unemployment Aces JV football team on a hot streak tin Chowan was Mack Leary caught a 55-60 yard passforthe 5.8% in July A2 game-winning touchdown against Gates 14-6 A long-standing tradition — Happy Home Camp Meeting B6 Matador crew takes first in EC sailing tourney B1 4 - V Holmes project on hold School officials respond to fiscal crisis By Rebecca Bunch Staff Writer : After spending $57,000 on plans to renovate John A. Holmes High School, the school system has put the project on hold, for now. Superintendent Allan Smith, said that all conver sations with the architec tural firm that created the plans have come to a halt. Smith said he felt the ac tion was appropriate given the county’s current budget shortfall. County Manager Peter Rascoe said, “Obviously right now, due to the finan cial situation of the county and due to the current bud get situation, the county would be challenged with funding capital needs.” Smith said he took the ac tion due to the extreme pres sure the county is under to pay for new construction already completed. That new construction in cludes the library expansion and the new public informa tion building which houses local law enforcement and related offices. The county will have to begin paying for those build ings next year. Drawings done The school system spent $57,000 to obtain drawings from an architect, showing different options for carry ing out the renovations. Smith said that no dollar figures had yet been attached to any of the options. Of the proposed ideas, he said, Option 5 was the favor ite at the time. Smith said that option would have allowed for con struction of a new audito rium and a new gymnasium at the high school, among other things. Reviewing plans Funds for the architect’s drawings, prepared by Moseley Architects of Ra leigh, were included in last year’s budget, Smith said. “It would be my desire that we come back to this project sometime in the near future but that is going to depend on local financial circumstances,” he added. ». Smith said that the school hoard, administrators and teachers were reviewing plans for the renovations at the time news of the coun ty’s budget shortfall came to light. See HOLMES, Page A2 > 0 ©2006 The Chowan Herald All Rights Reserved RESIDENTS REACT TO PROPOSED EDENTON BYPASS Vernon Fueston Tommy and Robin Skittlethorpe of Butternut Lane say a proposed highway bypass would cut off access to their home, forcing them to abandon it for lack of access. Tommy and Robin Skittlethorpe vow to keep their home despite bypass By Rebecca Bunch and Vernon Fueston Staff Writers Tommy and Robin Skittletho rpe could lose the home they’ve lived in for 22 years to Edenton’s proposed Soundside bypass route. Their home won’t be plowed under by the construction. They just won’t be able to have access to their land if the route is se lected. The Soundside route is one of three being proposed and is backed by the Town. Their home will simply be aban doned for the lack of an onramp to the only road near their house. “We were both in shock after the meeting,” Robin said of the DOT hearing Aug. 19. “Nobody told us there would be no access to our home. We just as sumed they would pave Butternut Road where we live and widen it. It was definitely a surprise.” Tommy literally found their home while hunting on land owned by Dr. Leibert DeVine back in 1986. Behind the undergrowth, he noticed a single-wide trailer and outbuildings he believed would Town taking steps to ensure future financial security By Vernon Fueston Contributing Writer Edenton’s town coun cil is reviewing a new financial management guide to prevent fiscal problems like those fac ing Chowan County. The guide, still a work in progress, spells out a series of financial policies, some new and some long-standing. Town Manager Anne Marie Knighton said the policies need tq be understood by everyone in town government. "I guess what moti vated us was that many make a great home and workshop for his construction business. The couple rented the property from DeVine and later purchased it, replacing the single-wide trail er with a double-wide in 1997. Today their home has a deck, vegetable garden and plenty of room for the couple’s three dogs to run. 'Tommy’s business operates from the outbuildings behind his home. He’s started building a new workshop structure, but wonders now whether or not to bother completing it. Tommy said he couldn’t under- * stand why the DOT would ask him to leave his home rather than pro vide access to the bypass. He said it particularly galled him to hear that the bypass will be widened for bicycle access and then to learn his home would have to be abandoned because of the lack of access. “We just can’t start all over again,” Robin said. “I’ve been here half my life. It’s too late in life for us to start a new 30-year mortgage. “It’s just wrong to think the DOT can just come in one day and of the councilmen were getting a lot of ques tions from citizens on what our policies were,” Knighton said. During a meet ing