Ocean Isle Board May Seek Political Backing For Inlet Study BY DOUG R UTTER Occan Isle Beach officials next week will talk about whether the town should go after political sup port for a Shallottc Inlet dredging study which the federal government says it can't afford. The U.S. Army Corps of Engine ers doesn't have the money avail able to pay for a study to Find out if an inlet dredging project would be worthwhile, said Marty van Duyne, spokesperson at the Wilmington district office. In response to requests from local officials and North Carolina's two senators, the district office last fall requested money for a study from the division office in Atlanta. However, federal budget prob lems have left the Corps of Engine ers in a position where it can't start any new studies not specifically au thorized by Congress. Ms. van Duyne said several corps programs, including small naviga tion projects, have been "severely curtailed" under the president's pro posed budget for next fiscal year. "In order to keep from ovcrcom mitting ourselves on those pro grams, any study not already under way or in the construction phase will be terminated," she said. "Others not on board will not be started." The only way the corps could study the inlet is if Congress autho rizes it. "It's in the hands of the town to pursue it from that avenue," Ms. van Duync said. "They would have to express their concerns to their elected officials." Ocean Isle Beach Mayor Betty Williamson said she plans to talk with town commissioners aboiH the proposed study at their meeting next Tuesday morning. "I really can't speculate on what the board's response may be," she said. "We arc very concerned about the inlet and keeping it open to boat traffic. It really means a lot to our beach and our area." Shallotte Inlet sits between Ocean Isle Beach and Holdcn Beach and links the Shallotte River to the Atlantic Ocean. Fishermen and other boaters have complained for years about the need for dredging. The corps district office received letters last fall from U.S. Senators "We are very concerned about the inlet and keeping it open to boat traffic. It really means a lot to our beach and our area." ? Betty Williamson Occan Isle Beach mayor Jesse Helms and Terry Sanford re questing the study, but the push to get the inlet dredged started at the local level. Occan Isle Beach officials have headed locai political efforts to get maintenance of the inlet in the hands of the Corps of Engineers. Responding to requests from boaters ant' commercial fishermen, the town's board of commissioners passed a resolution last June asking the corps to examine the inlet to see if dredging is needed to keep it open to boat traffic. Occan Isle Beach leaders pointed out in the resolution that the inlet is often used by visitors to the area and is important to the island com munity's tourist industry. They also said that commercial fishing is an important part of the local economy nnd that fishermen need access to the ocean through the inlet Brunswick County Commission ers followed suit last October, adop ting a resolution of their own asking the corps to help maintain the inlet < and keep it open to boat traffic. The Corps of Engineers dredges the lower portion of the Shallottc River every few years and the inlet crossing in the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway about once a year. Brunswick County residents have had recent success getting approval and funding for special waterway projects. Within the past year. Congress has funded a study in Lockwood Folly Inlet and authorized a one time dredging project in Eastern Channel near the mouth of the Lockwood Folly River. The Corps of Engineers district office is presently studying the inlet east of Holden Beach to find out if its construction has hurt boat traffic in the area. Soine local fishermen and con cerned residents think the Corps of Engineers made a mistake when it dredged the inlet several decades ago. They say it has caused shoaling in Eastern Channel, which is the natural inlet between the river and o:can, and has prevented bacterial pollution from escaping the re source-rich river. Congressman Charlie Rose has promised to seek money next fiscal year for a demonstration dredging project in Eastern Channel. Holding Company Only Bidder For Bricklanding Plantation BY SUSAN USHER Only one bidder