" E NEWS RECORD aKKVinG THE PEOPLE OF MADISON COUNTY SINCE 1901 Thursday, June 5, 1986 25c r.AT ?COUMTV Li.T BRAi?V ?TMSflfcL D6LIVLRV r MARSHALL N C Salute To Class Of 1986 j * ? ? Special 16 Page Supplement Community Calendar American Legion Meets Tonigjit American Legion Post No. 317 in Marshall will meet tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the Legion Hall on Gudger (Back) Street in Marshall. All members are urged to attend and take part in the election of officers for the coming year. Carl Story To Perform Friday Night Carl Story and the Rambling Mountaineers will perform at the Spring Creek Volunteer Fire Dept. station house on Friday night at 7 p.m. This will be the band's final performance for Madison County audiences prior to their retirement. Spring Creek VFD Auction The Spring Creek VFD will sponsor an auction on Saturday night at 8 p.m. in the fire house. Kirkpatrick Family Reunion Set The annual Kirkpatrick family reunion will be held on June 29 in the Spring Creek VFD fire station from 11 a.m. until 6 p.m. Descendants of Jeptha and Martha Kirkpatrick and friends are invited to attend. For more information, contact Ethel Kirkpatrick at 627-7300. Laurel VFD Flea Market Planned The Laurel Volunteer Fire Dept. will sponsor a flea market at the fire hall on Saturday beginning at 9 a.m. Proceeds from the sale will benefit the fire company. Marshall Board Meets Monday Night The Marshall Board of Aldermen will meet on Monday night at 7:30 p.m. in the Town Hall. Hot Springs Hires New Policeman By ANDKKVV KUI.I.KK Ho? Springs aMcrmen spent much of Monday's meeting in closed ses sion discussing personnel matters The meeting began with a review of delinquent water customers. The board voted to disconnect water ser vice to delinquent customers who have not paid their bill by June 9. Alderman Gene Autry did not at tend Monday's meeting at Town Hall. Board member Donnie Franklin re quested that the board meet in closed session to discuss a personnel matter. When they emerged from the secret meeting, the board voted to appoint Don Magrini as the town's new police officer. The board also approved a new in surance policy to cover town property and will auction off a .38 caliber pistol as surplus property. Town clerk Lillian Whitten then asked the aldermen to lwHjl a second closed; door meeting to dfecoss a per sonnel matter. When they emerged from the second 20-minute secret meeting, board members announced that Mrs. Whitten was resigning her position with the town. Board members praised Mrs. Whitten for her years of service to Hot Springs residents The meeting adjourned at about 8:30 p.m. without taking any action on the town's 1986-87 budget. Mayor Kenny Ramsey is expected to call a special meeting to approve the town budget before the close of the fiscal year on June 30. The next regularly scheduled meeting of the board Wtyl be held on July 7. Farmers Sought For FmHA County Committee Eligible farmers in Madison Coun ty are invited to become nominees for the Farmers Home Administration (FmHA) County Committee, FmHA County Supervisor, Douglas E. Taylor announced today. As a result of the 1965 Farm Bill, two of the three members of FmHA County Committees must be elected. The third member is designated by FmHA. The Madison County Com mittee assists the FmHA county of fice in determining the eligibility of applicants for certain types of FmHA loans. Generally, farmers who are residents of the county but not FmHA borrowers are eligible to become nominees for the FmHA County Com mittee. For this first election only, two members will be elected at the same time. One member will be elected for a term of one year, and one member will be elected for a two-year term. In the future, all terms of service will be for three years each on a staggered basis. Nominating petitions must be returned to the Km HA County office by June 10. 1986 Additional information and ap plication forms for those who are in terested in becoming nominees for the County Committee are available at the FmHA county office. Griffin Building, Main Street. Marshall, N. C. or by calling 649-2821. County Commissioners Cut Property Tax Rate 1 By ROBERT KOENIG The Madison County Board of Com missioners voted Monday to lower the county's ad valorem tax rate to 75 cents per $100 of assessed valuation, a cut of 15 cents in the present property tax rate. The decision came at the close of the board's monthly meeting following discussion of the county's 1986-87 budget. The commissioners also cut Madison County tax collector Harold Wallin's salary by $200 a month after meeting briefly with the tax collector. Wallin agreed to the cut in salary when he was told he would either have to take a cut or have his assis tant cut from full-time to part-time. After a lengthy, and sometimes heated discussion, the commissioners agreed