THF Dn. ..." viCK^tEACON ; ? ? ? CpQlWti'"'*" ? Thirty-First Yeor, Number 7 onallotte, North Carolina, Thursday, December 31, 1992 50< Per Copy 30 Pages, 3 Sections, 3 Inserts SW' STAFF PHOTO BY SUSAN USHER SESSIONS MEMBER JIM INNES (left) looks on as insurance adjuster Dave Morris takes measure ments and compiles information in the aftermath of a fire Saturday that damaged the fellowship hall and temporary sanctuary of Shallotte Presbyterian Church. Presbyterians Begin Renovating Fire-Damaged Fellowship Hall BY SUSAN USHER Workers Tuesday began hauling away furniture and tearing out fire-damaged wallboard and carpeting in the aftermath of a weekend fire that blackened Shallotte Presbyterian Church's combination fellow ship hall and temporary sanctuary. Shallotte Police Department is continuing its inves tigation of the fire, said Del. Carey Gaskins. He and Brunswick County Fire Marshal Cecil Logan said the fire originated from Advent wreath candles near the pulpit. The Rev. Lester Dattler, pastor, said that physical damage to the church was mainly confined to the sin gle room on the east end of the building on South Main Street, Shallotte. Elsewhere the building sus tained only smoke damage. "There was a charred section about this long in one of the trusses over the altar area," said Datllcr, indicat ing a distance of about three feet. "Ralph (McClure) said he thought it could be pieced." Helping contain the fire and limit its damage were five-eighths-inch-thick fire retardant wallboard and closed, steel insulated fire doors that separated the hall from the rest of the church, said Dattler. McClure, a member of the building committee and the contractor who built the structure, said he expected renovation of the hall to begin Tuesday, following an all-clear Monday from the insurance adjuster. He expects the renovations to take at least four weeks, but said it may take longer to obtain furnish ings such as matching carpet and chandcliers and to (See PRESBYTERIANS, Page 2-A) HRST TIME IN 20-40 YEARS Lockwood Folly River Channel To Be Dredged; Bid Opening Next Month BY SUSAN USHER Commercial and recreational boats in the Holdcn Beach area should regain a traditional refuge from storms when the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers dredges the Lockwood Folly River channel later this winter for the first time in 20 to 40 years. Restoring the channel is expected to not only make it possible for fishermen to once again move their boats to safe harbor near the Lockwood Folly River Bridge when hurricanes threaten, but also to increase water flow ? and possibly water quality ? in the river. Harold Varnam. field engineer in the navigation sec tion of the Corps' Wilmington Regional Office, said the dredging will extend approximately two miles upriver from the Vamamtown fish houses, or about 3.6 miles above the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway. Vamam said the Corps expects to open bids in late January. If bids come in at or below estimate, he said he hopes to have a dredge at work in the river by mid February. He expects the work to take less than the 90 days allowed in the bid specifications. On Dec. 21, the Corps issued an environmental as sessment and finding of no significant impact on the project. The report indicates it expects no significant ad verse impacts to marine life, shellfish waters or vegeta tion, and that it believes not dredging the channel would result in "significant adverse economic and social im pacts" to the local communities by limiting navigability of the channel by commercial and recreational fishing vessels. To limit possible harm to nesting sea turtles or piping plovers all dredging is to be completed in future years between Jan. 1 and March 31, and in 1993 only, no later than April 30. The Corps will continue to receive comments and questions on the project from reviewing agencies through Jan. 29. So far Vamam hasn't had much response from resi dents of the area about the planned dredging and sus pects they arc waiting to see the project under way. "They've been promised a lot in the past," he said. "Let's keep our fingers crossed and hope the bids are good." Annie Smigiel of Varnamtown said Monday that the last time she had talked with Corps officials the agency wasn't sure when it would gel to dredge the river. "Thai's great," she said, when told the project had been put on the 1993 schedule. Smigiel is one of numerous individuals who have been outspoken in efforts to get the Corps to open up the river channel. She was president of the defunct Save Our Shellfish, an