showed up last Thursday for what was widely considered to be the largest foreclosure sale ever to take place in Brunswick County. Brick Landing Plantation golf and residential development went on the auction block at noon at the Brunswick County Courthouse in Bolivia. Diana Morgan, Brunswick County Clerk of Superior Court, said that the five groups taken to gether constitute the largest foreclosure in the county of which she is aware. She has been ei ther clerk, assistant clerk or deputy clerk of court for 16 years. The only bidder, Intracoastal Holding Inc., of fered S4.25 million total for the five blocks auc tioned, subject to any upset bid(s) offered by April 8. Intracoastal, a subsidiary of Pioneer Savings Bank of Rocky Mount, assumed posses sion of the properties from the developers last September. Pioneer then began foreclosure pro ceedings against Intracoastal. The blocks of property auctioned ranged in size from 2.10 acres to more than 300 acres. They included improvements such as a club house, maintenance facilities, sales office, two 18-hole golf courses and unsold properties ? land or units ? in Mariners Wacche, Inlet Wacchc and Southern Oaks condominiums, Oakbrook patio homes, Windsong Villas detached town homes. Fair Winds town homes, and single-family resi dential lots in Lake Forest, the Lakeview tract al so known as The Parks at Ocean Pines Ltd., and five lots at Sunset Beach provided for property owners' parking at the beach. Bricklanding Plantation overlooks the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway at Brick Landing on one side and has its main entrance on N.C. 179. The property extends across N.C. 179. According to documents on filed at the county courthouse, the tracts had served as security for a scries of eight notes totaling S25.8 million from Pioneer Savings Bank Inc., seven to Brick landing Associates Limited Partnership and one to Fairwinds Limited Partnership. The first loan, of SI 1.69 million, was made in January 1988, and referenced a still earlier loan made in June 1987; the last, for S1.2 million, was made in March 1990. The outstanding balance on those notes as of March 8 was S16.45 million, according to an af fidavit of default signed by Ted Hardee, vice president of Pioneer Savings, excluding attor ney's fees and other costs. Hardee, contacted Tuesday, refused to answer any questions, saying he did not handle news re leases. He said he would have someone else call later who could respond to questions. The balance due on the loans is substantially greater than the S4.25 million bid by Intracoastal last week. Intracoa-sial's bids were as follows: ?S575.000 for S708.947 for the 5.25-acrc tract that includes Fairwinds; ?S300.000 for two five-acre tracts; ?$447,796 for a 1.55-acre tract that includes Building A of the Inlet Wacche condominium project; ?SI, 676,333 for 28 tracts that constitute the balance of the property, including the beach lots, undeveloped acreage, Windsong Villas, Mariners Wacche, additional Inlet Wacche properties, Southern Oaks, Oakbrook III, Lakcview and un developed land. The assets of Bricklanding Associates Limited Partnership were held by a parent company, Bricklanding Plantation Properties Inc. That company was succcssor to Carver, Williams, Tomblin and Madison Inc. H. Michael Breazel Inc. ws the marketing cor poration for the project and Breazel was regis tered agent for its various property owners' asso ciations. Bids Could Be Upset It took more than an hour last Thursday for William A. Sessoms, an attorney from Whiteville who acted as trustee for the sale, to read the lengthy legal descriptions of the property into a microphone. His only breaks were to accept five quick bids from Intracoastal and to occasionally clear his throat with water. Only a handful of people attended the sale, including the president of one of the property owners' associations at Bricklanding Plantation. Should one or more upset bids be filed by the April 8 deadline, Sessoms ? or more likely his designee, he hastened to say ? will get to repeat Thursday's performance. The bids remain open 10 days from the date of the sale for upset The sale is subject to any unpaid ad valorem taxes, easements, liens against the property that includc deeds of trust used to secure other loans from various parties, and "the right, if any, of the United States of