I Trojans vs. To| Kick-off for the first home gc the season is Friday at 8 p.m on Page 9-B. p> HMnHMBMnBHIHi it Trucker I H I In Supply BY DOUG RUTTER ] A South Carolina man was out of t the hospital Monday following an two-vehicle collision last Friday near < K Supply that left another man dead. 1 Thomas Lee Nick, 25, of Hugen, ( S.C., was traveling north on U.S. 17 in i a dumptruck that skidded into the \ path of a southbound tanker truck loaded with gasoline. \ r In the accident, Trooper Bobby ( Wilkes charged Nick with exceeding i safe speed, driving left of center and t | death by vehicle, according to c Highway Patrol spokesperson Ruby Oakley. i Earl Eugene Chavis, 41, of Con- \ way, S.C., was killed in the accident s when the tanker he was driving ? caught fire shortly after the collision, t Brunswick County Emergency t Management Coordinator Cecil 1 Logan said the impact did not cause an immediate explosion and allowed i Nick to escape the wreckage with no \ burns. "It kinda smoldered a little bit then t burst into flames," he said. "It never g did explode." i Nick was rushed to The Brunswick ? Hospital near Supply following the ( accident and was admitted in stable condition at about 4 p.m., according i to spokesperson Francis Williamson. < He was transferred to a Wilm- t ington hospital 2Vi hours later and 1 was released from New Hanover Memorial Hospital Monday. i The only injury Nick suffered was i a stable fracture of a cervical i vertebra, added Mrs. Williamson, t "He was alert and cooperative," she said. "He was a luckv man." i The accident brought to 13 the i number of fatalities on Brunswick c County roads this year, said Ms. j Oakley. By the same time last year, s 15 motorists had died on local e highways. t The wreck occured Friday about 2:30 p.m. on U.S. 17 approximately t 9.5 miles north of Shallotte, accor- I ding to Highway Patrol report. The t vehicles collided on a straight stretch of road just south of Brunswick Com- t munity College's main campus. J Five area volunteer fire depart- I ments and three rescue squads responded to the accident, which ? forced rerouting of traffic along N.C. t 211 south of the scene and Midway r Com mis BY RAHN ADAMS Brunswick County Commissioners Monday discussed a full range of potential capital projects facing the county and decided to tackle the two most pressing needs first?relieving overcrowded conditions in both the county jail and local Department of Social Services. Attended by all five commissioners, the four-hour work session in Bolivia also included an hour-long executive session requested by Chairman Grace Beasley to discuss the proposed purchase of land for expan sion ot me county landfill near Supp- l ly. No action was announced after the t closed-door session. On a motion by Commissioner ( Chris Chappell, the board j unanimously voted to seek architec- 4 tural proposals for expansion of the ( county jail and construction of a new j building for the Brunswick County Department of Social Services. ( Chappell also stated in his motion e that the county should "get on with v those two projects as soon as possible." 1 According to County Manager John c T. Smith, the county's $1.4 million f capital projects fund should cover ex- j pansion of the jail and construction of new DSS facilities, even though the 1 fund would be depleted. t He noted that 1986 estimates placed s the cost of the *wo projects at v 4 psail 1 ^tory IF I%V1| HOAG & SONS BOOK i PO _ _ _ BO SPR i NGPOR frl I 4! Killed f Wreck itoad on the north side for about :hree hours. "We had a lot of sand on the road to soak up the oil," said Logan. N.C. 7orest Service workers also respond>d to the blaze and used tractors to nove heavy debris from the roadvay. Logan said emergency personnel vere on the scene until about 10:30 >.m. Friday removing oil from the oadside ditch. The remains of the rucks were not removed until Monlay. An estimated 50 to 60 fire and escue volunteers responded to the vreck, which Logan said was very timilur to an onniHont tViof vu c*i? UV.V1UVIII. (.not ULV.UUCU :ight years ago on the same stretch >f road. In December of 1980, a anker collided with an automobile, tilling both drivers. "I really can't say why it happens it that spot," he said. "I'd say they veren't 20 feet from each other." The tanker in last week's accident rontained about 8,800 gallons of ;asoline stored in five compartnents, according to Bob Childs, jeneral manager of G.J. Creel Inc. of Conway, owners of the vehicle. T /lUfln fiSJlH firofiohforc nraifo/1 fr\r . uu>u k?vti(jiuvio nai^u ivii nost of the gasoline to burn before ;xtinguishing the blaze, which sent hick black smoke towering several lundred feet into the air. "In a gas type situation the cleanuf s a whole lot less when you let it burr tself out," he said, adding that batting such blazes presents an addiional risk to firefighters. Chavis was en route from Wilmngton to Conway at the time of the iccident, said Childs, and was the :ompany's senior driver with eight 'ears of service. Chavis had earned [even safe driver awards during his tmployment, he continued, adding hat "he was an excellent driver." The