THE YANCEY JOURNAL VOL. 2, NO. 35 Environmental Problems Follow 'Land Boom’ In Western North Carolina; Wildlife, Streams, Wilderness Areas Threatened By Development Surge By Jim Dean Maior newspapers across the nation are calling it " the last, big Eastern land boom. " They're talking about wes - tern North Carolina, and they compare the sprawl of deve - lopment and real estate speculation with the Florida, Ari - zona and Southern California booms. A story in the Baltimore Sun in early August is fairly typical. Says the Sun. "Land prices have tripled in many areas during the past year and even 'goat' land—a localism for almost vertical r r’ / hillside covered with trees —may brine more than SSOO an acre. "We don't know how long it's going to last," says one real estate agent, "but people are not quibbling abort terms, and there is no sign of a financial downturn. " United Fund Contributions Finance Many Progams By Ashton Chapman Your tax-exempt contribu - tion to the United Fund in Mitch ell or Yancey County, or to the special fund campaigns conduc ted each year in Avery* help a number of humanitarian agen - cies to continue functioning in your county. Without such do nations as yours, some of the agencies could no longer stand ready to serve you and other residents of your area. One of the most important of these agencies, and ouevdiich always serves the public speedi ly, cheerfully and without any charge, is the American Nation al Red Cross. The importance of the Red Cross to residents of the Tri-County area is beyond calculation. Every one of its programs is of great importance. These in clude the life-saving blood pro gram, school health program, service to military families, les sons in swimming and in water safety, courses in first aid and home musing, to name some of the most outstanding services. Although there is never any charge for any of these services it does cost the Mayland Chap - ter to have the bloodmobile from the Asheville Red Cross Blood Center make each of its scheduled visits to the three counties several times a ye ar , and to maintain a centrally-lo cated office for the three coun - ties in Spruce Pine, including expense of telephone, postage, and other necessities. Therefore it is important that everyone donate generously to the United Fund in Mitchell, or Yancey County or direct to the annual Red Cross drive inAtury, in order that the Red Cross may continue its valuable free ser vices in the three-county area. Records in the Chapter's headquarters office show that several Red Cross chapters were organized in the three counties as early as World War I and la ter disbanded. Grandfather Mountain Chap ter, Elk Park, was chartered on October 23, 1917, with E. R. Mortimer, Chairman. This chapter was disbanded March 28, 1928. The Banner Elk Chapter was chartered Novem ber 1, 1917, with Dr. W. C. Tate, Chairman, and thischap ter was disbanded March 28, 1928. The Avery County Chap ter, New land, was chartered on January 30, 1928, with T.C. Dellinger, Temporary Chrmn. The Bakeisville Chapter, to serve the whole of Mitchell County, was chartered January 7, 1918 , with A. R. Gallimore, Chairman. This chapter was disbanded January 13, 1921. The Mitchell County Chap ter in Spruce Pine, was char - tered August 27, 1928, with Mrs. W.C. Young, Chairman; the Yancey County Chapter, Burnsvilleyvas chartered May 20, 1918, with the Rev. Homer Casto, Chairman. It was dis banded December 8, 1923. A new Yancey County Chapter, Burnsville, was chartered De (Cont'd on page 2) • ~ - —m. ._ „ _—. - - --- lltlSl lifll K/pl - if * dm Jll * frailpfsPr nß| f- * WMI yk * r%4 Jjk j J k i MiME? ■ j ISBi ■Gk BM BBf b W iW B BB « % i - H ■i’flHHHk*: fln 91 flHp •lilpßffi*' 1 - I mr wr g* mm B - BIW . •SBlßi Mark Bledsoe Pictured With His Parents, Scoutmaster McLain, And Jack Tessier Youth Dies Os A tridental Gunshot Wound Tonny Young, 15, of Burns ville, died Saturday at Memor ial Mission Hospital in Asheville from a self-inflicted gun shot wound in the chest. According to Carroll Hens - ley of the Yancey County Sher iffs Department, the shooting was accidental. Young was ap parently attempting to clean a 16-gage shot gun when it fired. Hensley said he answered the call around 9 a.m. Saturday from the victim's brother, Ty ren Young, requesting that the sheriff's department send an am- Though this may be news to many North Carolinians, par ticularly those living in the Eastern or Piedmont sections of North Carolina, it is hardly news to western Tar Heels. They have seen gentle valleys and small communities turn almost overnight into rapidly growing tourist centers complete with condominiums, motels, ski resorts, summer vacation home developments and all the neon trappings that go with it. Feelings in the mountains are mixed, of course,but there is considerable widespread opposition to the "land boom"by local people who do not like to see life styles and familiar landmarks altered so quickly. Many would prefer not to see them changed at all. There are also serious environmental problems rising as a result of the boom. Huge recreational complexes are ex WSr . m - - Vi* At,: :Jr - Hppn im r Donna Ami John McLain Receive Recognition Awards bulance