Do you tend to swim upstream or go with the flow? Either way, you probably want to check out this weekend’s Rivanna RiverFest, hosted by Rivanna Conservation Alliance and Rivanna River Company. An afternoon of family-friendly activities, games, and educational opportunities shifts into an evening of celebration and jubilance with live performances from Hometown Choir (a children’s choir of students from the YMCA After-School programs at all Charlottesville City Schools) and We Are Star Children (a local nine-piece “adventure pop” group … and not literal children). Food trucks and beverage vendors will be on site, as well as many community partners, to rejoice in the majesty of the Rivanna River.
Saturday 5/18. Free, 2–9pm. Rivanna River Company, 1518 E. High St. rivannariver.org
There are no leaves on the trees, but signs of spring are visible at the Rivanna River. A dozen turtles sit on a log on the riverbank, their shells bluish, almond-shaped dots from a distance.
“What really has inspired us all along is just the wildness that’s accessible right from the city,” says Gabe Silver, co-owner of Rivanna River Company, which rents kayaks, tubes, and other river equipment. “Great blue heron, green heron—people see river otters right in city limits on the Rivanna. We have bald eagles that nest on the river right outside of town.”
Recently, more and more people have joined these critters. Silver reports that the pandemic “drove a really significant jump” in river usage, and that interest has remained high. The same dynamic has been visible across the region—1.7 million people visited Shenandoah National Park in 2020, a 17 percent increase from 2019.
On this Sunday afternoon, one of the year’s first truly warm days, squeals of joy can be heard from the playground in Riverview Park, and an intrepid young swimmer is splashing around in the river’s rocky shallows as a parent watches from the orangey-brown dirt of the bank.
The high level of interest makes the river’s health and accessibility all the more important. In January, the Thomas Jefferson Planning District Commission released an 86-page Urban Rivanna River Corridor Plan, packed full of recommendations for the river’s future. Both Charlottesville and Albemarle officially approved the plan in February. The river has flowed through the central Virginia hills for thousands of years—what will it take to keep it healthy for the next thousand?
Clams and worms and mayflies, oh my
“If you’re looking at just water quality, the river is impaired for biological health,” says Lisa Wittenborn, executive director of the Rivanna Conservation Alliance, a nonprofit that aims to clean and protect the river.
Her group, staffed by an enthusiastic corps of volunteers, tests the river’s biodiversity and bacteria levels multiple times per year. They monitor the presence of tiny river creatures—larva of dragonflies, damselflies, mayflies, stoneflies, plus clams and worms and crayfish and more—to see how the river is doing. Right now, “the little organisms that live in the river don’t have the diversity and abundance that we would like to see,” she says, and the bacteria levels are higher than ideal.
Water quality issues can be exacerbated if people litter and behave badly when they visit the river, but it’s the built environment around the water, rather than the recreational swimmers and boaters, that is most responsible. Four miles of river runs along the eastern edge of the city, and the river’s watershed covers 769 square miles, from the western edge of Albemarle County all the way through Fluvanna. From its headwaters in the Shenandoah, the river eventually feeds into the James and then the Chesapeake Bay.
“In such an urban system, with a lot of impervious surfaces, rainfall hits the ground and runs off immediately into our stormwater system, into our streams, and into the river,” says Wittenborn. Fast moving rainwater increases the amount of sediment in the stream, which makes it hard for river creatures to see and eat. The runoff also “picks up things like dog waste and trash, and washes those into the waterways. And that’s where a lot of the bacteria issues are coming from,” she says.
Despite these issues, Wittenborn says the data suggests that the conservationists are “holding the line.” A recent analysis of the last 15 years of biological data didn’t reveal many trends, suggesting that the river’s water quality issues aren’t getting worse.
“Actually, in four areas we identified places where the stream health scores had improved, statistically,” Wittenborn says. The group was able to connect those healthier locations to specific restoration projects and upgrades to the wastewater treatment plant. “All of those things seem to have made improvements in the stream health conditions downstream, so that was very encouraging.”