organization formed a number of years ago in an effort to focus attention on improving water quali ty and therefore productivity of the river. SOS members and local fishermen argued that improved flow should increase circulation and help flush contaminants from the channel. Varnam said there has been "extensive shoaling" in some places, leaving only 15 feet to 20 feet of channel. "It should help increase water flow," he said. "The two shoals that have given them such a time ? Mary's Shell Bed and at Rourk's Landing ? will be cleared. They've been almost acting like a bulkhead." (See CORPS, Paee 2-A1 Man Wounded As 1 ,000 Flee Gunfire Outside Local Night Spot BY ERIC CARLSON One man was shot and a crowd estimated at more than 1 ,000 people was sent scurrying when gunfire broke out in the parking lot of a pop ular nightclub outside Shallotte early Saturday morning, a Brunswick County sheriffs detective said Monday. It was the third shooting reported since August at Freeman's on Mulberry Street, where local law en forcement officers say drug -dealing, guns and underage drinking arc cre ating an atmosphere ripe for tragedy. In the early morning hours after after Christmas night, three sheriffs department vehicles, a Shallotte Police car and an Ocean Isle Beach Police officer responded to a radio dispatch alerting all units in the area that shots had been fired outside the club. Detective Tom Hunter said. "When we got to the end of Mulberry Street it sounded like then.', was a fircfight off in the distance," Hunter said. "There were cars parked along the entire length of the road and hundreds of people were running away from the club." As the police cars tried to make their way through the crowd. Hunter said he saw a man by the side of the road trying to help another man stay on his feet. The man had been shot one lime in the side of the abdomen with a small-caliber bullet. "ThCi- wwt so many pcopic, tfto ambulance could not gel down the road and turn around. So I carried him out to the bypass in my patrol car," Hunter said. The wounded man was identified as Darrell McNeil, 22, of Greenville, S.C. He was transferred to an ambu lance and taken to The Brunswick Hospital, where he was kept overnight and released Sunday morning. Hunter said. "When I came back, I could still hear gunshots," he said. 'To my knowledge, nobody else was hit. I think they may have been shooting into the air." Hunter said he spoke to the owner of the club, Freeman Hankins, who identified the man who had done the shooting. An arrest is expected in the case soon. Witnesses said the incident began inside the building. Two men got in to a fight when one confronted the other about dancing with his girl friend, Hunter said. After Freeman moved the two outside, one of the men ran to a car, pulled out a chrome handgun and started shoot ing. In a search of the area around the club, police found several spent shell casings and a few live rounds of ammunition. Some were 9mm shells, probably from a pistol. Homer said. Also fourvd were live, copper-jacketed cartridges from a high-powered rifle, possibly a semi automatic M-16. 'They ain't playing around any more," Hunter said. "Somebody is going to get killed down there. I just hope it's not one of us." Hunter said officers know to ex pect trouble when called to Freeman's and arc under standing orders not to go there without back (See NIGHTSPOT, Page 2-A) Inside... Birthdays 2B Business News 7C Calendar of Events .5B Church News ???????????????? 4B Classified ~1-6C Court Docket 8C Crime Report 6A Golf 8B Obituaries 4B Opinion 4-5A People In The News 7 A Plant Doctor. ???????????????? .3B Sports 8-10B Television Listings.....6-7B County, Schools Invested For Long Term In 1 992 BY THE NEWS STAFF Their approaches differed, but both Brunswick County government and the public schools focused efforts in 1992 on investment for long-term results, despite an uncertain economy. For Brunswick County govern ment, the year was largely spent implementing the aggressive plans and programs initiated by the board of commissioners. Highlights in cluded the completion of an enhanced 911 emergency phone system, expansion of the water system and the adoption of a county-wide zoning law. Responding to concerns expressed by parents, the business community and the state, Brunswick County Schools focused on student performance and account ability for results by educators, parents and students, they adopted new management approaches, hired a new superintendent and opened a state-of-the-art ele mentary school. Brunswick County Finance Officer Lithia Hahn