to their home. Tyren Young told Officer Hensley that his brother was in the bathroom when he said he wanted to clean the shot gun Restue Squad Spousors Show The Yancey County Rescue Squad will sponsor a country music show and dance Saturday night, September 1, 1973 at Btoo p. m. in the Burnsville Elementary School gym. The Honeycutt Brothers, Mike Loftis and Southern Country and the Robinson family will be inchi - THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1973 and asked Mm to bring it to him. He said hejrook his brother the gun and returned to the living room and sat down to watch te levision when he heard the shot. ded in the local talent. There will be drawings for door prizes and refreshments will be, available. Tickets are SI.OO in advance from Rescue Squad mem ben and $1.50 at the door. Children under 12 will be admit ted free when accompanied by an adult. panding into private, near wilderness areas. All too often, there are major losses of wildlife habitat and streams. The populations of many species of fish and wildlife (bears, turkey, deer and trout far instance) cannot tolerate more than minimal damage to habitat. These species and many others —will be seriously affected by the rapid development, and may not even survive in some areas where they are now fairly abundant. Already huge inroads have been made on prime near-wildemess areas and wild life habitat. Sportsmen and conservationists are concerned that if tlie "land boom" continues at its original, uncontroll ed pace, there will be very few suitable large areas for the wildlife to life, and even fewer trout streams. "It seems to me," observes one native of the region, "that Boy Scouts Receive Awards, Troop Honors Scoutmaster Last Tuesday night Mark Bledsoe, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ca rlyle Bledsoe received the Eagle Scout Award. Mark is the third hoy from Troop 502 to receive this award which is the highest in Scouting. The award ini presented by Mr. Jack Tes sier, Scoutmaster from Ashe ville, at a Court of Honor held in the Fellowship Hall of Higgins Memorial Methodist Church. Boys receiving the Star Scout Award were Jimmy Wilson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dean Wilson; Tommy Carr, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Carr; Mike Grind staff, son of Mr. and Mrs. Louie Grindstaff; Doyle Bradford , son of Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Bradford. Boys receiving the First Class Rank were Todd Bailey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dick Bailey; Steve Parsley, son of Mr. and Mis. Sam Parsley. Boys receiving the Tenderfoot Rank were Sam Young, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Young; Doug McLain, son of Mr.and Mrs. John McLain; Jackie Buchanan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Buchan an; Gregg Edge, son of Mr. and Nbs. Wallace Edge; Gregg Wes ts|l, son of Mr. and Mrs. Phillip \Ai estall; Jerry Laye 11, son of V:. and Mrs. Hebren Layell. and Bi yan Hensley, son of Mr. .and K rs. Ben Hensley. A large crowd of parents en jc fed a pot-luck meal and slide po mentation of the troop's recent 5( -mile hike and trip to the N itional Jamboree in Butl e r , Pennsylvania prior to the awards b nquet. ★ ★ As part of Tuesday's cere i onies, Scoutmaster Johnny lcLain was presented an s vard by the members of his ' roop in recognition of all the vork he has done for the Troop i id the community as a whole. John McLain has distinguish e 1 himself in many capacities i the four years that he and his f mily have lived in Burnsville. 1: has been an able and cap - ale leader in hb church, hav i: i served as a deacon for the pst two years. In 1972 he was e ected secretary of the Board o Deacons, A position he has 1 ithfully filled. He has been a regular attender of his church, i: :hiding Sunday School,Train i j Union, and prayer meeting. _ F r the past year he has served a president of the lion's Club, indicating his interest in com munity affairs. The Lions Club has grown and accomplished much under his leadership. By far his most outstanding work since coming to Burnsville has been that with the Boy Scout organization. Combining vast knowledge of the outdoor world with excellent leadership abili ty, he has led the Boy Scout Troop 502 of Burnsville to a re cord high in number and inter est. The boys have responded to his work with them both be came of his capability and be cause of his sincere interest in them as individuals. Their knowledge and appreciation of the outdoors have been greatly advanced through numerous camping activities and hikes. Emie Howard and Kennie Dey ton, two of the boys in his troop; have received their Eagle Awards and Mark Bledsoe received his recently on August 21. Time invested in the lives of boys, the future men of Am erica, is time well spent, and no man in Burnsville has invest ed a greater portion of his life in this choice and important activity. As part of the evenings events, Donna McLain , wife of Scout .