It’s difficult to come up with long-term solutions for these water-quality issues, since the area isn’t going to get less developed as time passes. Still, Wittenborn says, there are things people can do on their own properties to limit the amount of harmful runoff hitting the water. She encourages planting rain gardens or collecting rainwater in barrels. And larger developments should install bioretention areas, “big rain gardens that allow the water to collect and infiltrate down into the ground rather than running off.”
“Everything we do in the watershed is affecting the health of the river,” she says. “So we need people to think about what they’re doing in their own backyard, and how that is affecting our waterways. Because it all compounds.”
Touching the river
With Charlottesville’s next sweltering summer approaching, more and more people will be drawn toward the water.
“We have been open now for six years,” says Silver. “In that time, we have seen a steady increase in the usage of the river recreationally, with on-the-water recreation, but also on trails and recreation adjacent to the river.”
As that interest continues to flow, it’s crucial that everyone can safely and easily access the water.
“To some extent, the public resources for enabling recreation on and around the river haven’t really caught up with the demand, or have never kept pace with the demand,” Silver says. Parking lots at Riverview and Darden Towe parks fill up, it’s not always easy to reach those places on public transportation, and the river’s steep banks make it difficult to get down to the water.
When the Rivanna River Company, the Rivanna Conservation Alliance, and the city worked together to install a better water access point at Riverview Park, it “instantly became a place for people to go with kids and families to just wade around and play in the river, and touch the river,” Silver says. “We need more spots like that. It’s free, it’s always there in the summer when it’s hot, it can be a great place for kids to get to know nature, get to know rivers,” he says.
From the perspective of outdoor recreation, Silver isn’t yet concerned about human overuse. In an urban river corridor like this, “summer Saturdays being busy with human beings playing on the water is pretty typical,” he says. “If you go upriver or downriver from that main stretch between Darden Towe and Riverview Park, you still find, I think, a fairly peaceful experience.”
Moving forward, “It’s worth thinking about [how to] leverage the interest and enthusiasm for the Rivanna into caretaking for the Rivanna,” Silver says. His company is helping to organize Rivanna RiverFest on May 1, which will feature food trucks, live music, and opportunities to learn more about the river’s past and present.
“I think all of us in the outdoor recreation world want to believe that there is a connection between using a natural resource and coming to care for it both in our hearts and in our actions,” he says. “We can continue to work on ways to connect the dots for people who are newly using the river.”
Planning for the future
The Urban Rivanna Corridor Plan aims to “build a vision and develop an action plan for the urbanized section of the Rivanna River,” according to the report. Sandy Shackelford, director of planning and transportation at the Thomas Jefferson Planning District Commission, says the plan was created to facilitate coordination between the Charlottesville and Albemarle governments when it comes to policymaking in the Rivanna area.
The document doesn’t dictate which stretches of the banks are best for new development. “The local Land Use plans and the Comprehensive Plans have already identified where the development and redevelopment is appropriate,” Shackelford says. “We’re not changing that. But where development and redevelopment is already allowed, there are ways to do that with greater context sensitivity and awareness of environmental impacts.”
Since 2014, the planning agency has been researching the river and conducting community outreach in order to create a set of recommendations for the city and county.
The goals fall into a handful of different categories. The Environmental Protection section includes aims like “Encouraging the use of locally native plants for landscaping at parks and businesses,” and “Identifying and protecting the most sensitive biological and ecological areas by limiting access and installing signage.” In the Multi-Purpose Trails and Bridges section, the planning commission recommends “Providing seating areas at regular intervals along trails throughout the corridor.” In Development and Redevelopment, the report urges the city and county to “maximize the environmental sustainability and context sensitivity of new development.” The plan also encourages the localities to apply for grants to fund some of these initiatives.
In February, Charlottesville’s City Council amended the city’s Comprehensive Plan to include the Urban Rivanna Corridor Plan. Albemarle, currently in the process of updating its Comprehensive Plan, saw its Board of Supervisors endorse the plan and direct staff to consider it as the new Comprehensive Plan is ironed out.
