1*1 ■'2* -<■ S :: >: >: Vol. LXXII, No. 23 Wednesday, July 27, 2005 Single Copies 50< .. ■ " ■ ■ / ■ ;' ; ' I Tourism v gets shot § in the arm BY SEAN JACKSON The Chowan Herald Tourism in Edenton just hasn’t been the same since Hurricane Isabel pounded the town and Chowan County al most two years ago. “Our visitation numbers are down,” Town Manager Anne Marie Knighton said Tuesday. 1 The Cupola House is among the historic sites visited by thousands of tourists annually. Three recently donated ad spots focus on the town's Co lonial heritage and other attrac tions. Seeking.to help Edenton and Chowan get back on track with its tourism trade, Raleigh-area radio and advertising execu tives have donated monies to fund a series of radio ads pro moting the town and county’s tourist destinations. Monday night, the Town Council listened to three ads already on the air in the Tri angle area! “The council was really im pressed with the ads,” Kni ghton said. “They liked them a lot.” The idea spawned from a media executive’s reaction to a speech delivered by Mayor Roland Vaughan in Chapel Hill recently Shortly after hearing Vaughan tell of Edenton’s tourism plight, Phil Zachary, Executive Vice President of Curtis Media Group of has do nated $25,000 worth of 30 and 60 second radio advertise ments on the company’s 14 ra dio stations based in the Tri i angle. Vaughan shared that news of the advertising gift with his son, Harris, who works for the advertising and public rela tions firm Rockett, Burkhead & Winslow, a town press re lease states. Harris Vaughan told his boss, Michael Winslow, a na tive of Hertford, about Curtis Media Group’s gift. Winslow immediately offered to donate the creative services to develop the advertising campaign. Nancy Nicholls, Executive Di rector of the Chowan Tourism Development Authority, was See TOURISM On Page 3-A — INSIDE Calendar.A10 Church.A13 Classifieds.. A16-18 Editorials..A4 Obituaries.A14 Society.A11 Sports.. A7-9 Edenton addresses affordable housing concerns BY SEAN JACKSON The Chowan Herald A panel charged with seek ing ways to increase affordable housing in Edenton and Chowan County is up and run ning after its first meeting on July 22. “It was a great first meet ing,” Town Manager Anne Marie Knighton said. Edenton/Chowan Planner [ Heat hits danger zone... Staff photo by Earline White A construction worker from Durham saws wood for the frame of the new subdivision on Hicks Street Tuesday afternoon as the temperatures approached 96 degees and the heat index hit a scorching 116. BY EARLiNE WHITE The Chowan Herald Heat advisories issued by the National Weather Service re mained in effect Tuesday with temperatures continuing to climb into triple digits. Town officials are doing their best to keep residents’ air conditioners humming. “Kilowatt per hour consump tion has been getting high for the past week or so,” Hawk Crummey, Director of Electri cal Services for the Town of Edenton said Friday as tem peratures approached the up per 90s. Peak periods of con sumption are combated by us ing 2500 kw generators; their times of operation are dictated by the NC Power Agency. But, already sweltering days have forced the generator to be cranked up before August (typi cally the hottest month) has even arrived. “Only eight days into the month we began using the peak generators, typically running UNC-TV finally available to thousands of dish owners BY EARLINE WHITE The Chowan Herald After an extensive two-year process the Federal Communi cations Commission an nounced Friday that over 10,000 satellite subscribers in eastern North Carolina will fi nally be able to watch North Carolina’s public television broadcasts. Since 1963 the counties of Chowan, Hertford, Gates, Northampton, Perquimans, Pasquotank, Camden, Curr ituck and Dare have been iden tified as part of the Norfolk, VA DMA (designated market Wmmmmm Parks Britton Elizabeth Bryant and staff in tern Leigh Ann Cienek pre them from 2 to 6 p.m," Crummey said. “We’re doing pretty good right now, keeping up with de mands. We’re ready for what ever comes.” The 10-day forecast calls for excessive heat warnings for our area, temperatures in the upper 90s with heat indexes in the triple digits. Possible relief may be headed our way later this week in the form of thunder storms. High moisture combined with relentless heat has already brought periodic bouts of thun der and lightning to Chowan County over the past few weeks, triggering high consumption of electricity and causing a signifi cant amount of damage to the county’s computer system. The late day electrical storm on Friday, July 15 resulted in several lighting strikes within town limits. One particular strike damaged the antennae atop the County Office Building, temporarily knocking out the See HEAT On Page 2-A area), thereby receiving Vir ginia public television broad-' casts. As a result of Friday’s announcement, the designated city of license