-Jf master Johnny McLain f was also presented with the "Scouter's Wife Award" by the troop mem bers. During the time the McLain's have been ( n Yancey County, Donna has been active in commu nity and church work. She has served as Brownie Leader, Junior Leader, and as Troop Committee Member of the Yancey Girl Scouts. She has also been very active as a member of the First Baptist Church in Burnsvill. CAP To Hold Open House The Mountain Wilderness Ci vil Air Patrol Squadron will hold an Open House September 1,2 and 3 at Mountain Wilderness Air Park at Pensacola. There will be Free Airplane Rides with each $5.00 donation to the Civil Air Patrol Squadron. Come see Burnsville and area from the air—and support your local CAP Squadron. many of these developmezts are destroying the very things that attract people to the mountains in the first place. No one really feels any security anymore. It seems that only yesterday I could look out my window in the morning and confidently expect the comforting sight of rolling fields and mountains and the road curving in the distance, ft was like a picture postcard, and I don't have to tell you how much it meant to see it everyday. Now, there is a trailer court in the valley, the mountains are carved up in roads and cha lets and the road is wrapped up with motels and tourist trapa It makes me sick to see it, but what can I do?" Very little, actually, and if the prophets are correct,we are only seeing the beginning. One reason the native resi dents are so helpless is the fact that only a few of the 23 western counties have any sort of effective zoning, which means that no landowner has any real assurance that his pro perty might not someday soon be ringed with mobile homes or sitting next to a new factory or recreational area where the center of attraction is an "old west" gunfight staged hourly seven days a week. Some see the boom as a good thing, uplifting economics in areas long depressed. And yet, most of the na* es in these areas prefer their way of life and in no way i them selves as economically underprivileged. In addition to the general sprawl of developmait througj*- out the western end of the state, there are many new resort cities or recreational areas being developed, some of them huge. Ttough a very few of them are taking pains to par tially protect the environment and aesthetics of the area, most are far more interested in a fast buck* Many of these fast bucks are going to out-of-state developers who have al ready run out of places to despoil in their own states and are looking for new horizons. Though of the unwise development is locally funded, much of it originates from out-of-state speculators, particularly from Florida. Perhaps, as some point out, the land boom in w estern North Carolina is unavoidable. It is, after all, one of the few remaining large areas in the nation which has not pre -. viously felt the blades of hordes of bulldozers. And people in other states along the Eastern Seaboard have become dis enchanted with the loss of primitive innocence and natural beauty and are looking for new promised lands. Western North Carolina looms large in the imaginations of those seeking a simpler way of life. Therefore, perhaps some sort of boom is unavoidable. But it need not result in the same massive destruction that has occurred in other states which have experienced such booms. Statewide Land Use Planning bills are in the hopper, and if a good, strong one is passed, it will help. A law regulating land speculation by oit-of-state developers should also be considered. Other states have such laws. Meanwhile, the state should strongly consider acquiring as much of the unspoiled private land as possible to insure that at least part of the western North Carolina area will still have aesthetic appeal and plentyof fish and wildlife. There are near wilderness areas—one as large as 40,000 acres (the old Mead Paper Company of Sylva tract now own ed by a Florida developer)--that might still be bought and sa\ed. It would be sad indeed if North Carolina proved unable to slow and control the rape of her prime western lands. If s we don't act soon, it will be too late, and Tar Heels will have learned nothing and profited less from the bitter lesson in Florida, Southern California and other "landboom" states. ★ ★ ★ Mayland Tech To Conduct Course In Proper Land Use Mayland Technical Institute, in conjunction with Agricultur al Extension Service, ASCS Ser vice, Farmers Home Admin is - t ration, Soil and Water Conser vation and Mitchell County Rural Development Panel will conduct a 20 hour course in pro per land usage for developmen tal purposes* All interested ci tizens are urged to attend and especially those who are plan ning any types of developing or participating in property de velopment. ~ , Topics to be discussed will be as follows! 1. How Development has affected our local areas. 2. Land Capabilities 1Q C 3. Site Planning 4. Access Road Lay-Out 5. Fishery Resources 6. Wildlife Resources 7. Forestry Resources 8. Sanitation 9. Water Resources 10. Field Trip to be con ducted. 11. Coimty Planning. Registration will be at the auditorium of Harris High in Spruce Pine, September 13, 1973. Classes to run through October 16, 1973. Registra •* tion will be at 7ioo p. m., and classes will run from 7KX)p.m to 9ioo p. m. on Tuesday and Thursday evening. There will be a $2.00 registration fee per peison#