Second class postage paid at Black Mountain, NC 28711 Thursday, March 2, 1978. Vol. 24, No. 19 Serving— ★ Black Mountain ★Swannanoa ★Montreat ★ Ridgecrest 15 cents per copy Black Mountain firemen put out a fire in a moving van on U.S. 70. (Charlie ivlor) . ;*j* Black Mountain Fire Black Mountain Fire Chief erling Poe was injured while ;hting a fire in a Mayflower oving van on U.S. 70 west sbruary 26. Poe suffered a cut on nis outh requiring five stitches idle pulling furniture from e burning trailer. The fire, ought by firemen to have arted from faulty wiring to >e lights, caused an tunated $8000 damage. One uck and 23 men responded to e fire. On February 21, one truck id five men put out a fire ‘used by a faulty dishwasher iotor at the Dickerson ‘sidence at 202 Border St. he fire, which caused $75 image, was responded to by ie truck and five men. An estimated $200 damage as done to a- Merita Bread tick that caught fire on U.S. * west February 24. One ’uek and 15 men responded. A fire alarm was set off at ‘ghland Farms February 26 hen a resident burned his «st One truck and seven >«n responded. A 1975 Fiat owned by Varies Ray was totally estroyed by fire on February > on Pleasant Drive. One 'uck and 13 firemen “ponded. Aiso that day, one truck and ve men returned to the ioving van that had burned arlier on U.S. 70 to wet down smoldering mattress. department has gained nd lost firemen. Rmky Carson was approved s full-time fireman at a Pwdal meeting on February 13. Carson, ^ ho has served as a volunteer fireman in Blade Mountain, began paid duties on February 16. Fireman Charles Shook has I offered a resignation, taking effect March 3, to accept a position with the Buncombe County Ambulance Service as a dispatcher. Task Force report Hospital upgrading recommended by Dan Ward A special task force ap pointed by Secretary of Human Resources Sarah Morrow has recommended that the state’ s specialty hospitals, including Western North Carolina Specialty Hospital, be revitalized to continue to meet ac creditation standards-and that emphasis on the treat ment of tuberculosis (TB) be phased out over an extended period. The recommendations, due to be sent to task force com mittee members this week before being turned over to Dr. Morrow, were the result of a four-month study by a group including state legislators, doctors and administrators. The News received the recommendations from a source close to the task force. The task force has recommended that the treatment, prevention and control of TB be moved as much as possible to com munity hospitals and homes. Dr. O.L. Henry, medical director for WNC Hospital, when asked about the recommendation, said it would have little bearing on treatment of TB patients at the hospital He said the hospital is already geared toward community-based treatment of TB patients, and would continue to treat special cases in the event the recommendations are followed. While no figures accompany the task force suggestion that the hospitals be upgraded to maintain accreditation, N.C. Rep. Gordon Greenwood, a member of the task force, said an overall figure of (8 million, and a figure of $2.3 million for WNC Hospital, had been discussed earlier as the amount needed to do im mediate renovating. An aide to U.S. Rep. Lamar Gudger, who had earlier issued a newsletter to media throughout Western North Carolina saying that the treatment of all respiratory diseases, not just TB, were recommended to be phased -—--—-*---1-1 ctfnuaucfl.mLPagfc.Al. Smith speaks on energy, health McNeill ,°mith, Greensboro Democrat campaigning for the U.S. Senate, told 30 per sons at the Black Mountain Library February 24 that he will support tobacco price supports, national health insurance, alternative energy development and federal subsidation of education, if elected. Smith, known for his energy proposals in the N.C. Senate, came out against further building of nuclear power plants in lieu of developing alternative energy sources Final hearing held by Dan Ward At the last in a series of Hearings for a Community Development Grant, requests for sewer, water and street improvements for the Craigmont Community were echoed February 27 at Black Moimtain Town Hall. The hearing, marked by the . absence of four Citizen Par ticipation Committee mem bers and Jim Allman, grant authority with the Land of Sky Regional Council, consisted mainly of clarification of the grant process. One member of the audience of 10 asked whether the Citizen Participation Committee will be obliged to follow the strongest recommendations in making its grant proposal to the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). Chairman Jean Standley said that although the com mittee is supposed to choose the proposal they tiiitJi is most needed and most likely to be funded, installation of water lines, fire hydrants and sewers in the Craigmont Community will obviously have to be a main con sideration. She added that she was told that, based on income figures for Black Mountain and HUD