CHI P8/C8******CAR-RT LOT**C 002 A0038 SHEPHERD PRUDEN LIBRARY 106 W WATER ST EDENTON NC 27932-1854 W ^D 482-4418 Wednesday, February 21, 2018 75* New appraisal does not deter Brew pub BY REBECCA BUNCH Staff Writer During their Feb. 13 monthly meeting members of the Edenton Town Coun cil agreed to schedule a public hearing on Tuesday, March 13 at 6 p.m. in the au ¬ ditorium at John A. Holmes High School to receive citi zens’ comments concern ing the proposed sale of the former Northeast Com mission building to Raleigh businessman John Glover who has announced plans to establish a brewery and pub at the site located on the downtown waterfront. Councilman Elton Bond, who is recovering from sur gery, was absent. Town Manager Anne-Ma rie Knighton said that a sign- up sheet would be available for those who wished to comment during the public hearing. In keeping with the council’s policy, comments will be limited to three min utes per speaker, she said. Knighton said she had been in contact with Glover concerning a new appraisal of the property in question which established an in creased value of about 10 percent for the property or a sale price of $309,000. An appraisal performed sev eral years earlier had estab lished the value at $282,000 See PUB, 8A Wrestlers compete A dynamic duo of John A. Holmes’ wres tlers competed recently competed at the North Carolina A Individual Wrestling Champion ship. — 1B Audit reveals health Edenton Town Hall recently released an external audit detailing the town’s financial health. —3A Pets of the Week Check out some of the pets the Tri-County Animal Shelter offers that would love to start the new year in a home of their very own. — 6B Confronting eternity Paul Young, best- selling author of The Shack: Where Tragedy Confronts Eternity,” will be the featured speaker in the sanctu ary at Edenton Baptist Church, on Monday evening, March 5, at 7 p.m. — 5B Jackson pranked It’s never a good thing to prank your boss, but what if the prank is for a good cause like the Special Olympics? Chowan Middle School Princi pal John Lassiter and John A. Holmes High School Principal Steve Wood decided to find out. — 6A Speller recognized On Friday, Ben Speller of Edenton was among a select group of North Carolinians recognized for their work in preserving African American heri tage and culture in the state. — 3B Safety top concern for area schools BY MILES LAYTON Editor A mass shooting at a Florida high school hits close to home as school officials consider safety and programs aimed at producing good behavior. Seventeen people were killed and 15 more were taken to hospitals after a mass shooting on Feb. 14 at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla. The suspect, Nikolas Jacob Cruz, activated a fire alarm while he was armed with an assault rifle and mul tiple magazines, and began shoot ing indiscriminately at students and teachers. Cruz was arrested shortly afterward and confessed to the crimes, accord ing to the Broward County Sheriffs Office. He was charged with 17 counts of premeditated murder. Edenton-Chowan Schools Super intendent Rob Jackson said there are safety protocols in place intended to counter any violent situation that may arise. So as not to jeopardize the school safety, Jackson declined to elaborate as to the specifics of plans in place intended to neutralize an armed suspect. However, Jackson said school staff have worked with the Chowan County Sheriffs Office to be trained as to how to handle potentially dangerous situa tions involving active shooters. There is an armed sheriffs deputy on duty at each school. Jackson said because of state law prohibits firearms on campus, teach ers and staff are not armed. Though schools don’t have metal detectors at m^or entryways, Jackson said, this is something that the admin istration is considering making a prior ity when presenting the annual budget to the Chowan County Commission. Jackson said call boxes with video capability by the main entryways is something school officials have dis cussed in the past and present. Such devices would allow staff to better identify visitors among others seeking entry into a school. Jackson said while the call boxes would be welcome, each schools’ ar chitectural planning, when built de cades ago, reduces the effectiveness of call boxes because the main entry ways open into common spaces rath er than smaller enclosures intended to restrict immediate access into the schools. MIKE STOCKER/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN-SENTINEL Students hold their hands in the air as they are evacuated by police from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla, after a shooter opened fire on the campus, Feb. 14. Jackson spoke in general terms about alarm codes that would be broadcast to alert staff of danger and to enact countermeasures to keep stu dents safe. Future planning at John A Holmes High School may involve reducing the long accessible routes “shortcuts” through the courtyard among other means of reducing trespassing, Jack- son said. Principals said the schools are safe for