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A brief history of the two-decade process to replace the Belmont Bridge

On a warm morning in late June, City Manager Sam Sanders presided over the ribbon-cutting ceremony for the new Belmont Bridge, a $38 million project that for a time served as another chapter in Charlottesville’s resistance to infrastructure for motorized vehicles.

“There are many who didn’t believe that this would actually happen,” Sanders said to a crowd assembled at the top of a new staircase that leads from bridge-level to Water Street. The western side of the bridge features the city’s first protected bike lane and the new bridge is much shorter at 236 linear feet. 

None of those features would likely be present if not for pushback from those in the community who felt Charlottesville deserved more than just a standard replacement. 

“We tend to get stuck on things and I want to get unstuck on things,” Sanders said.

Now that vehicles are rolling across the bridge and people are able to use sidewalks on both sides, reviews are mixed for the project, which still has remaining items waiting to be completed. 

“It’s a vast improvement, but for all the time, angst, and money that went into getting it built, it’s a bit of a let-down,” says Carl Schwarz, a city planning commissioner who was on the Board of Architectural Review when that body approved the bridge design.

The story of the Belmont Bridge is one of what might happen when public expectations are raised much higher than what the constraints of a local government can provide. 

Almost 21 years and several city managers before the ribbon was cut, the Charlottesville City Council learned of the need for $1.6 million in repairs to a 440-foot-long bridge built in 1962 that carried Virginia Route 20 across the railroad tracks. This section of the roadway, also known as Avon Street, is considered a primary road by the Virginia Department of Transportation.

The minutes of the September 15, 2003, council meeting indicate the direction the city would eventually take. The mayor at the time was Maurice Cox, a professor at the University of Virginia School of Architecture and a vehement opponent of what became known as the John W. Warner Parkway.

“Mr. Cox said the Belmont Bridge is not very friendly and the best solution may not be just to replace what is there,” reads the official record of the meeting. “He asked if there is a margin to make it more attractive and pedestrian friendly.”

Cox’s desire for a replacement did not immediately take hold, and Council held a public hearing in May 2005 for an appropriation of $1.46 million in funds for bridge repairs. Jim Tolbert, Charlottesville’s planning director at the time, said VDOT asked the city to consider a replacement due to quickly deteriorating conditions, but the official plan was still to repair. 

A year later, crews installed plywood underneath the bridge deck to prevent concrete chunks from falling on vehicles in the city-owned parking lots below. 

In April 2009, Tolbert told Council that VDOT estimated a replacement would cost $9.2 million and construction would not happen until 2014 at the earliest. The now-shuttered architecture and design firm MMM Design was selected to develop construction documents in part because of its work in overseeing the controversial reconstruction of the Downtown Mall that was underway that year.

To pay for the replacement project, the city set aside a portion of funding received each year from VDOT and had $4.4 million reserved by May 2010. Unless the city decided to use more of its own funding, construction of the replacement wouldn’t begin until 2018. 

MMM Design formally kicked off the public phase of the project in November 2010 with a presentation in CitySpace, and by this time, the city had saved up $5.3 million. Around the same time, the city had closed the eastern sidewalk to foot traffic due to a deteriorating sidewalk.

The presentation was intended to gather feedback from the community about what it wanted to see in a bridge design. Joe Schinstock, MMM’s project manager, even suggested there might be room for a pocket park on the bridge itself. 

Two months later, the city was forced to transfer some of the funding it had saved up for the Belmont Bridge to replace another deteriorating railroad bridge that carried Jefferson Park Avenue Extended over a different set of railroad tracks. 

Council voted 3-2 in April 2011 to spend $14,000 on permanent fencing on the Belmont Bridge’s eastern sidewalk, with two councilors asking for repairs to open the walkway to pedestrians as soon as possible. Those repairs were not made and the black fence stood until the eastern span of the bridge was replaced.

Over the course of 2011, MMM Design held many meetings with various stakeholders. The now-defunct Downtown Business Association of Charlottesville wanted an easy way for people from Belmont to access the Downtown Mall and prioritized pedestrian connectivity over bike lanes. The cyclists and walkability activists wanted vehicular activity to be secondary to non-motorized transport. 

An initial design shown to Council in September 2011 showed sidewalks on both sides of the bridge, three lanes for vehicular traffic, and bike lanes on each side. 

At the same time, VDOT’s cost estimate for the bridge replacement went up again from $9.2 million to $14.5 million due to a variety of inflationary factors. All estimates assumed the city would stay within the footprint of the existing bridge to avoid purchasing additional land. Studying the environmental effects on more rights of way could result in further delay. 

Before the design process was over, several Belmont residents approached the Board of Architectural Review in September to critique the process. That included filmmaker Brian Wimer, who launched a contest outside official channels that challenged the very need to build a bridge at all. Wimer described this process as “creative protest.”

“Community members aren’t just waiting for results,” reads a press release from Wimer in late November 2011. “They hope to get the results themselves, even if it means finding a new design team. The solution: Project Gait-Way—an unsanctioned $1,000 design competition for the Belmont Bridge to create ‘an iconic, pedestrian-centric, bike & auto friendly gateway bringing Charlottesville into the next era of world-class cities and communities.’” 

Such design contests were not unheard of during this era. In 2006, City Council funded a competition to reimagine two surface parking lots on Water Street. Both remain undeveloped with no plans on the horizon. 

Court of public opinion

In January 2012, Wimer asked Council for $2,000 for the contest he was launching—Project Gait-Way—that would prioritize how the bridge improved the experience for humans rather than vehicles. Wimer’s advocacy led to the project being put on hold, and Council agreed to pay Wimer the funds to help cover the cash prize. 

“Ultimately, we didn’t get an artful or very imaginative bridge,” says Wimer, who now splits his time between Charlottesville and Costa Rica. “But I think we nudged the process to try harder.”

UVA’s School of Architecture got involved in February 2012, with 29 teams of students entering the Project Gait-Way contest in what became known as the “Belmont Vortex.” In front of a crowd of students assembled in Culbreth Theatre, Wimer suggested the railway tracks would no longer be necessary as the country moved away from coal. 

Those tracks are now owned by the Virginia Passenger Railway Authority and are seen as part of a future east-west service between Richmond and Charlottesville. 

A design called “Belmont Unabridged” swept the competition. It envisioned no bridge at all in favor of an at-grade railway crossing. One of the team’s faculty advisors was Daniel Bluestone, a former architecture professor at UVA, who urged students to push back on automotive culture. 

By this time, Cox had left Charlottesville to work as design director for the National Endowment for the Arts. He suggested to Council that the city apply for a $150,000 grant from a program he helped create called “Our Town.” The funding would pay for a study of how a new connection tied to arts and culture could transform the surrounding area. 

