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Updates on the construction and detours at Hydraulic Road and Route 29

As of July 8, through traffic on Hydraulic Road is closed while contractors work on the construction of a roundabout. If you’ve driven anywhere in Charlottesville recently, you’ve probably noticed the wealth of ongoing road work while sitting in heavier-than-usual traffic. Here are the latest updates on the construction status and detours for local motorists and pedestrians:

By far the largest ongoing project is at Hydraulic Road and U.S. Route 29. According to Virginia Department of Transportation Project Manager Will Stowe, construction on the roundabout at the intersection of Hydraulic Road and Hillsdale Drive is on schedule despite the extreme heat, with drainage work and the removal of old signal poles already completed.

Crews are working in two shifts six days a week on the project to finish by the August 13 deadline.

“They’re working almost 24/7 during the daylight hours,” says Stowe. “We are giving the guys a break on Sunday, but we’re working six days a week besides that to try to get this back open to the public.”

“There’s quite a lot of concrete that needs to go down. We’re probably about 80 percent done with the splitter islands [pavement that separates a roundabout’s entrances and exits] currently. So right on schedule,” says Stowe. Some of that concrete will be poured in the second week of construction as crews work on the center island of the roundabout and install light poles.

During project planning, the detour was intentionally scheduled to end before the influx of traffic from the University of Virginia’s move-in weekend and the start of the school year in Charlottesville and Albemarle County. “The roundabout will be functional with all lanes of traffic open in the roundabout configuration. … It won’t be the final pavement, but it should be a smooth intermediate layer with good pavement markings. Also, the pedestrian facility should be completed around the roundabout.”

While work is ongoing, roughly 35,000 vehicles per day are being detoured from Hydraulic Road, according to VDOT. Traffic signal timings have been adjusted at several lights around the detour to accommodate the temporary traffic pattern, but some congestion is still occurring during rush hour windows.

“It’s really a balancing act of managing the traffic that was there before the detour and adding the additional traffic to it,” says Stowe.

VDOT does not currently have official information about the extent of delays. Anecdotally, traffic is moving well at off hours, but there is some backup in the detour areas during peak flow hours of 9am, noon, and 5pm on Route 29.

Motorists coming off of the 250 Bypass traveling westward who would normally use Hydraulic Road have been detoured to the next available exits for 29 North and 29 South. Traffic traveling eastbound from Route 29 looking to use the bypass can use the entrances by Angus Road at the intersection of Route 250 and Emmet Street.

Access to both Whole Foods and the Kroger shopping area has also been affected by the detour. To get to Whole Foods, shoppers can either use Zan or India roads to access Hillsdale Drive or pass through the rerouted one-way side entrance from the east side of Hydraulic Road. Kroger and its surrounding stores are still accessible by Hydraulic Road in both directions through Kroger Way and the turn-in on 29 North.

According​​ to Stowe, VDOT has been coordinating with both grocery stores and other businesses for more than a year to maintain access during the detour.

“Back when we first were procuring a contractor and designer for the project, we sat down with both Kroger and Whole Foods and some of the businesses along Hydraulic,” says Stowe.

The size and frequency of the semi-truck deliveries were also factored into the design of the roundabout itself.

Beyond the roundabout, improvements to Route 29 and Hydraulic Road also include signal and traffic pattern adjustments and the construction of a pedestrian bridge crossing Route 29.

“We’re currently building some retaining walls for [the pedestrian bridge], and we’ll start doing some drilled shafts here later in August,” says Stowe. “We’ll be working on that after the roundabout is completed. … When we go to hang the girders for the pedestrian bridge, we will have some overnight closures for traffic for about 20 minutes, but that’ll be probably a year down the road from now, so nothing to anticipate in the near future.”

For more information about the project and detours, visit vdot.virginia.gov.

“We are giving the guys a break on Sunday, but we’re working six days a week besides that to try to get this back open to the public.”

Categories
News

In brief: Biden defeats Trump, ’Hoos rank high, and more

Bye-bye, Trump!

A quiet fall day on the Downtown Mall quickly turned into a party on Saturday morning as word spread that Joe Biden had won Pennsylvania, giving him enough electoral votes to win the presidential race.

People cheered and clapped in celebration of the Democrat’s long-awaited victory, while cars sporting Biden-Harris flags honked as they passed the mall.

Several hours later, community organizers Don Gathers and Katrina Turner led a last-minute victory rally at the free speech wall. Following several speeches from activists and community members, the crowd sang and danced, overjoyed at Donald Trump’s defeat.

