\ \ County Health Officials Say They 'Misinterpreted' Septic Tank Law HY KAHN ADAMS The Brunswick County Henlth Department last month bewail enforcing a five-year-old state health regulation involving septic systems, after the depart ment was notified tliat it was misinterpreting the law. 1 he regulation prohibits the coiustruction of septic systems under driveways—a situation that imiy be dif ficult to avoid on small lots, say county and town of ficials. Brunswick County Environmental Health Super- vi.sor .John Crowder sail! the health department chang ed iLs position on the regulation Nov. 18, after the N.C. Division of Health Setw’ices clarified its official inter pretation of the regulation. The law reads, in part: "Septic tank sy.stems .shall not be located under paved areas or driveways." However, solid cast iron pipe or other .sewer pipe can be used to convey effluent under the driveway or paved area to another location on the lot. Crowder .said. “The actual drainage field or septic tank system can’t be located under the driveway," he explained. The regulation, which has l>een in effect since 1982, refers to driveways of all types and surfaces, Crowder said. He noted that the county had misinterpreted the law by assuming it referred only to paved driveways. "We were thinking, by ilriveway.’ they were mean ing a paved driveway." Crowder said. Septic systems aren’t permitted under driveways—paved or not—due to the "compaction of the soil and possible damage to the system iUself," Crowder said. "Ihe weight could cause (the septic system) to fail." After receiving notification from the state, Crowder sent “informational memos" on the regulation to town administrators and town building inspectors throughout the county, he said. He .s;ud the county’s new enforcement position does not affect lots where septic tank permits have alreadv been issued. "If it’s already been done . . . according to the health director, we will leave those situations alone. iinle.ss it’s determined that there’s some type of pro blem," (Towder said. But to obtain a pennit now. builders may lie re quired to supply "plot plans." to show how the lot will l)c developed, he said. " 1 here have lieen some problems with finding space . . . where lots are real small." Crowder .said. "Builders may fuive to cut back to smaller driveways and have more green area." Holden Beach Building Inspector Dwight Carroll .said the regulation would have an impact on mainly canal lots at Holden Beach, except that no septic tank permits have been i.ssiied for canal lots there in the jiast few' montlcs due to other state health .standards. "On a 30 by 100 foot lot, I don’t see how you’re going to get a driveway, septic t;ink and water system in a 50 by 25 foot area, ” Carroll said, referring to the size of most front yards on canal lots at Holden Beach. Various setback requirements further decrea.se the amount of s|)ace available for a septic lank, he said. .Sunset Beach Town Administrator I.inda Klucgel last week said she doesn t anticipate any problems with the regulation at Sunset Beach. She .s;iid septic tanks now can lie placed on the ocean side of oceanfronl lots at Sunset Beach, while sep tic .sy.steins are located at the rear of most other lots there. She .said only one builder has applied for a septic tank permit at Sunset Beach since the county changed its position on the regulation last month. Ihe builder had to tile a plot plan, and the permit w:is approved, she .said. I BF H0A(a S' bon-. cppiNGFOPT HI ■ S I • Twenty-sixth Year, Nui.iuer o SWIdCiRACON BRUNSWICK BtAC.ON Shallotte, North Carolina, Thursday, December 17. 1987 25c Per Copy 34 Pages Plus Inserts OunnriQn With Fok© Bomb Robs Calabash UCB Bank L’CB .AKEA EXECUTIVE A1 I.aughinghnusc (right) 'allis with Brunswick Couiuy Sheriff John (’. Davis (left) and Det. I.indsey Walton shortly after lawTiien ar- SI Atf PMOlO BY »AMN ADAMS rivi'il on Ihi' sri'ne of Tuesday's armed hank robbery in Calabasli. Whiteville Man Sentenced In Cocaine Case; Prosecutors Prepare To End 'Phase One' BY KAHN ADA.MS Law enforcement agencies in North and South Carolina Tuesday night remained on the lookout for an armed suspect who earlier in the day robbed the Calabash branch of United Carolina Bank and left behind what he said was a bomb. Lawmen and onlookers waited tensely for three hours Tuesday afternoon until a Wilmington Police Department explosives team deter- tnined that the device left iaside the bank was not an explosive. According to UCB Area Executive .M Uiughinghouse. none of the four bank employees wa.s Icuined No customers were uiside Uu- l>uuk al the time of the robbery. Iaughinghoii.se .saiil Tuesday after noon that he did not know exactly how much money wa.s Uiken. but that it wa.s a "nominal amount." The robbery is under investigation by the FBI, since bank robbery is a federal offense. FBI Special .Agent Terry Peters of Wilmington described the lone suspect as a white male, approx- inv .ely 50 years old, wearing a dark leather jacket and dark ’Ben Hogan" golf cap. Peters indicated that a video camera inside the bank might have photographed the suspect. •’If we do liave a picture, we will make it available,” Peters said Fue.s- day. I aughinghouse said the suspect ■’evidently is not local" because the bank employees did not recognize him. According to Peters, the roblx*ry occurred around 12:20 p m. Tue.sday at le UCB branch bank, wluch is lo lied on Ivey High .Street. Peters said the suspect :du>weit employees a handgun and u.ihc.ited that there was i bomb" before leav ing with an "unknown" amount of cash. " The suspect wa.s la.st seen w alking away from the bank toward the waterfront," Peters said. Inunediatcly after the robbery- was reported, sheriff’s deputies and policemen from surrounding municipalities set up roadblocks on highways leading out of Calabtish. Peters said Tuesday night that authorities also were investigating the possibility that the suspect could tiave left the area on foot or by boat. .After arriving on the scene, sheriff’s deputies closed Ivey High Street to traffic, while local, state and federal investigators waited for the explosives team to arrive from Wilmington. UniLs from the Calabash Volunteer Fire Department and Rescue Squad were on standby at the scene. No radio communications were allowed within 50 yards of the bank due to speculation that radio traffic could possibly detonate the “bomb." I’he explosives team arrived al the bi-.iir’. .0 .,.uul'2: -.0 p.ir. jiut completed '.1., .ork u'. ap()i-oxln»ately ai- Viijsir. Pe!er.