5 . Hi# COUNTY LIBRARY 6ENERAL DELlVEfY Lady Patriots 1 MARSHALL NC 26753 THE PEOPLE OF MADISON COUNTY SINCE 1 90 1 Thursday, March 6, 1986 25c Gospel Singing Planned For March 14 Ed Ball will host a gospel singing at the Tri-County Baptist Tabernacle on March 14 at 7 p.m. The Spencer Family from Ohio will be the guest singers. Everyone is invited to attend. Retired Teachers To Meet March 12 The Madison County Retired Teachers will meet on March 12 at 11 : 30 a.m. at Mary's Restaurant on the Marshall Bypass. Marie Willis of Mars Hill will be the guest speaker. All retired school teachers are invited to attend. American Legion Meets Tonight American Legion Post No. 317 will hold their monthly meeting tonight at 6:30 p.m. at the Legion Hall in Marshall. All members are urged to attend. School Board Meets March 12 The Madison County Board of Education will hold their mon thly meeting on March 12 at 10:30 a.m. in the Madison County Court House. GOP Lincoln Day Dinner Saturday Madison County Republicans will hold their annual Lincoln Day dinner Saturday night at 7 p.m. in the cafeteria of Mars Hill College. Associate Supreme Court Justice Rhoda Billings will be the featured speaker. Dems Hold Precinct Meetings Tonight Madison County Democrats will hold precinct meetings throughout the county tonight at 8 p.m. Meetings will be held at all local polling places. Democrats will elect delegates to the county convention scheduled for April 5. Weaverville Library Program Set "Delving Into Your Roofs" will be the subject of a program at the Weaverville Public Library on Sunday at 3 p.m. The program will explore family research, particularly in the Reems Creek area. Guest speakers will include Doris Cline Ward of the Old Bun combe Genealogical Society, Sarah Cole and Blanche Roberts Robertson who is currently working on a history of the area. County Jobless Rate Unemployment declined in Madison County during January, ac cording to figures released this week by the North Carolina Employment Security Commission (ESC.) In county joblessness stood at 7.2 per cent of the workforce during the first month of the year, a full percent point less than the December reading of 8.2 percent. The ESC report estimates that 460 Madison Countians were without work during January. 80 fewer than the previous month The ESC estimates also report that the county's force force declined during the month by 190 workers, accounting for much of the decline in the overall employment rate. statewide, unemployment stood at 5.9 percent in January, according to the BSC estimates The decline in Madison County unemployment ran counter to the trend in neighboring counties in January. Buncombe County reported an increase in joblessness to 5.6 per cent, up more than two percent from December. Haywood County also saw unemployment increase by 2.6 per cent to a January reading of nine per cent. Yancey County joblessness also increased by more than a percentage point to 3.8 percent. In Tennessee, Cocke County reported that state's highest unemployment rate, 24.6 percent, despite adding more than 200 jobs during the month. April 16 Is Deadline For Nuclear Dump Comments ison County Nuclear ?Waste Education Committee reports that residents wishing to make wril ten comments to t he U.8: Department of Energy concerning the : uclear waste storage facility have until April 16 to hev? their comments included in the Although t ficidls did not -a 3 so luring last week's public briefing in Vsheville it ti DOE ave specific eluded the Tlx NucMtr %ast? Edwatio. UkystajI mcr m I beading respond to letters I which do not include this information, but only letters which fulfill this re quireroent wW Da included in (he public record for this stage of the pro 1 be to U.S. Department of Eaergv CryataMar rati Offk* MOO Soath CM? V venae. ArgonM. 111. 50 Attend Mars Hill Public Hearings Aldermen To Study Proposed Rules By ROBERT KOENIG An estimated 50 Mars Hill residents and businessmen at tended Monday night's public hearing on a proposed or dinance governing outdoor advertsing. Many of the businessmen present voiced objections to the plan to restrict billboards and other forms of outdoor signs. The public hearing was held prior to the start of the regular monthly meeting of the board of aldermen. A second public hearing concerning changes in the town's fire code was held following the sign ordinance hearing. Mars Hill Mayor Owen Tilson opened the meeting by telling the audience, "I could be down in Florida living the good life. I don;'t have to be here, but I want to be. I can assure you we're not going to do anything to hurt Mars Hill. We're not going to have a lot of political mess. We're running this tiown on a non partisan basis." Tilson said that the hearing was called to learn the public's reaction to the proposal. The board took no final action on the proposed ordinance during Monday's meeting. Mars Hill druggist Ed Howard worried that the proposed or dinance would lead to lawsuits. Tilson responded, saying, "We want to take care of this before they (billboards) get here." Insurance agent Clyde English, who also operates a Big Branch Rd. restaurant, said he opposed a proposed ban on flashing electric signs. English has a flashing sign outside his restaurant. He told the meeting, "I would like my sign to stay as is." Former hardware store owner Bob Phillips said he believed that the provisions of the proposed regulating off-premises advertising were unenforcable. Phillips also warned that a ban on off-premises advertising would hinder development by national chains such as Holiday Inn. Bill Zink Jr., operator of Zink's Small Engine Repair, also argued against the proposal. Zink said a provision calling for removal of political signs within ten days of an election was too short a time period. Zink also questioned a provision of the proposal that would ?ban signs obstructing passageways and defended flashing neon signs, saying, '1 can't see a thing wrong with flashing signs. I don't think they're a bit distrac ting." Finally, Zink said he opposed the proposal because it would prohibit forms of outdoor advertising not yet invented. J.F. Robinson asked if Signs at his Texaco service station and the Western Steer Restuarant would have to be removed. Mayor Tilson said that most of the signs presently standing would meet the requirements of the proposed ordinance. Tilson added that a sign Robirison erected on cemetery pro perty adjacent to the Western Steer would have to be remov ed. In response to another question, Tilson said that the or dinance