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Under fire: Pet Paradise blaze raises concerns about lack of oversight

By Spencer Philps

Mallory Cypher’s husband dropped their dog, Teddy, off at Charlottesville’s Pet Paradise on August 26 before the couple went on vacation. The boarding facility operates in nine states, and Teddy, a regular at the Harris Street location, seemed to love it there. Cypher says the staff was great, and she never had any issues.

Two days later, while Cypher was still on vacation, she received an email from Pet Paradise: There’d been a two-story fire at the facility, and emergency workers were rescuing pets and administering oxygen to the animals that needed it.

She spent the rest of the evening trying to determine Teddy’s whereabouts, calling all of the area’s veterinary hospitals to see if they had any idea where he was. Eventually, she tracked him down at a local vet, and learned that he’d been unharmed by the fire.

For most pet owners—many of whom see their dogs or cats as members of their family—Cypher’s story sounds like something out of a nightmare. 

While almost all of the 78 pets in the facility at the time were rescued (one dog, Bailey, was found dead a mile and a half from the location), the fire has revealed perhaps an even more troubling fact for local pet owners: the absence of laws and regulations that govern the pet care industry. At the time of the blaze, the Charlottesville Pet Paradise didn’t even have a fire sprinkler system installed. 

The Code of Virginia has few laws pertaining to pet boarding facilities. It requires them to provide adequate food, water, shelter, exercise, space, and emergency veterinary care, but provides no specifics on what these elements ought to entail. Virginia also has no required licenses or inspections for facilities such as Pet Paradise.

In early 2017, Ellie Carter made the decision to take her dog, Levi, to a boarding training facility in Afton. One night, she received a text from the trainer saying that Levi had escaped from his kennel and gone on “walkabout.”

“I’m like, how does my dog take himself on a walkabout when you’re in charge of him?” Carter recalls.

She and her husband were unable to find Levi that night, and spent the next three months looking for him. Carter said that once she informed the trainer that she expected him to reimburse them for their search efforts, he cut off all contact with them. They later found Levi’s remains in Albemarle County. Carter eventually discovered that the trainer didn’t have a business or local kennel license, both of which are required by Nelson County law.

The ordeal inspired Carter to learn more about the laws that govern the pet boarding and training industry in Virginia. She was dismayed with the little that she found.

“There’s just nothing,” she says. “There’s no rules or regulations.”

Carter says she’s spoken with a state politician about drafting legislation on the issue, but nothing has come of it.

“I think it’s kind of scary,” she says. “Pets are part of people’s families.”

Other local pet owners say they’d noticed signs of concern at Pet Paradise well before the fire, and felt that they had no way of holding the facility responsible.

In May, Caleigh Saucier dropped off her goldendoodle for a summer haircut. When Saucier returned to pick up her dog later in the day, it’d been shaved so completely that she was unsure if it was her dog.

“She was not responding to her name [and] she seemed really traumatized, and we noticed later when we brought her home that she had scabs on her ears from the clipper maybe cutting off the edges of her ears. She had these bald spots all over her chest and her tummy,” Saucier says.

Saucier and her husband repeatedly attempted to get into contact with Pet Paradise, but their calls and messages went ignored. 

“We felt kind of helpless because we had no way of holding them accountable.” she recalls. 

Erica Goldfarb, another former Pet Paradise customer, had a similar negative experience when she dropped her dog off for boarding.

“It was just chaotic.” she says. “They didn’t really know what they were doing, and I just remember leaving and thinking I am never coming back here.”

The local Pet Paradise manager, Dustan Sweely, says they take special precautions when grooming dogs that require excessive shaving, and that the chaos Goldfarb observed could have been explained by the recent transition of ownership and new policies. 

“We have thousands of clients that come here on a weekly basis, dropping off, picking up, boarding, the whole nine yards, and we take reviews seriously,” Sweely adds. 

Pet Paradise CEO Fernando Acosta-Rua said several new measures will be put in place to ensure the safety of the pets at the Charlottesville location.

“We were obviously within code [at the time of the fire], but our goal going forward is going beyond code and ensuring that we’re doing everything to prevent something like this from happening again.”

Acosta-Rua says that in addition to setting up a sprinkler system in the building, the Charlottesville facility will now also have a staff member on location 24 hours a day.

