February 11,1998 THE STATE PORT _Phone 910-457-4568/Fax 910-457-9427/e-mail pilot@southport.net Volume 67, Number 24 50 cents Winter storm Winds, tides take a bite of Oak Islarj Pre-budget talks i Regional projects are on Long Beac Brunswick ABCs County, municipal stores show gooi Published every W' Q. O mthport, NC Union and Confederate Civil War reenactors joined a large turnout of residents and visitors at John Smith Cemetery on Saturday to com memorate the service in the Union cause of Abram Galloway and Photo by Jim Harper Abrain Blount. Galloway and Blount, who served with the 37th Infantry Regiment ofJLFnited States Colored TVoops, lived in the com munity and are buried here. Public forum helps choose future goals By Richard Nubei Municipal Editor Just how big should Southport be? Aldermen are going to-ask city residents to help them answer that question - a question of far reaching importance, all agree. At a workshop devoted to discussion of the city’s overtaxed wastewater management system Thursday, public services director Ed Honeycutt told aldermen if the city requires developers to deliver wastewater directly to force main lines - bypassing gravity lines which feed the city’s five overburdened pump stations - Southport’s waste water management system can continue to oper ate until a decision is reached on how big an improved sewer system should be. Naturally, the.size of the wastewater manage ment system the city builds will reflect how big the city is projected to be at build-out. For that reason, aldermen want to know how big city resi dents want Southport to be. Should the city stop at present city limits? Should it grow to the two Carolina Power and Light Co. canals? Should it expand farther out N C. 87andN.C. 211? ‘ “We can essentially stay as we are,” alderman Bill Delaney said. “Or, we can get on that train and invite everybody in. We have to ask the citi zens: Do we want to ride that train?” With that question in mind, aldermen have scheduled a public hearing for 7:30 p.m. February 19. The subject of that hearing: How big should Southport be? Officially, notices of the public hearing say it is to solicit comments, concerns and suggestions regarding future growth issues in the City of Southport's extraterritorial zoning jurisdiction - that area lying between the present city limits and See Future, page 7 How shall Southport Aldermen want to hear how residents of Southport want their city to grow and where they think city services should and should not be provided. 3 A public hearing on those issues will be held at 7:30 p.m. February 19 at City Hall City government wants to hear from you. 3 Southport More facts would help in analysis By Richard Nubel Municipal Editor City staff will tell aldermen Thursday night it has been unable to analyze Brunswick County’s consolidated solid waste proposal beyond year one of a pro posed six-year deal with Waste Industries Inc. And, Southport city manager Rob Gandy has expressed several reservations about the county’s proposal to the city governing board. Aldermen will entertain a proposed interlocal agreement with Brunswick County by which the city would allow the county to foot the cost of once-weekly solid wa’Ste collection in Southport.^ In a memorandum to aldermen this week, Gandy suggested the county propos al was incomplete. “We have analyzed the ‘numbers’ associ ated with this proposal, but can only do so See Southport, page 11 Decision Monday? County plan for collection is questioned ■ Towns seeking some explanation for contract costs By Richard Nubel Municipal Editor Reaction to Brunswick County’s proposal to provide once-weekly curbside refuse collection for virtu ally every home under a countywide contract with Waste Industries Inc. has ranged from enthusiastic to very guarded in the Southport-Oak Island area. Under terms of the ^5-million pro-, posal, Brunswick County has asked all 18 of its municipalities to join it in a contract by which the county will pay Waste Industries the equiv alent of $10.98 per household per month from its general fund, the fund supported in part by property taxes. In successive years of the pro posed six-year contract, Brunswick County’s general fund cost will be capped at $5 million, but each prop erty owner in the county will be billed at tax time for 2.5-percent per-year contract cost increases. Those once-yearly assessments on tax bills will range from $10.20 per household in year two of the con tract to $43.08 in contract year six. Last week, mayor Tom Tully of Boiling Spring Lakes hailed the county proposal for once-weekly service as one that would save that city an estimated $76,000 per year. Boiling Spring Lakes now spends the equivalent of $5.09 per house hold on solid waste costs and will cut that to a fraction, paying only for semi-annual large-item collections. Boiling Spring Lakes' board of commissioners became the first municipal governing board in the county to ratify the plan county offi cials have said all must execute bv See County plan, page 10 Not so. says attorney Company says county ignored low trash bid ■ Management firm could have left out services By Terry Pope County Editor County commissioners are expect ed Monday to sign a seven-year garbage deal with Waste Industries Inc. to provide countywide curbside collection service, but objections have been raised by another contrac tor. Waste Management of Wilming ton’s claim to have submitted lower bids came at the 11th hour, four days after a retreat ended with 18 munic ipalities as county officials dis cussed Waste Industries’ proposal. County attorney Huey Marshall said both companies were asked to sub mit proposals in October to take over the entire trash collection oper ation in the county, but only one complied with all specifications. Waste Management sent informa tion to the towns and municipalities , last week to complain that its pro posal “was not seriously considered or presented” during the three-day retreat between commissioners and town officials. Waste Management’s cost comparison claims to save the county $681,200 the first year based on providing curbside service to 40,000 residences at $9.56 each, rather than the $10.98 figure com missioners have negotiated with Waste Industries. Waste Industries holds a three year contract with the county to haul garbage to a Sampson County regional landfill and is currently operating under a six-month interim contract to haul and collect from county green-box locations. Information distributed by Waste Management last week did not stir town or municipal officials to ques tion the county’s decision to seek a $5-million ' deal with Waste Industries. Even among county leaders, there has been no debate over the counter-proposal. “Commissioners went about this See Trash bid, page 10 Schools to better serve ‘gifted’ student By Terry Pope County Editor School leaders hope an academically gifted program approved Monday by the Brunswick County Board of Education will identify top students earlier and offer them a higher level of instruction. The plan drafted over the past 18 months by a committee of 24 teachers, parents and administrators will be sent to the state in . March for approval. Under House Bill 53, the ■ N. C. General Assembly stipulated that school districts submit plans to better teach ’ academically gifted students, with the plans in effect and updated every three years. The increased emphasis in Brunswick County is identifying gifted students by the time they reach third grade, using end-of grade test scores as the primary indicator rather than standardized tests as used in the past. “We hope to identify students earlier who are academically gifted,” said Mary McDuffie, assistant superintendent of cur riculum and instruction. “We think that assessment will tell us about our other needs.” Most of the stipulations in the new plan are changes that are already being made on a daily basis in the county, she said. However, in the past, Brunswick County did not do a comprehensive assessment of third graders, but neither did most other school systems in ' See Students, page 6 ranmai Opinion Police report Business Obituaries Notices Calendar Church TV schedule District Court Classifieds n n n a o ^ u w o\ ■ NEWS on the NET: www.southport.net —