April 15.1998 THE STATE PORT Phone 910-457-4568/Fax 910-457-9427/e-mail pilot@southport.net _Volume 67, Number 34 50 o- o Chili cookoi Food, fun and festivi Marathon g South in 13-inning tl Adult busin< Lakes ordinance seel n Published every Wednesday m juumport, NC mem "-t ■ - —irrwan~r't rwr if r i urn n in w— Photo by Jim Harper Horn (horn) n. 1. a sound-making device operated by blowing air, or occasionally squeezing a bulb, or push ing a button. 2. a butting device found on a variety of barnyard animals, sometimes even on small goats in petting zoos at Robert Ruark Chili Cookoffs. Grant will fund study of northern area sewer By Terry Pope County Editor A state grant will help begin plan ning and development for the coun ty’s 20-square-mile regional sewer system in the northern area. The N. C. Rural Economic Development Center has awarded the county a $125,000 grant that will be used to contract with W. K. Dickson and Co., a Charlotte firm which will develop the county’s 201 Facilities Plan and weigh the pro ject’s environmental impact on the community. The study area includes Navassa, Leland and the North Brunswick Sanitary District. The project is being coordinated with Landmark Development Corp., developer of the Magnolia Greens golf course subdivision. Landmark has paid for sewer line extensions to the golf course project off U. S. 17 south of Leland. Dickson will have 105 days to draft the plan and will be paid $170,000. Last week, Brunswick County commissioners awarded consultant Skip Green and Associates $1,000 for obtaining the grant and also transferred $46,000 from the county’s contingency fund to be applied toward the project. Commissioners have set aside $1,590,600 for the Northeast Brunswick Wastewater Facility pro ject in revenues from the county general fund and other sources. But commissioners say the system, once See Grant, page 6 Yaupon looks across waterway ‘Economics’ reason for annexation plan By Richard Nubel Municipal Editor Seeking greater control of their wastewater treatment plant property and their town’s economic destiny, Yaupon Beach commissioners have adopted a resolution of intent to annex 483 acres abutting Long Beach Road and Fish Factory Road on the mainland. Annexation is the process by which municipalities increase their size, taking land adjacent to their boundaries. The proposed Yaupon Beach annexation across the Elizabeth River marsh into the heart of an area now governed by Southeast Brunswick Sanitary District will be the subject of a public hearing at 7 p.m. June 23 at the Oak Island Moose Lodge on Long Beach Road. Under terms of annexation law, town clerk Nancy Wilson said, Yaupon Beach commissioners will be free to adopt an ordinance of See Annexation, page 7 PROPOSED ^ ANNEXATION \ AREA McIntyre, corps Feds address beach erosion By Richard Nubel Municipal Editor While federal officials cannot guarantee funds for construction will follow, one short-term erosion control measure and one major nourish ment project are on the drawing board for Oak Island. Seventh District U. S. Congressman Mike McIntyre and U. S. Army Corps of Engineers officials last week touted beach erosion control measures and a planned investigation of poor water quality in the Lockwood Folly River basin in two “town hall” meetings at Ocean Isle Beach and Holden Beach. The corps has moved into the “design phase” of a proposed $5-mil See Erosion, page 8 Rescue funding levels stay same By Terry Pope County Editor Local volunteer fire and rescue squads have been told to expect the same level of funding for the 1998-99 fiscal year as was received last year while the county continues to work towards a per manent funding solution. Recommendation from a study committee to the Brunswick County Board of Commissioners is to fund the fire and rescue squads at the proposed level for a two-year period, recognizing that it will take that time to develop and put in place a permanent financ ing source — such as special fire and rescue tax districts or estab See Rescue, page 6 Long Beach TVash answer Tuesday By Richard Nubel Municipal Editor Town council has set next Tues day as the day it will decide whether or not Long Beach will sign-on to Brunswick County’s six year, $30-million plan to provide roadside refuse collection county wide. That decision, and a decision to resell a leaf vacuum once thought critical to the town's management of yard debris, came at a special council meeting April 7. At that session, councilor Kevin Bell called the $82,000 leaf vacuum the town has ordered through the state procurement service a “white ele phant” and said other towns using similar equipment find it in the shop more often than not. Only councilors Mike Oxford and J. K. Somers opposed his motion to resell the machine before delivery is made. A manufacturer’s rep has told the town there will be other buyers for the machine which has been on order for nine months. After swapping information with a representative of Waste Industries Inc., council said Brunswick County will have the town’s deci-. sion on refuse collection next • See Trash, page 9 School goals are something to shoot for By Holly Edwards Feature Editor „ Hundreds of goals and strategies to improve ■* virtually every aspect of the Brunswick County school system - from classroom instruction to transportation - are included in a report submitted by superintendent of schools Marion Wise during the annual board of education retreat. Board members applauded Wise’s ambitious programs and pointed to rising test scores as ah indication that the new administrative team is doing its job. “He certainly has been aggressive in his attempt to revamp and upgrade the school sys tem and to meet the requirements the state has set forth/’ said board member Pat Brown. “He and his team are doing the best they can. Even if they can’t achieve all the goals, the goals provide a vision for Brunswick County.” Board vice-chairman Joyce Hewett said the school system is “moving in the right direc tion,” and board member Bud Thorsen said Wise's goals, wijl set a “high standard" for everyone in the school system to follow. But. despite improvements in student perfor mance. board members listed several lingering concerns and piroblems, such as overcrowded classrooms, low teacher and student morale, poor communication among students; and teachers and chronic discipline problems. “Until we get parents that will stand behind the teachers and provide discipline at home, we’re going to have discipline problems at school,” Thorsen said. "The school system isn’t there to raise kids, but more and more time is being spent on guidance and discipline and it's taking time away from instruction. Thorsen added that students sometimes get suspended from school deliberately so they can have a "mini-vacation at home. "A lot of kids do something stupid just to See Schools, page 9 District Court 12 Police report 12 Tax listings 13 Obituaries 19 Calendar 5B Church 7B Schools 8B TV schedule 1 11B Classifieds 5C ■ NEWS on the NET; www.southport.net “