Supporting the plan doesn’t mean its recommendations have become law, or even guarantee that the localities will follow the plan’s proposed course of action. “It doesn’t necessarily commit resources,” Shackelford says, “But it does give additional weight to staff being able to pursue some of these resources. That could be things like applying for grants or prioritizing work programs, or things like that.”
Shackelford says the planners tried to include realistic, short-term goals. Installing erosion control and flood prevention infrastructure like fencing along the bank could go into a parks department work plan “at a fairly low cost,” she says, and could have a big impact on the river’s health.
In some areas, like transportation, the plan recommends additional study. “We tried to think about things from an equity lens,” Shackelford says, “Things like increasing access by different modes of transportation, and thinking about who is going to have access to the park.”
She also points out that the river’s historic resources are not adequately cataloged. The report offers a cursory history of the river: Monacan Indians live throughout the region, and their historic capital, Rassawek, was located on the Rivanna, about 30 miles southeast of the city. In the antebellum era, enslaved laborers worked on plantations along the river’s banks. In the 19th century, Woolen Mills and Union Mills developed into major economic engines for the region. “So much local history happened around this really small section of the river corridor,” Shackelford says, and additional research will be required to ensure that history is well told.
From here, Shackelford says the next phase is creating an even more detailed master plan, with specific projects and cost estimates from engineers. Responsibility for undertaking some of the more complicated recommendations laid out in the plan lies with the area’s municipal governments.
“I thought the recommendations were great,” says Wittenborn. “I think the real question is just, are they going to be implemented? It doesn’t matter if you don’t follow through.”
Monday is Memorial Day, the traditional start to summer, but this year, much of the city’s outdoor recreation space will be off limits. Last week, Charlottesville Parks & Recreation closed all city pools and spraygrounds for the summer, and canceled camps. In addition, other outdoor facilities, including basketball and tennis courts, picnic shelters, and the Sugar Hollow Reservoir, will remain shuttered until further notice. In Albemarle County, all swimming lakes will be closed, along with playgrounds and ball fields.
“Our decision at this point is based on public safety and health, and our staff and keeping our staff safe,” says Todd Brown, Charlottesville Parks & Rec’s interim director. Where parks are open, both the city and county will employ monitors to ensure visitors are social distancing.
Under Phase One of Governor Northam’s reopening plan, which began May 15, pools are allowed to open for lap swimming, and private facilities like ACAC and Fry’s Spring have done so. But city and county officials say the decision to keep public pools closed has to do with staffing.
“We don’t have a year-round staff for lifeguarding, and so it’s really difficult to recruit seasonal lifeguards when we don’t know when they would be able to start work,” says Emily Kilroy, the director of communications and public engagement for Albemarle County. Brown noted that the city did not start training lifeguards in March, as it usually does, and that carried weight in the decision.
“With things being delayed in terms of the different phases…that uncertainty, it goes against being able to plan on how to open and operate pools so that you’re keeping people safe,” says Brown.
Amy Smith, assistant director of the county’s Parks & Recreation department, says “park ambassadors” will be stationed at the county’s swimming lakes this summer, to make sure no children make their way into the water. But how to keep kids with no other options for cooling off away from other, unguarded bodies of water—like the Rivanna River—is less clear.
“We know that there is going to be a reaction to this action, and that could also cause negative impacts elsewhere,” says Brown. “And we are concerned about that, too.”
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Quote of the Week
“I am hopeful that our students will be back in the classroom this fall.”
—Governor Ralph Northam, at a press conference on Monday. (So are we, Ralph. So are we.)
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In brief
Sour grapes
Listening to the President these days, you’d think the pandemic is over. But don’t tell that to Charlottesville’s Trump Winery, which soft-opened this week behind a set of complicated social-distancing requirements. While Trump has famously declined to wear a mask in public, they’re mandatory for servers at his winery, and recommended for guests.