The new Belmont Bridge features a staircase that leads from bridge-level to Water Street, as well as the city’s first protected bike lane on the western side of the structure. The replacement is also much shorter at 236 linear feet.

A divided Council rejected the idea in part due to timing and the unlikelihood of either VDOT or CSX Transportation accepting the idea of no bridge. Instead, the idea was floated to spend $150,000 on further planning of the area around the bridge, while MMM continued to work on a new design with input from the contests. That funding would end up being used for a different project known as the Strategic Investment Area. (Despite winning an award from the Congress for New Urbanism in 2018, none of the SIA’s signature ideas would be implemented.) 

Mo’ money, mo’ problems

By May 2012, Sean Connaughton, Virginia’s secretary of transportation, had arranged to fully fund the $14.5 million price tag for the bridge alongside funding for the Western Bypass, another controversial road project that would ultimately remain unbuilt. The Commonwealth Transportation Board approved the funding for the Belmont Bridge, but Council remained divided about how to proceed. 

By that summer, Siteworks Studios had been hired as a subcontractor who would work on its own set of designs parallel to MMM. In December, the Siteworks team, including architect Jim Rounsevell, unveiled a proposal for Avon Street to go 25′ under the railroad tracks in an underpass rather than a bridge in order to allow the surrounding area to be developed. Siteworks hired a construction firm to produce a cost estimate of $17.3 million—higher than the $14.5 million the city had reserved for a bridge replacement. 

In January 2013, the now-defunct Place Design Task Force, which had been created to provide advice to Council on how to proceed with urban infrastructure, recommended the underpass option, though they also acknowledged it would be prone to flooding and may be unwelcoming to pedestrians. In a memo, they also declared what kind of a bridge they wanted. 

“Attention to appropriate lighting, pedestrian walkway design, railings, and bike travel lanes will ensure that the bridge scheme serves the community as safely and appropriately as possible,” reads the memo. 

In September 2013, a firm hired by the city put the cost estimate for the bridge at just under $15 million and the estimate for the underpass at $27.3 million. That same month, Council directed staff to pursue an “enhanced bridge” but did not eliminate the option of an underpass. Rounsevell launched a crowd-funding campaign to further develop the concept, which he said would build “on the success of the Downtown Mall.” 

“We are hoping to also develop a market study of the immediate area similar to what was done for the [High Line] in New York,” reads the campaign’s description. “We suspect that removing a 34-foot high bridge is a superior economic alternative.”

Reviews for the completed $38 million Belmont Bridge project, which still has remaining items waiting to be finished.

Three bridge options developed by MMM Design were shown side-by-side with Rounsevell’s underpass at meetings in the spring of 2014. Finally, on July 21, 2014, Council voted 4-1 to proceed with the “enhanced” option presented by MMM. Council member and architect Kathy Galvin voted against the motion and said instead the city should hire a new firm from scratch. 

Three months later, Galvin would get her way when MMM Design went out of business and could not complete their work. By this time, Bob Fenwick had been elected to Council after running a campaign in which he insisted the bridge could be repaired rather than replaced. Fenwick said he was not interested in any of the amenities associated with the enhanced bridge and tried to get Council to follow along. 

Tolbert left city government and Charlottesville in February 2015 before finalizing the process to begin the bridge design all over again. That would fall to his successor, Alex Ikefuna. By the time a request for proposals was issued, the bridge’s sufficiency rating as measured by the Federal Highway Administration had dropped to 40.8 in 2015 from 47.6 out of 100 in 2012. 

At that time, VDOT’s cost estimate for the bridge remained at $14.5 million but would soon increase to $23 million due to inflation. To fill the gap, Council voted to seek revenue-sharing funds from VDOT that required a dollar-to-dollar match from the city government. 

The firm Kimley-Horn was hired for $1.98 million in late 2016 to resume the design work after a long period of negotiations. Its task was to complete construction documents by March 2018, which would include a plan for how to redesign the street network around the bridge. Design specifications included one lane of vehicular traffic in each direction and a 25 mile per hour speed limit. 

Meanwhile, the western sidewalk was closed in early 2017 after it, too, had deteriorated. One of the existing southbound lanes was converted for bike and pedestrian use. 

When Kimley-Horn took over, project manager Sal Musarra said the process would build off of what had come before but would not seek to build consensus. 

To pay for their share, Council began setting aside local money in the capital improvement program, beginning with an allocation of $4.5 million in Fiscal Year 2018. There was another $5 million in FY21, even with the budget uncertainties introduced by the pandemic that year. Another $2.5 million was set aside in FY22. These allocations totaled $12 million in local funds toward the project—almost a third of its projected cost. 

By the time Council approved a design in July 2018, the cost estimate had risen to $24.8 million. Council held a final public hearing on spending money on the project in August 2020; the cost estimate had grown to $31.1 million. The amount would rise slightly due to supply-chain issues that increased the cost of materials. 

Caton Construction won the award to build the bridge, which contains many of the elements of the enhanced design from MMM. At the ribbon-cutting, Steven Hicks, the city’s public works director, said the final product accomplished many of the city’s goals.

“We created an innovative and architectural design and the bridge has separated pedestrian, vehicle, and bicycle lanes,” said Hicks. “Two 11-foot travel lanes, one in each direction. Seven-foot bike lanes and 10-foot pedestrian lanes. And we preserved the views to the mountains and of the railroad tracks.”

Former Councilor Galvin says she felt the process and design overseen by Kimley-Horn were good and said the work of the Belmont Vortex introduced ideas that would never have been considered otherwise. 

“Some of the ideas were just too expensive and not practical from an engineering standpoint,” Galvin says, adding she is glad the project was completed, unlike a new streetscape on West Main Street that Council canceled in 2022 to free up money for the expansion of Buford Middle School.

As this is Charlottesville, the Belmont Bridge and so many others will continue to be debated.

Wimer calls the creative protest from a dozen years ago “future-bending” in that it helped create a “slight improvement” over what he had seen.

“For what it’s worth, I still favor an at-grade solution,” Wimer says. “The ‘no-bridge’ design that won the juried and the public vote.”

Schwarz said the design concept was executed in a poor manner, but he admits the bridge is now safer for pedestrians. 

“But is it the gateway to downtown that we should be proud of? Let’s give it a few years and see how it ages.”

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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.”

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Path for improvement

With the missing medians, peeled-up pavement, and barrage of cones, it’s hard to miss the construction on Hydraulic Road and U.S. 29. But Virginia Department of Transportation Project Manager Will Stowe says there’s a method to the madness.

