Breaking Ground Exlde Electronics VP A1 Schnaldt turns the first spadeful of earth Friday for Exlde 's new Leland plant. Joining lilm for the ceremony are Exlde President James Rlsher, Commerce Secretary James BroyhUl and County Board of Commissioners Chairman Gene Pinkerton. The story's on the Business Page, 9-C. Right Place, Right Job Counselor Joe Morefleld, the newest addition to the Student Services staff at Brunswick Community College, Is smiling these days. He's living at the coast again, and working with adult students. Meet Morefleld on Page 12-B. Start Your Engines! The miniature race cars In Cub Scout Pack 227's annual Plnewood Derby Friday night didn't have engines, but the pull of gravity kept them rolling. Approximately 40 scouts turned out for the sloped-track competition in Shallotte. Find out who won on Page 1 1-B. HOAG & SONS BOOK BINDERY 12/31/99 PO BOX 162 SPR I NGPORT MI 49284 TWenty-elghth Year, Number 12 CI MO THf BRUNSWICK BEACON Shallotte, North Carolina, Thursday, February 1, 1990 25c Per Copy 32 Pages, 3 Sections STAFF PHOTO IY RAHN ADAMS SOUTHERN BEU. REPRESENTATIVE Robert Fuller (left) demonstrates "Enhanced 911" emer gency telephone equipment Monday for (from left) Brunswick County Emergency Management Co ordinator Cecil Logan, Yaupon Beach Volunteer Fire Department Chief Al Essey and lu>ng Beach VFD Chief Rodney Brooks. MAKVtbi RESi RiCTED Oyster Season To Close Early BY DOUG RUTTER Local shellfishcrrncn have mixed feelings about a state plan to impose stricter limits on oyster harvests and close the season several weeks ear lier than normal this year. While they are worried about smaller harvests and less money this year, many see the need to take steps to preserve the resource before it's too late. Oyster season will close Feb. 17 at sunset. State regulations allow the fisheries director to keep the season open as late as March 31, but it usually ends in early or mid March. Through Friday, fishermen will be allowed to harvest up to IS bush els of oysters per person per day and 50 bushels per boat. Starting Friday at sunrise, howev er, daily harvest limits will be cut back to five bushels per person and IS bushels for each fishing opera tion, regardless of the number of boats or people involved. The har vest limits on Sundays will remain the same as they are now ? one bushel per person and two bushels per boat The shortened oyster season and limits on harvesls arc part of an ef fort to ensure oyster harvests in the Lockwood Folly Shut Down Again Oyster and clam beds in the lower Lockwood Folly River were closed to harvesting Tues day morning, one week after they had been temporarily open ed to shcllfishermen. The section of river was clos ed to harvesting due to Mon day's rainfall and runoff, accord ing to a proclamation issued by the director of the state Division of Marine Fisheries. Heavy rains generate storm water runoff which often carries bacteria into the river and push es pollution levels beyond the point where shellfish harvesting can be allowed. Since oyster season started in October, the lower section of the Lockwood Folly has been open to harvesting only 12 days. The season will close Feb. 17. future, said William Hogarth, direc tor of the stale Division of Marine Fisheries, who announced the limits in a proclamation last Wednesday. Hogarth said the early closure may causc problems for shellfisher mcn this season, but should help them and the oyster population in the years to come. He said Uicrc is a good population of young oysters, or spats, that will be protected with the early closure and provide for a better harvest next season. "We're having one of the worst seasons on record," said Hogarth. "We felt that the gain in keeping it open this year would not be as great as the gain in future years." Mike Street, development section chief with Marine Fisheries, said preliminary figures for November 1989 indicate that oyster harvests for the month are down more than 80 percent compared to recent years. Shortening the season will give the oysters a better chance to recover, he said. Hogarth said the new daily limits were imposed in response to con cern that oysters are being overhar vested. Due to the scarcity of oys ters this year, he said the new limit should not put a hardship on local shcllfishermcn because very few of them have been able to gather more thon f!ve bushels in 2l d2y. With higher limits, Hogarth said the tendency is for oystermen to try (See Oyster, Page 2-A) Telephone Owners Could Begin Paying 911 Charges In August BY RAIIN ADAMS If county commissioners sign on the dotted line as cxpcctcd next week, monthly telephone bills in Brunswick County will increase 50 cents apiece beginning in August to pay for a countywide "Enhanced 911" emergency telephone system that will be operational within two years. The full board of county commis sioners and officials from at least 1 1 of the county's 17 municipalities held a joint public hearing ? actual ly a neighborly question-and-ans wer session ? on the proposed sub scriber surcharge Monday in Boli via. Besides the town representa tives, only a handful of local resi dents attended the one-hour, 15 minutc hearing. Seated in individual rows of chairs marked with large cardboard placards, town delegations repre senting Shallotte, Ocean Isle Beach, Holdcn Bcach, Sunset Beach, Cala bash, Vamamtown, Boiling Spring Lakes. Caswell Bcach. Leland, Yau pon Bcach and Navassa were on