MMfe J*** I iiiuft PAGE 4 -A, THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1994 Help 'Coastal DWI7 Save Hassle, Lives Everyone thinks it's only the other guy who's unfit to drive after consuming a couple of beers over a seafood platter. Case in point: Last summer, a New Jersey municipal prosecutor who had worked to have his state's iegai intoxication ievei changed from ,i() to .(Ms percent bioou alcohol was chargcd with drunken dri ving at Sunset Beach. If he'd known about Sunset Beach Police Department's reputation for zero-tolerance, he'd probably have steered clear of the place. He was convicted in Brunswick County District Court and is appealing the verdict. Beginning this month, the State Highway Patrol will conduct a summer-long driving-while-impaired enforcement program with Brunswick and sever, other coastal counties. "Coastal DWI '94." to run between Memorial Day and Labor Day, is funded by a $75,(X)0 grant from the Governor's Highway Safety Program. 'I lie grant allows the Highway Patrol to allocate more troopers to work with local police and sheriff's departments, concentrating enforcement on DWI violations. Highway Patrol Commander Col. Robert A. Barefoot says people tend to be a little more relaxed when they vacation at the beach, and aren't as careful about drinking and driving as they are at home. If we're honest with ourselves, we locals know it's true. Vacationers do all kinds of things here that they're too smart to do back in Gastonia or Lumberton ? like crossing a busy street without looking both ways, walking barefoot through a fire ant mound, swimming in a thunderstorm, or driving to the store for ice alter they've already had a few too many. Folks in these parts who rely on tourism for their living tend to cringe at law enforcement projects or government sanctions which might subject visitors to unexpected hassle. And getting a DWI would unquestionably qualify as one. "Coastal DWI '94" is going to happen, and South Brunswick Islanders who serve and rely on visitors can make the best of it by lending a hand. If rental agents, waiters and waitresses, store clerks and other service workers take the time to mention the DWI crackdown to their customers, two purposes can be served. A word of warning to a tourist may spare him or her from an ex pensive, humiliating experience with long-term repercussions. Or it could save the precious life of a visitor or resident. Too Little , Too Lote Thanks for the information, but it's too little, too late. You're going to have a hard sell ahead. That's what one member of the public told a frustrated Brunswick County Board of Education at a recent, hasti ly-called public hearing on the schools bu'.igc. He was right The hearing was at tended mainly by school system em ployees and their spouses, and a hand ful of parents who didn't also work for the schools. That's because the hearing was called only after some candidates for the school board talked up the idea at primary time, and after county weeklies were published. Too bad, because taking a budget directly to the public can be a very effective way to win taxpayers' support for im provements and to defend legitimate past expenditures. The hearing was a beginning, and may set the precedeni for future boards cf In Hn more exnlainino and more wllino if vr?n will nf ? l ? ? i- a ? luuj L. . -i ? n..? v j w* :? _i_ e ,L . M.I1UUI IKU1& OIIU .tuniui UUUKU Ibuutau. put I UUUU1 ll UIU I IIUL1I |UI use current board's efforts to sell its 1994-95 budget. Those who attended received a summary of the budget and saw overhead transparencies that summed up needs in various areas But most had had no chance to actually study the budget, not enough to have many questions about it. They still didn't get that chance after the hearing, when the board insisted that attendees return their copies of the budgets because they had not been adopted by the board. They were told that a copy was available for public inspection at the Board of Education office in Southport. as required by law. Never mind that, adopted or not, they were public documents, that the money had already been spent to prepare and distribute beaucoup copies of them, and that these were people who had taken the trouble to come to a hearing and were interested in trying to understand a very complex, but im portant subject. The speaker who called the school board on its timing was right about something else too: the board of education needn't be afraid of the public, but should consider us as people who share their concerns about education and make efforts to keep us informed about what they're doing and why. Too bad they didn't hear what he said. ? > a . Ibe La wson's i.c ii&L IkJ sui(M after-Hits C(ffimM.3l&K! Don? ao away'* !t 5 Lovelier The ^omnrl T i mn Ar/M inrl 11 W fc-N/T VMWI; ? I IW WWWI IVI I II I IV #^%l V/U I ivJ "You know,"* said my mom's fnCuu Luitu, WiKjm, Scfiac of ituinor is as dry as a rice cake but as re freshing as a beverage you'd wash one down with, "This is a whole lot nicer than having two or three hun dred people you don't really care about." "Yep," I replied. "As long as you don't need the gifts." We were sitting on a veranda at Asheville's Grove Park Inn Country Club enjoying the elegant cham pagne brunch at my sister's wedding last Sunday. It was a small group ? just 30 or so family members and best friends. The ceremony was brief and intimate, and there wasn't a dry eye in the house. The brunch was delicious ? a roast turkey, home -baked breads, fresh fruits and an array of nibbles like bite-size salmon quiche, tiny mushroom tarts and mini-croissants stuffed with cheese. There was no wedding cake; Brenda and Dave upteu for bread pudding and cheese rakes instead. In most cases, second (or should I *wi V u/??11 u*_*. iik w