Construction along the busy corridor started earlier this year and has mostly consisted of right-of-way acquisitions up to this point, according to Stowe. “Currently, the main work is along the Hydraulic corridor,” he says. “We are preparing to build a roundabout at the intersection of Hillsdale Drive and Hydraulic.”

Located between the Whole Foods Market and Kroger parking lots, that particular intersection  is a notoriously busy one. Data from VDOT’s crash map over the last two years shows clusters of accidents in and around the intersection. By putting in a roundabout, VDOT hopes to improve safety and traffic flow in the area.

VDOT is currently relocating utilities and installing drainage, and they plan to implement a detour for which construction is projected to last between 40 and 45 days. This detour will take drivers to the nearby intersection of the 250 Bypass and U.S. 29/Emmett Street next to Bodo’s Bagels. In an effort to reduce traffic as a result of the detour, VDOT intentionally scheduled the work while the University of Virginia, Albemarle County schools, and Charlottesville City schools are out of session (UVA holds summer session classes, but student presence on Grounds is significantly lower compared to the fall and spring semesters).

During construction, drivers will still be able to access businesses and other locations along Hydraulic Road, Brandywine Drive, and Michie Drive, but the area will be closed to through traffic.

“We’ll make sure that all the roundabout signage and guidance is in place, [and] the pavement marking will make it pretty clear which ways you need to go,” he says.

Aside from the roundabout, the project will also include signal changes, handicap ramp improvements, and the construction of a pedestrian bridge over U.S. 29 by the Shops at Stonefield.

“We’re also installing Amber beacons at the crosswalks around the roundabout to alert traffic to pedestrians,” says Stowe. Other pedestrian crossings and street lighting will be added throughout the construction area, but one big change for drivers will be the removal of left turn lanes from Hydraulic Road onto Route 29. “Reducing the phases at that light … will give a lot more green time to the other operations [there].”

VDOT has already started preparing for the pedestrian bridge over U.S. 29, but construction will not significantly affect drivers and pedestrians until at least this fall. “We’ll be focused on the roundabouts and signal[s] this summer,” says Stowe. “We’ll be focusing on getting the pedestrian bridge built into the fall and into next year.”

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Driving it home

Sure, it’s the most wonderful time of the year. But along with holiday festivities comes the traffic. Lots of traffic. And while roads will be bumper to bumper in the coming weeks, the Virginia Department of Transportation has a few tips for minimizing your travel stress.

According to VDOT, the periods of heaviest traffic will be the Friday and Saturday before Christmas (December 22 and 23) and the weekdays immediately following the holiday (December 26 to 28). Some areas where traffic is expected to be the worst include I-95 northbound and southbound near Fredericksburg and I-395 northbound near Arlington.
VDOT will suspend a majority of work zones and lane closures during the peak holiday travel window, but some semi-permanent zones will remain closed. Construction, lane, and shoulder closures will continue in Hampton Roads, which may cause significant congestion on nearby portions of I-64.

VDOT also reminds drivers to stay safe this season and keep an eye on weather conditions. “One of the things that we always stress—and it’s really easy for people to forget … in all the business of the holiday season—is to make sure that you stay weather aware,” says Lou Hatter, VDOT communications manager for the Culpeper District. “Particularly as we get into the colder parts of the year, people who are traveling should always be aware of the weather conditions, not just where they are, but also where they’re going … and the route along the way.”

Hatter also recommends that travelers dress for the weather when driving, and have resources on hand in case of an emergency. “It’s always a good idea to have some kind of a winter coat, some sort of decent footwear, again just in case you get stuck,” he says. “You don’t want to be stuck out on the road somewhere in traffic backup wearing short pants and flip flops in December. It’s always a good idea to pack those extra clothes, [and] something that can help you stay warm if for some reason you get stuck.”

Safe driving is important year-round, but especially when roads are crowded. In addition to standard best practices of using turn signals, wearing seat belts, and not driving when distracted or under the influence, VDOT recommends leaving extra space between you and the car in front of you.

“With increased traffic, it’s even more important to make sure that you maintain a safe distance between yourself and other vehicles,” says Hatter. “Be aware and thoughtful about the fact that there’s going to be more traffic out there on the roads.”

According to data from the Department of Motor Vehicles, areas of high traffic were the most frequent crash sites across the Charlottesville area in 2023. Areas with some of the highest crash volumes this year include the Barracks Road Shopping Center, Route 29 near Stonefield, the 250 Bypass at Pantops, and Interstate 64.

To learn more about anticipated traffic conditions across Virginia this holiday season and other VDOT safety recommendations, visit vdot.virginia.gov. Real-time conditions can be found through the Virginia 511 app or information line.

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Deer crossing

There are more than 50,000 deer-vehicle collisions in Virginia each year. One local scientist has a low-cost solution. 

 

May 3, 2013. It’s 7:50 in the morning. A 51-year-old man driving an SUV west on I-64 collides with a deer. The man is unhurt; police notify VDOT that they’ll need to remove the carcass.

October 13, 2014. Evening rush hour: 5:35pm. A 28-year-old woman is driving east on the same highway. From the police report: VEH#1 WAS IN THE RIGHT LANE WHEN A DEER CAME FROM THE LEFT AND STRUCK THE VEHICLE. THE DEER THEN FLED THE SCENE.

November 1, 2017. At 1:31am, two women have just driven over the Mechums River. A deer flashes into their headlights right before they feel the thump of the collision. The driver, who’s in her 60s, is fine, but her 21-year-old passenger sustains a “visible injury.”

July 26, 2017. Westbound lanes, just after midnight. VEHICLE 1 SWERVED TO MISS AN ANIMAL IN THE ROADWAY, LOST CONTROL, CRASHED INTO THE BANK AND ROLLED OVER. Visible injury to the 29-year-old driver.


Spend a little time looking through VDOT’s crash data, and it soon becomes obvious: A substantial portion of the mishaps—both minor and serious—occurring on Virginia’s roads involve a certain hoofed mammal. Odocoileus virginianus, the whitetail deer, causes enough crashes to earn its own code in the police reports. Alongside “1. Rear End”; “3. Head On”; and “8. Non-Collision” there’s “10. Deer.”

“Deer are not wired to learn to cross a road,” says Matt Knox, who leads the deer program for the Department of Game and Inland Fisheries. “They’re programmed to get away from wolves and panthers, but cars are a predator they haven’t evolved to deal with.”

