Sports Two former South cagers squared off in Division I basketball Saturday — 1C Neighbors The offensive turned the Vietnam War and changed Sgt. Willie Gore’s life — IB Our Town Bald Head Island started pumping sand and cost may exceed $3 million - Page 2 Hospital may seek 'authority' By Richard Nubel Municipal Editor How Dosher Memorial Hospital was chartered may determine whether it should pay property taxes to Brunswick County and to the City of Southport, a lawyer for the hospital and Brunswick County tax supervi sor Boyd Williamson say. Hospital trustees learned Monday night their attorney, Michael Murchison of Wilmington, and Williamson will meet to discuss Dosher’s potential property tax liabil ity the first week in February. Under discussion will be whether some $1 million of real estate owned by the hospital and rented to doctors and oth ers at fair market value is subject to property taxation. Williamson, in a January 10 inter view with The State Port Pilot, sug gested property used for purposes other than those directly associated with the public hospital are subject to property taxation, under the N. C. Machinery Act, the body of law gov erning property taxation in this state. “Buildings on hospital property that are being rented and the doctors are making a profit and paying rent, that’s taxable,” Williamson said on January 10. The county tax supervisor said if the Dosher Memorial Hospital prop erties are “discovered” — added to the county tax scrolls -- the hospital could be liable to pay property taxes for the years 1991-95 with penalties gradu ating ten percent for each year of ar rears. In a January 15 letter to hospital administrator Edgar Haywood and finance officer James Shomaker, Murchison countered Williamson’s contention, saying there are “two ex emptions for real property taxes in North Carolina which arguably may apply to Dosher.” Murchison told hospital adminis See Hospital, page 6 ‘Dosher is in the real estate business. They’re creating a market force.... They can potentially rent cheaper by not paying taxes.’ Boyd Williamson Tax supervisor Forecast It's cold again. We can expect winter temperatures for the pe riod of Thursday-Sunday. Highs only reaching into the 40's. ^7^ # INSIDE i Opinion lusiness * 'i* ♦ ♦ 4 * | 4 110 Obituaries . *.,. II phurch.2B IliotTv phools; ♦*i\ A grackle can work up a powerful thirst just now eating chinaberries, and other delicious stuff that might be found under the bleak winter sun. How nice Photo by Jim Harper to be able to drop over to the nearby neighborhood gutter for refreshment. Wastewater management Yaupon, state finally to discuss alternative By Richard Nubel Municipal Editor Just shy of 18 months after declar ing a moratorium on new taps to the Yaupon Beach wastewater manage ment system because its method of disposing treated effluent was defi cient, N. C. Division of Environmen tal Management officials have called town leaders and their engineers to Raleigh to discuss “alternatives.” Mayor Dot Kelly and commission ers Dick Marshall and Roy Johnson will keep that appointment Monday, but have not been told which “alter natives” will be on the table. DEM’s Wilmington regional su pervisor Rick Shiver said Tuesday DEM staff has three treated effluent disposal options to put before Yaupon Beach officials. “Obviously, the option we have See Yaupon, page 11 Do recycling charges equal a double tax? By Richard Nubel Municipal Editor Commencement of Brunswick County’s contract to dispose of gar bage in partnership with a solid-waste to-energy company near Fayetteville leaves municipal officials here with two policy questions to face in bud get deliberations this spring: ■ Are municipal residents paying twice to recycle? ■ Is that bad? Town manager Jerry Walters of Long Beach and city manager Rob Gandy of Southport say they will bring those policy questions to their respective governing boards shortly, as the budget preparation process for FY 1996-97 progresses. They may also be questions for Caswell Beach and Boiling Spring Lakes, both of which operate recycling stations, and Yaupon Beach, which pays Caswell Beach so its residents may use a recy cling center there. Under terms of Brunswick County’s contract with BCH Energy Limited Partnership Inc., trash is hauled 90 miles by a private carrier to BCH’s ‘The likelihood is, we’ll reevaluate the need for a recycling center in the community. The $2,000 a month we pay for the center is a significant amount. ’ Jerry Walters Long Beach manager bubbling fluid bed incinerator where trash is burned, converted to steam and sold to a Dupont plant nearby. But first, recyclable items are re moved from the waste stream by BCH, under terms of its contract with See Double tax, page 6 Leland opts for regional sewer study By Terry Pope County Editor Leland officials have broken off negotiations with the Town of Belville and will instead pursue a regional ap proach to sewer service. The unanimous vote of council last week halts current talks with Belville over a proposed contract to tap onto that neighboring town’s sewer treat ment plant. It also officially endorses a Lower Cape Fear Water and Sewer Author ity study which may take six to seven months to complete. That draft will also include recommendations for all of northern Brunswick County. “The number-one priority now is regionalization, and the number-one See Leland, page 8 ‘I will bend over backwards to get Belville in the process. We want them in the process. But if we must, we will go on without them.’ Kurt Taube LCFWSA director Units permitted by county zoning We’re a ’mobile’ society By Terry Pope County Editor Figures show Brunswick County was on the move in 1995. So were a number of mobile homes. Mobile homes outnumbered new stick-built houses in the county by almost a four-to-one margin last year, ac cording to figures released by the Brunswick County Building Inspections Department. One reason is the county’s open-door zoning policy for mobile units. “Eighty-five percent of the county has mobile homes available to it by zoning,” said Brunswick County plan ning director Wade Home. Last yfear, 916 permits were issued for mobile homes, up 18 percent from the 773 permits issued in 1994. An average of 76 mobile homes are moved into the county each month, but building inspections doesn’t attach a value to the units for its yearly report. Also last year, 256 permits were issued for single-fam ily dwellings, an increase of 34 percent from 1994’s to tal of 191 permits. It was another building boom for the county with the value of new construction at $32.4 million in 1995, up 61 percent over the previous year’s estimate of $20.2 million. The county ranks second in the state in growth. Mobile homes are welcomed into the county because all residential zones now allow them in some form -- singlewides in higher density zones, and doublewides in medium density zones. “That is a rarity,” said Horae. “In my opinion, that is not good for the county.” In other counties the reverse is true - mobile homes are restricted to certain zones. Most residential areas do not normally allow them. County commissioners are See ‘Mobile’, page 9 BUILDING PERMIT SUMMARY