Highway Patrol report listed lamage to the 1983 tanker at $50,000, iut Childs said it was closer to $60,000 ir $65,000 with the gasoline included. Damage to the 1987 Ford dumpruck was estimated at $25,000, said ds. Oakley. It was owned by S.S. .easing Inc. of Greensboro. Ms. Oakley also said the wreck did ibout $5,000 damage to the highway. V 75-foot-long section will have to be eplaced. >sioners Se J1,175,720. The new DSS building would cost $750,000, while a new parking area would cost $50,000. The arice tag on expansion of the jail would be $375,720. Although no action on financing was taken, Smith suggested that the county fund the projects through a ease-purchase method, since the ;wo-year-old estimates are probably ower than current costs. The lease-purchase method would seep the county from having to make lp-front payments on the construc;ion projects. However, interest would be owed to the lending instituion that provided funding, he said. Prior to the board's vote. Smith :mphasized the urgency of both proects. The jail regularly exceeds its 14-inmate capacity, and over:rowding has been noted on monthly ail inspections, he said. Commissioner Jim Poole pointed >ut that 18 prisoners had to be "farm;d out" to other area jails last veekend, due to local overcrowding. Sheriff John C. Davis said Monday le feels the jail would have to be loubled in size, or else another ex>ansion would be needed within five 'ears. Also, "the state has been on us very leavy about our Social Services milding," Smith said, noting that the tate could eventually choose to withhold its DSS funding if additional Canal Dred Sunset Beach gives tf" Ocean Isle extends pc I ?-;%v:.:S.r ; v-/'.A\ '. fc . ' ,'% ' P"-- *".;-; v-._ ', J."" ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ . /* > " ' ft.. . -' - ? ' K < STATE TROOPERS Bobby Wilkes, left background. 'Assistan BY RAHN ADAMS 1 A judge's finding that a drug traf- 1 ficker has been of "substantial ' assistance" to investigators ap- ^ parently affects more than just the 1 prison sentence the defendant ' receives. Trie uncling also is taken in) to consideration when the inmate is i up for parole. DeCarol Williamson, who was sentenced in May to a two-year 1 prison term after he pleaded guilty to cocaine trafficking, was paroled ! from the N.C. Department of Correc- ' tions last month, according to N.C. Parole Commission Chairman Sam 1 Wilson. ' 1 Wilson said Williamson's parole ? was granted Aug. 8, after the defen- < dant's case was reviewed by the com- ( mission in Raleigh. j "We consider everything," Wilson i told the Beacon last Thursday. "The ? public record showed that Mr. Williamson provided substantial t assistance to law enforcement." i According to state law, a finding f that a defendant has "provided i substantial assistance in the iden- f. tification, arrest or conviction of any C accomplices, accessories, co- ? conspirators or principals..." t it Jail, DSS E I space isn't provided by the county. > r No official action to require the ex- ] ! pansion has been taken yet by the ( 1 state. i The county's expansion plan calls ; for the new building and parking lot i to be located behind the present Human Services Building. Smith has ! said that the additional parking also would help relieve the government complex's current parking problems. I Later in the work session, Smith i brought the board up to date on completion of a new building to house the offices of Operations Services, Solid Waste, and Building and Grounds. The office space vacated by Operai tions Services and Solid Waste in the Planning building will be used by Building Inspections, he said. Cost of the new 30-foot by 56-foot building, which opened Friday, was approximately $36,000, Smith noted. Construction was done in-house by Operations Services. Water System Discussed Commissioners also discussed but took no action on matters involving the Brunswick County Water System. At the outset of Monday's work session, Public Utilities Director Jerry Webb briefly outlined the findings of a just-released study on the water system's immediate needs south of Shallotte (see related story). Webb said the initial phase of the proposed water system expansion Iging: ie go-ahead, 2-A lyment deadline, 6-A ruM irsday, September 15, 1988 i I PbJ ? I i , and B.C. Jones investigate the acci ce' Is Factor illows a trial judge to give the defen iant a lighter sentence and fine thai s required by state drug traffickinj aws. Although the chairman would no comment on specific reasons behin the commission's decision to grai early parole, Wilson also noted th< U7ill 1 nmrnn'p frrrr* ?fAn?