It’s a problem for all parties involved. There are more than 50,000 deer-vehicle collisions—or DVCs, as they’re known to VDOT—each year in Virginia. Many of those result in death for the deer, and VDOT spends time and treasure dealing with the carcasses. For drivers, deer are a hazard to property as well as to life and limb. While Virginia isn’t one of the very worst states for DVCs (those honors go to West Virginia, Montana, and Pennsylvania), it’s still in the top dozen. A driver in Virginia has a one in 99 chance of hitting a deer, according to State Farm, which tracks deer-related insurance claims nationwide. Fatal crashes caused by deer are rare, but not unheard of.

The busiest time for DVCs is right around the corner: fall, which is rutting (mating) season for deer. Bridget Donaldson, a scientist with the Virginia Transportation Research Council—that’s VDOT’s research arm—has spent almost four years tracking deer activity and collisions along a stretch of I-64 west of Charlottesville. Of all the DVCs recorded during her study period, more than half occurred during October and November. During the rut, says Knox, “Their activity goes up dramatically, and that means they’re crossing roads.”

Donaldson (who’s based in Charlottesville) found that in the stretch of I-64 she studied, there were about nine deer-related crashes per mile per year. “That’s high,” she says. “That number can be decreased.” Fewer crashes would, obviously, benefit wildlife: not only deer, but bears and innumerable smaller animals. But how to prevent collisions, when our roadways cut right through forests and other prime wildlife habitat? Could there be a way to mitigate what seems like an unfortunate fact of modern life?

Deer in the road

In the fall, after bucks have shed the velvet on their antlers and dispersed from their chummy summertime “bachelor groups,” they find themselves restless and driven, propelled by the highest testosterone levels they’ll have all year. Does, meanwhile, have weaned the fawns they birthed in the spring and, as the days grow shorter, prepare to come into estrus, meaning they’re ready to breed. Searching for mates, both sexes crisscross the landscape more frequently than at any other time of year.

While bucks travel alone in autumn, does continue to move in social groups. Led by an alpha female—usually their mother or grandmother—younger does and fawns stick together, following the alpha whether her decisions are good ones or not.

“She controls when and where they move,” says Knox. “If she crosses the road, those other animals are going to cross regardless of traffic, because she’s the leader. If they’re crossing a bridge or overpass and the oldest doe jumps to her death, they all jump to their death.”

For drivers, this means that where there’s one deer in the road, there are often several—sometimes as many as a dozen. That increases the chaos factor during a road crossing, making it more likely that an encounter will end in a collision.

It doesn’t help that deer are neither nocturnal nor diurnal, but crepuscular: most active at dawn and dusk. Unfortunately, in the fall, those are often the same hours that people commute to and from work. While DVCs can happen at any time of day, the overlap of deer and human “rush hours” means there are that many more opportunities for fatal contact.

George Bragg, third-generation owner of Bragg’s Body Shop in Charlottesville, says lately he’s seeing cars with deer damage year-round. Photo: Amy and Jackson Smith

George Bragg, the third-generation owner of Bragg’s Body Shop in Charlottesville, is used to seeing cars come into his shop with deer damage, and recently, he’s noticed a trend. “Traditionally, we used to see a lot of deer hits in fall and winter,” he says. “Nowadays, in the last two to three years, it’s a consistent problem year-round.” He chalks up the increase in spring and summer collisions to Charlottesville’s steady pace of growth. “I attribute it to construction and development,” he says.

Donaldson says that the more fragmented forested habitat are for deer, the more often they’ll get hit—and maybe not for the reasons you’d assume. It’s not that deer need large swaths of unbroken forest, which human activity interrupts. It’s that they actually prefer edge habitats: places where forest meets field, or a creek breaks up the landscape—or a road cuts through the woods. Of that last type, there are more and more, as human developments extends its fingers into the landscape. “Deer love that edge, and use rights-of-way as part of their habitat,” Donaldson says. “They like early successional vegetation,” the plants that tend to grow back first when a forest is cut down. “They thrive where humans are, because we break up the habitat.”

Fencing them out

As more and more places see development, deer become used to the sights and sounds of roads and highways, walking and feeding along roadsides with no true understanding of how dangerous they are. “Deer raised near highways become habituated,” Donaldson says. “They haven’t evolved to understand the speed” of motorized vehicles.

This explains what sometimes looks to drivers like very stupid behavior—the classic “deer-in-headlights” situation, or the fact that deer sometimes run directly into the sides of vehicles, or leap off embankments onto a vehicle’s roof.

What deer can understand, as gardeners well know, are eight-foot-high fences.

When Donaldson joined the VTRC in 2003, she brought with her an interest in wildlife ecology, and she knew that, especially in the West, some roads were constructed with underpasses specifically for use by animals. Those are effective but expensive, and very tough to retrofit. “I thought maybe we could make better use of existing underpasses,” she says. Her idea was to study the effectiveness of roadside fences in funneling animals toward spots where they can safely cross under the road. If those underpasses were already built, VDOT would save the cost and hassle of new construction.

Donaldson identified two spots on I-64, between Charlottesville and Crozet, that could serve as wildlife crossings. One is ideal for deer: a tall, wide space under the Mechums River bridge with lots of visibility.

The other, located just east of the Ivy exit, is less inviting. It’s a “box culvert”—a concrete tunnel—that was built along with the interstate, back in the 1960s, to accommodate cattle on a farm the new highway had bisected. The culvert is 189 feet long and dark. From one end, the other side looks like a small square of sunlight framed by blackness. Donaldson knew from reading other studies that a culvert like this would not be a preferred crossing for deer, who hesitate to pass through confined spaces. But would they use it if they were forced to, by fencing?

Scientist Bridget Donaldson spent almost four years tracking deer activity along a stretch of I-64 west of Charlottesville. Photo courtesy VDOT.

Donaldson and her colleagues started out by studying deer activity near the two underpasses for two years before fencing was installed. In 2013 she placed game cameras every tenth of a mile, for a one-mile stretch centered on each underpass, and collected images of animals at the roadside: deer feeding, deer attempting to cross, even deer mating and sparring. Her cameras recorded more than 4,700 deer visits to the two sites.

As she’d expected, deer were more willing to walk under the bridge than to brave the box culvert. Also as she’d expected, they frequently crossed the road at both sites, regardless of having a safer passage available.

A mile of fencing went in at the box culvert in 2016, and another mile at the Mechums bridge in 2017. The fence is pretty simple: eight feet high, made of woven wire attached to metal stakes, with occasional “jumpouts” that let deer escape if they get trapped on the wrong side.

Simple it may be, but it seems to be working. In the mile surrounding the box culvert, the number of DVCs dropped from 16 (in two years of study) to just one in the two and a half years since the fencing went in. And the annual number of deer crossings through the culvert went from 148 to 745—a 505 percent increase.