requirements for funding, the Craigmont Road area and Flat Creek community are the only areas likely to be in favor of HUD grant-givers. Ms. Standley noted that Blade Mountain should stand in good favor with HUD because it demonstrated that it could utilize money well when it spent $15,000 in grant money three years ago to pave two streets. Aid. A.F. Tyson noted that there are other parts of town, including downtown and the Kerlee Heights area, that are in need of water lines and fire hydrants. He recommended that the town apply for general water improvement funds to be spent wherever needed in town, rather than soley in the Craigmont Community. out by the task force, said the congressman regretted passing on incorrect in formation, but was “delighted” that it was recommended that the hospitals continue and expand treatment. Gudger fully supported a recom mendation to spend “several million dollars’ ’ to maintain accreditation standards at the hospital, the aide said. The task force has also recommended that the operations of the state’s tiiree specialty hospitals be “maintained and expanded as changing health care needs dictate’ ’, apparently asking that the facilities remain open indefinitely- -regardless of the such as solar and distilled forest waste. He also said he would, if elected, propose a type of counter-embargo on Cartel oil requiring oil-producing nations to bid on import contracts. spiralling energy costs are a major cause of Inflation, reducing oil imports would bring the country closer to a balanced budget. Smith also came out in favor of tobacco price supports, saying that penalizing the farmer is not the b*at way to fight cigarette smoking. He did say he supported con tinued public education on the hazards of smoking. Smith also said that be would propose a national health insurance plan that would provide free medical care to pregnant women and children, and would pay the cost of “devastating illnesses” beyond 20 percent of the af fected family’s income. Smith also called for federal aubsidation of education. He noted that tax money applied to education is much greater per capita in Northern cities than in the Southeast. To offset the difference hi taxable property values, federal money should be distributed to areas of the country with poorer facilities, he said. Smith also came out in favor of removing expensive business lunch and air travel business deductions on income taxes. To fight unemployment, h$ said, the government should intiate an alternative energy exploration and con struction program similar in nature to the space program. Smith, who stopped in Black Mountain while on a campaign trip through the Asheville area, criticized Republican Jesse Helms, saying the senator has failed to provide answers to the country’ s problems while opposing all proposals offered. New directors have hopes for state facilities by Dan Ward “Sometimes I have to pinch myself to beLeve it’s come this far in so short a time,"William Johnston, director of the Alcoholic Rehabilitation Center (ARC) in Black Mountain said of the program at the institution. Many employees at the ARC feared for their jobs, and some quit, in the wake of the firing of previous director, Herb Moore, for protesting a revision in the State Em ployment Act last July. “I assured them when I came here that if they were effective, dilligent and ac cepted (an Alcoholic' s Anonymous oriented) philosophy, that no friend ships or favors could cause them to be fired,’ ’ Johnston said. Acceptance and enthusiasm for the Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) philosophy has helped restore employee confidence in the institution, Johnston said. “AA is basically a program where a person is forced to look at himself and see his character defects rather than blaming the whole world for all his oroblems. "Johnston Swannanoa Fire The Swannanoa Fire apartment made six runs 51 week. February 21, a trailer at * Wilson Ave. was totally Grayed by a fire. Damage Hie by the fire was estimated ; WOO. The trailer was ^ by Rex Smith, and was toted to Delores Lee. Three ■«ks and 23 men responded 1 ^ fire, which had already ^tofed the budding before trucks arrived. On February 20, two trucks and nine men put out a grass (ire on U.S. 70 at Buckeye Cove Road. Brush fires on Northeast Avenue February 25 and at the ball field behind Beacon Manufacturing February 26 were answered by two turcks and 20 men and three trucks and 17 men, respectively. Two false alarms were iViti-H -- said. “We try to convince the alcoholic here that his life is unmanageable and by his own will and wits he is a total failure. Then we go to the AA spiritual concept,” he said Contrary tc misgivings by some that the “spiritual concept” is a violation of the separation of church and state, Johnston said that the program requires that the person recognize a power greater than him, not necessarily through a given religion or even through God. “I know people in AA who would look to a Fifth Avenue bus as a power