South Brunswick opens basketball season, will meet Wildcats, Devil Pups - 1C December 4,1996 Neighbors 1 Entries are invited in the Pilot’s annual cookie contest with microwave prize — 7B Our Town Smith Island Land Trust increases effort to preserve ^ Bald Head ‘point’ — Page 2 Photo by Jim Harper Terry Wilson sets out Christmas decorations to be suspended from Long Beach utility poles. Both Long Beach and Yaupon Beach decorations are now up, ready for the annual Christmas-by-the-Sea parade down Yaupon Drive and Oak Island Drive on Saturday. Step-off time for paraders is 3 p.m. Area grocery stores VIC holds food drive The Brunswick County Volunteer and Information Center (VIC) will sponsor a food drive at most Brunswick County grocery stores this weekend. The drive will be conducted Friday, December 6, from noon to 6 p.m. and Saturday, December 7, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Volunteers will be collect ing food for the VIC Christmas Bas ket program. “Please schedule your grocery shopping so you can help the needy in our county to have a merrier Christ mas,” a spokesman urged. A VIC volunteer will be outside the grocery store and will have a flier noting the most-needed food for the Christmas baskets. flees of Hope are also placed in See Food drive, page 6 Long Beach weighs cost County water rate puts drain on town By Richard Nubel Municipal Editor Long Beach Town Council now knows that it can immediately sell 1,000 gallons of drinking water for $3 or less if it decides to develop a wellfield and build a treatment plant. The town also knows that its cost to recover water from the ground and treat it will drop over the years, as the town sells more water to more customers. Engineers estimate the cost may drop to $2.50 per thousand gallons as early as 2009 and to $2.25 per thousand gallons by 2020. What is not known to Long Beach is: How much will it cost to continue buying water from Brunswick County? “That’s not an easy question,” ad mitted assistant county manager Rob ert Hyatt, into whose realm of respon sibility the Brunswick County water system falls. Brunswick County has no firm pro jection of water costs even oyer the next two years, much less over the next 20. . -.v • v ' ? - Faced with Brunswick County’s requesi lijr V3fvpe«