June 9, 1999 THE STATE PORT 50 cents Summer play It’s baseball season, but basketball action highlighted the week - ICi * h. * • . * - v jm >» ^ vt , ' IttlliMiH ' MM The N. C. Baptist A celebrate its 50th ai •JG35 CJ 3, O 'V t 11 Phone 910-457-4568/Fax 910-457-9427/e-mail pilot@southport.net Volume 68. Number 42 Published e’ JSR „ a. k ; • ! in Southport, NC BELVILLE ELEMENTARY Students in Gloria Faye Lloyd’s third- and fourth-grade class at Belville Elementary covered their teacher with gobs of whipped cream on Friday. Photo bv Jim Harper Lloyd offered herself as a target its incentive for her '.indents to excel on the N. C. Writing Test ‘Topping’ to the test By Diana D’ Abruzzo Staff Writer rmed with cans of whipped cream, s % Selville students showed no mercy .Z ^toward their teacher Friday as they let cream pies fly, coating her with the sticky sweet substance. After all, the chance to throw pies at a school teacher doesn’t come along every day. Gloria Faye Lloyd, a third and fourth grade teacher at Belville Elementary, offered herself as a target as incentive for kids to excel ott the N. C. Writing Test. And it worked. Ten of her 12 fourth graders received a three u;: a . '■ or' i le.-A. ’io press, a student must get at least ,< ?.5. Across the e;,, \n.."i ; aide at Belville. 42.7 percent p.r-vd the test tats year, up from 35.8 percent la •< year. Having promised to let her students “cream” her with a whipped cream pie if they scored well, Lloyd had to put up. So on Friday, the group of kids gathered at the year-round school, making mini-pies by See Test results, page 13 L Hampton Inn project eould be grounded 5 v Terry Pope ItatT Writer A proposed hotel and marina project adjacent to Brunswick County Airport property could he grounded under a new height control ordinance that won approval from county commissioners Monday. Developers want to build a hotel and mar ina, with diy storage for boats, adja cent to the airport on Long Beach Road. But part of the 43 acres would be ren dered unusable tor such a project under restrictions which also are subject to approval by Southeast Brunswick Sanitary District and municipalities w here the'height limit is mapped. The Brunswick County Board of Commissioners on Monday adopted the ordinance tor property that .lies within the county's jurisdiction, mostly the area north of N. C. 211- The hotel and marina project'would lie entirely within sanitary district boundaries. Gary Lawrence, representing the developers, said the height limit will make a third of the 43-acre tract his clients plan to develop not suitable lor the project, which also would include some restaurants arid shops along the tracoastal Waterway. "We felt' this would be a benefit to the lunty, community and the airport, id Lawrence. "If this ordinance is Lssed, that project would not be leasi e. It would cut it down to a scope that just would not be feasible. Lawrence said the developed have lied on the current height limit to plan eir project and that the site was select 1 because of the airport hvat.on. 'hat's at stake, he said. is. a S25-to 10-million investment and a|jpnw See Project, page 6 Photo by Jim Harper Up in flames Area firefighters tested their skill in extinguishing LP gas fires in a drill conducted at Southirort Elementary School. ‘Lean’ Southport budget requires 49-cent tax rate By Richard Nubel Staff Writer Sitting as the city’s budget committee for fiscal year 1999-2000, aldermen Paul Fisher, Meezie Childs and Wayne He welt have recommended a $7.09 million budget for the City of Southport in the year to begin July I. The committee has proposed a prop erty tax rate of 49 cents per $100 valu ation, four cents less than the property tax rate in this year of county revalua tion. Electric rates are proposed tc increase for about 55 percent ot resi dential customers and decrease margin (2.70%) Admin (15 30%) Part* & Recreation (8.00%) Reecue (2.00%) 8traat (8.50%) Fha (5.70%) Poire* (26.50%) ally for about 45 percent. No water or sewer rate changes have been pro posed, and monthly solid waste collec tion fees will be cut $2.38. This lean budget is withoul trills. The only significant budget increase out lined in the document is a doubling of costs for the city communifttsions cen ter to return to 24-hour local dispatch ot police, fire and rescue. In his budget message, city manager Rob Gandy issued a warning to alder men that the city 's badly depleted unap propriated general fund and and elec tric fund balances are likely to tall under scrutiny of the N. C. Local Government Commission, the ruin ol the state treasurer's office charged with See Southport, page 13 Rescue s< o tfh-r. •r 'fc- ■ cr k r .JStS Oaklsl Caswell S X says ould pay equal share By Richard Nubel Staff Writer Emergency medical service fees the Town of Oak Island may charge start ing in July could raise the proposed tax rate in Caswell Beach by as much as four and a half cents. At a budget workshop last Wednesday, Long Beach councilors and Yaupon Beach commissioners said the rescue fee town manager Jerry Walters had proposed to charge Caswell Beach in fiscal year 1999 2000 was too low. Councilors and com missioners said residents of the Town of Oak Island next budget year would pay the equivalent of 4.5 cents on that town’s tax rate to suppprt its rescue squad; Caswell Beach residents should pay that much, too. „ Councilors and commissioners also agreed that paid rescue personnel will be on-duty around the clock next year. This fiscal year, professional rescue personnel worked only daytime hours and volunteers responded to nighttime calls. Volunteers will remain members of the town rescue squad and will sup port paid personnel. The Town of Oak Island will be cfe Budaet hearings ■ Council for the Town of Oak Island continued its review of department budgets last Wednesday. Page 3. ■ The next budget work shop will be held today (Wednesday) at 6 p.m. at the Long Beach Recreation Center. ‘Look at the tax valuations.... Break it into who is paying for these services.... The people at this end of the island are.’ Jeff Ensminger Oak Island councilor ated July 1 by consolidation of tile towns of Long Beach and Yaupon Beach. For several years. Yaupon Beach and Caswell Beach have paid a percentage of Long Beach Rescue Squad costs equal to the- percentage of the < >ak island population hv:r, : c those two town.- in his budget pvopiw al for the fiscal year w hich aL negats Lay 1. Wallers had once ag. n used peivenlage-i'i-population as ae basis lor formulating a Caswell Be. eh rest-!;, lee tor I999-2(XK) in supjxxr: ':>;al $309.31 I rescue budget (so,hi- ••• Under Walters' proposal, f A a ell Beach would have paid the Jhwn of Oak Island $7,463 for rescue service next year. Under the parallel tax rate payment proposal commissioners and councilors fashioned Wednesday. Caswell Beach will be asked to pay between $50,000 and SbO.(XX). bach See Oak Island, page 6 , State press awards Pilot’s ad staff in win column The State Port Pilot advertising staff Friday matched the news department's ear-* lier achievement, earning the most North Carolina Press Association awards of any newspaper in the 3.500-to-10,000-circulation division. Signifying the honor was the Metro Plus Business Award, given on the basis of first-, second- and third-place awards received. This year, the •Pilot advertising department was presented 11 first-place awards among the 35 categories, three second-place awards and six third-place awards for a total of 20. In January, Pilot writers and photographers received 16 NCPA awards, more than twice the number of the runner-up newspaper. “The advertising staff has done a remarkable job," noted Pilot editor Ed Harper, See Awards, page 15 Pilot ad representatives (left to right) Sabrina Rabon, Diane McKeithan and Kim Adams display some of the 20 awards the newspaper received from the North Carolina Press Association Friday in Raleigh. NEWS on the NET: www.southport.net ■ ' • •' • . • - • •, ' / y.- ' • .• ' , V