< ? Ktuiuiiuuii o tnir/cai fjiiauii icii was "substantially lower" than th presumptive 12-year sentenc Williamson faced after the finding c substantial assistance by Superio Jourt Judge Gile Clark. The 37-year-old Williamson?i ocal businessman and the son o Jcean Isle Beach developer Odel Williamson?was one of 48 in iividuals indicted on drug trafficking :harges in April by a Brunswicl bounty special investigative grant ury. His indictments stemmed fron \ 1984 drug conspiracy involving seven other area residents. On May 16, he pleaded guilty ai :harged in Brunswick Count] Superior Court to conspiracy to traf ic in more man 4UU grams of cocaim ind trafficking in more than 4CM prams of cocaine. The following da} Jlark consolidated the charges an< ientenced him to a $10,000 fine and i wo-year prison term. xpansion will cost an estimated $1.5 millior He added that the immediate need Df the system?a storage tank o Ocean Isle Beach Road and a pum NOMINATED BY i Lower L* Could G A portion of Lockwood Fol! became the first area in Brunswic for designation as an Outstanding Lower Lockwood Folly south < one of 12 coastal areas statewide n consideration for protection again; last Thursday by the state's Envi ment Commission was unanimous While the areas will receive ; tion immediately, their nominatic series of studies and hearings by vironrnental Management. "We a at the same time," said Presto manager. He added that over the staff will be doing "use attainabili checking for existing and pote shellfish and recreation, taking projecting how the water could with the ORW classfication. ggMMgjfggggKHfn New Presid Allan Dameron is the new \ South Brunswick Islands O Commerce. Story on Page 1 MBgBfr;'_ V'^HPBHtI dent scene as steam and smoke rise In Williamsor Williamson's possible maximum 1 prison term on the consolidated ' charges was 40 years. He also faced a mlnimiro fino tlKfl OAO iC 1 C? ..uiiunuiu tuiv VI ywu,UUU, U 11UI< IVIL 't the finding of substantial assistance, d During the sentencing hearing in May, an SBI agent testified that it Williamson had helped set up a 11 "sting" operation near Calabash that e resulted in the arrest of three cocaine e traffickers from Florida. According f to documents on file at the clerk of r court's office, the arrests were made Dec. 19, 1987, around 3:30 a.m., at i Williamson's The Pearl Golf Links, f 1 In addition to finding that William son had provided substantial I assistance, the judge also listed no c aggravating factors and several i mitigating factors in the sentenci ing?facts which Wilson also noted 1 last tupplr fYinrt rppnrHe ohnnr , > wwix wwua V * vwv* uu Uliun VIJC2V the mitigating factors were that 3 Williamson had no prior criminal ' convictions, admitted guilt prior to - his arrest and cooperated with law J enforcement. ) Department of Corrections Public f Information Officer David Guth said 1 last Thursday that Williamson was i admitted to the prison system on May 18. He was placed on work Projects In A i. station near the intersection of N.C. s 904 and N.C. 179?should be comn pleted by late 1989, according to the p study. EAAC ockwood Folly ain Added Pre ly River last week Within nine n :k County nominated studies as well as Resource Water. project >f Genoe's Point was In July the Con ominated for special it will deal with 3t pollution. The vote specific criteria an ironmental Manage- While under coi i. tion, that section of tected to the extent iome special protec- stormwater manai in sets into motion a lands within 575 fe the Division of En- density controls cai in't work all of them Howard 3aid n Howard, regional nomination would next six months the development abovi ty analyses," that is, peripheral to the w ntial uses such as Several other b water samples and for consideration a! be better protected eluding the Waccai to date. tamber of 2-C. P / %HI 1HP1M1 : Sfe^dges j ?warns V/'"5^ ' '?C v STAFF PHOTO BY DOUG RUTTER from charred wreckage in the i Parole release on June 3 and was assigned to the New Hanover County Prison Unit. He was paroled on Aug. 10. According to Wilson, even with a two-year prison sentence, Williamson's sentence would have "maxed out" on May 17, 1939, due to the Department of Correction's policy of giving inmates one clay of credit for every day of good behavior. New Hanover Unit Supervisor Ray Murphy said Friday that Williamson's release date is March 9, 1989, as a result of additional "gain time" credit he earned while in custody. Murphy explained that Williamson was granted a standard 270-day parole, which is allowed when the Department of Corrections is under a "system emergency" such as overcrowding. Murphy said the system has been in that situation for the past several years. The Emergency Powers Act allows the commission to parole inmates for the last 270 days of At i_ A meir sentences. Citing confidentiality requirements, neither Wilson nor Murphy would comment last week on the specific terms of Williamson's parole. Aotion Commissioners instructed Webb to set up a joint meeting between them and the Brunswick County Utility (See EXPANSION, Page 2-A) River Section nontns DEM must complete its public hearings on each proposed imission adopted guidelines on how requests for nomination, but left d rules unchanged, nsideration for the special designaLockwood Folly River will be pro; that no "engineered solutions" for *ement can be used on adjacent iet of mean high water. Only lown be used. he didn't see any way that the affect a marina proposed for 8 Genoe's Point since only area3 ater gain protection. ~e x? ' " uuics ox water were proposed eariy 3 Outstanding Resource Waters, innaw River, with no decision made t