“Now they realize they have to use it,” says Donaldson. She’s excited that the fence has done exactly what it was supposed to—channel deer to the safe crossing, even though it’s not what their instincts tell them to prefer. And it’s safe to assume that, at the two sites, it’s prevented more than 30 DVCs. Images of does bringing their fawns through the culvert suggest that a new generation of deer will learn to use it as part of their normal movements.

The post-fencing study at the Mechums bridge site won’t be fully complete until 2020, but so far it looks just as promising—no DVCs at all, and a marked increase in deer using the underpass.

Too many deer?

Donaldson’s study, she says, “is the most comprehensive evaluation of adding fencing to existing infrastructure. It’s the first time we’re heavily studying the effects of this.”

She plans to share her findings with other road ecologists around the country, and one thing she’ll emphasize is how cost-effective such a strategy can be. The two sections of fencing cost around $300,000 to install, and maintenance has so far been paid for by the VTRC’s research budget.

Wildlife conservation isn’t VDOT’s main priority here, says Donaldson. (Earlier this year, Virginia’s General Assembly failed to pass a bill that would have required studies of habitat corridors, to better understand how deer and other animals move through the landscape, and provide protection for those corridors. Several other states have passed similar legislation.) While deer do benefit from the new fencing, human safety and protection of property are more central to VDOT’s mission.

It’s hard to know the true cost of the roadkill problem to the state and to individuals, since many DVCs never get reported to the police. But for those unlucky drivers who do make contact with deer, Bragg says, it’s not unusual for the cost of vehicle damage to get into the four-figure range. “It doesn’t take much to do a lot of damage,” he says. “Vehicles today are made with crumple zones and a lot of plastic, and the sheet metal these days is very thin to make cars lighter. A good hit from a 200-pound animal can render $2,500 worth of damage to an average car.” State Farm reports an even higher figure: $4,341 per claim on average.

Bragg has seen vehicles totaled when deer have damaged roofs and windshields and set off airbags. “That can total a brand-new car,” he says. “We’ve seen that happen at less than 500 miles.”

If habitat is becoming ever more fragmented, and the number of roads and drivers in our area is increasing, deer and drivers will inevitably continue to encounter each other with great frequency. Seeing—and being nervous about—deer while driving is part of what drives the public’s perception that there are too many deer in the environment.

Matt Knox says that overpopulation of deer is a myth, or at least half a myth. “There’s two ways to look at this,” he says. “The first way is from a biological perspective. If you have so much food out there on the landscape, it can carry so many deer. From that perspective, the deer population is not overpopulated. The deer are healthy.”

But the biological carrying capacity is a different yardstick than human feelings. “The cultural carrying capacity is people’s tolerance for deer,” he explains. From that perspective, many people do believe there are just too many white-tails. Recreational hunting is the major means of limiting their population. In Virginia, hunters kill nearly 200,000 deer each year. Charlottesville has hired wildlife pros to cull 125 deer annually for the past two years on city property.

The project’s cameras show deer, guided by VDOT’s fencing, using the box culvert to cross under the highway. Photo courtesy VDOT.

Dealing with the mess

Along with the fact that deer mow down people’s gardens and landscaping, deer-vehicle collisions are a major reason that many humans see them as a nuisance. There’s the danger and cost of hitting a deer, of course, but there’s also the unpleasant experience of seeing mangled carcasses on the roadside.

It may be unfair that people move into deer habitat, endanger them with our vehicles, and then profess disgust at seeing the bloody results. But from VDOT’s perspective, deer carcasses are another possible hazard to drivers, and removing them is just part of its charge. That task costs the agency more than $4 million annually.

VDOT and its contractors sometimes pick up carcasses as part of regular maintenance runs, and sometimes in response to calls from motorists. More than 55,000 carcasses must be dealt with each year. Most of these, including those picked up in Albemarle, go to landfills. But that solution is becoming more expensive, says Jimmy White, a colleague of Donaldson at the VTRC.

“As the technology in landfills has progressed over the years,” he says, “[adding carcasses] messes up what’s going on in the landfill.” This makes landfills less willing to accept dead deer; some charge high disposal fees when VDOT brings in carcasses.

In 2013, Donaldson and White studied several different systems that VDOT could use to compost deer at its own facilities. They tried composting in rotating drums, in windrows made of wood chips, and in forced-air compost bins. The forced-air bins worked best—they destroyed pathogens, broke carcasses down efficiently, and didn’t take up much space.

The half-dozen forced-air compost facilities installed during that pilot study are still in operation, says White, and are scattered around the state. Eventually he’d like to see more of them built. At a local VDOT headquarters outside Lynchburg—essentially a large yard where snowplows, mowers, and other maintenance equipment is stored—White shows off a set of compost bins that can break down hundreds of carcasses at a time.

It’s all very plain-looking: four concrete bins under one large shed roof. Each is about 10 feet wide and 18 feet deep, and has a swinging metal door across the front that opens to allow front-loaders to add animals and turn the compost. (One of the four bins is marked: PLACE DEAD ANIMALS HERE.) Along the floor, thin PVC pipes hiss with the forced air that helps the system work quickly.

To use the bins, workers line the bottom with sawdust and layer carcasses on top, back to front, all facing the same direction. They continue layering animals and sawdust as the pile builds up. “It might take a month to fill it,” says White, “and then it sits for another month until it’s finished. The neat thing is that in the bin that’s working, there’s no odor—it’s all balanced. The guys that operate it can tell by the odor if it’s out of whack.”

On this visit, on a hot summer day, there is no smell and just three animals—two deer and a dog—in the bin. An adjacent shed holds finished compost, looking like dark sawdust studded with bones and antlers, which will be added into new piles as a starter. In the busy fall season, White says, as many as 100 animals might be added to each bin before the whole system is at capacity.

“We create an environment so the microbes prosper and eat everything up in about 28 days,” says White. “It’s pretty fast.” Long probe thermometers measure temperatures inside the piles of up to 140 degrees during the hottest part of the cycle, and drainage channels collect the leachate, rich with beneficial microbes, that managers recycle back into the piles.

At a cost of around $150,000 per compost facility, the bins can save VDOT money over the long term, concluded Donaldson and White in their study.

That’s also a big part of the case Donaldson wants to make for fencing: that it’s smart management of public funds.

“While underpasses designed for wildlife are a great solution when new roads are constructed, for existing roads it can cost millions to dig up the road and install a new underpass,” she says. “It’s low-hanging fruit when we can make better use of existing structures—it’s inexpensive, and the mitigation has a profound effect. We hope that our projects in Charlottesville are going to be the model for the rest of the state.”