to renew a contract with Yancey County for joint operation of the IV-D child support enforcement office. Commission chairman James Led ford expressed opposition to continu ing the contract and suggested that operation of the IV-D office be placed with the Madison County Dept. of Social Services. Pat Miller, the IV-D investigator serving both counties, said it would be impossible to sever the contract on short notice and questioned why Led ford would want to change the pre sent arrangement. Miller said the current joint agreement saves the county administrative expenses. After a lengthy discussion, Ervin Adams and Virginia Anderson agreed to continue the present arrangement County attorney Larry Leake presented the commissioners with a letter from school superintendant Robert Edwards regarding the evic tion notice the commissioners sent to the school board in May. The day following their defeat in the May primary, the commissioners voted to order the Madison County Board of Education to vacate the of fices in the courthouse and find other headquarters. The commissioners ordered the offices be vacated by June 1. School board members responded by saying that the Board of Education has no other facilities available, sug gesting they may have to move to either the old Ebb's Chapel or Beech Glen School in order to comply with the eviction order. In his letter to the commissioners, Edwards agreed that the Board of Education should relocate, but asked for an extension of the June 1 deadline. Commission chairman James Led ford recommended that the county withhold school funds until the board of education vacates the courthouse offices. Larry Leake, who also served as the school board's attorney, sug gested that the commissioners hold off on withholding funds until after July 1. On a motion by Virginia Anderson, the commissioners agreed to extend the deadline until July 1, after which time, county funds will be withheld. Before making the motion, Ander son complained that the county has provided the school board with no cost rent and janitorial services for many years. "They don't mention that when they say they need more money." she said. The commission took no action on the school board's 1986-87 budget re quest during Monday's meeting. The Board of Education has requested $1,566,191 including $250,000 for con struction of new classrooms at Mar shall Primary School. The commissioners have discussed appropriating surplus funds from the school's 1965-86 budget for inclusion in the 1986-87 budget, a move school officials contend would result in a cash flow problem in August and September. Leake told the commissioners that school officials are considering using most of the surplus funds for repairs and to replace desks and other fur niture in the county's elementary schools. In addition to the letter from the school superintendant, Leake presented a packet of requests sub mitted by the county's school superintendants for improvements at their respective schools. The school board was expected to take action on the requests during their monthly meeting on Wednesday. The commissioners also made a number of appointments during Mon day's meeting. Harold D. Anderson of -Continued on Page 2 Three Indicted On Seven Sexual Offense Charges Bond Is Set At $150,000 Three Madison Countians, including a county employee cur rently under suspension, were indicted on Friday by the Madison County grand jury on sexual offense charges. All three had earlier been arrested on charges of taking indecent liberties with children following complaints filed by the parents of children formerly enrolled aL Abe Marshall Day Care Center. Indicted on seven counts each of engaging in a sexual of fense with children by force were Andrew L. Chandler Jr, also known as Junior Chandler; Lathem Hensley, also known as Buddy Norton; and Pam Coli. Both Norton and Coli had been residents of the Mintz Rest Home prior to their arrests. Chandler was a van driver employed by the Madison County Transportation Authority at the time the alleged offenses took place, sometime between January and last month. Chandler's duties including transporting day care children and clients of the Mountains of Madison project in Mars Hill. Chandler was suspended from his county job hours after he was initially ar rested back on May 19. He was re-arrested on a second charge of taking indecent liberties with a child on May 20. Superior Court Judge Charles Lamm set bond for all three defendants at $150,000 shortly after the indictments were handed down. Chandler was freed on bond on Friday night. No date for a hearing on the charges has been set. The three were indicted following testimony by Linda Gail King, an investigator with the Madison County Dept. of Social Services and Dr. Andrea Gravett, an Asheville physician who examined the seven children. None of the