PHOTO CONTRIBUTED Riverside Gets Flag Preston Phillips, left, and Marion Davis prepare to raise a United Slates flag in the Riverside community at Varnamtown. Congress matt Charlie Rose donated the flag after it h as flown over the U.S. capitol Nov. /.?, 1990. Crack Cocaine Suspect Arrested Second Time BY TERRY POPE Brunswick County narcotics offi cers have arrested a Shallottc man on drug charges just two weeks af ter he was placed on probation in Brunswick County Superior Court for the same offense. Jerry Lee McNeil, 37, of Airport Road, was arrested following a search of his mobile home last Thursday which uncovered "28 hits of crack cocaine," said Lu David Crockcr, head of the narcotics squad for the Brunswick County Sheriff's Department. According to Crockcr, Detective Charlie Miller received an anony mous tip that drug activity was al legedly taking place at the suspect's home. A search warrant was obtain ed and officers, aided by State Highway Patrol Trooper Jerry Dove and his drug-sniffing dog, Augustus Marcos, uncovered the estimated S3,(XX) worth of crack cocaine. Detectives went to the home around 11 a.m. and were let in by a woman. "On entering the premises, the suspect was about to be read his rights when he ran from a bedroom to a bathroom," Crocker said. Offi cers forcibly entered the bathroom and placed McNeil under arrest. Instead of officers searching the mobile home, Marcos was brought in to sniff for drugs. The dog led of ficers to a medicine cabinet in the bathroom where the man was arrest ed, Crockcr said. In the back of the cabinet was the crack cocaine, each piece wrapped in an aluminum foil packet, he said. Dctcciivcs also seized SI 10 in cash and found wrappers and razor blades with what may be drug resi due on ihem. McNeil was charged with posses sion with intent to sell and deliver cocainc, maintaining a residence for keeping and selling cocainc. posses sion of drug paraphernalia and ob structing and delaying a police offi cer. He was uken to the Brunswick County Jail where he was later re leased under S20,(XX) bond. In Superior Court on Dec. 10, McNeil was given a three-year sus pended sentence and placed on five years' supervised probation after pleading guilty to possession with intent to sell and deliver crack co cainc. He was also fined S300 and ordered to perform 2(H) hours of community scrvicc. Judge Lynn Johnson also ordered that he not use or possess illegal drugs or controlled substances or associate with anyone w ho docs. Me was also ordered to enroll in a sub stance abuse program. Those charges stemmed from a May incident in which he was stop ped by a Shalloite Policc officer for driving left of ccntcr on N.C. 130 west of Shallotle. When McNeil stepped from the vehicle, a medi cine bottle containing 29 pieces of crack cocainc fell onto the ground, the report stated. Another bottle containing four pieces of crack cocaine was also confiscated from the car along with SI,067 in cash and the suspcct's 1977 Ford Thundcrbird. The drugs were valued at S3,300. Change Of Weather In Store For South Brunswick Islands After enjoying springlike temper- For the pcrkxl Dec. 18 through atures last week that ran 16 degrees 23, Canady recorded a maximum above average, local residents can high of 77 degrees, which occurred expect a sharp change of weather on the 22nd. over the next few days. The minimum low of 47 degrees . . was recorded Dec. 18. Shallottc Point meteorologist A daily avcragc high of 71 dc. acksonCanady said temperatures a combined with an average ! average, ranging from ^ hU , f 55 d f a ^ the mid-30s at night .mo the mid- avbcra^c lcmpcraturcfcof 63 degrees 50s during the daytime. Canady .said that is 16 degrees While no snow is in the forecast, above avcragc. he said he expected normal rainfall. Also, he recorded .74 inch of about a half inch. rainfall. HOW TO SUBSCRIBE TO THE BRUNSWICK# BEACOM POST OFFICE BOX 2558 SHALLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA 28459 TO START THE NEW YEAR OFF RIGHT! ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY MAIL: Sr. Citizen In Brunswick County J6.30 35.30 N.C. Sales Tax .32 .27 Postage Charge 3.68 3.68 TOTAL 10.30 9.25 Elsewhere in North Carolina ?6.30 ?5.30 N.C. Sales Tax .32 .27 Postage Charge 8.18 8.18 TOTAL 14.80 13.75 Outside North Carolina ?6.30 ?5.30 Postage Charge 9.65 9.65 TOTAL 15.95 14.95 Complete And Return To Above Address City, State Zip Water Director Asking County For Workers (Continued From Page 1-A) and maintenance," Webb stated. The department needs additional personnel to set up a "tnic preventa tive maintenance program," he add ed. The water department's func tions no longer consist of just oper ation of the water system, but in cludes operations of the wastewater system for the government complex in Bolivia, the wastewater collec tion system, and the wastewater pumping station and treatment plant for the Leland Industrial Park. "Staff training cannot be accom plished overnight," Webb adds, "and we must have sufficiently trained staff to operate this utility with the integrity it not only de serves. but requires." The number of water customers has grown from less than 700 ini tially in July 1986 to more than 3,000 today. The department's num ber of employees has grown by only a couple since the 1987-88 budget year, when the county began adding water users through the first Special Assessment Districts (SADs). SADs are projects in which the property owners arc assessed the "Staffing,funding inadequate for county water system headed "upward and onward'. ?Jerry Webb Director of Public Utilities cost of running water lines from main trunk lines into adjacent neigh borhoods. Properly owners pay based on either highway frontage