Budget bristles
City budget officials have their work cut out for them, as staff projects a $5.4 million loss in revenue this year. That’s made some in City Hall grumpy: This week, The Daily Progress wrote a story about the city-county revenue sharing agreement, but City Manager Tarron Richardson (whose job is to talk about the budget) didn’t like the coverage, and said at Monday’s council meeting that he was “too upset to talk about it right now.”
Seedy suspects
On the evening of May 6, two people walked into a Louisa Sheetz wearing unusual face masks: hollowed-out watermelons with holes cut out for their eyes. According to the Louisa Police Department, the pair committed larceny, though it’s unclear exactly what they took. Police arrested one of the suspects—20-year-old Justin Rogers—on May 16, and charged him with wearing a mask in public while committing larceny, underage possession of alcohol, and petit larceny of alcohol. The second melonhead is still on the loose.
Major makeover
After many years of residents protesting against its dilapidated conditions, Crescent Halls will undergo major renovations starting this fall—but not without a huge price tag. At a May 18 meeting, the Charlottesville Redevelopment and Housing Authority announced that the project—which also includes the redevelopment and construction of new units on South First Street—would cost $26.94 million for construction, about $4.3 million more than last year’s estimates. To pay the bill, CRHA plans to secure additional funding from the Virginia Housing Development Authority, as well as private donors.
Learn about local environmental organizations and businesses, listen to speakers and enjoy live music, workshops, a book swap and more. Free, 11am-4pm. IX Art Park, 522 Second St. earthweek.org
NONPROFIT Wordplay Thursday, April 19
This team-based trivia night includes questions on pop culture, history, literature and more. Audience members are invited to play along and cheer for their favorite team. Annualfundraiser for Literacy Volunteers of Charlottesville/Albemarle. $20, 7pm.The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 979-1333.
FOOD & DRINK Cider-making workshop Sunday, April 22
Learn how different apple varieties are made into cider, and the importance of orchard “terroir” at this workshop led by Diane Flynt of Foggy Ridge Cider. $35, 3-5pm. Blenheim Vineyards, 31 Blenheim Farm. 293-5366.
HEALTH & WELLNESS Spring wildflower walk Saturday, April 21
These five-mile hikes through the woodlands of Monticello to the Rivanna River are a perennial favorite of plant-lovers. The trek includes uphill climbs, so sturdy shoes are required. $20, 9am-noon. Meet at the David M. Rubenstein Visitor Center, 931 Thomas Jefferson Pkwy. 984-9880.
FAMILY Fall Fiber Festival Saturday, October 7, and Sunday, October 8
Bring the whole family for craft workshops, sheep dog trials, Celtic music and dancers and more at this 30th annual festival. Adults $5, children 16 and under free, 10am-5pm Saturday; 10am-4pm Sunday. James Madison’s Montpelier, 11350 Constitution Hwy., Montpelier Station. fallfiberfestival.org
FOOD & DRINK Cheers for Charity Wednesday, October 4
This kickoff event for Starr Hill Brewery’s October Cheers for Charity recipient, Common Ground, includes music by Stan Marshall, free chair massages, mandala coloring and more. One dollar for every pint sold in October goes to Common Ground. 5:30-7:30pm. Starr Hill Brewery, 5391 Three Notch’d Rd., Crozet. 218-7677.
NONPROFIT Boats and Butterflies Festival Saturday, October 7
Enjoy rides down the Rivanna River in handmade wooden boats, and learn about one of the most seasoned travelers: monarch butterflies. Artists young and old can contribute butterflies to the collage painting. $7, 10am-4pm. Lewis & Clark Exploratory Center, Darden Towe Park. lewisandclarkvirginia.org
HEALTH & WELLNESS Trails Crew 5K Race Saturday, October 7
Start your morning off right with the eighth annual Crozet Trails Crew 5K Race and Kids 400m Fun Run at Claudius Crozet Park. The race precedes the Crozet Arts and CraftsFestival held at the park from 10am-6pm. $20-25, 8am Kids Run; 8:30am5K race. Claudius Crozet Park, 5300Park Rd., Crozet. crozettrailscrew.org
Local high schooler and wilderness guide Char Tomlinson leads a seasonal hike that highlights native plant and animal life. Pay what you will, 12:30-1:30pm. Wildrock, 6700 Blackwells Hollow Rd., Crozet. RSVP to 823-5100.
