May 12,1999 THE STATE PORT Students lea in school-sp rlayon North Bruns uptothepla Volume 68, Number 38 Publis tS)Z? U) Q* Q * QftfO * * e-3 ro * CO i * ° iesday in Southport, NC BEACH SAND Council ‘interest’ expressed By Richard Nubel Staff Writer Even without critical cost informa tion finalized, Long Beach Town Council Tuesday night said it has ah interest in nourishing the Oak Island beachfront with sand from the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers' Wilmington Harbor Project. Council voted unanimously to send a "letter of interest" to the corps through the Brunswick Beaches Consortium, a coalition of seven beach towns and Brunswick County that has formed to facilitate beach nourishment projects. "It's a big public works project," mayor Joan Altman said. Corps officials two weeks ago spoke to a meeting of Brunswick Beaches Consortium representatives, saying up to 7.75 million cubic yards of beach quality sand could be removed from Jaybird Shoal, near the mouth of the Cape Fear River, during the Wilmington Harbor Project. The pro ject calls for the widening and deepen ing of the Cape Fear River channel from a point above Wilmington to a point offshore’ of the river's mouth. The shipping channel will be relocated through Jaybird Shoal between Caswell Beach and Bald Head Island. It is believed most of the sand deposited on Jaybird Shoal migrated from eastern sections of Oak Island. Corps officials two weeks ago laid out preliminary cost figures for the placement of 150 cubic yards of sand per linear foot of beachfront from Bald See Sand, page 10 YAUPON Annexation of mainland tract okayed By Richard Nubd . Staff Writer ' Southeast Brunswick Sanitary District was without standing to challenge the annexation of nearly 500 acres along Long Beach Road, Fish Factory Road and Airport Road, resident Superior Court judge William C. Gore Jr. said in a written ruling issued April 14. Yaupon Beach commissioners reviewed judge Gore’s ruling Monday with town attorney Roger Lee Edwards. Judge Gore earlier had said he would rule in Yaupon Beach’s favor. He heard arguments in the case March 18. The Yaupon Beach annexation of mainland acreage becomes See Yaupon, page 16 GIMME A BREAK! Photo by Jim Harper It was The Agony and Ecstasy Revisited in the second Communities In Schools putting tournament at Oak Island Golf and Country Club. Last Saturday’s competition raised blood pressure, but it also raised funds for various supplemental education projects at schools throughout the county. 03 Q Crt'M Sanitary district Statute stops BENIC, SBSD system sale By Richard Nubel Staff Writer A sketchy proposal of Thursday by which Southeast Brunswick Sanitary District would have sold its wastewater management system to Brunswick Electric Membership Corporation was shattered Monday when officials of the U. S. Department of Agriculture declared the deal ille gal. SBSD commissioners were directed to hire a professional manager for the district and were told they stood to have federal loans made for construction of the $ 11.3-million wastewater management system called, if management of the district were not improved. “The message, basically, we got was: ‘Get your act together or we call the notes,'” SBSD chair man Gene Formy-Duval said of the warning delivered to district officials by Willard Dean, director of business and utilities development for the N. C. Office of Rural Development, a branch of USDA. It was this agency that provided the bulk of all funds used to build the SBSD waste water managemen t system in a combination of See District, page 9 ‘We’ve still got a lot of work to do. We’ve got a lot of coming together to do... We’ve basically got 50 days to get something done.’ Gene Formy-Duval District chairman Willard Dean and Gene Formy-Duval talked Monday about how well the new Southeast Brunswick Sanitary District treatment plant is operating, then met again later at the sanitary district office where Dean expressed an entirely different view of SBSD management ADM, county tax case continued By Terry Pope Staff Writer Round two is scheduled for June. A dispute over valuation of real prop erty at the Archer Daniels Midland Corp. plant near Southport wasn’t decided by the N. C. Property Tax Commission last week. Instead, the commission will reconvene June 22-23 in Wilmington to hear final arguments and to make a ruling. Evidence was presented by ADM and Brunswick County at the four-day hear ing last week that was adjourned Friday • morning so members could return to their families for the weekend. They left with a mountain of data, facts and fig ures to ponder while attorneys for both ADM and the county prepare tor final arguments next month. “It was a very direct hearing about replacement costs,” said- Brunswick County attorney Huey Marshall. “We're going through our revaluation process now, and we'd like to know what the appraised value of the proper ty will be." ADM officials do not agree with Brunswick County Tax Department's assessment of taxes due on structures at See Company, page 11 State school official visits Kirk says programs provide ‘focus’ By Diana D’Abruzzo Staff Writer In a whirlwind tour of Brunswick County schools Friday, Phil Kirk passed out shiny red apples to teachers, sneaked French fries from kids eating in the cafeteria and held a dialogue with educators about the ABC plan and upcoming end-of-year tests. Kirk, chairman of the State Board of Education, visited classrooms at Union Elementary, Shallotte Middle and Supply Elementary schools in the morning before meeting with adults later in the day. Walking into the Supply Elementary cafeteria around 11:30 a.m., Kitk was greeted by the smell of hamburgers and fries ond the sound of kids engaged in chat ter and laughter. Lunch in our school is a time when you can talk and make some noise,” principal Carolyn Williams explained to Kirk. ‘Good, good that s even okay in the classroom sometimes,” he said, moving toward youngsters eating at a nearby table. Sitting down in a small chair, Kirk asked the girl next to him, “What grade are you inr “Second,” she replied. “Well, 1 thought you were at least in fourth grade,” he said, smiling, and grab bing one of her fries. Moving next to a computer classroom where third-graders worked on 'thinking maps,” Kirk leaned over shoulders and chatted with children as they w orked won ders on computer screens. One boy turned to Kirk and asked a ques tion about the computer program. “You’d better ask her, Kirk said, point ing to the teacher. “I'm afraid 111 tell you See Schools, page 7 Photo by Diana D'Abruzzo Phil Kirk, chairman of the State Board of Education, sits with third-graders at Supply Elementary School on Friday. Kirk paid special attention to this lesson, where children were dis cussing how to write a story on “Why Mom Is Special.” Wal-Mart to blame ferrates? By Terry Pope Staff Writer Southport residents want to know if Wal-Mart is responsible for higher electric and sewer rates proposed in the next fiscal year budget. Several questioned the board of aldermen at a preliminary budget hear ing Thursday held to obtain input from citizens on how to allocate funds in the 1999-2000 city budget. They asked if a new Wal-Mart shopping center being built northwest of the city on N. C. 211 will force officials to spend more to accommodate the business. Southport alderman Paul Fisher said to expect a three-percent increase in electric rates, but he doesn't attribute the increase to Wal-Mart's arrival but to being locked into the city’s current utility contract through the year 2026. Rumors circulated last week that $2.5 million was needed to upgrade the city's water aid sewer system to please the department store were also put to Sye Southport, page!6 NEWS on the NM: wwwjsouthportnet