Vol. LXXIII, No. 6 Wednesday, February 15, 2006 Single Copies: 50c vmemmmmmsmmmmmmtMmmimmmfflmmmmmmmmmaMms Report says county 41st in taxes paid BY EARLINE WHITE The.Chowan Herald The average North Carolin ian paid $17 more for local government’s cost in 2003-2004 than they did one year ago, ac cording to a recent report pub lished by the John Locke Foun dation. The report, By the Numbers, calculates tax bur den for the average taxpayer for each county. t/nowan uounty ranxea 4ist - out of all 100 counties in the state for the amount in taxes and fees paid to the local gov ernment ($1,139.71 per capita) compared with Pasquotank at 28th ($1,254,06) and Dare County which places the high est burden on their residents ($3,572.61), according to the re port. Gates County came in near the bottom, ranked 98th for $683.37 per capita, while Perquimans was ranked 51s.t ($1,085.91). “I think some of these fig ures are misleading,” Chowan County Manager Cliff Copeland said Friday about the top five tax burdening counties. “Consider Dare County, for example. The year round population is around 40.000- 45,000 people, but in the summer the population sky rockets in excess of 100,000. The property taxes and sales taxes collected from those 100.000- plus individuals and divided by the number of full time residents (45,000) makes no sense. For these numbers to be more accurate the inclusion of sales and property taxes col lected by non-residents will have to be taken out of the equation. In reality Dare County’s tax burden for full time residents is among the lowest in the state.” Copeland said he felt, how ever, that the numbers for Chowan County were about right. “Chowan County does not have the seasonal population like that of Dare County so the numbers for us are pretty ac curate. The numbers show that Chowan County is doing a See TAXES On Page A2 INSIDE Calendar.C2 Church.. C5,6 Classifieds.D1-4 Editorials.A4 Obituaries,.C4 School...A6 Society.C3 Sports.. Bt-4 Contact us Call 482-4418 ©2006 The Chowan Herald All Rights Reserved Earline White/Ihe Chowan Herald Investigator Dwayne Goodwin, left, registers to run for the office of Chowan County Sheriff, as his boss, current Sheriff Fred Sprniil, and Elections Supervisor Rebecca Lowe look on. Spruill is retiring at the end of his current term. One’s a deputy, one’s a police detective... both want the chance to be your next sheriff bY tAKLINt WHIlt The Chowan Herald Chowan County Sheriff’s Office Investigator Dwayne Goodwin officially threw his hat in the ring on Mon day for the upcoming Sheriff’s election. Goodwin has been with the Chowan County Sheriff’s Office since 1991 when he came on as part of the auxil iary force. From 1991 to 2000, he served as a Patrol Of ficer then became a State Certified Criminal Investiga tor. He has logged over 2,500 hours of law enforcement training, many of which have been in the area of Civil ian Emergency Preparedness and Terrorism Security. “Over the last fourteen years Dwayne has proven that his is up to the challenge (of being Sheriff). This job is a people’s choice and I feel very fortunate to have an individual with his level of character, experience, and professionalism asking the citizens for the opportunity to serve us as our Sheriff,” Sheriff Fred Spruill said. Goodwin, who grew up in the Cannon’s Ferry area of Chowan Comity, said he has learned much from working alongside Spruill. “Sheriff Spruill has afforded me the opportunity to be a part of the decision making processes from which I have learned a great deal, especially about the admin istrative activities,” Goodwin commented. “Right now is an exciting time in Chowan County, especially with the growth that is occurring on each end of the county,” Goodwin said Monday as he stood with his family and supporters, including Spruill, at the Board of Elections Office. “I think we have a great Sheriff’s Office; I want to grow on that. I want to get more involved in the community watch programs, for example, and reach out to the community for their help and input.” Goodwin is involved in investigating everything from homicides to worthless checks. He pursues federal, state, and local violations, collecting and preserving See GOODWIN On Page A3 Sean Jackson/The Chowan Herald Edenton Police Detective Sergeant Rhonda Copeland, top right, signs up to become a candidate for the Chowan County Sheriff’s. Looking on are her campaign manager Jeff Knox, and Board of Elections Supervisor Rebecca Lowe. BY SEAN JACKSON The Chowan Herald Veteran Edenton Police Det. Sgt. Rhonda Copeland filed Monday for the soon-to-be-vacated Chowan County Sheriff’s job, pledging to run a hand’s-on de partment if she’s elected to the post. Copeland, 52, a Democrat, has spent the past 16 years with Edentori’s police force, including the past two as head of the department’s new investigations division. “I just want the voters to be aware that I’m very seri ous about this (sheriff’s) position,” she said shortly after filing at the Chowan elections board office. “I’m very serious about fighting crime,” she added. “That’s number one on my priority list.” Copeland said she’d been considering such a bid, her first-ever run for elected office, for much of the