students, teachers and staff. “I would want my two daughters to go to any school in this school system,” said Steve Wood, JAHHS principal. “Safety is a top concern for our stu dents throughout the school system.” White Oak Elementary Principal Sheila Evans has worked many years an educator and administrator within the Edenton-Chowan School system. “White Oak School is a safe place to learn and work,” she said. “If we see something that needs attention, we say something and then we act upon that situation. That could be a spill on the floor or a child teasing another child or a parent upset with a teacher. We handle each situation in a professional manner. But, again, I’m confident that schools who have experienced vio lence are doing the same things. All of us must be vigilant to protect our chil dren.” Like us on Facebook At /THECHOWANHERALD '89076 44813 1 ©2009 The Chowan Herald All Rights Reserved 0 Beloved educator leaves legacy BY MILES LAYTON Editor A longtime educator and administrator has MILES LAYTON/ CHOWAN HERALD Edenton-Chowan principals insist that school safety is a priority for students, teachers and staff. Chowan Middle School Principal John Lassiter said, “The values we teach our students make our schools more safe." matricu lated into God’s class- room. For more than 30 years, SEE INSIDE Safety always foremost concern - 5A Evans said the school system’s poli cies and procedures are in place to en sure a safe learning environment. “While I do not know what other states do to ensure safety in their schools, I can’t help but think that all educators are doing every thing in their power to create and maintain safe learning environments,” she said. “Over the years, I know that we, in Chowan County, have continued to refine our policies and procedures to ensure our schools are safe.” Chowan Middle School Principal John Lassiter spends many hours in Bulldogs’ country. Lassiter spends many hours not only at school but at ball games, school dances and band concerts. He’s never been worried about school safety. “I have worked as a teacher at John A Holmes and as principal at Chowan Middle,” he said. “Never once have I been concerned for my safety. Know ing that safety is not a concern, I often bring my wife and small children to school events like concerts and ath- See SAFETY, 4A Brenda WINBORNE Kaye Bunch Winborne was a teacher and principal with the Edenton-Chow an County School system before she retired. As an administrator, Winborne was the recipient of the Regional Principal of the Year Award. Surrounded by family, Winborne, 70, died Feb. 15 at Vidant Medical Center in Green ville. Colleagues remem bered the good times spent with Wmborne. “I had the joy and plea sure of working with Brenda Wmborne at the old White Oak School,” said Linda Bunch, a re tired teacher. “She taught second grade and I was a third grade teacher. We were asked by our princi pal to lead a school-wide sing-a-long once a month. Brenda and I would come up with the songs togeth er. She would play the piano while I led the chil dren. It was a fun and en joyable time for tire entire See EDUCATOR, 6A Board approves contract policy BY MILES LAYTON Editor Town bands together, saves trolley service BY REBECCA BUNCH Staff Writer One of the most famil iar sights in Edenton is the trolley that offers rides and tours of the community to visitors and locals alike. So in January when the state revealed plans to eliminate funding for an interpreter who rode the trolley and talked with riders about the town’s history, local leaders began meeting and looking for a way to keep the ser vice going. Once the town agreed to continue to fund the cost of maintenance and up keep for the trolley, and to continue paying the trolley driver, officials who head the Edenton Historical Commission, whose offices are located at the Penelope Barker House on the down- town waterfront — realized that the eyes of interested parties were turning toward them for a solution regard ing keeping an interpreter in place. “Everyone was looking to the Historical Commis sion to do that,” said EHC president Chris Bean, “even though it had not been our responsibility in the past.” So the commission reached out to Sharon Keeter, a 30-year employee PHOTO BY KIP SHAW More than 11,000 people rode the trolley last year to see Edenton’s rich historical history. of the Historic Edenton that time. Keeter, who had State Historic Site, who planned to retire, enthusias- had served as the trolley in ¬ terpreter for a large part of See TROLLEY, 7A TYNER—Teacher con tracts were the first thing on the agenda for the Board of Education when it met recently in Bull dogs’ country at Chowan Middle School. The Board approved the first of two readings for plans during it’s Feb. 13 regarding how the school system will hire new teachers or renew contracts with educators. According to the pro posed policy, a new or re newed contract will be for a term of one school year for teachers who have been employed by the Board as a teacher for less than three years. After a teacher has completed See CONTRACT, 8A