I THE PEF ERQW pzi/cia********** 5 - 010 ” 27 -’' 1 * , iiii. lll ii| 1 H rl iMHhh 1 hhr , hh'' ! h i iri 1 ''i- , u l 'l'l PERQUIMANS COUNTY LIBRARY 514 S CHURCH ST HERTF ORD NC 27944 , ^ We e kly Scholarship winners, 6-7 "News from Next Door” WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 2018 75 cents Superintendent passed over for N.D. job BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor Perquimans Schools Superin tendent Matthew Cheeseman was one of two men named as finalists for a similar job in North Dakota, but last week he was passed over in favor of someone with more ex perience as a superintendent. The process in Dickinson start ed in January when the current su perintendent announced he would be retiring at the end of the school CHEESEMAN year. At the start, the Dickinson Public Schools had 39 applicants for the job, and then narrowed it to four semi-final candidates. The names were not released earlier in the process because of a new North Dakota law that prohibits it until the list is narrowed to two or three final choices, according to the Dickinson Press, a daily news paper there. But it wasn’t until April 12 that the two names were released. Cheeseman could not be reached for comment, but Lisa Lane, the spokeswoman for the school district, shared some of the text he sent back to staff in the schools. “I think you for your full and understanding as my family and I investigated this opportunity. I look forward to being back and work Monday and beside you as we continue to move Perquimans County forward.” Amy Spaugh, the chairman of the Perquimans School Board, said she became aware Cheese man was in the running on April 2. But at the time, it was far from a done deal. Spaugh said a recruiter sought out Cheeseman for the po sition and he is not actively look ing to leave. The advertised salary for the North Dakota job is $210,000. Cheeseman makes $127,000 thanks to a $7,000 raise last year. At that time the Perquimans School Board also extended his contract to June 2021. His original contract would have expired at the end of the 2019 school year. Dr. Shon Hocker, the man who ' got the job, is the current super intendent in the Big Horn School District in Crowley, Wyo. He has See CHEESEMAN, 2 Riverbash coming this weekend (EDITOR’S NOTE: Far a schedule of Riverbash events, please see page 7.) BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor The Indian Summer Festival may be gone, but Perquimans County has a new event this year — Riverbash. The two-day event starts Fri day and runs through Saturday. Sharon Smith, the county’s tourism director, came up with the idea of Riverbash after meet ing with local groups. She stressed that Riverbash is not a replacement for the Indian Summer Festival. Historic Hert ford Inc. still has the rights to the Indian Summer Festival name and officials with HHI have not ruled out bringing it back in some fashion. The last one was in 2016. For the most part, Riverbash is not a fundraiser for one group, she said. “It’s also not really a county- sponsored event,” Smith said. “It’s a template of how the com munity can run a festival. “The one thing we all know is that smaller areas are known for their festivals. When I got here I heard people were missing the fact that the Indian Summer Fes tival had been put on pause for now or gone entirely. “I thought about how could we start a new event. But there were some concerns that people were burnt out, that putting on a festival would put too much responsibility on one group and See RIVERBASH, 2 Serious assaults on prison workers continue The Associated Press RALEIGH — North Carolina’s understaffed prisons remain a dangerous place for employees six months after the bloodiest escape attempt in state history left four workers dead, accord ing to agency data and separate case reports. About three dozen workers at the state’s correctional facilities have been assaulted so badly that they have lost work time, prison officials said in response to a public records request from The Associated Press. Leading STAFF PHOTO BY PETER WILLIAMS Top, Sara Winslow (center) and Murielle Harmon (right) of Citizens for the Preservation and Growth of Hertford, talk to volunteers Saturday before a cleanup campaign at the Hertford Town Docks. The effort was timed so the town could look nice for the upcoming Riverbash this weekend. SUBMITTED PHOTO Left, as part of Riverbash, the Chrome To The Bone Challenge will feature remote-controlled monster truck racing at the tennis courts on Grubb Street Saturday from 11 a.m. until 4 p.m. “Our department has gotten extremely dangerous in recent years. ” Deborah Ezuma Correctional officer, Polk Correctional Institution the official list of