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In brief: Cop’s case reopened, Meadow Creek pollution, Belmont Bridge plans and more

Bridging the Belmont gap

Replacing the 1962-built Belmont Bridge was first recommended in 2003. Many plans have come and gone, as has at least one design company. In 2012, some, like former city councilor Bob Fenwick, said the bridge’s deterioration was the result of city neglect and could be repaired. At the time, the bridge replacement project cost was about $14 million.

That cost is now $24.7 million, and on August 20 the Board of Architectural Review approved a certificate of appropriateness for the new span. The design, with its 10-foot sidewalks and 7-foot bike lanes, favors pedestrians and 

bicyclists, with two lanes devoted to motorists.

City officials hope that construction will begin by 2020.

Putting the “i” in infidelity

Millennials and Gen Xers are more likely to engage in “internet infidelity” than earlier generations, according to “iFidelity: The State of Our Unions 2019,” a report from the National Marriage Project at the University of Virginia and the School of Family Life at Brigham Young University.

UVA sociology prof Brad Wilcox has studied marriage and fidelity for the past 10 years. For this study, he partnered with BYU’s Jeffrey Dew, a family studies professor. They found:

  • Online sex talk: 18 percent of millennial participants did it with someone besides their partner, compared to 16 percent of
    Gen Xers, 6 percent of baby boomers, and 3 percent of the greatest generation.
  • That’s cheating: 70 percent or more of Americans rate secret emotional affairs or sexting with a non-partner as “unfaithful.”
  • Crossing the generations: The number of people who cheat in real life is consistent across age groups at 15 percent, although Wilcox points out that millennials and Gen Xers haven’t had as much time to have affairs and may exceed that number by the time they’re older.
  • Married and cohabitating adults who don’t fool around online are more likely to be happy and committed in their relationships.

    Quote of the week

    We needed to make it go away.—Delegate Chris Head, R-Botetourt, on the GOP strategy to adjourn the special session called by Governor Ralph Northam to address gun safety after the Virginia Beach massacre, according to the Roanoke Times


    In brief

    Cop’s case not closed yet

    Andrew Holmes, the Albemarle County Police officer who was accused in 2016 of racial profiling, is no longer off the hook after a federal appeals court ruled a previous decision to throw the case out must be revisited. No date has been set for the next hearing.

    Chasing gold

    Former UVA men’s basketball star Joe Harris was named to the U.S. men’s national team for the FIBA World Cup, which will be held in China beginning September 1. The roster is chock-full of NBA stars like Kemba Walker and Donovan Mitchell, but several spots opened up after many of the bigger-name players backed out to focus on preparing for the 2019-20 season.

    Murky waters

    Construction workers at the demolition site for U-Hall poured stormwater into a drain that ran into Meadow Creek, polluting the water and killing hundreds of fish. Although the city’s drinking water was unaffected, the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality said the rainwater had mixed with concrete dust prior to being dumped down the drain.

    Last pet standing

    Izzy the cat, who’s been missing since the August 18 Pet Paradise fire, was found Tuesday morning, and, according to WINA, appears to be okay. Izzy was among three pets who escaped during the fire. Shadow, another cat, was safely located, but a dog named Bailey was discovered dead about a mile and a half away from the building.

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In brief: A12 legal guide, big-ticket sale, pet peril and more

Who’s suing whom

In advance of the two-year statute of limitations, a flurry of lawsuits have been filed stemming from the events of August 12, 2017, adding to several that are ongoing. Having a hard time keeping up with who’s a defendant and who’s a plaintiff?  Here’s a primer:

Sines v. Kessler

Ten victims of the Unite the Right rally, including Seth Wispelwey, Tyler Magill and Marcus Martin, filed suit against 24 UTR organizers, including Jason Kessler, Richard Spencer, James Fields, Elliott Kline, Chris Cantwell, Matthew Heimbach, David Parrott, and Andrew Anglin. It’s the oldest lawsuit filed, filed October 11, 2017.

In addition to filing another federal lawsuit against the city, Jason Kessler is also a defendant in other suits filed by Unite the Right victims. Eze Amos

Kessler v. City of Charlottesville

Kessler and David Parrott are suing City Manager Tarron Richardson, former police chief Al Thomas, Virginia State Police Lieutenant Becky Crannis-Curl, and former city manager Maurice Jones, claiming their First Amendment rights were violated. kessler v. charlottesville

Tanesha Hudson v. City of Charlottesville

The community activist claims Maurice Jones, Al Thomas, Detective James Mooney, Sergeant Ronnie Stayments, and Sergeant Lee Gibson violated her First, Fifth, and 14th amendment rights and seeks $400,000. Filed pro se, which means she’s representing herself, in Charlottesville Circuit Court.

