Pick the Football Contest winners! | Serving -- EThursday, September 29, 1977, Vol. 33, No. 50 ■i®BBlB®BiB®BifcBBHBUnynniHH8BillnHi#dyytoiBfi^iiaWn34BMllniB3fiHi 15 cents per copy ———mmmrnmmmm■—^---■ I Plants cited for odors in Swannanoa by Dan Ward Three Swannanoa plants ve been asked by the gional Air Pollution Control ard to meet with that board explain why they are iducing odorous emissions The three plants, Chem nics. Winston Dyeing and nshing and Charles D. en Manufacturing, have in the subject of com ints from area residents According to Ronald G. Boone, director of the Regional Air Pollution Control Agency, all three plants were cited as emitting unpleasant odors. Although laws exist governing odorous emissions, they are difficult to enforce when the emissions are not harmful, Boone said. None of the plants has been cited for poisonous emmissions, Boone said. In addition, the Winston plant was cited as expelling visable emmissions Boone said those emmissions were the result of a defective boiler, which has since been fixed. Contrary to charges that the plants were not cooperating with inspectors, Boone said that there have been no problems inspecting the plants, except in a case where an inspector was kept waiting at the Owen plant. Violations found during inspections are now being corrected, Boone said. Three women accepted forSwannanoa VFD Two women have been cepted as firefighters for tSwannanoa Volunteer Fire ■partment, raising the mber of women firefighters the department to three. With the acceptance of Sue lams and Karen Lee, the Swannanoa department now has more female firefighters than any other department in Buncombe County. The two women will also be trained in rescue procedures. They are currently taking an advanced first aid course being taught by the depart ment. The two new tirewomen join Barbara Settle as women firefighters in Swannanoa. Their acceptance raises enroUement for the depart ment to 30 firefighters. IWater-use climbs despite ordinance According to readings taken y the Black Mountain Water lepartment, households In lack Mountain have in reased water use although ie water level in the Black lountain Reservoir continues idrop. According to outtake meter eadmgs, water consumption as gone up by 4000 gallons er day during the last week. Town Manager Jon reighton said that the out age may be even greater than he meter shows. Intake leasurements taken from beams flowing into the hinsmore Cove Reservoir re about equal to outtake eadings, Creighton said, lowever, the water level is actually dropping. Creighton said that the town may have to purchase a new meter to replace the present one, believed by Creighton to have been installed in the 90s. Traffic changes The yellow flashing light at the intersection of Blue Ridge Road and NC 9 will soon be moved to the corner of US 70 and Craigmont Road, ac cording to W.B. Cochran, division traffic engineer for the Department of Tran sportation, in a letter to Aid. Ruth Brandon, Black Mountain representative on public safety. Mrs. Brandon also noted that a sign has been posted on Montreat Road at State Street warning that a right tarn is not allowed there on a red light. She said many older persons have complained that there Is not enough time to cross the street when cars are turning. Black Mountain Police have charged Glen Bartlett of Black Mountain with in timidating a witness in con nection with fartlettk trial for Bird watching This cal, photographed by Todd Byrns, is either having identity problems or has discovered the purrfect spot for birdwatching* Police Report assaun. Bartlett has been charged with stabbing Walt Tipton of Black Mountain at Lake Tomahawk on August 20. Bartlett allegedly threatened to bring harm to a witness in that case if he testified. Police reported an accident on Montreat Road September Can recycling with a flair by Dan Ward Although a number of igestions have been made recycling old cans, few are mce as James Andrews’ Andrews, who lives in annanoa with his wife, Betty, makes Victorian doll furniture out of old cans. “Theyd be good for doll houses,’ Andrews said of the tiny chairs, sofas and beds he fashions with tinsnips and pliers. "After theyfe painted, you cant get cut on them.’ "I sold a few of them,’ he said. “A lot of people use them for pin cushions or what-not.' Andrews, who learned how to make his first chair from James Rogers, a co-worker at the WNC Hospital, said it now takes him only an hour to make one of the intricate mini furnishings. He sells them, to friends for $1.50 each. “It took me a lot longer to make the first ones,'he said. “The first two flhiade, I threw away-they didnt look so hot.' Now he finds himself looking for unusually shaped cans in the supermarket to extend his imagination further in his hobby. Hei found that tobacco cans make good couches, chopped ham cans the best footstools and a coffee can the best bed. “A juice can wont work, itf too stiff,’ he warned. “Aluminum wont work either -it uncurls right out.’ For those interested in making the can furniture, Andrews gives these steps. Cut one of the ends off a soda-size can to make a chair. With tinsnips, cut about 40 strips the length of the can, leaving them attached to the other end. These strips will be about ‘4 of an inch wide. Bend the strips in relation to the can top in the following order-four down, si* up, four down, 12 up, four down, six up then four down. Cut the remaining strips off to use as binders for the various curlycues The four sets of strips bent down will become legs, the rest will be armrests and the chair back. An en terprising craftsman can use two cans to create a can-top chair back such as the one in the photo. To make the upholstry, cut a cardboard circle the size of the can top. Cover it with i cotton and a scrap of material Spray paint the chair before upholstering, of course As if doll furniture building is not hobby enough for one man, Andrews also creates intricate string-art sculp tures. He is now working on a large clipper ship. 22. There were no injuries. They issued four traffic citations, escorted three funerals and answered 115 calls last week. Planning Board backs extended zoning by Dan Ward The Black Mountain Planning Board decided in its September 21 meeting to ask the Town Board to implement the existing Subdivision Or dinance. It was decided to send a