Top Ten Taxpayers, 1993 Value Tptai Tax CP&L ................?.???$6*1,966,915 $4,909,067 duPont 244,965,460 1,665,765 N.C. Eastern Munic. Power.... 170,296,547 1,226,135 Archer Daniels Midland 109,086,404 785,422 Cogentrix of N.C. Inc 35,066,214 252,477 Odell Williamson 30,584,610 207,975 Bald Head Island lid 27.596>7?6 ?ft2;rtl4 Brunswick Electric 27,256,485 187,250 Federal Paper Board................ 24,684,200 167,866 International Paper Co 20,839,859 141,830 SOURCE: BRUNSWICK COUNTY TAX ASSESSOR Tax Office Busy With Receipts, Listings, Revaluation BY ERIC C'ARI-SON Those who missed the deadline will he charged firms dominating the roster. This year. Bald Head The ghosts of taxes past, present and future are a 2 percent penalty during the month of January. Island Ltd. jumped from ninth to sixth on the list, keeping the Brunswick County Tax Office busy Taxpayers who file lelurns after Feb. 1 will face while Federal Paper Board fell from seventh to these days, as workers began counting last year's an additional '/? percent each month until taxes are ninth. Again. Ocean Isle Beach developer Odell tax receipts, mailed out more than 17,000 person- paid. Williamson was the only individual taxpayer to al property tax listing forms and conducted infor- As a first step toward enforcing tax payment, make the top-ten list. mal hearings with people who have questions the names of everyone who fails to pay their taxes Carolina Power and Light Company last week about their new tax revaluation. be published in local newspapers in April. Under brought Moore a check for just under $5 million. As the deadline for paying personal property a [x>licy adopted in 1991, the county has the right which she expects to be about one-sixth of the taxes passed last week. T<i* Cuiiectoi Nancy to ^afnish :hc wages of delinquent taxpayers or year's total tax levy The value of the company's Moore estimated that about 85 percent of attach their bank account to recover the money, holdings at the Brunswick Nuclear Plant jumped Brunswick County property owners will have No warning of such action is required. by more than $22 million this year, increasing its paid on time and avoided a penalty. She said that With minor exceptions, the names and order of tax bill by more than $150,000. collection rate was "about average." and expects the county's ten largest taxpayers remained the Meanwhile, tax officials want people to re another 10 percent to pay their taxes by June. same for 1993, with the area's large industrial (See DEADLINE, Page 2-A) Tl' IS""" )WICK< Thirty-Second Year, Number 11 ci^mmunswickkacon Shallolle, North Carolina, Thursday, January 13, 1994 50$ Per Copy 36 Pages, 3 Sections, Plus Inserts Hospital Lease Good For 40 Years, Judge Rules BY SUSAN USHER After 10 years of uncertainty, a judge ruled Tuesday morning in Brunswick County Superior Court that the company managing The Brunswick Hospital has a 40-year lease. Tuesday morninc. Judge Bradford Tillerv of Wilmington directed attor ney Henry Foy of Southport to draft an order to that effect for his signa ture. Since the order had not yet been signed. Mark Gregson. new chief executive officer of The Brunswick Hospital, was hesitant to comment on the ruling's impact Tuesday, hut confirmed the judge's favorable rul ing. The authority and HealthTrust de cided last summer to seek the ruling, in order to clarify their relationship and provide a sounder legal footing for future decision-making. The hospital's administrator at that time. Earl Tamar, said that there were numerous capital improve ments nc.'rU'd at the hospital that HealthTrust was hesitant to invest in, given thai a 10-year lease would end in less than a year, on May 17, 1994. The lease issue was the second of two motions Tillery ruled on after hearing oral arguments Monday. On Monday he granted a motion filed by Brunswick County, dismiss ing it as a second defendant in the suit. Sharing news of both rulings, county attorney Michael Ramos said, "That sounds pretty good for both the county and the authority." Ramos is also the regular attorney for the Brunswick County Hospital Authority, which hired Foy as spe cial counsel for what was termed a "friendly" legal action. The hospital authority was creat ed by the Brunswick County Board of Commissioners as a separate le gal entity to own and operate the hospital. By law it has sole control over hospital affairs and is not re sponsible to county government, though its members are appointed the county board of commissioners. Initial hospital construction was financed by general obligation bonds issued by the county in the mid-1970s, with approximately $925,000 still outstanding. If Tillery had ruled that the hospi tal lease was for only 10 years, the lease would have expired May 17, !