children testified at the Friday's grand jury hearing. In an unrelated matter, the grand jury refused to indict L.H. Cutshall on charges of voting in elections in 1982 and 1984. Cut shall, a convicted murderer, is ineligible to vote as a result of his conviction. LJOlli Decision Postpones N-Dump Issue 10 Years By BILL STUDENC The WaynesvMIe Mountaineer Western North Carolina is off the hook as a candidate for a proposed nuclear waste repository site for at least 10 years, according to U.S. Department of Energy officials. "Based on our review of. . .information, it is the depart ment's opinion that the nation need not consider a second repository un til at least the mid 1990s ? or much later," said U.S. Secretary of En ergy John S. Herrington in a state ment released late Wednesday The news fell on eager ears in WNC, where a 105-square mile area of Haywood, Buncombe and Mad ison counties was among 12 "poten tially acceptable" repository sites selected earlier this year by DOE. And despite some worries that Herrington's announcement has not permanently removed the nuclear waste threat from WNC, U.S. Rep. Bill Hendon, R-N.C., says those fears are unfounded. "We are so pleased that we haven't had time to sit back and rock yet," Hendon said in a tele phone interview from Washington, D.C., Thursday. "There is just no question that it's great news for Western North Carolina. It's over." Hendon said there would be no further studies of WNC as a poten tial nuclear waste dump site. "Absolutely not. There is no sen timent for it in Congress. The decision was made (Wednesday) to put nuclear waste in one of three areas in the West ? Washington state, Nevada or Texas," he said. "The plans are to expand that re pository, and not to build another one, if we ever need the space. This thing is over. We are off the hook, and we are off the hook per manently," he said. / Despite Hendon's optimism, lop?l groups which have opposed a WNC repository since DOE announced the list.of 12 candidates in^/anuary are not >o certain. / "Th*re can be no Celebrating now,"/saul Dr. Kobort Earnest of the Haywood Anti-dump Lead ership Team (HAtT). "We've won nothjhg. This is^tnly a 10-year post ponement and in essence we have / ' / J / ? 1 not been allowed our day in court. ' ' Earnest said he believes infor mation gathered by repository op ponent# would have resulted in the disqualification of the WNC site for geelogic, economic and social seasons. / N.C. Gov. Jim Martin, in a Wed nesday statement, said Her rington's announcement would "lift the cloud of anxiety of that has hung over North Carolina. " A second site in North Carolina ? in Wake, Johnston and Franklin counties near Raleigh ? was also on DOE's list of candidates Martin punctuated his statement with his wish that DOE had ruled out both North Carolina sites as un -< onlinunl on Page I Mars Hill Aldermen Consider 1986-87 Town Budget " / , V By WILLIAM LKE The Man Hill Board of Aldermen heard from their former mayor William Powell, who expressed his dissatisfaction with the town's resolu tion not to allow sewer hookups out I side the town limits. Three or four of the businesses along Big Branch Road have already paid, at least for (he water lines," Powell told' the aldermen. "They set up temporary sewer disposal systems >f their own. fully exp?!ctinK to come >n line once Mars I Ml had its system ? I I last way to get property owners along Big Branch to petition for annexation into Mars Hill. "It sounded like blackmail to me then, and it still does." said Alder man Ed Worley Worley was all prepared to rescind the resolution but was unable to get a second to his mo tion. Board Chairman John Chandler, acting as presiding officer in Mayor Owen TQson'a absence, agreed that builders of Ptna Inn had been told Powell. "Exception was made for Madison Manor, and its lines paid with county tax monies. In a way, then, we all have paid for the Mars Hill sewer system " R Augusta Jenkins suggested the board determine if there was some dissatisfaction with the town's resolu ttM. "But we need to put the burden on them to come to us with proa and coos, rather than each of us going oW and grttmg different ituptv-sions." Powell also told the board that some of the temporary systems failing and those businesses needed to have hookup available in the' very near future. / IV board/ of aldermen* following Governing Body, $13,000; Ad ministration, $71,750; Elections, $15; Tax listing, $500; Tax Collections, $790; Public Buildings, $M,M?; Police Department, $92,900; Fire Department, $35,057; Streets, $54,110; Powell Bill Expenditures. $74,000; Sanitation S35.450 Recreo tion, $17,050; and Library, $8,000. Listed a >re xpe plans for the develop) for 46 apartment units, 20 one bedroom ipartment anc 2t two Booth asked i he tv>;,rd to a(*rov<> nvonina of the for is? Thi N ;ii proposed will be