hand for the meeting, which con sisted mainly of a presentation from Southern Bell otticial Robert buller. w ? ... ?? iiijv tv mi uvoiu mv-ituvi a- ? wo pccially from Calabash and Lcland ? kept Fuller busy with questions for about an hour, no one spoke against the 911 surcharge. "How can we even go into all this when a life is on the line?" commented Shalloitr. Alderman Sarah Tripp, re ferring to the monthly surcharge that amounts to 56 per year. "I think they were all legitimate questions," Brunswick County Em ergency Management Coordinator Cecil Logan said after the hearing, "and I don't think there was a soul here against 911. I just think they wanted to get a better understanding of it." County Commissioners Chair man Gene Pinkerton also told the gathering that his board stiil has "a lot of unanswered questions" about 911, and that commissioners proba bly will hold workshops this month to address 911 -related matters. A main consideration will be where to locate a county 911 communica tions facility. Logan indicated that the county is no longer considering pulling the communications center in the old Agricultural Extension Service/ Brunswick Community College building at Supply; the building now houses the county's Aging/ Older Adults and Clean County of fices. and the Brunswick County Volunteer and Information Center, as well as the Brunswick County Literacy Council. Tvui) options still being consid ered are construction of a new building near the county govern ment complex in Boiivia or turning 911 communications over to the Brunswick County Sheriff's Depart ment, Logan said. The 911 system's other two public safety answering points (PSAPs) will be located at the Southport and Long Beach po lice departments. In response to questions from town officials. Fuller said the coun ty has "several months" to decide on a location for the county's PSAP. Southern Bell and Atlantic Tele phone Membership Corporation have begun engineering work to prepare for the system, which should be in full operation by January 1992. Commissioners gave the phone companies the go-ahead to start work less than two months ago. According to the county ordi nance that commissioners arc cx (See 9ii, Page 2- A) Belville Businessman To Seek Commission Seat Belvillc businessman V.A. Cre ech Jr. has become the third Demo crat to file for the District 5 seat on the Brunswick County Board of Commissioners. According to county Elections Supervisor Lynda Britt, Creech was the only new candidate to file for county office during the period of Jan. 24 through 30. The filing peri od for the May 8 primary elections ends Monday, Feb. 5, at noon. Creech, 63, owner of the Olde Brunswick Towne Cookery, will square off against incumbent Com missioner Grace Beasley and politi cal newcomer Mike Holmes in the Democratic race. As of Tuesday, Donald Shaw was the only Republi can to file for the District 5 com missioners post. In the campaign for 13th District Attorney, Tabor City attorney C. Franklin Stanley Jr. was to formally announce his candidacy Wednesday morning (Jan. 31) at the Columbus County Courthouse, Whiteville. Stanley would be the first GOP candidate so far for the district at torney's office, currently held by TIC hnrw?fnl MVIIIUVIUWV V/.w. WV.U..V I - ! ?_! ! Mike Easley of Southport. Shallotte lawyer Rex Gore and Assistant Dis trict Attorney Tom Aldridge Jr. of Route 2, Whiteville, will vie for the Democratic district attorney nod. According to the state board of -i - nMi.:nL i cicvuum uiuvt in naiu^si aii u &ivv~ tions boards in Brunswick, Bladen, Columbus, New Hanover and Pen der counties, the following candi dates have filed for other local, dis til- and state offices to be decided this year: ? Sheriff ? Democratic incum bent John C. Davis of Bolivia and Democrat J.R. "Jim" Vaughan of Route 6, Southport; and Republi cans David L. Gause of Shallotte and William "Bill" Sisk of Long Beach. ? Clerk of Court ? Democratic incumbent Diana Morgan of Long Beach. ? Commissioner, District 2 ? Democrats Allan Dameron of Holden Beach, Joseph Stevenson of Route 3, Supply, and Alfonza Roach of Boones Neck; and Repub licans Jerry W. Jones of Shallotte, and Eugene Hewett of Route 1, Supply. ? Board of Education, District 2 ? Democrats Polly G. Russ of Shallotte. and Joseph Carter of Route 2, Supply; and Republicans W. James Payne and Richard F. Bangs, both of Shallotte. ? Board of Education, District 5 ? Democratic incumbent James Clemmons of Leland and Democrat Jul:C Strickland of Oldc To^nci and Republican Yvonne Lewis Bright of Route 1 , Leland. ? District Court Judge ? Demo cratic incumbent David G. Wall of Elizabeth town. ? Superior Court Judge ? Demo crat William C. Gore Jr. of White ville. ? State Representative ? Demo cratic incumbent E. David Redwine of Ocean Isle Beach. ? State Senator ? Democratic in cumbent R.C. Soles Jr. of Tabor City. ? Congressman ? Democratic in cumbent Charles G. Rose III of Fayetteville; and Republican Fries Shaffner of Wilmington. ? U.S. Senator ? Democrats Mike Easley of South port, Robert L. Hannan of Greensboro and R.R "Bo" Thomas of Hendersonville; Republican incumbent Jesse Helms of Raleigh and Republican George Wimbish of Charlotte. Also, former Charlotte Mayor Harvp.y Ganii was to announce Wednesday (Jan. 31) his intentions to seek the Democratic U.S. Senate nomination. 