Monday evening, Knighton pointed out areas where the town’s finances were in good shape and where im provement was needed. She said the town haS done well in avoiding debt. The town current ly owes $646,000, well below the limits advised by the state. Knighton also said the town has kept to its goal of keeping a 30 percent reserve fund, but said the town’s audit was suggesting 40 percent. Among the policies suggested by Knighton in the guide are: ■ The town will con tinue to budget based on the previous year’s books for revenue rath er than projecting for growth. ■ When estimating tax collection rates, the town will use figures from the previous year’s books. ■ The council will not use bond financing to cover expenses. See TOWN, Page A2 > “In this day of uncertainty with he economy, you want to put a road hrough homes and farmlands, why ion’t you just shoot us now and put us n the ground?" — Robin Skittlethorpe Steps business, homeowners will be taking: ■ The minutes of a closed DOT meeting will be post ' ed on the Albemarle Commission’s Web site within the next 60 days. ■ A team of state and federal agencies will write an environmental study The study should be finished by September 2010. ■ ’ The state’s acquisition process will begin some time near September 2010. Letters will be sent to. property owners and a hearing planned. ■ Plans for the exact route will be firmed up after the hearing and another meeting held 12 months later to address individual property issues. ■ ■ The state will pay “fair market value” for all prop erty taken. Damages may also be paid when property is not purchased but its value is decreased. ■ Construction on the bypass should begin in Sep tember 2012. then you’re INSIDE out.” People write let- “We’re not ters about DOT going down bypass meeting without a AS . fight,” Tom —-—i- my said. Losing land For his part, DeVine said he stands to lose part of his front yard but thankfully not access to his home. He said the proposed road would take part of his front yard, putting it 400-500 feet from his front door. DeVine, who is living with in curable cancer, said he has no plans to move away from the home , he and his late wife, Cyndy, shared together. His wife died several years ago from cancer and is buried behind their home. He said he plans to be buried there as well. DeVine, who helped build But ternut Lane, which remains a private road, said he sympathized with the Skittlethorpe family’s situation. “If they were doing that to me,” he said, “somebody would have to pufi my dead, lifeless body off a tractor because I’d be out there Some unhappy with new proposed subdivision By Rebecca Bunch Staff Writer A 15-lot area on Athol Lane in the Cape Colony community known as Revell’s Cove could be come the county’s latest subdivi sion. Other subdivisions in the works in Chowan County are Beechwood, RiverSound and the Refuge at Drummond’s Point. Wes Haskett, planner for Edeh ton and Chowan County said his office thinks Revell’s Cove “is a great plan.” Not so enthusiastic about it is property owner Christi Basnight. She and her husband, Robert, have lived in their home on Athol Lane for the past 10 years. trying to keep them off my land.” Other options Two Chowan County farm ers are among those questioning the proposed bypass for another reason — they say it’s no longer needed. Leonard Small Jr. and Frankie Parrish both say that while large truck traffic was a big problem for the community back in 2005 when the DOT survey used to justify the bypass was done, that’s no longer the case. Their argument is that time, and the economic downturn, have already solved much of the prob lem. Small and Parrish said that a lo cal lumber company that ran large log trucks through town has closed in the intervening years, and that Mi-Tek, which replaced another company with large trucks, uses a barge system to bring in the steel beams it uses, bypassing the local roads altogether. Both agree that if another sur vey were done today, it would show that the majority of large trucks coming down the streets of Eden ton now are actually delivering to See BYPASS, Page A2 ► “I would hate to see it happen," she said of the proposed subdivi sion. “We have a lot of wildlife; and it’s so nice and peaceful.” “Having 15 more homes back here would create a lot more traf fic,” she added, “and that’s some thing we don’t need.” Proposed plan If approved, the- subdivision would be used for single-fam ily homes, according to property owner Bill Revell. Revell and his project engineer, Bob Farris of Elizabeth City, pre sented plans for a preliminary re view at the Aug. 19 meeting of the Chowan County Planning Board. The Revell’s Cove property is See REVELL'S , Page A2 ► TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: AMERICAN LEGION COLONY TIRE ; <’< WESTOVER GENERAL STORE PEMBROKE MARINA CHOWAN GOLF COURSE HALSEY'S GARDEN CENTER AL8EMABLE FORD $mf of rm mmmmn i mm SEPTEMBER 13TH, 2008 5:00-7:30PM DINNER 6:00-9:30 MUSIC S20-ADVANCE; $25-AT GATE TABLES & CHAIRS PROVIDED