DeAndre Harris v. Jason Kessler et. al.

The 35 defendants include Richard Spencer, six attackers, Elliott Kline, David Parrott, and John Doe 1 and 2 (aka Sunglasses and Redbeard). Harris, who was severely beaten in the Market Street Parking Garage, is alleging  conspiracy to discriminate and attack on the basis of race. DeAndre Harris v. Kessler, Spencer et.al

Greg Conte v. Commonwealth of Virginia

Richard Spencer pal Conte and UTR attendee Warren Balogh named the VSP, former governor Terry McAuliffe, VSP Lieutenant Becky Crannis-Curl, Al Thomas, Mike Signer, Wes Bellamy, Emily Gorcenski, Seth Wispelwey, and Dwayne Dixon among the 16 defendants, and alleged First and 14th amendment violations. Also filed pro se. conte, balogh v. VA

Bill Burke v. James Fields et. al.

Bill Burke waits for the jury’s verdict at the James Fields trial. staff photo

The 19 named defendants include Jason Kessler, Richard Spencer, Matthew Heimbach, David Duke, Daily Stormer founder Andrew Anglin, plus John Doe and Jane Doe 1-1,000. Burke traveled from Ohio to protest the white supremacists who came to Charlottesville. He was injured when Fields drove into a crowd, and Heather Heyer died beside him. Claims RICO violations and conspiracy, and seeks $3 million on each count. burke v. fields

Karen Cullen and Amanda Bates v. Commonwealth of Virginia

The widows of Virginia State Police’s Berke Bates and Jay Cullen, who died in a helicopter crash August 12, both filed wrongful death lawsuits seeking $50 million each.



 

Quote of the week

“The temperature at the floor when they entered was 500 degrees.”—Charlottesville Fire Chief Andrew Baxter describes the August 18 Pet Paradise fire


In brief

$4-million sale

Hawes Spencer, former editor of C-VILLE and the Hook, sold the Downtown Mall building that houses Bizou for $4 million to Bizou owner Vincent Derquenne and developer Oliver Kuttner, who purchased the property as Walters Building LLC. Spencer bought the building, which housed the Hook offices, for $2.5 million in 2006.

Elliott Harding. publicity photo

Slimed by Kessler

Independent 25th District candidate Elliott Harding’s brief association with Jason Kessler came to light last week when Kessler posted messages from Harding, who reviewed Kessler’s petition to recall Wes Bellamy in 2017. Harding, a former chair of the Albemarle County Republican Committee, says he quickly saw what Kessler was about and has worked to prevent him from gaining a platform. “We’ve been at it ever since.”

Another statue suit

Norfolk, fighting to remove its own Confederate statue, filed a federal lawsuit arguing that Virginia’s law preventing a locality from removing a war memorial is unconstitutional and forces the city to perpetuate a message it no longer stands behind, violating its First and 14th amendment rights, the Virginian-Pilot reports. City councilors are also plaintiffs in the suit.

‘Hitler’s best friends’

Two weeks after city councilors were accused of aligning themselves with the Nazi dictator for rejecting a proposal to bring D.C. rapper Wale to Charlottesville, Kathy Galvin, Mike Signer, Heather Hill, and Wes Bellamy issued a joint statement condemning the “abusive environment” created by some attendees of council meetings. Bellamy also apologized for not initially defending his colleagues, saying “I genuinely don’t believe any of you are racist.”

Fatal infection

German shepherd Gunner died after a day of swimming in the Rivanna River, NBC29 reports. He contracted a bacterial disease called leptospirosis, which is transmitted in wet places where animals have urinated and can be deadly to humans as well.

More bad pet news

A fire broke out in Pet Paradise around 6:30pm August 18. Seventy-five animals were rescued from the Concord Avenue facility, but Pet Paradise is asking for help in locating two cats and a dog that were missing after the fire.

Beauregard splits 

Interim Deputy City Manager Leslie Beauregard is leaving after 16 years working in city government and will take a position as assistant city manager in Staunton October 7, the DP reports. Beauregard was best known for her budget work. She was put in an interim position under new City Manager Tarron Richardson’s reorganization of city hall.