Published every Wednesday in Southport, NC Up, up a Miss Brunswi* flyers at Satu ’ *nts 'Local golfei tournament at Pantnei a Ai p- v. •; • . ‘ < : . Wastewater treatment District system draws interest of Oak Island By Richard Nubel Staff Writer With Brunswick Electric Member ship Corporation legally jilted, South east Brunswick Sanitary District has a new suitor'— the Town of Oak Island. Long Beach town councilors and Yaupon Beach commissioners voted unanimously Thursday to direct staff to prepare a proposal by which the Town of Oak Island would assume responsi bility for the Southeast Brunswick Sanitary District wastewater manage ment system. The Town of Oak Island will be created July 1 by the consolida tion of Yaupon Beach and Long Beach. The idea that the new town should offer to take over in some manner Southeast Brunswick Sanitary District’s wastewater system came from Yaupon Beach town attorney Roger Lee Edwards, Yaupon Beach mayor Dot Kelly said. “(Edwards’) thought was that they were under the gun from USDA,” mayor Kelly said. “It might help the annexation to go down a bit.” The U. S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has loaned or granted SBSD virtually the entire $11.3-million cost of wastewater management system con struction. The federal agency has ‘I think it’s time to get down to specifics and explore what we can do. And, that can be a combination of a lot of things.’ Joan Altman Long Beach mayor threatened to call loans to the district if management is not improved, SBSD chairman Gene Formy-Duval said recently. A substantial portion of Southeast Brunswick Sanitary District served by its wastewater management system will become part of the Town of Oak Island in September. Yaupon Beach ini tiated annexation of about 500 acres bounded by Long Beach Road, Airport Road and Fish Factory Road in September, 1998, and a court upheld See Oak Island, page 7 Festival to ‘rest’ Sunday, July 4 North Carolina will save its biggest Fourth celebration ‘til the fifth this year, as Southport hosts the official state observance of Independence Day. The N. C. Fourth of July Festival will hold its parade and fireworks display on Monday, July 5, preserving a more solemn atmosphere on the Fourth. Events on Sunday will include gospel singing on the Southport waterfront, ceremonial activ ities at Old Smithville Burying Ground and a wreath-laying at The Moving Wall, a replica of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial on display at the city waterfront There will be children’s entertainment in Keziah Park, and the art and craft exhibits will remain open in Franklin Square. Festival-goers may need that day of rest The festival officially begins Thursday with the opening program and natural ization ceremony, then accelerates Friday with the opening of art and craft exhibits in Southport and Beach Day in neighboring Oak bland. Saturday activities will include die 5K Freedom Run and children’s events in the morning, exhibits and tours throughout the day, and a street dance that evening. Monday, July 5, is a Ml day. The festival parade begins at 11 a.m., to be followed by a regatta on the Cape Fear River, entertainment throughout the afternoon on two park stages, a Sea Notes Choral Society and Brunswick Concert Band program, continued art and craft exhibits, and a beach music concert featuring The Embers. The fireworks display over the river at dusk will bring the 1999 festival to a close. The Moving Wall will continue on display through July 8. mmmrw. ISLAND GIRLS Caribbean sounds pleased young and old alike Monday evening as Sons of Steel entertained the Memorial Day crowd in Waterfront Park. The Greensboro group will appear again June 12 in a Beach Day celebra tion at the Long Beach cabana. Photo by Jim Harper County spending evaluated Brunswick faces 25-percent hike By Terry Pope Staff Writer Somewhere in the county's proposed $104-million budget, there might be areas to cut spending and reduce the 60-cent tax rate. Maybe. Brunswick County commissioners on Thesday began trying to do just that while sifting through the sheriff's department and emergency medical services budget requests. That’s where 23 of the 62 new full-time employees that county manager Jim Varner wants to hire would go to work. “Each time you cut out a little bit of money, you cut out a little tax,” said commission chairman JoAnn Bellamy Simmons. “You can look at the larger items, but there are a lot of smaller items that have increased, too.” So page by page, commissioners are questioning how last year’s $83.3-mil lion budget has suddenly grown to $104 million in one year. Varner’s pro posed 1999-2000 budget would increase spending 25 percent, he says, in an effort to get a handle on the coun ty’s substantial growth. Very few full time workers have been added to departments during the past four years. A public hearing will be held on the budget this Thursday, June 3, at 7:30 pm in the commission chambers in the public assembly building at the county government center near Bolivia. The board has also scheduled three more workshops for June 8, 10 and 14, all at 3 p.m. It will meet with the Stormwater Management Oversight Committee and chairman May Moore at 6 p.m. on June 14. Commissioners can adopt a budget anytime following Thursday’s public hearing but must do so before July 1. Brunswick Community College olti cials plan to address commissioners June 8, when the board also will review the budgets for operation services, solid waste management and the coun ty landfill. The budget is based on an assess ment of 60 cents per $100 valuation and on an estimated tax base of $8.9 billion. A revaluation earlier this year increased property values tin average of 57 percent countywide over last year, when the tax rate was 68.5 cents per $100 valuation. Brunswick County sheriff Ronald Hewett requested $3.83 million to run his department while Varner has rec ommended that amount be trimmed to $3.53 million, a reduction of about $298,000. Hewett told commissioners Monday he needs four more deputies, a bailiff, secretary, domestic violence See County, page 7 tit nilr 'HTnir'i - ~ Photo by Diana D'Abruno Brunswick Learning Center graduate Shaun Brown gives mom Mary Daniels a kiss after the graduation ceremony Thursday. Area graduations are reported extensively in the Neighbors section this week. Budget review continues New town still looking at 36-cent rate By Richard Nubel Staff Writer A proposed $113,000 program by which the Town of Oak Island street department would acquire equipment and per sonnel to do street widening and new paving “in-house was nixed by Long Beach town councilors and Yaupon Beach commissioners at a joint budget planning workshop Thursday. The Town of Oak Island will be created by consolidation of the towns of Long Beach and Yaupon Beach on July 1, also the first day of the new fiscal year for local governments in North Carolina Public works director John Olansen said the paving pro posal was aimed at expanding the ability of the town work force to create bicycle and pedestrian paths and to widen streets. That “in-house” ability would cut down on the amount of paving work fo^ which the town must contract with private firms. He estimated the in-house paving capabil ity would save Oak Island between $400,000 and $500,000 over the course of ten years. Though the expensive program was scrapped by budget makers, Olansen said the proposed $990,649 street depart ment budget could not be pared by a like amount. Contract costs of doing the paving work he anticipated the town work force would do must now be plowed-back into the street department budget. Commissioners and councilors said they were dissuaded to begin an in-house paving program this year, as they were not sure how much paving would have to be done in the 500-acre mainland annexation area which is to become part of Oak Island on September 30. The axing of the “in-house” paving capability was com missioners’ and councilors’ first major policy decision in this second of six anticipated budget workshops. Elected officials See Budget, page 8 NEWS on the NE1: www.southport.net