“It is a historic moment. We now have a woman going into the executive office, and to put the cherry on that sundae, a Black woman,” said Gathers.

Celebrations erupted across the country as Biden’s win dominated headlines, sparking fireworks, parades, and other festivities.

In nearby Washington, D.C., thousands flocked to Black Lives Matter Plaza—close to where federal agents teargassed protesters over the summer so Trump could take pictures holding a Bible—waving flags, banging pots and pans, dancing, and popping champagne bottles amidst whoops and hollers. Others reveled in front of the fenced-off White House, later booing and flicking off Trump’s motorcade when he arrived back from hours on the golf course.

“Sha na na, hey hey, goodbye!” shouted the crowd at the White House.

Confederate time capsule

In September, Albemarle County removed the Confederate statue from in front of the courthouse, and in the process revealed a dented, waterlogged time capsule that had been filled with mementos and buried below the monument more than a century before.

Archivists at UVA library have now sifted through the time capsule’s contents. Most of the documents are unreadable, the paper not having survived “a century of immersion in dirty, acidic water,” the librarians wrote in a blog post. Other things did last, however, including three bullets that had been collected from a local battlefield. The capsule’s creators must have thought they were burying Confederate bullets, but modern historical analysis reveals that the bullets were in fact fired by Union guns.

                                                      PC: Eze Amos

_________________

Quote of the week

That man is gone! That’s it. Trump is gone.

community activist Katrina Turner, speaking to NBC29 during an impromptu Downtown Mall rally on Saturday

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In brief

Hopeful ’Hoos

UVA men’s basketball clocked in at No. 4 in the nation in the first AP preseason poll of the 2020-21 season. The Cavs are still, technically speaking, defending national champions. The team will look to build on a strong finish in last spring’s COVID-shortened season. UVA opens on November 25 with a neutral-site game against St. Peter’s.

Tragedy on 29

After being struck by a car on U.S. 29 last Tuesday evening, 23-year-old Marcos E. Arroyo died of his injuries at UVA hospital on Monday. He had been trying to cross the highway near the intersection of 29 and Twentyninth Place, close to Fashion Square Mall. Last year, 41-year-old Bradley Shaun Dorman also died after trying to cross 29 North near Gander Drive, highlighting the need for improved pedestrian infrastructure on the busy highway.

Free college

Piedmont Virginia Community College will use CARES Act funding to offer free spring tuition to those who’ve received unemployment benefits since August 1—or who’ve taken on a new part-time job that pays less than $15 per hour. The no-cost classes will apply to high-demand career areas, including early childhood education, health care, IT, and skilled trades. Students must enroll by December 14.

Military surveillance

Just days after The Washington Post published a scathing report last month on the “relentless racism” Black students and alumni faced at Virginia Military Institute, Governor Ralph Northam ordered a third-party investigation into the state-funded school. Last week, Northam pushed forward with the plan, adding $1 million to the proposed state budget for the probe. Lawmakers will review and approve budget revisions during this week’s special session.

Categories
Living

Emu update: Merry Christmas, Gladys, wherever you are

On November 29, the day after Thanksgiving, we posted a story about Gladys the emu and the Cathcarts of Albemarle County. That holiday had been incomplete for the family, because Gladys—one of three emus who live on the Cathcart farm near Carter’s Bridge—was still missing after bolting from her pen with her sister Mabel ten days earlier. (Their brother, Floyd, stayed behind.)

Rip Cathcart and one of his three beloved emus. It’s likely he’ll spend Christmas without one of them, Gladys, because she’s been on the loose for weeks. Photo: Courtesy Millie Cathcart

After searching for the big birds (only ostriches are larger) and responding to a flurry of reported sightings and photographs posted online, Rip Cathcart, 62, and his wife, Millie, 55, rescued Mabel. She was in Schuyler, about 13 miles away from home, which would be incredible if emus weren’t capable of running as fast as 30 miles per hour. A father and son had spotted the bird while hunting and managed to capture and hold her until Rip and Millie arrived.

Millie Cathcart said that with the exception of a few trolling comments, the community response via social media—NextDoor.com, Charlottesville/Albemarle Lost & Found Pets, Facebook—was heartwarming. People wanted to help. People did help. Good Samaritans exist!

After our story came out, and readers (many thousands of them, according to Facebook and C-VILLE Weekly site analytics) discovered that Gladys was still at large, Cathcart received word from another Schuyler resident.

“This past Friday [December 6] a man in Schuyler heard strange noises when he was out on his property,” Cathcart related via email. “He had read your article and knew that Gladys was still on the loose! He went home and did some Google and YouTube research on emu noises, and is pretty sure that’s what he heard. He called my husband’s office, and they called me and connected us. We have a glimmer of hope!

