INSIDE Volume 62/ Number 48 Southport, N.C. July 21,1993/ 50 cents Brig. Gen. David Whaley hugs Col. Charles Zakszeski, outgoing Sunny Point commander, who will be retiring from the Army in September. A Photo by Mary both Blanch change of command ceremony was held Friday a the terminal. (See Page 8.) . j * Original request repeated Schools say progress must depend on funds By Marybeth Bianchi Feature Editor How can the Brunswick County school system raise its score on the state report card, if it doesn’t get the money it needs to get the job done? That’s a question the board of edu cation will be asking the board of commissioners when the two meet at 6 p.m. this Friday, July 23, at the county government center public as sembly building near Bolivia. "How can you improve the report card if the resources aren’t there?" chairman Donna Baxter asked after a special school board meeting Monday night. The county agreed to give the school system S7.85 million for cur rent expenses, which includes in structional programs dealing directly with the teaching of students and \ ‘Go back to the original budget. We’re going to ask for that. We’re not trying to be hard-core. To me we have the kids we have to answer to.’ Donna Baxter School board chairman support services providing adminis trative, technical and personal as sistance to enhance instruction. That, according to school board figures is 5.33 percent, or $397,084, more than the schools received last year; however, it is $1.5 million less than requested. The second part of the budget is capital outlay which covers building and renovation of schools, equip ment and vehicles. The county agreed to fund $576,672 of the pared-down $2.5 million budget. In its original request, the school See School funds, page 6 For Yaupon Beach tap-on Long Beach approves sewer use regulations By Holly Edwards Municipal Editor An exhaustive, 24-page sewer use ordinance detailing regulations for the operation of all future sewer lines owned by the Town of Long Beach was unanimously approved Tuesday night by the town council. Town officials say the ordinance was required by the state in order for Long Beach residents to tap onto Yaupon Beach’s sewer system, which is expected to begin operation in September. The ordinance outlines a number of regulations concerning the opera tion of a sewer system, including prohibited discharges, radioactive waste limits, maximum permissible levels of hazardous materials and wastewater discharge permit re quirements. Turtle Creek-By-the-Sea devel opers plan to construct 115 residen tial units and 100 motel units in the eastern portion of Long Beach, and developer Homer Wright plans to construct 22 residential units and a clubhouse nearby. Both developers, as well as a few residents of 79th Street, have expressed an interest in tapping onto Yaupon Beach’s sewer system. The developers or individual resi dents would be responsible for hav ing the sewer lines constructed, and would then turn them over to the Town of Long Beach for ownership and maintenance, explained town manager Tim Johnson. All sewer lines would have to be designed to match up with any future sewer lines built by the town, he added. Long Beach would then bill the residents 1.25 times the user rate charged in Yaupon Beach, plus an administrative cost to cover the added billings and any costs re See Long Beach, page 6 Gypsy moths land at MOTSU docks By Terry Pope County Editor Illegal aliens who flew from an ammunitions ship docked at Milita ry Ocean Terminal Sunny Point near Southport recently have state offi cials worried. Agriculture experts say the stowaways, feared to be a hybrid species of the Asian gypsy moth, may pose a threat to hardwood trees, .shrubbery and pines typically found in southeastern North Carolina. The answers may lie thousands of miles away. Researchers were sent scrambling to Germany this week to learn more about the enemy. An European variety of the moth is found in northeastern North Caro lina but its females do not fly. "The significance of this introduc tion is that the females do fly," said Howard Singletary Jr., director of "See Gypsy moths, page 6 Looking for minorities Schools to form recruitment panel to find good candidates By Marybeth Bianchi Feature Editor A minority recruitment task force has been created by Brunswick County schools in response to a black community contention that the school system doesn’t consider qualified minority candidates for vacancies. Reading from a memo following a two-hour executive session at Mon day night’s board of education meet ing, school Supt. Ralph Johnston ad mitted "the percentage of minority administrators and teaching staff needs to be increased to meet ideal ratios with the student population." Of the county’s 8,583 students, 25.7 percent are black. However, just 17.6 percent of the central of fice, administrative and teaching staffs are black. The largest percent age of black representation is at the assistant principal level, where five of the 13 employed, or 38.5 percent, are black. "In an effort to be proactive and clearly demonstrate our commitment ‘It just depends on how soon they get things done. This is something we’ve been asking for for two years.’ Thurman Gause to the effort, I am creating a minori ty recruitment task force," Johnston said Monday. The task force "will work toward assuring an equal percentage of certified minority staff equal with the student population" and establish a leadership academy so school sys tem employees can be trained for administrative positions. Assistant superintendent Jan Cal houn was given the responsibility of identifying and activating the task force immediately. Thurman Gause, the only black member of the board of education, said Tuesday he hopes the task force does something before the school year begins in August. He wants to see more blacks hired for central of fice positions, as well as principals and teachers. However, if nothing is done quick ly, a planned boycott of schools by the more than 2,000 black students across the county will be carried out, Gause said. "It just depends on how soon they get things done," said Gause. "This is something we’ve been asking for for two years. "We’ve been promised so many things. We’re not taking any more lies," he said. By keeping students home during the first ten days of school, blacks could keep the school system from receiving more than S2 million from the state, which allocates funds based on the number of students en See Recruitment, page 6 Schools want more money Warren can’t believe request By Terry Pope County Editor ■ ■ ' Don Warren says he can’t believe the schools want more money. Fighting over tax dollars in court irks the chairman of the Brunswick County Board of Commissioners. ' He ran for office last fall as a friend to education. 7 believe I have four friends on this one," he said. The three Democratic and two Republican commissioners frequently vote along party lines. They have awarded the schools what amounts to a 17-percent increase in total funding in the current budget However, die Brunswick County Board of Education wane an addi tional $4.3 million to build an elementary school near Leland and an other $525,000 acfded to current expenses. Does Warren think the schools deserve another $4.8 million? "No, I do not” he said Monday. "Emphatically, no." The two boards will meet Friday in the first step of a process some commissioners predict will end up in court "There's no money in the budget" said Warren. "It would have to come from the general fund." The schools will get $8,430,072 from the county for the 1993-94 fis cal year. The school system will also get an additional $1 million to up grade its computer technology program so computer systems can be placed in each classroom. "I feel like if expenses are over $1,100 per student through our county appropriations, then we are doing a fair share," said Warren. He has asked for the school system’s financial records so he can review them before Friday’s meeting. School board chairman Donna Baxter requested the joint meeting two weeks ago, he said. Interim county attorney Michael Ramos also got a phone call from, school board attorney Glen Peterson. That conversation included reference to court action should commissioners deny the request, War See More money, page 6 OUTSIDE Forecast The extended fore cast Thursday through Saturday calls for partly cloudy skies. Daytime highs will be in the lower 90s while nighttime lows will be in the lower 70s. Tide table HIGH LOW THURSDAY, JULY 22 11:04 a.m. 11:18 p.m. FRIDAY, JULY 23 11:57 a.m. -p.m. SATURDAY, JULY 24 12:08 a-m. 12:53 pjn. SUNDAY, JULY 25 1:04 a.m. 1:54 p.m. MONDAY, JULY 26 4:49 a.m. 5:07 p.m. 5:36 a.m. 6:00 p.m. 6:27 a.m. 6:59 p.m. 7:19 a.m. 7:59 p.m. 2:01 a.m. 8:17 a.m. 2:54 p.m. 9:05 pjn. TUESDAY, JULY 27 3:03 ajn- 9:17 a.m. 3:57 p.m. 10:09 p.m. WEDNESDAY, JULY 28 4:06a.m. 10:18 a.m. 5:00 p.m. 11:11 pjn. The following adjustments should be made: Bald Head Island, high -1.0, low -7; Caswell Beach, high -5, low -1; Southport, high +7, low +15; Yaupon Beach, high -32, low -45; Lockwood Folly Inlet, high -22, low -8.