 


Photo courtesy VDOT.

How not to hit a deer

Consider your timing. In fall, and at dawn and dusk, your chances of a DVC increase. Drive extra cautiously during those times.

Consider your position. Preferred crossings include creek bottoms and places with lots of vegetation on one or both sides of the road.

Slow down. “If you’re going 55,” says Matt Knox with the DGIF, “the chances of a DVC are much higher than if you’re going 25.” And if a collision seems imminent, don’t swerve. Jerking the wheel can make you lose control of your car, resulting in a much worse impact than hitting the deer. As Knox puts it, “Would you rather hit a deer, or an oak tree?”

 


Bears, too

When Bridget Donaldson took C-VILLE on a tour of the box culvert where VDOT’s new fencing is funneling wildlife, we saw lots of tracks in the tunnel. Deer were obviously using the tunnel, as were smaller animals like raccoons. Just before we left, we discovered bear tracks too.

Sure enough, later that day Donaldson discovered footage of a black bear emerging from the culvert.

An average of five bears per year died on I-64 between Afton Mountain and Charlottesville during Donaldson’s three-year study of the road. Like deer, bears are most likely to cross roads during the fall, when they’re feeding intensively to get ready for hibernation.

Though deer are the biggest problem for motorists and the main focus of Donaldson’s fencing study, bears benefit from the project too—as do the handful of drivers each year who would otherwise have collided with an animal that can weigh up to 500 pounds.

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In brief: Diverging diamond, Way’s passing, educator arrested and more

Six road projects, one $36-million package

The Virginia Department of Transportation has identified six upgrades for Albemarle roads, and will choose one contractor
to design and build them for $35.9 million. Citizens can check out and weigh in on the projects from 5:30 to 7:30pm at Western
Albemarle High School on Wednesday, October 10, and at Albemarle High on Thursday, October 11.

  • I-64 and U.S. 29 interchange: Eliminates crash-prone loop exit from U.S. 29 south to I-64 east, and installs two left-turn lanes on 29.
  • I-64 and U.S. 250 at Richmond Road: While left-turn lanes are being installed above, this project eliminates the current left turns across traffic onto 64 with a tricky diverging diamond interchange, like the one at Zion Crossroads, which allows lefts without crossing oncoming traffic.
  • U.S. 29 at Fontaine Avenue: Reduces number of lane changes needed to exit 29 north to Fontaine.
  • U.S. 250 at Route 151: Builds a roundabout at the collision-heavy intersection of Alcohol Alley and Rockfish Gap Turnpike near Afton.
  • Route 20 at Proffit and Riggory Ridge roads: Adds a roundabout at this intersection.
  • Berkmar Drive Extended. Adds a quarter-mile connector with Rio Mills Road

 


Quote of the week

“We knew all the details. Maurice always told the councilors.”—Bob Fenwick on former police chief Al Thomas remaining on the public payroll, according to the Daily Progress


In brief

Teacher’s aide indicted

The man knocked to the ground by Deputy Police Chief Greg Jenkins at an August 30 Albemarle County School Board meeting has now been indicted on a felony charge of assaulting a police officer. Michael Reid was among dozens of protesters calling for the school board to ban Confederate imagery from its dress code, and was brought to the hospital after the scuffle with Jenkins, who accused Reid of assaulting him.

Another Miller Center departure

Doug Blackmon. Wikimedia Commons

Douglas Blackmon, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Slavery by Another Name, follows two other senior historians in leaving the Miller Center. The former director of public programs declined to stay after his contract ended, and wrote in an email to the center’s CEO, obtained by the Cavalier Daily, “our ships are traveling on very different bearings.” Like Melvyn Leffler and William Hitchcock, Blackmon also cited the appointment of former Trump aide Marc Short as a factor.

Korte sentenced

Former UVA film studies professor Walter Korte, 75, was ordered to jail October 2 for possessing two child porn images. Korte, who was sentenced to 12 months, had requested electronic home incarceration, but Judge Humes Franklin denied the request. Korte was arrested in 2016 after tossing thousands of legal pornographic images in a UVA dumpster.

Federal lawsuit

Ira Socol, the Albemarle school division’s former chief technology and innovation officer, says he was wrongfully punished for his unauthorized purchase of school furniture earlier this year. He is suing the school board and Superintendent Matt Haas for firing him without a hearing, violating his right to due process, breach of contract, and defamation, according to the complaint.


Preacher, public servant dies

Courtesy Rob Bell

The Reverend Peter Way, who served on Albemarle’s Board of Supervisors and school board, and was the 58th District delegate in the General Assembly, died October 6 at 82. The Keene resident was elected to the House in 1991 in a seven-vote squeaker.

After his retirement from elected office in 1997, he founded the Conservative Coalition, a Tea Party forerunner. “He was a passionate fiscal conservative,” says Paul Wright, who worked with Way in the coalition in the late ’90s.

Way was passionate about his religious beliefs as well, says Wright, but he was not judgmental toward those who did not share his beliefs. “He was one of the good guys in politics.”

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UPDATED: Ivy flood victims found

The second victim’s body has been found after a couple’s Toyota Prius was swept away by flash flooding on the night of May 30 near the intersection of Old Ballard Road and Martin Farm Lane in Ivy.

At about 12:30pm today, a canine search crew detected a scent about one-third of a mile downstream from where the couple was last observed. Search crews removed debris and mud, eventually uncovering the body, according to Albemarle County spokesperson Jody Saunders.

Searchers had covered more than 7.2 miles of waterway with extremely dangerous terrain and conditions from the Old Ballard Road crossing to the South Fork Rivanna River Reservoir, said Jody Saunders. Weekend rain made search conditions even more difficult.

“There are countless downed trees tangled in the waterways and huge piles of vegetative debris,” Saunders said Tuesday, before the last victim was found. “Consequently, local volunteers are not being sought to aid the search effort.”

The first body was found on the morning of May 31 near Ivy Drive in Ivy Creek, and the Prius was located about 20 yards from Old Ballard Road. A BMW that was swept away on the same road was also located today, completely submerged in approximately four to six feet of water, near where the Prius was found, according to Saunders

The driver of the BMW escaped the vehicle at the time of the flood and was rescued.

Eggleston described how the Prius was “tossed and turned and overturned” by the “swollen, raging river.”

As much as nine inches of rain fell in the Ivy area, and the areas west of U.S. 29 saw seven inches and eight inches. Climatologist Jerry Stenger calls the estimates “certainly believable,” though only three inches were collected at the McCormick Observatory and the Charlottesville Albemarle Airport.