assaults is the Pasquotank Correctional Insti tution in Elizabeth City, where eight workers have been badly harmed since the fat^l breakout attempt there on Oct. 12. The list provided to the AP, which covered 34 assaults through March 27, did not in clude an attack at a Morganton prison that hospitalized a worker with stab or slash wounds. Offi cials from the state Department of Public Safety did not say why when asked Monday or during the previous two weeks. On March 28, three more workers were assaulted in two attacks at Maury Correctional Institution in Greene County. It’s not clear whether any of them were injured badly enough to miss work. Correctional Officer Debo rah Ezuma said the frequency of inmates assaulting workers has grown more common in the past two or three years than at any time in her 20-year prisons career. “Our department has gotten See PRISONS, 2 Early votes trickle in BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor As of the close of business Mon day, 66 Perquimans County voters had cast an early ballot for the May primary race. That is a tiny fraction of the 9,700 voters in the county, but the largest slice of them — 4,000 are Demo crats and the only thing on the May ballot they can vote for is a school board race with no challengers. Unaffiliated voters come in sec ond with 3,100 and Republicans to tal about 2,600. There were only 31 libertarians registered as of March 7. One-stop early voting runs until on May 5. The hours are: April 19- May 2, 8 a.m. until 5 p.m., May 3-4, 8 a.m. until 7 p.m and May 5, 9 a.m. until 1 p.m. One-stop early voting will be held at the Perquimans County Board of Elections office 601 S. Edenton Road St. in Hertford. The only local race that will be decided in May is for Perquimans County School Board. But in that- case, there are three people running for three seats, so unless there are a large number of write-in ballots, they stand a good chance of win ning. Running this year are incumbents Anne White and Amy Spaugh and challenger Matt Peeler. Peeler has served on the Perquimans County Commission before, but opted not to run again when his term expired two years ago. This is his first try running for the school board. While there are three people and three seats, voters can only cast a ballot for one of them. Also a three-way race for U.S. Congress will be decided in May because there is no Democrat chal lenging them. Republican Congressman Walter Jones is being challenged by Repub licans Phil Law and Scott Dacey for the District 3 Seat. Incumbent Commissioners Wal lace Nelson, a Republican, and Fondella Leigh, a Democrat, filed, as did Alan Lennon, who’s running in November as a Libertarian. Like the school board race, there are three people running for there seats so short of a huge write-in vote, all three should win in November. See VOTES, 2 Swim program wraps up eighth year From Staff Reports Eight years and 1,250 stu dents ago, The Perquimans County Schools Foundation sought out to provide two weeks of swim lessons to all kindergarten students at tending Perquimans County schools. The Water Turtles pro gram has now served stu dents in grades K-7. This year it was sponsored by the Vidant Health/Chowan Hospital Foundation, Avan- grid Foundation and North Carolina Community Foun dation’s Women Giver’s of Northeast North Carolina. Each year, sponsors pro vide funding to ensure the water safety program is available to all kindergarten students in the county. “Perhaps with the excep tion of wearing seatbelts or checking smoke alarms, one of the most important things we could ever do for a child in terms of their safety is to teach them how to swim,” said Perquimans County Schools Foundation Executive Director Brenda Lassiter. “I am so thankful for the continued sponsor ships to the School Founda tion for the past eight years. We will never know the true impact this program has had for the 1,250 students who have already completed the course. “Parents probably rec ognize that teaching their children to swim is of great importance but due to time and/or financial restraints, it may not be realistic for ev eryone. According to statistics, drowning is the nation’s second leading cause of ac cidental death for children under 14 years of age. Ac cording to the U.S. Consum er Product Safety Commis sion, in summer 2012, there were 137 child drowning deaths in the United States. In 2009, the American Acad emy of Pediatrics found that children enrolled in formal swimming lessons had an 88 percent reduced risk of drowning. See SWIM, 2 SUBMITTED PHOTO Thad Woodard and Caryss White work hard to make the swim across the pool with the assistance of a YMCA instructor as part of the Water Turtles program this year.