greater than he-it could run him over,’ ’ Johnston said “The secret seems to be surrendering, rather than a temporary submission.” Another change at the ARC that Johnston said has worked out well is in requiring patients to follow up in stitutionalization with at least three months of biweekly meetings with their families and those of other alcoholics. Pastors from the community also attend the meetings, held on Thursday evenings and Sunday afternoons. Volunteer meetings for alcoholics and their families are held weekly at the United Methodist Church in Black Mountain. “There is a comraderie among the patients here that the staff supports. Once ihey get this dirt out in the open and realize that others have the same problems, they no longer feel like square pegs in round holes,' ’ Johnston said. The program at the ARC, Johnston said, is modeled after a private treatment facility, Fellowship Hall, that was providing ezceilent treatment for alcoholics at a cost $20 per day less than the state. Johnston said that the ef fectiveness of the Fellowship Hall program could not be compared t with the state facilities because the private center had the right to reject those who were not serious about giving up drinking, while he state institutions could not. If the enthusiasm of the I patients and staff, as' well as i the number of persons claiming to stay sober for three months after discharge is any indication, the new program has been very successful, Johnston said. *‘I kind of feel like a chosen person,”he said. “I'm thrilled to death with the program here.” Bill Johnston by Dan Ward Although Don Pagett, new director of the Juvenile Evaluation Center (JEC) in Swannanoa, hates to see all problems written off as a “communication gap’ ’ , he indicates that better com munication is the key to making the institution reach its potential. “The main thing is to provide a healthy en vironment for the staff to exercise their talents,” Pagett said. To do that, he said, staff and residents must feel that there is an air of trust, cooperation and a receptivity to new ideas. That, Pagettt said, will come through ef fective communication. “I know the outcomes I’m Don Pagetl looking for. Some of those may have already taken place, ’’he said. Acknowledging that a morale problem has existed at the JEC, Pagett said that he is trying to give more authority and responsibility to staff to remove feelings that policy is determined by him and Raleigh authorities. “I think it’s a straw dog state level interference,’ ’ he said. “I’ve done my best since I started here to assure the staff that we have a great deal of latitude here in what we do and how we do it. But we need the creative tension from the state level so that we don’t get stagnant.’’ Pagett said that, again, feelings of state-level med dling are usually a product of poor communication. Sometimes a person in some level of the department hierarchy will reject an idea passed on by a person working at an institution and fail to give a reason why the idea was dropped. The state employee is left with the conclusion that, because he was not givpn a reason, the motive for rejection was political, Pagett said. Pagett said he prefers not to dwell on the negative. “I don’t want to be problem oriented. I want to get at issues-to say ‘ what resources do we have to accomplish what we want?”’he said. Pagett, who came to the JEC as acting director 10 weeks before his appointment as director two weeks ago, praised relations between the JEC and the community He noted that about ISO volun teers help out at the facility, and the organization sponsored Christinas con tributions and parties for the children at the JEC were overwhelming. ‘What I don’t want to see here is what’s happened in other institutions. It’s the ‘we they syndrome’” he said. “We don’t want it to become ‘We the institution’and ‘they the community’. We are part of the community.” ‘•‘I’m going to have that sign out front that says ‘unauthorized persons keep out; or whatever, tom down. I want to encourage the people to come see what we have going here,”he said. When Pagett took the position made vacant when Secretary of Human Resources Sarah Morrow fired Bill Noland for failing to carry out a directive, he listed four goals to the JEC staff goals he said are longterm and on-going. The first was to see that the facility is staffed with well trained, interpersonally competent and cooperative persons. The second was to see an administration and series of programs that could respond to all needs of the children. Third was to establish an organization that encourages and utilizes staff expertise in initiating plans. The fourth was to see an organization of persons who fully believe in individualized care of the residents, and are able to apply that belief to practice. Reaching, or reaching for, those goals will accomplish many things, Fagett said. Top priority, Pagett told his 1 staff the day he was made director, “is ciuidreu-what we do to them, for them and with them.’'