said in January that the county was in its worst financial condition in 20 years. There were encouraging indica tors of a possible recovery, such as falling interest rates, but few were in a position to take advantage of the situation, she said. Zoning was the top issue raised in a poll of those at tending a January public workshop on Brunswick County's latest land use plan update. Improved educa tion, industrial recruitment and unemployment were ?P* I IN REVIEW among the other concerns listed. In early February the commissioners voted to give Planning Director John Harvey 120 days to prepare a ' basic" countywide zoning ordinance. Commissioner Gene Pinkerton criticized the planning department for dragging its feet on the law it had been asked to draft two years earlier. Commissioners took the first step toward forming a countywide library system with a unanimous vote to revert the tide of the Southport library to Brunswick County, allowing it to be operated as a county depart ment. A high-rise bridge to Sunset Beach, a second bridge to Oak Island and a Wilmington bypass connecting Interstate 40 to U.S. 17 in northern Brunswick County were given the highest priority on the commissioners wish list sent to state highway officials in March. Contracts for another S2.45 million worth of work on the phase III capitol improvements project to extend water service to Shallotte Point and Seaside were awarded in early March. The work included the con struction of a pumping station and elevated storage tank. A state personnel hearing was held in April to deter mine if Brunswick County officials had reason to fire Animal Control Supervisor Zelma Babson of Ash, who was accused of misusing department telephone privi leges and of being discourteous to fellow employees. She was suspended and later fired, an action she ap pealed' to the State Personnel Commission. The field of candidates vying for three seats on the Brunswick Board of Commissioners was narrowed from 13 to six after the May 5 primary election. There was speculation that a runoff might be necessary in the District 3 Republican race in which Bob Slockett won a five-way race by only 135 votes over runner-up Steve Foster. He later chose not to call for another vote. County officials were showing off the new 911 Emergency Services Center at the Bolivia complex. The long-awaited emergency communications program went into operation May 8, allowing residents of any the budget, the board agreed to allocate S 1 .5 million for a four-branch county library system. The plan called for new buildings at Leland and on Oak Island and ad ditions to the Shallotte and Southport branches. After years of public discussion and a final deadline issued to the planning department, a draft zoning ordi nance was presented to the county commissioners in June. The board scheduled a scries of joint meetings with the planning board to discuss and modify the plan. area of the county to call for help by dialing the familiar three-digit number. CLEGG County Manager David Clegg presented commissioners with a S45.3 million budget that called for no increase in property taxes. More than S5.5 million in departmental funding requests were cut from the budget to maintain the current tax rate, Clegg told the board. In their last workshop to Finalize Angry mobile home dwellers assailed the planning board for a policy statement in the draft county land use plan update that referred to residents of manufac tured housing as "less educated" than those who live in stick-built homes. The language was later deleted from the final draft. Late in July, Brunswick County Older Adults/Department of Aging Director Ronnie Robinson was suspended from position and later fired after major shortfalls were found in his budget. Robinson's depart ment ran out of money one month before the end of the fiscal year, forcing commissioners to approve an addi tional $20,000 appropriation. Customers of the Brunswick water system started getting a little something extra from their taps in early August as the county began its long-awaited fluorida tion program. Public Health Dentist Dr. David McDaniels called it "one of the best measures we can take to help the oral health of Brunswick County. Brunswick Emergency Mcdical Services was forced to shut down the county's fledgling Advanced Life Support program after state in spectors uncovered deficiencies in its emergency medical technician training program. As a result, am- DAVIS bulance personnel were no longer allowed to perform advanced medical procedures. An aggressive re-certifi (Sw 1992, Page 8-A)