Wednesday, January 21, 2009 482-4418 Leaders outline effort to secure VA Clinic Chowan County Commis sion Chairman Eddy Good win and Edenton Mayor Roland Vaughan are leading the effort to have Edenton selected as the site for the proposed outpatient clinic to serve area veterans. The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs is propos ing to establish a communi ty-based outpatient clinic in the Edenton/Elizabeth City area. The clinic is part of the VA’s plan to improve access to veterans in rural areas to primary and specialty care. Funding for the clinic is be*'' ing proposed in the VA’s FY 2009/10 budget. According to information obtained by the steering committee, the community based outpatient clinic will be located in an area that will greatly reduce the vet eran’s drive time to receive primary and specialty care and reduce waiting times for follow-up care, and also improve waiting times at main VA hospitals. Mayor Vaughan suggested the idea of a steering com mittee to ensure that all bases are being covered in the effort to get the clinic in daemon. The steering committee, co-chaired by Goodwill and Vaughan, also includes E.C. Toppin, American Legion Post 40 Adjunct; Richard Bunch, the Executive Di rector of the Chamber of Commerce and the Edenton Chowan Development Cor poration; County Manager Peter Rascoe; Chowan Vet erans Representative Clyde Adams and Town Manager Anne Marie Knighton. The committee invited Da vid Blomquist to also serve as a member. Blomquist is affiliated with the local “Change for America” group. “Change for America” has identified securing the VA clinic as one of the group’s goals. Various contacts have already been made includ ing Senator Burr whose se nior military affairs staffer was invited to Edenton by the Chamber of Commerce when the news about the proposed clinic was first re leased. The staffer met with ■ Vaughan in Edenton the week of Christmas. Toppin briefed the committee on his meetings with Burr about the need for such a clinic in northeastern North Caro lina. -The clinic is proposed to create 14 new jobs which our town and county desperate ly needs given that the N.C, Department of Commerce ; < has designated Chowan County as a Tier One “eco nomically distressed coun ty” with current unemploy ment rate of a 10.6 percent. C2006 The Chowan Herald All Rights Reserved REMEMBERING THE DREAM * VERNON FUESTON/THE CHO.WAN HERALD Members of the choir hold hands and sing "We Shall Overcome" during Edenton's ML King Celebration. About 150 people gath ered to celebrate the life and accomplishments of Martin Luther King, Jr., Monday at Swain audito rium. The event held special Commissioners get education on school system By Rebecca Bunch Staff Writer New Chowan County com missioners say they feel a recently held joint meeting with members of the board of education will yield posi tive results in the future. The meeting was planned to discuss “items of mutual interest,” according to Dr. Allan Smith, superinten dent of schools. Topics on the agenda ranged from urgent renova tion needs at John A. Holm es High School to state bud Local woodworker re-creates 18th century masterpieces By Vernon Fueston Staff Writer Don Jordan belongs to an elite club. He is one of a handful of artisan-woodworkers who manage to earn a full-time living making reproduc tions of the world’s finest antique furniture. Jordan started his career working for a lumber com pany after graduating from l^l.C. State’s forestry and wood technology program. Trained to meet the needs of North Carolina’s forestry and furniture manufactur ing industries, he thought he knew where his life was headed. Then the sawmill he worked for closed its doors in 1983. Lane change That’s when he decided to turn his energies toward doing something hie loved. Jordan had always loved working with wood, so he decided to make furniture himself — really fine furni ture. Don Jordan makes an tique reproductions, pieces made using the techniques and designs common among American furniture mak ers two and a half centuries ago. It’s an exacting business that meets the demands of some extremely picky cus poignancy for those at tending as King’s birthday fell on the eve of Barak Obama’s inauguration. Several speakers marveled at the progress King’s movement has made in get cuts that will unpact the school system’s budget. Smith said that some needs at the high school j will not be able to wait the four to six years it may take before renovation funds'are available. (As of Monday afternoon, board of education mem bers were scheduled to hold a board retreat on Tuesday to set priorities for repairs that must be done in the near future.) Commissioner Keith Nix on said he found the meeting “very informative” when tomers. “I’m not trying to make fakes,” Jordan said, “but I am trying to make some thing close to the original.” Jordan’s customers are sophisticated connoisseurs of fine furniture. Sometimes he’s called in when the owner of a special piece wants his children to each have a copy of the original. At