letter to the Town Board asking that the ordinance be recorded with the Registrar of Deeds, as required by law. The ordinance was passed in 1969, but has not been utilized since then. Regarding that section of the ordinance giving the Zoning Board authority in subdivision regulations up to one mile outside the town limits, the Planning Board is requesting that the Town Board have a map drawn, with the help of an engineer, describing the area of jurisdiction. The Planning Board is also requesting that additional members, from outside the town limits, be appointed to the Zoning Board to represent persons living in the area to come under town zoning. The board also heard Robert Fischer, chairman of the Zoning Board of Adjustments, who said that the zoning iurisdictinn eranted under the Subdivision Ordinance is not adequate to prevent obnoxious development from occurring around Black Mountain. The Subdivision Ordinance gives the Zoning Board control only over areas being sub divided. The Zoning Board still has no jurisdiction over standards in mobile home parks, junkyards and noisy businesses in residential areas, Fischer said. Most of the Town Board, with the exception of Aid. Ruth Brandon, has opposed town zoning jurisdiction outside the town limits. (See editorials on page 2). -^V? »^V¥ Immediate problems Part one: by D411 Ward Ed. note-This article is part of a series outlining Black ' Mounts ink water system, its problems and suggested solutions. This article wOl focus on immediate suggestions made by Aid. John Mundy, the town representative on water and sewer, at the September 12 town meeting. Long-term suggestions will be discussed in a later article. Sky High and McCoy Cove Mundyk only suggestion voted on at the latest town Board meeting was that a surcharge be placed on users of water being pumped from the McCoy Cove and Sky High Reservoirs. The two reservoirs are subsystems of the main system utilizing water from the Dunamore Cove Reser Registration set Voter registration for the November Town of Black Mountain elections will be held at the Eagles Nest from noon to 5 p.m. on October 1 and October 8. The Eagles Candidate announces MAKK HOOPKK. of 113 Byrd Hd., has announced for the upcoming election for Black Mountain Town Board. Hooper, who is a self employed landscaper, has run for alderman on three previous occasions, lie is the only Black candidate to enter the race so far. Nest, near the Clubhouse, is the regular polling place for the third precinct. Persons may register any time at the Board of Elections office at the County Building in Asheville. They may also register with registrars for their precincts. Appointments may be made by contacting the registrars, who are Precinct t-Jenny Black, Precinct 2-Susie Patton, Precionct 3-Mary Sobol, or Precinct 4-Barbara Harris. voir. Due to the altitude of houses on McCoy Cove Road and in Sky High Acres, separate pumps must be used to supply water to tboss-areas -both of which are outside the town limits. Mundy calculated the ad ditional cost to the town for electricity, pump main tenance and pump depreciation to be 51 cents per 1000 gallons for McCoy Cove, and 45 cents per 1000 gallons for Sky High. The board approved Mundyk suggestion that a 50 cents per 1000 gallon sur charge be added to bills for Sky High and McCoy Cove residents. The surcharge, Mundy said, was the only fair alternative to annexing those households. In the event those households eventually become annexed, the surcharge would be dropped, Mundy suggested. Bi-monthly billing Mundy also cited a recommendation made by Cummings Engineering in 1975 that meters be read every three months rather than every month, as done now. The study also showed that it would save the town money to bill every two months rather than monthly. Savings in postage alone would be $1,632 per year, Mundy said. Only half of the town 9 1700 customers would have to be billed each month. The only drawback to a quarterly meter reading would be that it would take longer to detect breaks in the system. The town would save the salary or labor of one of its two full-time meter readers. RIC HARD, a friend of the News staff, wasted little time in making friends with a migrating Monarch butterfly. At this time of year, millions of Monarch* migrate from Canada to Mexico-- no small chore for such a frail-looking creature. (Dan Ward) Broken meters Mundy suggested charging those with broken meters their average monthly rate. At present, citizens with broken meters are charged the minimum rate. He also suggested charging customers who have their water disconnected seasonally the minimum rate even though they do not receive water. Services for those meters and the system in general continue although the water for a particular meter is shut off, Mundy pointed out Minimum pressure standards I Pressure over a 24 hour period should be measured in the higher elevations where an additional water hookup is requested, Mundy said. The recording of pressure would guarantee that pressure comes up to Health Depart ment standards and would not impair the pressure for existing households. For higher elevations within the town, building permits should not be issued until the water pressure for the proposed housing is measured, Mundy recommended. Standardization Mundy recommended that the town standardize its system and set standard specifications for future reservoirs, pumps and distribution systems. A good deal of cost and trouble in the water system has been the result of different types of systems with parts that are not interchangeable, Mundy said. Water sources Mundy proposed as an immediate solution to the water shortage and a long term means of complying with Health Department standards the drilling of two 40-gailons per-minute wells. He suggested that the wells be placed near the Dunsmore Cove reservoir and be used only when they are needed, or to drill them near or on the golf course. If placed on the west side of town, the wells would be accompanied by a water storage system and chlorinator. The storage system could be gravity fed from the Dunsmore Cove reservoir and serve as a storage system for the town in the event that a problem developed in the Dunsmore Cove Reservoir. At the town meeting, Mundy said he will determine the cost of drilling two additional wells and report to the board in the near future.