America to redeem the property for a period of 120 days following confirmation of the sale." Clegg: Town BY TERRY POPE Faced with shrinking landfill spacc and state mandates to recycle, Brunswick County will start charg ing a "tipping fee" in July for dumping trash at the Supply land fill. The fees are expected to have a big impact on local municipal bud gets for the 1991-92 fiscal year. Brunswick County Manager Da vid Clegg told county commission ers Monday that towns, private companies and individuals who dump in the landfill can expect a fee of around S30 to S35 for each ton of waste dumped there starting July 1 . Those figures are just estimates at this point, he stressed. s Must Prepare "Hopefully, those towns who arc looking at bleak budgets can start preparing," Clegg said. At its present rate, the county ex pects the landfill to last another sev en years. Senate Bill 1 1 1, adopted last year, mandates that counties have a recy cling program in place by July 1. By 1993, counties must be recy cling 25 percent or more of their solid wastes in an effort to reduce the amount of material arriving at county landfills. Approximately 55,000 tons of garbage are dumped in the Bruns wick County landfill each year. Clegg said one of the aims of tip For Landfill D ping fees is lo promote recycling "big time." 'To impose a tipping fee definite ly encourages residents to take out those plastics and recyclable paper products," Clegg said. Commissioners are expected to adopt a recycling program for the 1991-92 fiscal year. One plan calls for maintaining drop boxes at the county's solid waste transfer sta tions and the eventual phasing out of green boxes sites for more trans fer stations. 'The purpose of the landfill is lo house unrecyclable refuse," Clegg said. "Recycling will extend the life of the landfill, which will save the county taxpayers some money." umping Fees The county currently helps to fund eight recycling trailer sites in the county that are manned mosdy by volunteers and operated by Bush's Recycling of Florence, S.C. Last fall, commissioners agreed to study a long-term plan and to con tinue paying Bush to operate the trailers until June 30. When the tipping fees begin, ac counts will be established for the towns and other commercial haulers that frequently use the landfill. Towns that contract garbage col lection out to private firms need to be aware of the impending fees when negotiating those contracts, Clegg said. Next Medifast Classes Start May 2 Call today to sign up. Marilyn J. Boehm. M.D., Ph. D. 919-754-5581 Village Pines. Shallotte 919-754-9949 Chiropractic Center of Shallotte/Ocean Isle Hwy. 179, Ocean Isle, 579-3502 Dr. H.J. "Skip" Davis Most Insurances Accepted Mon.-Fri. 8:30-12 & 1:30-5:30, Thurs. 8:30-12 Hwy. Sunset. Beach 904 4 Mile Hwy. 179 *DR. DAVIS Rd. Ocean Iile 3} y? Don't Forget WE'VE MOVED For Great Prices On Bedding, Come To Shallotte Plaza, Hwy. 17 S., (Next to NCNB), Shallotte FREE? Your choke with $150 bed purchase Bed Frame, Local Delivery or Pillows 5% Senior Citizens Discount formerly R&R MATTRESS OUTLET HWY. 17, SHALLOTTE SHALLOTTE PLAZA 754-5727 17th & Market St.. Wilmington, 762-7331 Won -Frl 9-5, Set 9-4. CLOSED WEDNESDAYS ?* STAFF PHOTO BY DOUG RUTTER Huddled Worshipers Three Ocean Isle Reach visitors huddle to stay warm at the Sunday morning Easter service held near the fishing pier. Cool temperatures and brisk winds caused many people to bring coats and blankets to the service. Pictured are Frances Allen of Troutman (top right), Debbie Cash of Jamestown (left) and her daughter, IJndsey Cash. NOW YOUR AD CAN REACH 25 WORDS $6 each additional word N.C. STATEWIDE CLASSIFIEDS BLANKET NORTH CAROLINA OVER 120 NEWSPAPERS (For more information, call this newspaper or...) SIMPLY FILL OUT THIS FORM AND SEND WITH YOUR CHECK. (No Phone Orders. Larger order forms are available from this newspaper.) Name Address Advertising Copy: -Z'P_ 25 Words ? $6 each additional word over 25. Word count: Telephone numbers (including area code) equal one word. Post office box numbers as two words, box numbers and ? route numbers as two words. The name of the city, state and zip |^code ea. h count as one word Other customary words count as one. SEND TO; THE BRUNSWICK^BEACON CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEPT. P.O. BOX 2558, SHALLOTTE, NC 28459 (91 9)754-6890