“It’s very unusual to get this much rainfall in such a short period at a given location,” Stenger says. “It is, nonetheless, not too unusual to see rainfall of this magnitude occurring somewhere when strong thunderstorms roll through.”

A Dickerson Road water main break and flooding at the North Fork Rivanna Water Treatment Plant put about 1,200 customers under an advisory to boil all of their water. That was lifted over the weekend.

Gary O’Connell, executive director of the Albemarle County Service Authority, said at the time that it was just a precaution. “We have no indication that the water’s not safe.”

Eggleston said multiple bands of heavy rain on the night of May 30 “overwhelmed our local and regional resources,” and Albemarle County declared a state of emergency around 11:45pm so rescuers could request additional resources. A water rescue team from Lynchburg was called to help search for the victims.

At least 10 water rescues were made, and more rain was in the forecast. The chief said an “unstable weather front” would be moving through the area.

“We’re possibly preparing for a repeat of last night,” he said on May 31, adding that any additional rain would make waterways swell to the same dangerous levels.

“Please do not drive through standing water,” he said. “Turn around.”

Nearly 40 county roads were closed, according to Albemarle Police Chief Ron Lantz, who asked drivers not to go around road closed signs. Holkham Drive, a private road in Ivy, collapsed, leaving about 20 families trapped until a temporary exit was made through a neighbor’s property. At press time, Ragged Mountain Road was the only public road still closed in the county, according to VDOT spokesperson Will Merritt.

A Norfolk man died around 7:20am May 31 on Interstate 64. Virginia State Police responded to a two-vehicle crash in the westbound lanes at mile marker 113, where 36- year-old Ahmed Shelton was heading toward a rest area when he ran off the right side of the road and hit a disabled tractor-trailer. The crash is still under investigation and it is unclear whether it was weather-related.

The Charlottesville-UVA-Albemarle Emergency Operations Center is asking residents to report flood damage by calling 971-1263. So far, damage assessment teams have responded to more than 500 reports in the Ivy area.

County residents are allowed free disposal of vegetative debris through June 9 at the Ivy Material Utilization Center on Dick Woods Road.

Updated Wednesday, June 6 at 4:10pm.

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In brief: Trashy people, rash of convictions, UVA’s warning and more

Spring cleaning

As the weather warms, more people are outside and noticing just how trashy our scenic highways are. That’s when local groups that have adopted a highway under the Virginia Department of Transportation don their orange blaze vests and go clean up after their filthy neighbors.

Groups that volunteer are asked to take care of a two-mile stretch of road at least two times a year. After two pickups, the group is eligible to put its name on a blue Adopt-a-Highway sign. VDOT supplies orange trash bags, vests and roll-up signs to warn vehicles a pickup is in process, and will come remove the bags.

Some adopters have been known to abandon their highway, and resident VDOT administrator Joel DeNunzio says if a group hasn’t picked up in a certain amount of time, it can lose its blue signage. “Certain groups may be more interested in having their names on highway signs,” he concedes.

Fortunately that’s the exception, and volunteers are welcome. “I will let anybody adopt any highway I think is safe,” says DeNunzio. “They’re only denied if I don’t think it’s safe. We don’t want to have inexperienced people or kids on dangerous roads.”

  • 96 groups have adopted roads in Albemarle County
  • 192 miles of road are adopted
  • 189 bags of trash have been picked up by volunteers so far this year

Source VDOT


“If the administration remains loudly silent in the face of white supremacy, it will perpetuate the University’s painful and pervasive history of racial violence.”—Petition from UVA students to President Teresa Sullivan and the Board of Visitors April 27, the same day the university issued a no trespass warning to Jason Kessler.


Beating trial begins

Jacob Goodwin

The first of four jury trials in the August 12 malicious wounding of DeAndre Harris got underway April 30. It took six hours to seat a jury for Jacob Goodwin, 23, from Ward, Arkansas. Goodwin’s attorney, Elmer Woodard, admits Goodwin kicked Harris but says that didn’t cause the serious injuries Harris suffered.

Sex trafficker convicted

A trial originally scheduled for five days stretched nearly two weeks before a jury, after deliberating 15 hours, convicted Quincy Edwards, 34, of 10 counts of commercial sex trafficking and of procuring a person for financial gain. The Albemarle jury recommended 22 years in prison. Edwards was arrested in 2015 at the Royal Inn, and his victim said she had sex with as many as 20 men a day for her heroin supply.

Teacher pleads guilty

Richard Wellbeloved-Stone

Popular former CHS environmental sciences teacher Richard Wellbeloved-Stone, 57, pleaded guilty to one count of production of child pornography April 26 in U.S. District Court. He came to law enforcement’s attention while chatting with an undercover agent in the U.K. and describing his fantasies about a prepubescent girl. Police found images of a girl’s vagina on Wellbeloved-Stone’s cell phone.

Garrett’s mandatory minimums

Congressmen Tom Garrett, Jared Polis (D-CO) and Ken Buck (R-CO) introduced the Review Every Act Diligently In Total—READ IT—resolution to amend House rules to establish a mandatory minimum review period for all legislation that is brought to a vote.

Warmbiers sue North Korea

The parents of UVA student Otto Warmbier, who was held in North Korea for 17 months before being returned to the U.S. last June in an unresponsive state, have sued the rogue nation for torturing their son as Kim Jong Un makes nice with South Korea and plans a meeting with President Donald Trump. Warmbier died shortly after his return.


Drugs and horses

Albemarle County Police had a busy April 28 running a drug take-back program at Sentara Martha Jefferson and policing 15,000 racegoers at Foxfield. The number of drugs collected was down from last year, but so were the traffic tickets at Foxfield. Collecting drugs or dealing with drunk UVA students—it’s one way to enjoy a beautiful spring day. Preliminary numbers for those events are:

Foxfield

Spring 2018

  • 15,000 racegoers
  • 5 arrests
  • 31 medical emergencies, 12 known to be alcohol related
  • 3 medical transports to ER
  • 0 traffic tickets

Spring 2017

  • 12,000-14,000 racegoers
  • 5 arrests, including 1 DUI  hit-and-run crash
  • 38 medical emergencies
  • 2 medical transports to ER
  • 19 traffic tickets
  • 1 ticket for marijuana possession

Drug take-back

Spring 2018

  • 364 vehicles
  • 25 bags collected
  • 768 pounds of meds
  • 428 pounds of needles

Spring 2017

  • 413 vehicles
  • 37 bags collected
  • 1,084 pounds of meds
  • 362 pounds of needles
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Trash talk: Highway adopters say littering worse than ever

There’s a famous scene from “Mad Men” in which the Draper family goes on a picnic. Afterward, Don tosses his beer can on the ground and Betty shakes the tablecloth out and leaves the trash from their outing, a not uncommon occurrence in that era before Lady Bird Johnson joined the Keep America Beautiful campaign in 1965 and PSAs urged citizens to “please, please don’t be a litterbug.”