<)t)4 Under the terms of that lease ?He aiithnritv would have had 30 days in which to pay Hospital Cor poration of North Carolina for the lessee's assets or capital improve ments, accounts receivable, cash or cash equivalent investments, sup plies and other expenses. HCNC as sets alone had been valued in excess of $4 million. Even without the judge's dis missal ot the county as a defendant, Ramos said he didn't believe the county held any liability for the au thority's obligations under the lease. An unfavorable ruling would also have launched the Brunswick Coun ty tiospiiai Authority into a bidding (See HOSPITAL, Page 2-A) Offices To Close For King Holiday The Brunswick County Gov ernment Center in Bolivia will be closed Monday in observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Brunswick County Schools. Brunswick Community College, local banks and post offices also will be closed Monday. All town halls in the South Brunswick Islands area will be open normal business hours. ruttei Blaze Destroys Shallotte Home Civietown Hire Chief Richard Evans (front) leaves a Madison Street mobile home that was destroyed by fire last Thursday. A local service club is raising money to help the burned-out family. Another home almost directly across the street was damaged the same day, and both originated as kitchen fires. Story on Page J-A. TASK FORCE FAVORS BOLIVIA Crowd Opposes Proposed Landfill Sites Near River BY DOUG RUTTER A new county landfill needed by 1998 won't be built anywhere near the Lock wood Folly River if the crowd that shewed up at a public meeting in Bolivia Tuesday night has its way. Residents of the Supply and Bolivia areas flocked to 'he Public Assembly Building to tell the Landfill Siting Study Committee in no uncertain terms that they don't want the new dump near their homes. "In a county of 650.000 acres there should be some site that's not next to somebody's back yard,'' said Maynard Owens of Shallotte. Owens and others suggested the county build the new landfill in a less populated area and forget about the five sites in the Supply-Bolivia area that are being considered. Besides protecting their neighbor hoods, audience members sa'd they ill Miuiiiu'ii; uit iuuuii'il in tut expansive LockwOod Folly River watershed. Residents fear the landfill might leak, contaminating their drinking water and adding more pollution to the river. Lockwood Folly has been closed to shelltishing trequently over the past decade because of pol lution. "I plead with you folks, seek an alternative," said John Holden of Holden Beach. "Preserve what you got. I have seen too many things de pleted in my lifetime. We don't need any more." In addition to hearing comments from 20 of the estimated 100 people who packed the meeting hall, the committee received a report from a state task force Tuesday night. The Inter-Agency Solid Waste Task Force studied the five sites in central Brunswick County that the local committee had earlier recom mended for further investigation. Tom Austin, project manager with consulting engineers Dewberry and Davis, said the task force is made up of officials from various agencies that review permit applications tor new landfill sites. The group visited the five Supply Bolivia sites in October and com pleted its report last week. Austin said the task force did not rank the sites, but did list positive and nega tive points for each. Based on those comments, Austin said the state panel thinks the most suitable site is a 570-acre tract bor dered on the north by a tributary of the Lockwood Folly River along Gilbert Road and about 1.8 miles east of Antioch. Rated as the second-best site was a 300-acre tract located north of U.S. 17, west of N.C. 211 and south of Little Macedonia Roau. It is bor dered on the west by the Middle River and on the south by Royal Oak Swamp. "Beyond that there was a break off." Austin said of the task force's findings. "They felt those two sites were desirable and the other thrrc sites were somewhat undesiraoie." The five cenii ally-located sites were among 13 potential sites iden tified last year by the committee based on a set of criteria that took into account various engineering, socio-political and environmental is sues. The eight other sites were lo cated in the northeast section of the county near Leland. The Landfill Siting Study Committee made no decisions Tuesday night. The five members present said they wanted to consider the public comments and new infor mation presented by the task force before making a final recommenda tion to county commissioners. The committee will meet again Jan. 25. "1 think it's something that we need to study," said committee member Wilton Harrelson of Shallotte. "I'm deliberate in my thinking, and when I make a deci sion I like to think I'm right and it's something I can back up." "We're gonna have to build one somewhere," said Paul Austin of (See LANDFILL, Page 2-A) Report Card Signals Need For 'High Expectations, Bold Action' BY SUSAN USHER How do you turn an entire school system around? That's the question Brunswick County School officials were trying to answer even before receiving an other below-standard report card from the state last week. The report card is prepared annu ally by the N.C. Department of Public Instruction to meet the re porting requirements of 'he School Improvement and Accountability Act, an effort