“This Good Samaritan is not giving up easily,” the email continues. “He called me on Saturday [December 7] and planned to spend several hours on his property searching. He had a bucket of organic sunflower seeds for her, and some rope, and I told him the details of how Rip and I secured Mabel so we could put her in my car.  He said he is very good with all kinds of animals, and seems to look at this as an interesting challenge!

“He called me with an update yesterday (Sunday). He spent 2-3 hours both days searching, and heard rustling leaves, but no Gladys. Unfortunately, today was a cold rainy day and she’s probably hunkered down somewhere in thick bushes for shelter. I am amazed and thankful for folks like him who are spending their time to help. He has researched and read up on Emus, and he’s all set. I hope their paths cross and the next phone call I get from him is great news!”

What we have here is a story of love, hope, and community, and beautiful examples of the kindness of strangers as well as human respect and affinity for animals. On one hand, the tale is terribly sad—Gladys is still missing, and the Cathcarts will spend another big holiday unsure of her whereabouts and well-being.

But on the other hand, it is encouraging. Collectively, we are all too well aware of the rancor and divisiveness among our fellow human beings. Reading and hearing the news of the day can be emotionally and psychically exhausting. Here in Charlottesville, you may think, If I hear one more damn thing about those Confederate statues, my head is going to explode!

It might be better to reflect for a minute about Gladys the emu. As we here at C-VILLE Weekly have discovered, Millie and Rip Cathcart are remarkable people. We would like to think that they set an example for us all. Have we spent too much time and too many words on a trifling saga about a big bird? That may be a valid criticism, but we would urge you to view our coverage of Gladys in the context of our other work. A cover story about The Haven homeless shelter, a heartrending profile of jazz great Roland Wiggins, an examination of the death of a man who died while trying to cross the treacherous Route 29… We believe that all of these stories deserve to be told (otherwise we wouldn’t publish them, natch) and discussed, because telling and sharing stories creates powerful glue.

With this in mind, we will leave you with the content of a recent text message from Millie Cathcart. (Please forgive us if sharing it seems a bit self-indulgent.) As the saying goes, “The heart is a very, very resilient little muscle.”

“Unfortunately, nothing new, no sightings or information for weeks. We continue to hope that someone has taken Gladys in and given her a new home. It has been amazing how many people we know, and have met, who have read your story! Our daughter was at Orangetheory [Fitness], and someone who knew her, but who she didn’t know, started talking about your story. Soon the entire lobby was talking about it. Your story brought 10 unrelated people together—all had read it!”

And with that, we wish you all the best this holiday season and an excellent New Year!

 

Categories
News

Tragedy on 29: Pedestrian death highlights need for safer crossings

Before Bradley Shaun Dorman left his Charlottesville home the morning of October 25, he told his mother he was going to look for a job. He would be back in a few hours, in time to bathe their dog Gater.

Several hours later, his mother, Annette Simmons, heard a knock at her door. She opened it to discover a police officer on her doorstep. It was every mother’s worst nightmare: her son was in the hospital. He’d been hit by a car while trying to cross U.S. 29 North.

The officer drove Simmons to UVA hospital, where Dorman was on life support. He had sustained internal and external injuries from head to toe along his left side. 

“His brain stem was so damaged that he technically couldn’t survive,” says Simmons. “He would’ve had to live on life support forever.”

At the hospital, Simmons says Albemarle County police officers told her that the driver was speeding in the far-left-turn lane near Gander Drive when she hit Dorman, and that an investigation was ongoing. 

Police later said the driver of the vehicle was not found to be at fault in the crash and would not face any charges. But when C-VILLE requested a copy of the police report under the Freedom of Investigation Act, the department denied the request, stating in an email that it was withholding all police reports, “as they are part of criminal investigative files.” The department did not specify who or what was under investigation.

Simmons allowed family and friends to visit Dorman at the hospital before taking him off of life support. He passed away on October 27 at age 41.

Bradley Shaun Dorman, 41, died on October 27 at University of Virginia Hospital. Photo courtesy of the family.

Dorman’s death sheds light on the need for more safe pedestrian crossings on U.S. 29. According to Albemarle County Principal Transportation Planner Kevin McDermott, the crosswalk closest to where Dorman was hit is on the Rio Road overpass —approximately a half mile away. 

Since January 1, 2013, there have been eight pedestrians struck by a vehicle on Route 29 in Albemarle County. An additional five pedestrians have been struck in the City of Charlottesville between the 250 bypass and Hydraulic Road. Dorman’s death is “is the first pedestrian fatality on Route 29 since the beginning of those records,” says McDermott.