For a Crozet couple, it might be time to launch that campaign again.

Miette and George Michie estimate they’ve picked up more than a ton of trash over the past 18 years on the stretch of Miller School Road they adopted—and that’s not counting tires or large pieces of debris that don’t fit into trash bags. Yet they say more people than ever are using the road as their personal garbage can.

Miette Michie says the amount of litter on roads has worsened. Photo Jeffrey Gleason

“It’s just ridiculous,” says Miette Michie. “We cleaned up the road three weeks ago, picking up literally 12 bags, and it needs to be done again. Who are these people?”

And it’s not just rural roads. She’s taken photos of litter in the city, on the U.S. 29 Bypass and pretty much everywhere she drives.  “I don’t think there is a 10-foot section of roadway anywhere in the area that is litter-free,” she says. “Disgusting.”

Michie has lodged complaints with Charlottesville and Albemarle officials, and she’d like to see more public awareness of just how trashy an area known for its natural beauty has become.

She points to a program in Albuquerque, whose mayor started paying panhandlers to pick up trash, and she thinks it’s an idea that could work here.

Charlottesville Public Works Director Paul Oberdorfer, in an email to Michie, says, “I agree there has been a notable increase in litter.” He says public works and parks & rec both work on litter control, and hire seasonal workers to help out.

Albemarle-Charlottesville Regional Jail recently implemented two inmate programs that try to stem the tide of rising refuse. Last month, the Virginia Department of Transportation started funding a program for men to go out on weekends to pick up trash. Albemarle County pays for a similar program in which female inmates go out a couple of times a week to clear county roads, says Superintendent Martin Kumer.

The inmates pick up around two tons a week. “We weigh the trash,” says Kumer.

He calls the program a “win-win” for everyone. The agencies pay for one jail staffer to go out with a crew of up to five inmates. And the inmates themselves receive a credit of $7.25 an hour to go toward their court costs and fines.

Some areas have to be picked up more often, and Kumer says Route 20 at Piedmont Virginia Community College is one of the worst, and the U.S. 29 Bypass and Ivy Road are also “really bad.”

Virginia’s volunteer pick-up program, Adopt-a-Highway, started in 1988, and the VDOT website boasts that it’s “one of the largest programs in the country.”

However, it’s unclear how viable the program currently is. C-VILLE Weekly contacted VDOT for more than two weeks without any success in reaching anyone involved in the program.

For those who attempt to adopt a highway, they’re asked to be responsible for a two-mile stretch and pick up trash at least two times a year for three years. VDOT supplies safety vests and orange trash bags. After two documented pickups, volunteers can get an Adopt-a-Highway sign with their names on it, according to the VDOT website.

“I don’t know how effective the VDOT program is,” says Michie. “We’ve never gotten a renewal in 18 years.”

Most volunteers get some satisfaction for their efforts, but picking up roadside trash isn’t necessarily one of them. “It’s the one thing that after you do it, you get more mad,” says Michie. “Other [volunteer activities] are uplifting.”

She concedes Miller School Road is on the way to the dump, but says the number of beer cans and bottles belie a few items flying off a vehicle on a dump run.

About the litterers, Michie is left wondering, “What is wrong with these people?”

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News

McAuliffe anoints Berkmar Drive, talks Morva

Virginia traffic officials began discussing ways to make U.S. 29—a highway that carries 50,000 vehicles a day—flow more successfully about three decades ago, Secretary of Transportation Aubrey Layne says. When Governor Terry McAuliffe took office three-and-a-half years ago, he made it a top priority.

Today, the governor and his colleague visited Albemarle County for a Virginia Department of Transportation ceremony to mark the opening of the Route 29 Solutions projects, which included extending Berkmar Drive from Hilton Heights Road to Towncenter Drive.

McAuliffe, Layne and about 70 prominent guests stood before the Berkmar Drive extension to celebrate and eventually cut the ribbon with several small pairs of scissors.

Governor McAuliffe speaks with City Councilor Kristin Szakos and Supervisor Ann Mallek. Staff photo
Governor McAuliffe speaks with City Councilor Kristin Szakos and Supervisor Ann Mallek. Staff photo

When the 72nd governor of Virginia took the podium, he said the people of Charlottesville and Albemarle County “made a lot of noise” about the busy highway corridor when he first took office. He remembers local entrepreneur Bill Crutchfield as the main squeaky wheel.

“Tell Bill the road is here,” McAuliffe said. And later he added, “You can bike, you can run, you can walk, you can do whatever you want.”

Virginia is the best state in the country, he claimed while clad in a navy suit and orange tie, but it won’t be if people can’t access it. “They’re not going to come to our state if they’re stuck in traffic.”

Layne, Board of Supervisors Chair Diantha McKeel and House of Delegates Minority Leader David Toscano also made remarks. In attendance were a number of supervisors and city councilors, as well as former supervisor Jane Dittmar, who ran for 5th District representative last year.

Other Route 29 projects, of which there are eight, include widening Seminole Trail from four to six lanes and extending Hillsdale Drive from Greenbriar Drive to Hydraulic Road. And the people of Charlottesville rejoiced when another project, the Route 29-Rio Road grade-separated intersection, opened last summer—46 days ahead of schedule.

unnamed-1
Ribbon cutting. Staff photo

After the ribbon cutting, McAuliffe was grilled on other topics, including today’s scheduled lethal injection of William Morva, who was sentenced to death for the 2006 killing of hospital security guard Derrick McFarland and Montgomery County Sheriff Deputy Corporal Eric Sutphin. Morva, incarcerated for burglary and attempted robbery, was receiving medical treatment when he overpowered a guard watching him, fatally shot McFarland, escaped, and shot and killed Sutphin, who was searching for him.

Many have petitioned McAuliffe to grant the man clemency on the premise of him allegedly being mentally unstable at the time of the murders.

“I’ll be honest with you, I didn’t sleep a wink last night thinking about it,” the governor said, but didn’t give any indication of his final decision. Hours later, he decided not to grant clemency.

As for the KKK’s plans to rally in Charlottesville this Saturday, McAuliffe, who has vetoed more bills than any other governor, said a number of them discriminated against women and the LGBT community.

“To me, any discrimination breeds hatred,” he said. “People are entitled to free speech, but I’m not for hate speech.”