to hold school systems more accountable for how well they serve children bv looking at overall performance. Ian Calhoun, assistant superinten dent for instruction, is convinced the answer lies in a goal embraced this past year by school system lead ers?a unified effort to upgrade standards and expectations, but by "taking bold actions," focusing on fewer priorities and recognizing that change begins in the school system and at the top, and can be painful. "It's really important that we come together and decide what's im portant," he told school board mem bers Monday night. He said the school system needs to stop using a "shotgun approach," Stop doing some things ;m<l heroine more efficient. "I'm pretty sure this board agrees with that," school hoard Chairman Donna Baxter tolil Calhoun. You need to Dring tnose things to use. You've got to tell us what these things are." "A lot comes from the parents, hut I think we need to he pro-ac tive," Calhoun explained in an earli er interview. "We need to focus on what one thing we could do to im prove schools the most. What be haviors tin school administrators have that communicate higher ex pectations?" Any effort to improve student performance "in one sense comes down to the number and quality of teachers in the classrooms and what they are doing to challenge stu dents," Calhoun said last week "But there are things we can do to help or support that." These include encouraging "good, solid" innovations based on sound planning, implementation and evalu ation rather than "shots in the dark." Calhoun said he sees his job "as giving principals and teachers a chance to do some things that arc in novative and bold" through site based management plans. Some schools may be looking at year round school, schools within schools, apprenticeship opportuni ties, or new ways of grouping stu dents. "We're not unique," he said. "A?i- - ? .i. i . .j:_ . i:(f villi I XIIUVII> till VII >ltl?; VII I I V. I W III llllllg> iiuili liciuic hwCiiu.>v .>tuvjv*ito are different." Other ways to ntove the system forward include continuing the high er level of in-services to help teach ers improve in the classroom, pro viding teachers time for planning, and aligning the curriculum?mak ing sure that what is actually taught in Brunswick County classrooms is the same material that students must he tested on at year's end. It also includes providing alterna tive learning experiences for middle and high school students who aren't successful in school. liic most "telling" fact Calhoun said last week, is the low number of county graduates earning N.C. Scholars recognition?12.3 percent compared to 24.2 percent statewide. Scholars receive a seal of recogni tion on their diplomas for complet ing an academically challenging high school program. "That indicates we need to raise our expectations." he said. "The state is dismally low. and we're even lower, and have dropped even from last year." Fifteen percent of 1992 graduates were N.C Scholars The push for hiuher expectations by and of students needs to begin not at the high school level, but much earlier, he said, at least sixth fl.* *? I ? ??? I ?j ? ?, ?. .r>l< I fttlli \rt it mrvc ?> it kwwiuiuutku viu'ii of gUidlilC! COUHftfl'V* n*:n*hers :tn?l parents to channel students into the most difficult classes they can take." One effort in that direction is a new systematic guidance plan being de veloped for all schools under the leadership of Assistant Superinten dent Oscar Blanks. I he I'W stale assessment uses a different format, making a direct comparison with the 1992 report card impossible. But Calhoun said he thinks the new approach is better. Before, average performance for each school system and the state was recalculated every year. That meant a school svstem needed to make gains in achievement at rates greater than the state as a whole in t.rder to show improvement on the report card. No more. Starting this year infor mation about student performance is presented in terms of a set stan dard?"grade level" tor elementary and middle school end-of-grade lest indicators and "proficient level" for high school end-of-course test indi cators. Those performance standards were based upon the collective judg ment of teachers who administered the tests in 1993, and are expected to continue as a constant standard tor comparison purposes for several years. On the 1993 Report Card. Brunswick County Schools showed improvement in only three cate gories, while performance on other indicators fell. In all three major testing areas (core high school courses, reading and math in grades 3-K) performance was below the state standard, and all writing scores were below the state standard. Reading scores are improving, he (Sec SCHOOLS, Page 2-A) Insirlf* ? " ? m v m w m Birthdays 2B Business News 9-iOC Calendar 9A Church News 10A Classified ~.....1-8C Crime Report 12C Court Docket ?????????????? I1C Fishing ?11B Golf 8B Obituaries 10A Opinion .4-5A People In The News 5B Plant Doctor ...4B Sports 8-I2B IVie visit mi

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