\JCil I km* *"'111/ n. . , ^ Pair of Rams earn CIAA tennis accolades -See Page BIO Volunteers 3 tidy-up around the city -See Page B1 The Chronicle Volume39,Number31 WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. THURSDAY, March 28, 2013 Backyard pick-up debate reignited BY TODD LUCK THE CHRONICLE McLaurin Turner The City Council will consider later this year whether to take measures to reduce the remaining number of backyard trash collec tions. The city moved to do away with backyard collection in 2005 when it implemented a voluntary policy that asked residents to place their trash on curbs; in 2010, that policy became mandatory for all residents except for those with medical exemptions or who live in some mnltifam ily complexes. According to Assistant City Manager Greg Turner, who oversees Sanitation, out of 77,000 households serviced, 2,700 still receive backyard col lection, accounting for five percent of collec tinnc Rut th^ riti7f?ns' Organizational Efficiency Review Committee, which was appointed by the City Council to find ways to save the City money. wants to reduce backyard col lections even further. It is recommending that residents receive a doctor's note in order IU IA. vAVllipi I1VIII IOA ing their trash to the curb; the existing policy only requires residents to Vubmit a form stat ing that no one in the household is able to bring the trash cart to the curb. The stricter requirement is already used in cities like Greensboro, which has only one percent backyard collection. It would save the city an estimated $114.000. Sanitation Workers are all in favor of reducing backyard collections. They say hauling trash from backyards is backbreaking work and can lead to uncomfortable con frontations with homeowners. Angelia Byrd. a former sanitation truck driver, said that going into a person's yard, sometimes before the sun rises, can lead to confusion and hos tility from residents. "If it can be done without (backyard col lection) it'd be great for the protection of cus tomers and employees as well," said Byrd. "Because you got customers who don't want people fumbling around their house." Byrd was fired after a conflict with a res ident who receives backyard collection. Byrd said her three-person crew was struggling to collect the woman's garbage because it was far in excess of what the 96-gallon carts san itation workers use could hold. Byrd said she told a co-worker that the resident's trash was more than they were supposed to collect, which, according to Byrd. led the woman to direct racial slurs at her. Byrd was axed after the Sanitation Department found faults in her actions. She maintains she did nothing wrong and recently brought her wrongful termination claim before the City Council. Sec Backyard on A7 Black ministers* group still divided over gay marriage BY LAYLA GARMS THE CHRONICLE PHoto by lay la Ganrn Ministers Conference President Rev. Willard Bass stands outside Green Street Church. Marshall The church of the president of the Ministers Conference of Winston-Salem and Vicinity made national headlines, announcing that it would not perform any more heterosexual marriage ceremonies until same-sex marriages are also honored by the state and federal govern tnont IIIVIII. But the issue of same sex marriage, and even homosexuality, is still very much a con tentious one for the mostly black clergy who make up the Ministers Conference. "It has been a journey for us," Ministers Conference President Willard Bass said of Green Street United Methodist Church's decision to support same-sex marriage in such a bold way. "...The question of not doing marriage at all in the church is a very controversial issue. It's really profound for a church to go that far." Bass is the associate nastnr at Green Street, a racially integrated church that is home to about 35 same-sex couples. The church's stance came just days before the U.S. Supreme Court was slated to hear oral arguments in two highly-publicized gay rights cases. The Ministers Conference as an organization has not taken a stance, one way or the other, on the legal challenges to California's Proposition 8 ban on same-sex marriage and the federal Defense of Marriage Act. Last year, the Conference urged voters to vote against Amendment One, which changed the state constitution to define mar riage as being only between a man and a woman, though many mem bers, including then-president Rev. Joseph Nance, expressed uneasi ness about gay marriage and Biblical objections to homosexuality. See Ministers on A8 Wright condemns usurpers of history PTKHO r? j*wn nu Rev. Jeremiah Wright takes a moment to ponder. BY T. KEVIN WALKER THE CHRONICLE : Rev. Dr. Jeremiah Wright likened those who alter, edit or redact the lega cy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to the Pharisees in chapter nine of John who created their own version of events rather than accepting a blind man's claim that he was healed by Jesus. "We let folks repackage King ... They want to tell you today what they think Dr. King stood for," said Wright, who predicted that such repackaging would reach a fever-pitch next week as the nation marks the 45th anniversary of the Civil Rights icon's assassina tion. Pastor emeritus of Trinity United Church of Christ - a Chicago mega church that once counted President Barack Obama and his family among its nearly 9,000 members - Wright keynoted The Chronicle's 28th Annual Community Service Awards Gala Saturday night at the Benton Convention Center. He told a crowd of more than 700 that distorting King's dream and mes sage is a bi-partisan and mutli-racial campaign. Black preachers have used King's words to preach a message advocating prosperity for the church and its members. The "prosperity pimps" have it all wrong, Wright said. "King was not a prophet of pros perity ... King was on the side of the poor." On the other extreme. Wright con tends that right-wingers have distorted King's words to advocate for causes such as ending affirmative action. Knocking notions of a "so-called post racial America," Wright suggested that those who think this country is at a place where content of character trumps skin color are delusional. "Ask the parents of Trayvon Martin is racism a thing of the past," Wright said. He urged the crowd to tell their own stories instead of leaving them for others to retell or distort. See Wright on A8 Meet tin New Super Photo by l-ayl* Garm* Jane Goins, chair of the Winston Salem/ Forsyth County Board of Education, introduces incoming Superintendent Dr. Beverly Emory to the local community Tuesday. Emory, who currently serves as superintendent of Pitt County Schools, will take the helm here in July when Dr. Donald Martin retires. Read more about her on page A3. ? ? ^ < s ? >- <5 ? 8 5 ? - H < (N f3 S s si 3 g = ^ a G ?? j ^ = * OQ , =: ? ^ ^ rrl - ; >- J ? * H H 5 5 i -CM'W = : l = ?s ?PsBt;2 5- *?:? JM Rev. Parthenia and Robert Galloway Loved ones vow to continue Cuthrell's fight BY LAYLA GARMS THE CHRONICLE City native Tamla 'Tammie" Cuthrell built her life on serving others. Whether it was her family, friends or her clients at the department of Social Services where she worked for 14 years, the UNC Chapel Hill alumna was known for her giving nature and willingness to do whatever she could for her fellow man. "She never was a taker," said her father, Robert Galloway. "She never wanted you to give her anything unless she really needed it." Cuthrell passed away March 9, following a coura See Cuthrell on A10 Photos by Layla Garms The late T a m m i e C uthrell speaks at The Light's Toy Drive/Breast Cancer bene fit in December. ASSURED STORAGE of Winston-Salem, LLC A I r* p Kg ? ? <* If V?>