NONPROFIT
Rivanna River Renaissance Conference Friday, September 29
Various community speakers talk about projects relating to the Rivanna River at this conference from the Rivanna Conservation Alliance and other partners. $40, 8:30am-5:15pm. Albemarle County Office Building, 401 McIntire Rd. rivannariver.org
FOOD & DRINK
Vegan Roots Fest Saturday, September 30
This vegan-focused festival includes food, beer, wine, talks from nutrition experts, live music and vendor booths. Free, noon-7pm. Washington Park, 1001 Preston Ave. cvillevegfest.org
HEALTH & WELLNESS
24th annual Martha’s Market Friday, September 29-Sunday, October 1
More than 80 boutiques sell their wares at this annual fundraiser. Fifteen percent of each sale benefits women’s health care programs at Sentara Martha Jefferson Hospital. $10, children 13 and under get in free, 9am-6pm Friday and Saturday,11am-4pm Sunday. John Paul Jones Arena, 295 Massie Rd. 654-8258.
This week two different organizations are bringing together people from various backgrounds to look at our community through a creative lens. One event will take place in a moonlit warehouse while the other will be on the sunlit Rivanna River. Here’s what they’re all about.
Idea Factory 1740 Broadway St. September 29
Aidyn Mills, the donor relations manager for the Charlottesville Area Community Foundation, has spent the last year and a half researching how to get people in their 20s, 30s and 40s—referred to as “next gen” —civically engaged in the community. A cultural anthropologist by training, Mills learned that while the demographic may not necessarily have excess financial resources, next geners don’t lack the enthusiasm, talent or time, “if directed in the right way.” Piggybacking on the CACF’s mission to help individuals “make thoughtful decisions about their philanthropy,” Mills has used her research to develop a program called Imagination Foundation that hits the sweet spot between structure and flexibility. The launch event, “Idea Factory,” will take place in a Woolen Mills warehouse and features an art installation by Claude Wampler and a sound installation by MICE.
So what is it exactly? Mills says she wanted to educate the audience by using a format other than a PowerPoint presentation. The whole concept is based on drawing from the diverse talents, skills and perspectives all community members have to offer. “The basic foundation is creative collaboration,” Mills says. “How do we all work together in addressing or approaching specific social [and environmental] challenges?” For instance, she asks, “Have you ever thought of asking your local mailperson what they think of urban infrastructure? I mean, who else knows the lay of the ground better than a mailperson?”
Idea Factory is only the first in a series of events focused on creative collaboration. There is no promise, Mills says, of solving all of our community’s problems in one night. “I think as organizations and institutions, for very good reason, we’re focused on outcomes and quantitative deliverables,” she says. “And I wanted to reside in the space of imagination for a while. I don’t think as a society we do that enough.”
Mills wanted a physical space that reflects this concept. Enter the empty warehouse. “Already that first step is pushing the bounds of how we do things,” she says. “And that’s what I’m trying to encourage our community to do.” She compares the warehouse to a blank canvas. The act of people coming together, she says, paints a picture of “what a resilient community can look like.” Rather than focusing on quantifiable results, Mills says, “The fact that we can come together and think and practice empathy and listening and creative problem-solving and critical thinking—that to me is an achievement. Let’s celebrate that!”
FLOW Darden Towe Park/Riverview Park September 30
Deborah McLeod, director of Chroma Projects for the last 10 years, was brainstorming a collaboration with the county when Dan Mahon, outdoor recreation supervisor with Albemarle County Parks & Recreation, proposed an art project on the Rivanna River. McLeod, who says, “I love the idea of going to the river, to see the river as a source of cleansing and a sacred aspect,” didn’t hesitate. The brainchild of McLeod and Mahon is FLOW, a dynamic art exhibition on and along the banks of the Rivanna that features a flotilla boat parade, art installations, live music, dance, theater, plein art painting and underwater photography.