1 1 989 Home-Building Figures Reflect Steady Coastal Growth, Drop Inland BY RAHN ADAMS As the Northeast's real estate market goes, so goes home-building activity in the South Brunswick Islands, a retirement mecca. That is the opinion of at least two local officials who saw new home construction drop considerably in 1989. Brunswick County ? which for the past several years has held the distinction of being the state's second fastest-growing county ? experienced a 23-percent de crease in construction of single-family homes last year, as compared to 1988 figures, according to the Bruns wick County Building Inspections Department. However, annual building inspection reports that were available last week for municipalities in the South Brunswick Islands showed steady growth, except in Calabash, where 1989 home-building was off by 56 percent Activity was also slightly down last year at Holden Beach, but was on the increase at Ocean Isle Beach and Sunset Beach. Comparative figures for 1988 and 1989 were unavailable last week for Shallotte. "I think the number one factor is that most home builders here are very dependent on that Northeast (real estate) market," said Larry Shreve, who was president of the South Brunswick Islands Home Builders Associ ation last year, "and the Northeast has had a real prob lem in selling their homes." Shreve noted that his own company ? Brierwood Builders in Shallotte ? fared well last year. However, in general, 1989 was "a pretty tough year" for builders across the county, he said. Permits were issued for construction of 184 single family homes last year in the county, compared to 239 permits in 1988 and 359 permits in 1987. The estimated value of single-family home construction fell to $12 million last year, compared to $16 million in 1988 and $21 million in 1987. Another indicator of the building slowdown across the county was a decrease last number in the number of septic tank permits that were issued by the Brunswick County Health Department. According to health depart ment figures, 2,716 septic tank permits were issued last year, compared to 4,076 in 1988. Stringent state septic tank regulations, however, ap parently weren't to blame for the drop in permits. The local health department's permit approval rate remained higher than 70 percent. The difference was that initial site evaluations for septic tank permits were down on the whole ? 3,521 in 1989, compared to 6,1 15 the previ ous year. Besides the fact that retirees had difficulty selling their old homes in the "very, very soft Northeast mar ket," last September's Hurricane Hugo also apparently threw a kink in many prospective Brunswick County newcomers' plans, forcing them to postpone coming here to look for new homes and homesites, Shreve ob served. He said other apparent factors affecting home-build ing here were septic tank regulations and relatively high interest rates, which ranged from 10 percent to 11% per cent throughout the year. He noted that tighter federal regulations on savings and loan institutions last year did not effcect the local housing market, since Brunswick County S&L's are "well-established." Calabash Town Administrator Janet Thomas also at tributed Calabash's drop in single-family home con struction to difficulty that Northern retirees had last year in selling their old homes. Building activity in Calabash decreased from 80 homes worth $4.7 million in 1988 to 35 homes worth $2.5 million last year. At Holden Beach, Building Inspector Dwight Carroll speculated that the island town's slight building drop was due to tight septic tank regulations, which ? until changes this year in the law?discouraged con struction on especially canal lots. He said relatively high land prices also discouraged development. Forty-one single-family homes worth $3.16 million were authorized last year at Holden Beach, compared to 46 homes worth $3.1 million in 1988. "They're not building as many houses, but they're building better houses because the price of the lot is higher," Carroll said. "We've run pretty well close to normal every year. It's mostly one- and two-family units, which I think is healthy for the beach." The South Brunswick Islands' other two island mu nicipalities recorded modest increases in single-family home construction last year. Twenty-seven homes worth $2.37 million were built at Ocean Isle Beach, compared to 24 homes worth S2.18 million in 1988. At Sunset Beach, 61 homes worth $4.38 million were built in 1989, compared to 57 homes worth $3.65 million the previous year. "We were up some in 1989, but it was still a slow year compared to other years," said Ocean Isle Beach Building Inspector Druied Roberson, attributing the building situation to high interest rates and land costs. In 1987, for example, 38 homes worth $3.3 million were authorized at Ocean Isle. However, Roberson added, "We've got some inter est now, and I think we'll see things picking up this year." He noted that five single-family homes currently are under construction in Island Park subdivision on the west end of Ocean Isle. Sunset Beach Town Administrator Linda Fluegel said the rise at Sunset Beach was due to increased activ ity in Sugar Sands subdivision, which is located in the town's extraterritorial area. "From what I've heard through the grapevine," Ms. Fluegel said, "Sea Trail (the subdivision's developer) can't get these homes in Sugar Sands built fast enough." 1988 figures were unavailable last week for Shal lotte, where 20 single-family homes worth $1.93 mil lion were authorized in 1989.