Losing ground? See the Opinion/Forum pages A6&7 BECOME A Happy 4th of July! Upstart in the WNBA W The Chronicle Volume41,Number42 WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. THURSDAY, July 2, 2015 Stadium neighbors express their issues Initial check for gas near Bowman Gray complete BY TEVIN STINSON THE CHRONICLE City oificials held their first meeting since testing was done in the vicinity of Bowman Gray Stadium to determine if the levels of methane gas found in the area were hazardous. During the open meeting held at Morning Star Missionary Baptist Church, 1400 Fitch St., members and residents of the community expressed their displeasure with how city officials are handling the process. On Wednesday, June 3, the city of Winston-Salem announced it found methane gas levels as high as 50 percent in the soil around the stadium and in the parking lot. The next day, officials announced they would be doing testing in the neighborhoods surrounding the stadi um. According to the residents in those neighborhoods, the city has not done a good job of letting them know what having methane gas in the soil means for their property and, most importantly, their health. Jacob Hughes said that most of the res idents in the area are senior citizens who can't physically get out to community meetings and that the city should do a bet ter job of letting those people know what's going on. "A lot of the people who are most effected by this aren't able to get out to meetings so they don't really know what's going on or what methane gas is," Hughes said. "The city should have people going door to door telling these people what was found and what're the next steps." See Neighbors on A2 Photo by Erin Mizelle for the Winston-Salem Chronicle Greg Turner, left, assistant city manager, and council member Derwin Montgomery listen as members of the community address their concerns about the methane gas that has been recently discovered in the vicinity of Bowman Gray Stadium on Thursday, June 25. Veteran wounded in Korean War needs help VA has denied Dock Dodd money despite shrapnel in his body BY TODD LUCK THE CHRONICLE Ret. Sgt. Dock C. Dodd fought in the Korean War 65 years ago. For the last 16 years, he's been fighting for compensation from the U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs. It can take years for some veterans to get their benefits because of the sometimes serpentine way they have to prove their current ailments stem from their time in com bat. But Greensboro NAB Vets (National Association of Black Veterans) Commander Jamaal Muhammad said this case is unusually difficult. Dodd, a local veteran, has paperwork placing him at Fort Lewis in Washington where soldiers were sent to be deployed to Korea. Doctors have documented not only his Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, but also the shrapnel still in his body from the mortar round that struck him during the war. However, because no one can find documentation - including the Purple Heart for his war injuries - that says he was in Korea, he has been denied his benefits. "I've never seen one like this," said Muhammad. Dodd who was bom and raised in Spartanburg, SC, was drafted into the Army and served from 1950-1952 in Company D of the 24th Infantry Division. Back then the Army was segregated, so he served with black soldiers in combat. He said during his basic training at Fort Jackson, South Carolina, white trainees would taunt him with racial epithets and start fights with him. He was shipped off to Korea, and when he arrived his sergeant made it clear some of the soldiers who stepped off the boat wouldn't live to get back on it. He said the thought of dying over there brought him to tears. He still volunteered to do battle on the front line so he could get See Veteran on A2 ' Any skirp color can burn' Doctors warn that African-Americans need caution in the sun, too BY TODD LUCK THE CHRONICLE AND TERIANA JONES FOR THE CHRONICLE It's summertime and the Fourth of July weekend awaits. Dreams of fun in the sun abound in the minds of fun-loving Winston-Salem residents. But doctors warn, don't have too much fun in the sun, even those with dark skin. "Any skin color can bum," said Sarah Taylor, M.D., M.P.H., assistant professor of dermatology at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center. "All human skin is affected by ultraviolet (UV) light, and every day we're bombarded by it. Even when it's cloudy outside, there's ultraviolet light coming through," she said, and that goes for African-American skin, too. "A lot of the time people don't think African American skin does burn or tan, but it can do both," she said. John Barrymore, an expert on the website www.healthiiowstuffworks.com, says having dark skin in the sun and heat can be an advantage and disadvantage for some people. Dark complexion people are less likely to get sunburn skin cancer. The disadvantage is, since dark See Burn on A8 r s Locals applaud recent Supreme Court rulings J^cisions on Obamacare, ^ay marriage, fair housing BY TODD LUCK THE CHRONICLE Same-sex marriage is legal in all 50 states, subsidies that allow millions to afford health insur ance through the Affordable Care Act will contin ue, and unintentional housing discrimination is still illegal. Those were the US Supreme Court rulings last week that had activists both locally and nation wide celebrating. The court's historic 5-4 ruling legalizing same-sex marriage nationwide and requiring all states to recognize same-sex unions was the decision that got the most attention. The White House was lit in rainbbw colors the night of Jane 26, and millions of Facebook users put a "Celebrate Pride" rainbow filter over their profile photos to show support for the ruling. The Rev. Roger Hjfyes, pastor of Church of the Holy v Spirit Fellowship, took to Facebook declaring vic tory after hearing the news. For the last 14 years, Hayes, an openly gay black pastor, has led a small non-denominational congregation open to those who are lesbian, gay, transgender and bisexual (LGBT). He said he's officiated over same-sex weddings years before they were recognized by the state-same-sex mar riage became legal in North Carolina on October 10, 2014, when a federal judge struck down the state's same-sex marriage ban. That weekend. See Locals on A2 ?= V ? # T | s _ ~ S ,% o j ? i '?? i| y o ?t rw J ASSUMED?5 STORAGE BHS2|9 ? of Winston-Salem, LLC He A