The art installations both incorporate and represent their natural surroundings. Compared to typical art festivals, McLeod says, FLOW “is more conscious of environment.” For instance, local sculptor Renee Balfour has sourced invasive vines collected by Rivanna Master Naturalists volunteers to create a bower that will drape into the current. Alan Box Levine’s sculpture uses colored string to explore how trees communicate through their roots. Jum Jirapan will demonstrate suminagashi—a printmaking process that involves painting on water to create a marbleized effect—using silk fabric. McLeod’s own sculpture, a literal interpretation of the riverbed, consists of a rusted bedframe supporting a makeshift aquarium.
Meanwhile, along the riverbank, painters will paint the landscape plein air. McLeod says, “It will be interesting for visitors to see how two people looking at the same view will see it very differently.” Musicians, including Terri Allard, Michael Clem and the Chapman Grove Gospel Singers, as well as Front Porch students and teachers, will perform. Local dancer Some’ Louis will both dance in the water and use it as a percussive instrument, while Katharine Birdsall will lead a dance group along the walking path. Actor Megan Hillary will perform a piece of theater about Queen Anne, the river’s namesake, and Alexandria Searls, executive director of the Lewis & Clark Exploratory Center, will demonstrate underwater photography in the Rivanna.
“The way it’s designed,” McLeod says, “is that you experience an art happening and then you go through nature and there’s nothing, so your sensitivity is heightened to nature and what to anticipate next.” FLOW’s sponsor, Rivanna Conservation Alliance, will have a booth, as well as the Rivanna Master Naturalists. “So it really is a confluence of art and nature,” McLeod says. “This is part of my hope that this is a kind of going to nature to be healed and to get some of this anguish out of our systems.”
It’s been nearly three months since Albemarle County resident Scott Fox first noticed a number of plastic bags littered across the bank of the Rivanna River behind his house, caught on rocks and tree limbs in the water and trapped below the water’s surface.
Fox, who lives in a small, A-frame house right on the river’s north fork, says he’s seen about 100 plastic bags at one time in the mile-long stretch of water that circles his property. The plastic comes from sandbags used in an emergency water main repair and relocation, according to Rivanna Water and Sewer Authority Executive Director Tom Frederick.
In a routine check last summer, an RWSA inspector noticed that, because of erosion, part of a pipe in the Rivanna’s north fork was exposed in the river bank, says Frederick. Federal regulations require a series of steps before contractors can begin fixing the pipe, so although the discovery was critical, the authority wasn’t able to begin relocating the pipe until November and had plans to finish by January, weather permitting.
During a recent trip to Fox’s house, at least 25 bags were visible around the river—some strung up in trees blowing in the wind and others submerged, but given away by dark, round shadows under the water’s surface. As it started to snow that day, some bags began to blend into the landscape.
RWSA is committed to restoring the area, but the weather, Frederick says, is a major factor in delaying the cleanup.
With recent snow and rain storms, river flows, or water levels, have been dangerously high. “We’re at nature’s mercy,” Frederick says. “We’re not going to put somebody in jeopardy.”
When Fox made his initial complaint, the RWSA asked contractors to clean up the area and an engineer was immediately sent to Fox’s house. The contractors gathered some bags, according to communications manager Teri Kent, but high waters prevented them from eliminating all trash. They will eventually need to take a boat down the river to collect it all, she says.
In the meantime, Frederick says the trash in the river won’t harm the environment.
“It’s inert material,” he says. “It’s construction material that was properly put in place and washed away by the flood.”
But Fox is frustrated with what he calls the “overwhelming pollution” and the contractor’s failure to remove it.
“If you put a thousand bags in the water, I want to see a thousand come out,” Fox says. “Right now, they’re showing me 20.”
The perfect solution? Fox has one. He proposes taking the issue to someone such as Rob Bell, a member of the Virginia House of Delegates and an Albemarle resident, and asking that the state mandate labeling materials that could become litter.
“Can we please put names and phones numbers on bags and anything else they put in the river?” he asks.