or the square footage of their loLs. Since 19S8, the county has ap proved of 12 SADs while two, SAD 7 and 9, arc still under construction off of the Holden Beach causeway. Those will be finished in February. SAD 12, approved by commission ers last month, will include 10 sub divisions between Ocean Isle and Calabash. "Where arc we headed in the com ing years?" Webb asks. "Very sim ply, upward and onward. This sys tem will continue to require both capital improvements as well as in fnistructure, as indicated by our Master Plan, through the year 2010." The Daniels and Associates report has indicated the county will need to spend in excess of S18 million be fore 2010 in capital improvements. Those cost estimates are based on 1990 figures for materials only, no labor or legal costs included. Another concern Webb mentions in his report is the continued use of SAD funds to pay for water line oversizing. "This fund will become depleted and if this process of installing in frastructure is to continue, it will re quire additional funding," Webb re ported. In 1991, the master plan recom mends the counly start construction of a main distribution line from the Shallolte elevated water tank to the Georgetown Road area. That line would follow the Shallolte bypass, travel along U.S. 17 south to Thomasboro and down N.C. 904 to tic in to the existing line at N.C. 179 at Seaside. Estimated cost of the project, which includes materials only, is S3.8 million. For the 1989-90 fiscal year, the county appropriated ap proximately S4 million for the en tire water system. Webb's report shows that in 1989 90, collections exceeded the budget ed amount for the second consecu tive fiscal year while expenditures remained around S3.5 million. Just how fast is the water system growing? Eight subdivisions were dedicated to the county for water extension projects in 1990. Those included Inlet Waachc, Windsong Villas and The Beach at Brickland ing Plantation; Carol Lynn Estates; Cmwnstrcam Subdivision; Forest Hills; Lakeside Subdivision Phase II; and Ocean Isle Estates. News, Advertising Deadlines Earlier During The Holiday Bccausc of the New Year holiday, there will be earlier news and ad vertising deadlines for The Brunswick Bcacon's issue of Jan. 3. Routine news items should be submitted no later than Friday, Dec. 28, for the Jan. 3 edition. Real estate advertising deadline is 5 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 27 for the issue of Jan. 3. Classified and display advertising must be in by noon Monday, Dcc. >1 for the Jan. 3 issue. The issue will be mailed on regular schedule and mail subscribers should receive their copies on the usual delivery day. The Beacon office will be closed Jan. 1. Leland Man Sues Sheriff's Deputies For Broken Arm BY TERRY POPE Thrcc deputies with the Bruns wick County Sheriff's Department have been sued by a man who claims they broke his arm and de nied him medical treatment during an arrest last year. Edward Noble Jr., 61, of Lcland, filed suit against the deputies and the sheriff's department Dec. 12 in Brunswick County Superior Court. He is seeking damages in excess of S10.CXX) and asks that a jury dccidc the ease. Named in the suit arc Deputies Gene Browning, Kenneth Mcsscr and Timothy J. McGinn. In the suit filed by his attorney, David Ford of Long Beach, Noble claims that on July 16, 1989 Deputies Browning and Mcsscr grabbed him from be hind and twisted his arms until he heard the bones breaking. Noble was handcuffed and trans ported to the Brunswick County Jail in Deputy McGinn's vchiclc. He was kept in jail for two hours, the suit states, before he was released. After seeking mcdical treatment it was learned Noble had suffered multiple breaks in his left arm, the suit suites. He was required to wear a cast for six months. The suit claims Noble suffered permanent damage in the arm and is still un dergoing medical treatment and has been unable to work. "I think it's highly inappropriate for me to comment on it while it's in litigation," said Sheriff John Can Davis. Davis said he has given his copy of the lawsuit to County Attorney David Clcgg. "We're going to defend it," Clcgg said Friday. "We'll be filing an an swer in due course. I have definite opinions about it, but I'd rather not say anything." Noble was charged with resisting and obstructing a public officer and found guilty of the charge in Bruns wick County District Court. His at lorncy, David Stanley, appealed the decision to Superior Court, where a jury on Oct. 11, 1989, found Noble not guilty, according to documents filed at the Brunswick County Clerk of Court's officc. According lo the suit, those charges stemmed from a heated dis cussion Noble had with a neighbor on the day of his arrest. The discus sion took place on the defendant's property and "was not violent and neither participant had requested as sistance from any law enforcement agency," the suit states. It claims Deputy Messcr, out of uniform and without a warrant, ap proached while the two were argu ing and told Noble to go home. Noble had exited his vehicle and was walking toward his house when McGinn, who was in uniform, ap proached and placed the defendant under arrest, it states. McGinn did not have a warrant for Noble's ar rest. Noble told the deputy that he was on his own property and had broken no laws and "then proceeded to his house," it slates. Deputies Brown ing and Messcr then grabbed Noble from behind and twisted his arms behind his back. The suit stales that Browning and Messcr both admitted under oath at Noble's trial that they "heard the bones breaking in the plaintiff's arm and continued to twist his arm and when asked why they had done so staled they didn't know." The suit claims