“We are trying to do what we can to make 29 a safer place for pedestrians,” says McDermott. “Five years ago, there were no crosswalks on 29 north of the city. Since then…we’ve gotten three new crosswalks on 29:” at Angus Road, on the Rio Road overpass, and at Hollymead Drive. 

Albemarle County has looked at additional crosswalk locations on 29, specifically at Hilton Heights Road and Woodbrook Drive, which are both near Gander Drive (where Dorman was hit). However, it currently does not have any new crosswalks funded or planned.

Due to the way funding cycles work, “we’re probably not going to see another new crossing out there for at least two years,” says McDermott. “But the county [does] monitor accidents, including pedestrian accidents… so when something like this happens, we take another look at the area and see what potential things we might be able to do to make the situation better for pedestrians.” 

Further south, city and county officials have been in discussions for years about improving the intersection at 29 and Hydraulic Road, but a plan submitted last year for funding through the Virginia Department of Transportation’s SmartScale program was denied. Earlier this year, members of the Hydraulic Planning Advisory Panel voiced support for the idea of building a bridge across 29 at Zan Road, connecting the Seminole Square Shopping Center with The Shops at Stonefield, and including a bike lane and sidewalks as well as vehicle access. 

Simmons hopes the county follows up on its plans to create more safe crossings, and wishes it would put crosswalks at every traffic light. 

“I don’t want nobody else to go through what I have to face,” she says.

Dorman did not have a car, and he often got rides from friends in order to run errands for his mother. He had moved in with her about two months ago, after breaking up with his girlfriend and losing his job due to health issues. Because of her severe back problems and inability to walk and stand for long periods of time, among other disabilities, Simmons relied on him to help her out around the house. 

“He was my first-born, my anchor,” says Simmons. “When I needed him, he was always there when he could. He would do anything for anybody…and would go to the extreme limits for his friends and family.”

Since Dorman’s death, Simmons has been struggling with raising the money for his funeral costs.

“I was told that the driver was responsible for the funeral,” says Simmons. “Now [the driver’s] insurance is saying they’re not responsible.”

Simmons, 58, lives on disability benefits, and says she is currently selling four burial plots at Monticello Memory Gardens and hosting a fundraiser on everloved.com in order to raise money for the funeral service and other expenses. She is also seeking the return of her son’s cell phone, which she believes may have been taken from the scene by a bystander.

Categories
News

In brief: Nelson cops indicted again, Route 29 & Rio get hairy and more

We’re noticing a trend

Major Ron Lantz was named Albemarle police chief May 11. He migrated here in 2012 from the Fairfax County Police Department, which also produced Steve Sellers, who was named chief in December 2010, and who will retire June 1.

Speaking of trends…

Former Nelson County sheriff David Brooks was indicted May 6 on four charges related to allegedly filming former opponent Mac Bridgwater undressed in a Lynchburg hotel in 2013. One of the charges, embezzlement for using public funds for a non-Nelson investigation, is a felony. Former lieutenant Becky Adcock also was charged with two misdemeanor counts. In April, former Nelson investigator and sheriff candidate Billy Mays was convicted of election fraud.

GOP picks 5th District congressional candidate

State Senator Tom Garrett won the Republican nomination on the third ballot of the May 14 convention, edging out three other candidates, including Charlottesville resident Michael Del Rosso. Garrett will take on Democrat Jane Dittmar in November.

Zero tolerance out, tolerance in

UVA prof and associate dean Catherine Bradshaw co-authored a National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine report released May 10 that says zero-tolerance policies that suspend students for bullying are ineffective and can do more harm than good.

Arrest in fatal home invasion

Culpeper resident Jordan Jerome Eaddy, 26, was arrested May 15 for the November 2015 slaying of Floyd Alston Jr., 31, in his South First Street home. Eaddy is charged with murder, breaking and entering while armed with a deadly weapon and attempted robbery.

Not a fan

c-ville sign
Staff photo

This mock cover of C-VILLE Weekly, which hangs from a tree on Nelson Drive, was created in response to a March news story about noise pollution in the North Downtown neighborhood coming from Allied Concrete.

map

AnimalControl

Number of fox bites in 2016:  3

Quote of the week

State Senator Tom Garrett “slandered me in Buckingham County, called me a liar…a snake oil salesman.” Michael Del Rosso said at the May 14 Republican convention to choose a 5th District congressional candidate, according to the Richmond Times-Dispatch.