past year. The more she thought about it, the more people approached her about becoming sheriff. “I felt like it was the right time,” she said. Copeland will have at least one opponent in the May 2 primary, fellow Democrat and Chowan County Sheriff’s Deputy Dwayne Goodwin, who also filed Mon day to replace retiring Sheriff Fred Spruill. After 20 years as sheriff, Spruill has decided not to seek re-elec tion for a sixth term in office. Copeland is not hoping to sway voters in her favor because of her gender. If elected, however, she would be the county’s first female sheriff. “There are some people that think a woman should not be sheriff,” Copeland said. It’s her years with the Edenton Police Department, and her passion for ensuring residents’ safety in Edenton and Chowan County, that Copeland wants vot ers to take notice of. It’s a job one has to love, Copeland added. “You lose so much of you family life,” she said. “You put up with a lot out there... And you don’t sign up to See COPELAND On Page A3 Former police officer facing felony charges Gardner on indictment: “I am innocent” BY SEAN JACKSON The Chowan Herald A former Edenton Police officer was in dicted by a Chowan County grand jury on Feb. 6 for alleged felony possession of a prescrip tion narcotic. Nicole C. Gardner, of Edenton, was named on the indictment for alleged felony posses sion with intent to sell and deliver a schedule II controlled substance, oxycodone, also known as oxycontin. Gardner was the focus of an Alcohol Law Enforcement investigation that lead to the indictment, District Attorney Frank Parrish said Tuesday. A total of 52 capsules were seized on Jan. 25th, allegedly in Gardner’s possession. She was fired by the town the following day, ac cording to Town Manager Anne-Marie Knighton and Police Chief Greg Bonner. Gardner was hired by the town, in Septem ber 2004. In an interview with The Chowan Herald at the newspaper’s office Tuesday, Gardner said the charges arenot true. “I am innocent,” she said. She added that she was not surprised that the grand jury found merit in the allegations. “(A) grand jury’s only (presented) one side,” of a case on which to make a decision, Gardner said, emphasizing that she has never had a prescription for oxycontin, and has never taken the drug. “I’ve never seen it,” she said of the pain killer. Oxycontin, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration Web site, is a narcotic drug approved for the treatment of moderate to sevei'e pain. “It resulted from a surveillance operation,” Parrish said of the narcotics seizure. He de clined to discuss additional details of the in vestigation. Both Knighton and Bonner have also de clined to discuss the incident, other than to confirm the fact Gardner was terminated from her job as a patrol officer with the town. At press time, Gardner had not been ar rested. According to court documents, ALE agent Rodney Parker issued an order of ar rest for Gardner on Feb. 6. Bonner said Tuesday that he understood ALE agents were making arrangements to arrest Gardner, possibly later that day. Gardner said Tuesday that she had not been See POLICE On Page A2 Chowan joins effort to save more heart attack victims BY SEAN JACKSON The Chowan Herald Chowan Hospital is one of 10 Eastern North Carolina hospi tals aiming at speeding up treatment for heart attack pa tients. Last week, area health care officials met at the Brody School of Medicine at East Carolina University in Green ville to discuss potential meth ods to provide quicker care to hedrt attack patients. The re gional group is part of a state wide consortium whose Re perfusion of Acute Myocardial Infarction (RACE) project seeks to boost the number of heart attack survivors, It’s that initial 60 minutes, or “golden hour,” that is crucial to surviving a heart attack, said Chowan Hospital Emer gency Department clinical manager Mary Spruill. Unfor tunately, many heart attack victims wait longer than that to realize what is happening to them. “They (often) wait several hours before they come in,” to the emergency room, Spruill said. “People don’t want to ad mit they’re having chest pains, and maybe a heart attack, and get to the hospital in a timely manner.” At the meeting in Greenville last week, health care officials echoed Spruill’s concern. "In North Carolina, people are not getting treated quickly enough...with artery-opening procedures by medication or mechanical devices,” said Dr. Joseph Babb, a cardiologist and professor of internal medicine at ECU’s medical school. “Bringing patients through that golden hour is critical to saving lives,” said Dr. Joseph Shiber, a clinical assistant pro The Daily Reflector Dr. Joseph Babb, a cardiologist and professor of internal medicine at EClPs medical school, addresses those attending a briefing in Greenville last week on the RACE project. fessor of emergency medicine at ECU’s Brody School of Medicine. According to an ECU press release, national registries See EFFORT On A3 ‘POT OF GOLD REVERSE DRAWING” ♦v ' • V&./;}4.J FRIDAY, MARCH 17 /IT 7 1 . AMERICAN LEGION BUILDING **“***j«*J2£« C*,,482-644° fay Chowan Hospital Foundation with portion of pipcMda to bwwfjt '‘‘^owaivHMpitaft Cancar Support a— I -- 1 mwmmu