would be in effect in the one-mile jurisdictional area outside the town limits. Another businesswomen said the proposal would discourage business at a time when Madison County has one of the state's lowest sales tax incomes. Robinson also warned that the proposal would harm the business community. He said, "You remember what Mars Hill looked like in 1966- 13 empty buildings and most of them falling down. We'll have the same situation again if something isn't done." Dr. Evelyn Underwood, a member of the Planning and Zon ing Board and one of the authors of the proposed ordinance, told the hearing, "It was imperative that we do some planning in advance of this growth, and not just grow up like Topsy." Dr. Reese Steen, also a member of the planning board, told the hearing, "We expect this growth to come very rapidly. We felt it was imperative that we do something now. We conferred with businessmen and asked, 'What size sign do you need?'" Electrician David Emerson also spoke out against the pro posal and called on the town to begin an inspection program to enforce the county building code. Both Steen and architect Wayne Roberts said they sup ported creation of a Board of Appeals to hear disputes arising from the proposed sign ordinance. The public hearing concerning the sign proposal adjourned at 8:30 p.m. A second public hearing on proposed changes in the fire code followed immediately. Mars Hill fire chief Eddie Fox outlined points in the code which will be changed. The changes deal with permits for one -Continued on Page 8 Hot Springs Aldermen Meet The Hot Springs Board of Aldermen learned how to apply for state grants during their monthly meeting held Monday night. The board listened to the steps in volved in grant application as presented by Myra Grant, a representitive for the Land of Sky Regional Council. Grant explained that up to $750,000 is available to the town for economic development and other community revitalization pro jects. Randall Lanier,, water supervisor for the town, told the board that he had purchased the flow meter and compositor for the sewer system. The board had ordered the purchase at the Feb. meeting. Lanier said that due ' to stricter state rules on sewer systems now in effect, extra maintenence would by required. The water supervisor asked the board for extra compensation for the additional work he would be re quired to perform. The aldermen agreed to Cable the issue of Lanier's salary. The aldermen also learned that a 60-year franchise granted to Carolina Power & Light by the town for elec tric service will soon expire. Chip Hutchins, a representitive of CP4L, presented the board with a host ofreasons for renewing his com pany's franchise. A second reading of the franchise document will be held at the April board meeting. All residents are urg ed to attend the reading. The board also heard complaints from residents about foul smelling dog pens and old cars being left on the roads. The board agreed to send notices to offenders. Further action was promised if the notices are ig nored. The next regularly scheduled meeting of the board will be held on April 7 at 7:30 p.m. Dump Opponents Ask Martin To Take Tough Stance By BILL STUDENT Staff Reporter Gov. Jim Martin's ? "town meeting" in Asfieville Thursday developed into an anti-nuclear dump session. Martin scheduled the session to heir what's on the minds of Western North Carolinians. Martin got an earful, as organ izations from Haywood, Buncombe and Madison counties used the meeting to present a united front against the location of a proposed nuclear waste repository in West ern North Carolina. Representatives of anti repository groups from each of the three affected counties presented petitions bearing thousands of sig natures to Martin during the meet ing in the Asheville City Council chambers. "We gave to the governor tens of thousands of signatures that were the result of our preliminary pet ition drive, Robert Earnest of the Haywood Anti-Dump Leadership Team, said this morning. "And we than Buncombe and Madison counties was on that list, along with a second North Carolina site, near Raleigh. DOE set up a 90-day period to receive public input on its selec tions, and a final recommendation on the 12 sites is scheduled for July. Opponents of the repository told Martin that DOE will not consider the factors most relevant to the WNC region until after that rec ommendation. And that means that WNC will probably remain on the list until 1992. The major reasons that WNC should be removed from DOE's list as soon as possible are economic. Earnest said. Western North Carolina depends heavily on tourism, and many be lieve that tourists will not want to come to an area that is home to a nuclear waste dump. "The issues that pertain to this area will not be considered until the 1990s If we are still being con sidered by 1992, I have no doubt we'll be disqualified then. But I don't want us to have to wait that "That's a vague phrase, and I think the law actually was intended to imply that if damage was done to somebody's property, that they would be reimbursed," Earnest said. "But a broader interpretation would imply that the government would be responsible for any econ omic hardship within the broad based area." Martin told the overflow crowd during Thursday's meeting that the state was attacking the issue from three sides. ? The metamorphic com position of the rock bodies in WNC and central North Carolina makes the rock too fractured to allow con struction of the underground storage vaults. ? The location of underground water tables above the rock form ations. ? Proximity of both North Car olina sites to growing population centers. Earnest and other repository op ponents say DOE needs to consider three other factors, and needs to consider them now : ? Population variables. The population figures used by DOE did not take into consideration summer residents, tourists, nearby college populations and a large number of people living on the outskirts of cities and towns, but not counted ?s being within the city. ? Tourism. The site's location CwHiwrt in Prr " FBEMC Ni * Y *, >. l i i of directors of the Fren ? eg Bread Electric Membership Carp, named a nominating committee at ,Un meeting in Marshall mi Tuea iy The nominating oommittee will ?eat on March II it p m the co operative's headquartan on VS. 113 pykerxull of M : tosh and H.G Yancey County; M.A Jr ? iaket of Mi hell Oc it} nd Ursk Shelter of Unicoi County bggtf. 4)1 const* r can our ? n mbrrs if th. board ol HWctors rtt tpt ns ?q> - re lot Car of Mar vx