the deputies treat ed Noble in a rough manner "by pushing, shoving and striking him all of which was unnecessary and aggravated injuries he had previous ly received." Both in transport and while at the jail, Noble asked for medical treatment but was refused, the suit states. He was held in jail for two hours. The lawsuit states Noble was denied his rights under the 14th Amend ment to the Constitution. New Shallotte Postmaster To Report In Mid-January A new postmaster has been ap- ing postmaster until Bringoli re pointed for the Shallotte Post Of- ports. fice, but he won't report until about Bringoli, 41, has held his Beach mid-January. Haven post, his first in management, Frank Bringoli, a native of Stalen since 1984. He began his postal ca Island, N.Y., and currently superin- reer in 1967 as a special delivery car lendcnt of postal operations at Beach rier at the general post office in New Haven, NJ., will succeed Frank York City and in 1978 was transfer Patton, who retired in August. red to Beach Haven, NJ., as a clerk. His appontmcnt was announced He has completed a number of last week by Bill Austin, general postal detail assignments and taken manager of the Postal Service's several courses in postal technology. Columbia Field Division. He and his wife, Maureen, also a L.B. Black, who has served as native of Staten Island, reside in acting Shallotte postmaster since Barnegat, N.J. They have two sons, Palton's retirement, said last week Frank and Brian. that today (Thursday) would be his Bringoli was selected on the basis last day at the office. He begins of merit from a list of qualified can work Friday as posUnaster at Hainp- didatcs as determined by a review stead. committee, a news release from Ronald Reaves, superintendent of John E. Vcmeire, sectional center posial operations, will serve as act- manager Sunset Town Council To Look At Needs Identified In Plan BY SUSAN USHER Come January, Sunset Beach Town Council intends to take time out to study a community facilities plan completed last August and pre sented by Town Administrator Linda Flucgcl in September. The plan examines the adequacy of existing facilities and projects fu ture needs for space, equipment, and to a lesser extent, workforce. The plan was developed by the town with assistance from the N.C. Division of Community Assistance. Topics addressed include the town's possible development of a sewer system. "If the town docs not act soon the opportunity (for state assistance) will again evade us and the property owners will have to bear the entire cost of a system." writes Ms. Flucgcl in the closing paragraphs of the study. "The time will come very soon when the Brunswick County Health Depart ment will not allow any additional development on the island." Mrs. Flucgcl said she has been advised by a state official that the town "might be in a good position" to receive grants or loans to help underwrite the cost of a sewer sys tem. Also, cooperation from Sea Trail Corporation might also be pos sible, she said, in the form of hold ing ponds and spray irrigation for the courscs. The town's last attempt to gain a sewer system was a sewer bond ref erendum in 1979 that failed by one vote. Ms. Flucgcl said she wants the council to discuss this and other needs identified in the plan before members begin work on the 1991 1992 fiscal year budget. She is proposing that the town es tablish a "set-aside fund," designat ing a specific amount in each year's budget toward meeting future facili ty needs. If designated in this way, said Ms. Fluegel, then the funds cannot be tapped for other purposes. At one lime the town had infor mally maintained separate funds for future development, beach erosion and beautification. But these were merged into the regular budget by a past finance officer bccause the funds had never been formally cs tablishcd by council action. The plan looks at the town hall. jx)lice department, water system, town garage and maintenance shop, stormwatcr and drainage, streets and the volunteer fire department. Remodeling the existing minis tralivc offices at town hall and con structing a separate council/meeting room area is another of the recom mendations included in the plan. It also suggests adding a police department storage area, garage doors to secure the garage area and conducting a water rate study to de termine if the town's water system is independent and self-supporting, including sufficient reserves to pay for future maintenance and repairs. The town might also want to base future contributions to the fire de partment on a formula developed by dividing the current 515,000 annual contribution by the number of lots or houses in town. Since its completion, however, the 12-page document has languished as council members dealt with more immediate matters such as annexa tion and zoning ordinance revisions. Its consideration has been de layed from one month to the next. In November the plan was to be one of the topics discussed at a work shop session. But most members admitted to still not having read the document or having misplacing their copy of it. THE BRUNSWICK {^BEACON Established Nov. 1, 1962 Telephone 754-6890 Published Every Thursday At 4709 Main Street Shallotte, N.C. 28459 SUBSCRIPTION RATES IN BRUNSWICK COUNTY One Year $10.30 Six Months $5.50 ELSEWHERE IN NORTH CAROLINA One Year $14.80 Six Months $7.85 ELSEWHERE IN U.S.A. One Year $15.95 Six Months $8.35 Second class postage paid at the Post Office in Shallotte, N.C. 28459. USPS 777-780. so Best wishes for the peace and joy of the holiday season to live in your hearts throughout the New Year. We appreciate your kind support and look forward to serving you in 1991. DEPARTMENT STORE Main St., ShaHotte ? 754-4846