« .said the tc: n "made an e.x- .-iniiiial.'on of the dc.-ice to make .sure It w.'is not an e.xplosive." He would nor de.scribc the device it.self. although he confirmed that a large manila envelope was "part of it (the fake bomb)" •According to I,aughinghouse. two attempted robberies have occurred at the Calabash UCB branch over the past several years, the first in Oc tober 1981. BY RAHN ADA.MS A Whiteville man—one of 37 people indicted in Brunswick County on co caine charges in June and July—received a .split sentence la.st week after pleading guilty in August. Meanwhile, the 13lh District At torney’s office is preparing to com plete the “first phase” in its in vestigation of major drug trafficking in Brunswick County, by hopefully prosecuting the last of those 37 cases by mid-February, according to Special Assistant District Attorney Bill Wolak. I^st Wednesday in Whiteville, William Irvin Peal IV, 24, received a 1‘2-ycar prison sentence, with six months active and 11'2 years suspended, Wolak said. Peal also vsas sentenced to five years of probation and a $1,000 fine. Judge Napoleon Barefoot Sr. hand ed down the sentence following a 45-minute sentencing hearing in Col umbus County Superior (’ourt, Wolak said. On .Augu.st 31, Peal pleaded guilty, as indicted, to conspiracy to traffic in cocaine and trafficking by po.ssession of cocaine, with both charges involv ing more than 400 grams of the con trolled substance. His .sentencing was continued from the Nov. Ifi term of Brunswick l^oun- ty Superior Court until the next available se.s.sion of Superior Court in the 13th Di.stricl, w hich wa.s la.st week in Whiteville. According to Wolak, I’eal faced a maximum sentence of 80 years in pri.soii, and a mandatory minimum .sentence of 70 years and a $500,000 fine. However, Barefoot reduced Peal’s .sentence last week after finding that the defendant had provided subsUin- tial a.ssistance to tlie state in its drug investigations. Wolak said. Peal was one of six persons who were Indicted .Inly 20 as a result of work by a .s|K‘cial investigative grand jury 111 Bruiiswiek County Uu- first to be used in the state. That grand jury indicted 33 persons in June, following approximately four months of investigation. Indictments were handed doivn in both June and July for two of the defendants. Court records show that all but five of the 37 defendants fiave entered guilty pleas. Some 17 defendants who pleaded guilty are awaiting sentenc ing. According to the Brunswick County Clerk of Court’s office, three defen dants—Folios KamLsiklis of Green ville, Dale Varnam of Supply and Richard Woods of Calabash—are awaiting trial. Sheriff John C. Davis said two defendants—Alan Dale Brooks of Shallotte and Francisco Navarro of Fort Myers, Fla.—remain fugitives. A special term of Brunswick Coun ty Superior Court is scheduled to begin Jan. 11, with the next regular .session set for Feb. 8. "I have about half (of the defen dants) scheduled for sentencing on the lllh of January, and the bulk of the remainder on Feb. 8th," Wolak said. "That will dispose of this first pliase .. .’’ When asked to explain his reference to a "fir.st phase," Wolak said, "It means the investigation (in to major drug trafficking) will con tinue . . The public can rightly assume there will be a phase two. three and four, as long as the in vestigation continues. • They (the initial drug cases) luivc turned out very well so far," he said. ".Something the public should know is that by using the (special in vestigative) grand jury process, there was no money expended for undercover buys, so there wa.s ac tually a savings." Wolak said an undercover opera tion resulting in the indictments of 37 suspects would have required an “astronomical" amount of funds for undercover drug buys. He pointed out that many of the defendants were charged with traf ficking in kilogram (2.2 pounds) quantities of cocaine, which has a .street value of $1,600 to $2,500 per ounce. An investigative grand jury "can achieve better and much broader results" since it can compel testimony, he said. State And Local Health Officials Study Well Contamination Near Ash BY DOUG RUTTER The suspicions of some Ash residents who started complaining about the strange smell of their well water in .August were confirmed last month by state and local health agen cies. According to Bob Janueson, Wilm ington regional manager for the .N.C. Department of Natural Resources and Community Development, at least one well in the community is contaminated with gasoline a several others are being vestigated. Ideath .Marie Rowe, who first formed the Brunswick County Health Department of the strange smell of her water four months ago, was in formed in mid-November that well was contaminated. Jamieson said the presence gasoline was confirmed by the health department following luboratori nd in- in- her of analysLs of water samples taken Nov 3. He .siiid that additional wells in the area investigated this week by Carol .Miller of the N.C. Division of En vironmental .Management were found not lo be contaminated. ■’There was no indication of petroleum conUnmination,” he said. ■She feels satisfied that it affected just this one well." (See .ASH. Page 2-.A) Yulefide Celebrated In Calabash o*.i PMOIOB. A Christmas flotilla on Ihe Calabash River capped off an afleriioiiii of RmhI, games and entertainment during Sunday’s Feed the Hungry Children I'estival in Calabash. Above, Jolly Old St. Nick waves to feslivnI-giK'rs from the deck of his "sleigh," which was sponsored by the Calahnsh VFW Pnsl. Yim’ll find the story and more plioio coverage of the festival on Page 1-B.