other times, he’s asked to reproduce an antique that has finally de teriorated beyond repair. Tough market Whatever the reason, his customers want something intangible, the look and feel of a hand-made original. “People prefer hand made things,” Jordan said. “I’ve read about studies where people are asked to choose between a piece of fine, mass-produced furniture and a handmade copy of the same thing. They usually choosp the handmade prod uct.” Just why they do that is a complex question that Jor dan said he can only guess at. One reason is that peo ple like the look and feel of a handmade item. Jordan pointed to one of his works in progress, a mahogany folding table. He ran his fingers over the sanded surface of its ma hogany table top. since the civil rights move ment began over five de cades ago. Edward Goodwin, chair man of the county’s board of commissioners, lauded King for “having the guts” it came to understanding school needs and funding sources. ^ Nixon and two others — Kenny Goodwin and Eddy Goodwin, recently named to chair the board — attended along with County Manager Peter Rascoe. Nixon said he, felt it was a very good first step in de veloping positive commu nication between the two bodies. Additional meetings be tween the boards will prob ably take place, he said. Commission board chair * ■ 'SiT** ’ yi V- ' ’ _ - .£ :. VERNON FUE$TON/THE CHOWAN HERALD Don Jordan works on the carved leg of a folding table. “All of that finished sur face there has the same tool marks the original had,” Jordan said. “I use a table saw and pofter tools, but ev erything on the surface is done the same way.” Jordan said there is some thing else that’s special about a handmade piece of furniture. Using hand tools allows the maker to produce a single piece that’s unlike anything else. to bring America into an age of tolerance. First District Court Judge Eula Reid spoke on King’s Legacy and Marie Daves recalled King’s rally in Edenton back in 1962. Eddy Goodwin said he learned a lot of useful infor mation too. Goodwin said that he is willing to sit in on addition al meetings to help improve his understanding of the working relationship be tween the two boards. “If you’ll let me, or some body, sit in a corner, I’m available,” Goodwin said. And board of education chair Ricky Browder de scribed the meeting, which lasted about three hours, as “very productive, very cor dial.” Even if he makes multi ple copies, Jordan said, the pieces will still be individu al, if they are handcrafted. Jordan said he worries that our fast-paced society is losing its appreciation for things that are both unique and of high quality. Disposable age “This younger genera tion, they’re part of the See JORDAN, Page A2 > Citizens discuss finances Group ponders bankruptcy and/or local government consolidation By Vernon Fueston Staff Writer It was a packed conference room at the Nothin’ Fancy Cafe, Thurday night, as 43 citizens gathered for.an un official town meetinpspon sored by the Edenton Dis cussion Group on Chowan’s fiscal crisis. They had a lot on their minds. Jim Badger, mod erator for the evening, wel comed the group. “This is a time when we all have to set aside our Re publican, Democrat and Libertarian labels and work together,” he said. Defining the problem Bob Chapman summa rized the county’s financial situation for the group — big new debt payments falling due on several recent capital improvement projects and a series of “balanced” annual county budgets that chewed through a $20 million-dollar reserve fund in four years time. “Many people think the county’s reserves were spent on big projects like the pub lic safety center,” Chapman said. “But the shocking thing is that the money was spent on county operations over a pe riod of years. “Now the citizens are be ing asked to sustain a bud-, get and a level of spending ' that was unlawful in the first place.” Finding a way out Participants explored several options the county might have for dealing with its problems. One speaker uttered the “B-word” — bankruptcy, suggesting the. county simply allow banks to foreclose on some of its new buildings. Chapman responded that any bankruptcy would put the county in receivership with unpredictable conse quences. “You can get a good guy or you can get a bad guy as a re ceiver,” Chapman said. “You don’t know what he will do. He can cut ser vices in ways you might not want.” Another speaker suggest- ' • ed consolidating the county with Edenton’s healthier town government, creating a metropolitan system for the entire county. One member of the au dience responded, “If you consolidate the government, you consolidate all the as sets. You’re still in the same spot.” Chapman dismissed both the bankruptcy and consoli dation options. “We have only two real alternatives,” he said. “We can either tax ourselves out * ; of existence, or the other option is to lay off employ ees.” Services or taxes An audience member commented that he favored a drastic reduction in ser vices. “We were told (at the coun- 1u See GROUP, Page A2 ► > ; •