■ if 1 1 1 1 - I * ‘Homeboys’ helping out their hometown —6B 482-441 & Wednesday, June 12, 2013 50« Pulp mill expansion offers promise for region By REGGIE PONDER Staff Writer Expansion at the Domtar pulp mill across the Albe marle Sound from Chowan County offers economic promise for Chowan and all of northeastern North Carolina, according to economic development of ficials. Lignin just might be the most valuable commod ity you’ve never heard of — and northeastern North Carolina is on the ground floor in producing it for an embryonic market. The Domtar pulp mill in Washington County held a ribbon-cutting Thursday for a new lignin separation plant, which will separate and refine lignin for sale to Man pleads in sex offense From staff reports A former Chowan Coun ty resident is in prison af ter pleading guilty to first degree sex offense with a child, according to court and prison records. David W. Bryant, 50, en .tered-a-guilty plea to> th/ft ■ charge in Currituck Supe rior Court on May 22. Bryant was sentenced to 300-369 months in prison and given credit for 932 days served, according to court records. The projected release date for Bryant is Oct. 25, 2040, according to informa tion on the N.C. Depart ment of Correction web site. The incident that led to the conviction occurred in November 2005, according to Department of Correc tion records. Town council mulls sign rules By REBECCA BUNCH Staff Writer An increased use of signs that are in violation of the town’s Unified Develop ment Ordinance has led to a discussion among town officials about enforcement issues. Town Planner Sam Bar row requested during the town council’s May 28 com mittee night meeting that the council consider imple menting a 30-day education program aimed at making local residents and busi ness owners aware of what are and are not appropriate signs under the UDO. At press time the council was scheduled to vote on See SIGNS, 4A \ | ©2009 The Chowan Herald All Rights Reserved ' external customers. The plant already em ploys more than 400 work ers. “Obviously as they ex-, pand their product lines it helps ensure employ ment in the region and also provides an opportunity where maybe we can get some companion compa nies that would have an interest in the products,” Vann Rogerson, president and chief executive officer of the Northeast Commis sion, said this week. “So it’s positive for us.” Normally, lignin is found in the pulp mill by-product sometimes known as black .liquor. Because it is highly combustible, pulp mills for some time have used the substance to help fire their STAFF PHOTO BY REGGIE PONDER John A. Holmes High School 2013 graduate Kayla Ann Warren gets a congratulatory hug from Principal Sheila Evans after receiving her diploma during the school’s graduation ceremony, Saturday. Holmes graduates class of ‘lollipop children’ By REOOIE PONDER Editor John A. Holmes High School on Saturday graduated a class of 150 that valedictorian Ashton Copeland said had earned the moniker “lol lipop children” because of its optimistic outlook. That optimism appar ently was not dampened Farm service agency seeks local leaders By PETER WILLIAMS The Perquimans Weekly Starting this month more than 2,200 farmers in Chowan and Perquimans counties will be asked to nominate new leaders for the farm service agen cy that helps set local policies. The two county farm service agen cies were merged in October as part of an effort to cut federal spending. Four other North Carolina offices that were within 25 miles of another agency and had two or more employees faced the same fate last year. The office in Chowan County was closed and consolidated with a FSA of fice at 512 S. Church St., in Hertford. Now Denise Gregory is the county executive director for those two coun ties plus Camden, Currituck and Pas own furnaces. But now Domtar—boost ed by a $7 million grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture — is sepa rating and refining lignin into a powder form and will package it for market. U.S. Agriculture Secre tary Tom Vilsack said in a phone interview last week that the department made the investment in the lignin separation project because of lignin’s potential value as an alternative fuel, sol vent, ink and adhesive. USDA is working to ex pand the variety of end uses in the forest products in dustry and to increase the value of those uses, which in turn will create incen tives for forest landowners to be more resourceful in even by the rain and wind that postponed the cer emony from Friday night to Saturday morning. Copeland encouraged the class of 2013 to hold fast to the upbeat mind set that has become its hallmark. She said that ;{ she has been told she sees the world through rose colored glasses. “But our optimism has ? managing their timber lands, Vilsack said. “That’s an exciting as pect of it,” Vilsack said of the opportunities the forest products industry presents for landowners. The USDA forest prod ucts lab in Wisconsin has been developing a Kevlar like vest using wood fiber, Vilsack said. “There are really unlim ited uses,” Vilsack said. Northeastern North Car olina has a long history as a source of timber for both lumber and pulp. Vilsack said not only can large timber companies benefit from the expanding market created by lignin and other high-value wood . See PLANT, 2A gotten our class to be labeled as the ‘lollipop children’ since early in our high school career, so I think that might be a good thing,” Copeland ' told her classmates. One of Saturday's grad uates, Joseph Fain, who holds the rank of sergeant first class in Army Junior ROTC, plans to serve in the Army now that he quotank. The first consolidation hap pened in 1995. “The Perquimans and Chowan Coun ty farm communities, of course, are vital to North Carolina’s agriculture,” Gregory said. “This new arrange ment enables the Perquimans-Chowan County Farm Service Agency to serve producers more effectively.” Consolidating Chowan and Perqui mans into one district required chang ing.the boundary lines of the districts. FSA’s are required to have an odd number, so the new district has five. Two $re purely Perquimans districts, two are Chowan districts and one has parts of both. Representatives of four of the five district are up for election this year. /• . » ■/; 1 ■ ; !-•. See FARM, 4A STAFF PHOTO BY REGGIE PONDER John Williams, president and chief executive officer of Domtar, cuts the ribbon Thursday at the company’s new lignin separa tion plant in Washington County. has graduated from high school. But Saturday morning he was taking one last opportunity to enjoy John A. Holmes High School. “I’m just so happy to have this moment,” Fain said. “So happy. There’s no feeling greater than graduating from your first stepping-stone.” Fain intends to go to Officer Candidate School in the Army “I plan to do a full 30 years in the U.S. Army,” Fain said. He explained that his father is retired military and he also learned a lot from military recruiters who visited the school. Fain said his mother See GRADUATION, 2A