for the transmit ter serving these counties will change from Columbia to Edenton, allowing satellite and Direct TV viewers in those nine counties to access UNC TV services. “We are very pleased that the FCC has agreed with our filing,” said Carl Davis, Assis tant General Manager/Direc tor of Engineering with UNC Center for Public Television. “The meat of the matter is that at some point, after working sented the committee with a PowerPoint presentation. Bryant and Cienek also pro vided income statistics and in formation about what other communities have done to boost affordable housing in their areas, Knighton said. The six-member committee recommended town staff focus on two strategies: urban in-fill in Edenton, and potential land acquisitions by non-profits. 4-Day Forecast Wednesday Mostly Sunny 102782° Thursday Scatt. T-stoms 92780° Friday Scatt. T-storms 93779° Saturday T-showers 91778° • information taken from weather.com % : v;. ■ > . ■>;. ■ with the satellite providers, UNC-TV will be available within the area that was pre viously unable to receive it be cause of an inconsistent rule. ” By moving the city of license to Edenton, Chowan will be come part of the WUND tele vision marketing area. How ever, the physical location of the tower and transmission facilities, in Columbia will re main at the current site. Those viewers receiving transmis sions from Columbia by the tower and through local cable service will continue to receive See UNC On Page 2-A The in-fill issue, Knighton said, centers around the fact that some already targeted va cant lots and buildings in Edenton are supplied town water and sewer services. That fact would negate any private developers’ need to install in frastructure at any new devel opments for affordable hous ing. “That’s usually what makes affordable housing afford able,” Knighton said, “if yoir can bring down the cost of (in stalling) infrastructure.” Regarding abandoned prop- . erties, the committee showed interest in the possibility of having the town and county acquire such properties that are up for public sale, or to work with private developers who could buy land the local. See HOUSING On Page 3-A Seniors urged to beware of potential scam BY EARLINE WHITE The Chowan Herald With Medicare’s constant changes a supplemen tal plan to help pay for senior health care may seem tempting. But beware, some agents soliciting for enrollees in the area are allegedly giving misinfor mation to attract enrollees, leaving them with more to pay in the end. Several sources, including Darlene Peebles of the Chowan medical community, have confirmed that insurance agents have been soliciting seniors (at among other places, private residences, Chowan’s senior facilities, and McDonald’s) to enroll in plans like Humana Gold Choice, based in Camden, South Carolina. The plan is reportedly being described as a supplement to their current Medicare cover age plan. Though Humana Gold Choice is a legiti mate business, it is not a Medicare supplement plan and after becoming enrolled by Humana, the senior may in fact forfeit part of his/her Medicare plan. Bill Hayes with the University Health Systems (UHS) of North Carolina confirms that there have been several agents working in Chowan and Bertie counties using the Humana Gold Choice company name and allegedly giving misleading impressions of the plan. Burgess Jernigan says he and some neighbors in Bertie County were solicited door-to-door by just such an agent. For the past two days, Jernigan has found himself calling offices across the eastern US trying to disenroll in the program. “I took my mother to the hospital and they wouldn’t take the insurance even though it said in Humana’s brochure that this hospital would take it,” Jernigan said. “A lot of people have got it (the Humana Gold Choice plan) and don’t know it’s no good around here until they go to the doctor. There’s no telling how many people (have) sign(ed) up.” Under the U.S. Center for Medicare and Medic aid Services guidelines, no agent is allowed to so licit door-to-door or at public places without for mal presentations, Patrick Farley, Director of Humana Marketing based in Cary said Tuesday. However, Humana does hold informative seminars at public places like fast food restaurants to enroll seniors in the program, he said. One local agent has allegedly enrolled many people by telling them that the plan pays like Medi care. The reality is that the program is not funded by Medicare and no health cqjre provider in this area has a contract with the Humana Gold Choice program. Therefore, the patient is left to pay the bill. Farley emphasized that agents working in the area who are allegedly falsifying information to attract participants are not following the market See SCAM On Page 2-A • The FCC announced Friday that Edenton would become a designated city of license, enabling area satellite subscribers to view North Carolina PBS programming.