion Energy permission to run its 42-inch natural gas pipeline through the George Washington and Monongahela national forests. Though Dominion still requires state water permits, spokesperson Aaron Ruby calls it a “key regulatory approval” in the company’s quest for final approval later this year.
By the numbers
Survey says
It costs a little bit more to gobble till you wobble this year, according to a recent survey conducted by the Virginia Farm Bureau Federation.
On average, it will set you back about $50.56 to feed a family of 10 adults on Thanksgiving. This is up from $44.02 last year, with the average cost of everyone’s favorite holiday meal increasing by a total of $11.44 since the federation began conducting the survey in 2003.
What’s on the menu? Turkey, stuffing, sweet potatoes, peas, rolls, cranberries, a vegetable tray, milk and a good ol’ slice of pumpkin pie with whipped cream. Eat up.