P22/C14 5-DIGIT 27944 IANS 'pZSnS COUNTY UBRARY 514 S CHURCH ST . WEEKLY Pets of the Week, 7 "News from Next Door" WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11, 2018 75 cents Election change facing a fight BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor Any effort to change the system by which Perqui mans County elects mem bers of the county com mission that hurts minority voters will be met with a challenge, said Joe Hoffler, one of the members of the board. HOFFLER C o m - missioner Kyle Jones floated the idea at are- cent board retreat. While he laid out potential pitfalls, he called the current system “absurdly-convoluted” and outdated and a change is needed. The current system calls for three commissioners to be elected every two years. Voters however get to cast a ballot for just one of them. Only one other county in the state has a system similar to the one in Perquimans. Jones suggested a mix of at-large voting and voting by districts. Hoffler is dead set against Historic home gets new owner BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor Cliff Miller wasn’t looking for an other house. Yet now he and his wife Pat own one of oldest ones in the Town of Hertford. He and his wife Pat bought a home in Elizabeth City about three years ago and moved down from Virginia. Then the real estate agent called last year. “The told us she had this listing and it was really cool and I thought what the heck,” Miller said. “We weren’t really interested but we saw it and we fell in love with it.” “When we looked at it, we agreed the change because of the it’s too nice a house not to bring it impact it could have on mi nority voters. “It (the current system) works for us, the citizens of Perquimans County. I’m not going to stand by and the NAACP is not going to stand by watching us go backwards.” Before the current plan was adopted in 1993, blacks and women weren’t being elected to the commission. Now the board consists of four white men, one Black woman and one Black male, Hoffler. From a political standpoint, there are three who are Democrats, two Republicans and one unaf filiated. “He (Jones) could be just testing the waters to see if there would be any opposi tion, and I’m saying there will be opposition,” Hoffler said. Before 2013, the county would have to seek “pre clearance” from the Jus tice Department to make a change. But that year the Supreme struck down that key provision of the Voting Rights Act by a 5-4 vote. But Hoffler said just be cause the Justice Depart ment won’t block a change on the front end, a citizen can still challenge any change and it could still be blocked by a federal court. “Not having to get per- See ELECTION, 2 back to the way it should look,” Mill er said. They are now the owners of the Isaac Hall House at 200 W. Market St. Depending where you look, it was built in 1818 or 1819. Either way, it’s a lot older than their Elizabeth City home which was built in 2006. Miller, 60, is retired now, but he’s never been into buying very old homes. When he was a boy his par ents bought a farmhouse that was built in the late 1800s in central Vir ginia. Miller said from what he has learned the oldest house in the town was built in 1775. There is another built in 1785. The oldest surviving house in the county is the Newbold See HOUSE, 2 Top, restoration is under way on the Isaac Hall House on West Market Street. Middle, a painter scraps off the siding of the Isaac Hall House on Market Street. Bottom, Cliff Miller stands inside one of the downtown rooms in his new house. STAFF PHOTOS BY PETER WILLIAMS Agency may be moving BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor After 40 years in Hertford, the Albemarle Commission is considering moving out side the county, perhaps to Elizabeth City. That was not what Ex ecutive Director Cathy Da vison wanted. Last summer the commission announced it wanted to build a new building in Hertford and Perquimans County agreed to give it land on Harvey Point Road for the building. But before they could build, the Commission want ed the 10 counties in the re gion to agree to pay the debt of building something new. Pasquotank County balked and since it represents the largest of the 10 counties and pays the most of the lo cal governments, Davison and her board went back to the drawing board. The Commission is a re gional planning, adult nutri tion and workforce agency for Camden, Chowan, Cur rituck, Dare, Gates, Hyde, Pasquotank, Perquimans, Tyrrell and Washington counties. Now the Commission board has directed Davison to look into leasing another building elsewhere. “The board had a long conversation and the board voted, but I can’t sign a lease without their approval.” She’s just exploring the options. Davison said the Commis sion has simply outgrown the space it has off Church Street and the board direct ed her to research leasing space in another area. Da vison said the move could take place in the next year. Davison said the commis sion was looking to build a structure of about 17,000 square feet. The current building has about 10,000 square feet. Elizabeth City is the obvi ous choice, she said. Davi son said there isn’t anything in Hertford big enough to house the agency. The old State Employees Credit Union in Hertford was con sidered, but it’s actually smaller than what the Com mission has now. “It (Elizabeth City) is a commercial hub and there are not a lot of offerings in Perquimans County,” she said. Perquimans County Man ager Frank Heath said he and his board want to do what they can to keep the Commission in the county. “If they decided to stay See AGENCY, 2 Timing of replacing police car dash cameras debated BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor Hertford councilmen agreed Monday they need to replace the dash cameras in police patrol cars but the question was how quickly can they do it. The arrest of Councilman Quentin Jackson in Febru- 6 89076 47144 2 ary brought to light the fact that the old cameras were defective and had been since 2017. That fact came out in an internal investiga tion after the arrest. At their meeting Monday night, Hertford Town Man ager Brandon Shoaf said then Chief Douglas Free man was aware of the faulty patrol car cameras, but in light of a lack of funding, he had officers rely on their body cameras for the time being. “In his (Freeman’s) de ¬ fense, it was a budget issue,” Shoaf said. The problem in the Jack- son case is the officer didn’t turn his on or didn’t wear it that day. Jackson was found guilty of resisting and offi cer in the case from Feb. 1, but he is appealing the case to Superior Court. Jackson has been critical of the town’s police depart ment and Monday night was critical of Shoaf as well since he oversees the police department. “We can’t say we have a good (police) department,” Jackson said. He pointed out that while there may have been a budget issue, the fact the cameras were broken wasn’t brought to the town board. Shoaf said replacement car cameras cost between $3,000 to $9,000 each but some state grant money is available that provides a 50/50 match. He’s still look ing for a third company to bid on the contract. See CAMERAS, 2 Town conducts survey on broadcasting meetings BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor The Town of Hertford is conducting a survey to gauge the interest in broadcasting town meet ings on either the Internet or a local access cable TV channel. Councilman Quentin Jackson brought up the issue at a meeting earlier this year. Some local govern ments do provide video of their meetings. The Perquimans County Com mission does not, nor does Winfall. See SURVEY, 2