Shallotte Board Gives Okay To Junk Car Rules BY IXWG RITTER In ?)0 days. Shallotte officials will start enforcing mlcs that prohibit "junked, nuisance and abandoned" vehicles anywhere in the town or within a mile of the city limits. After lengthy discussion Tuesday night, aldermen voted 3-2 in favor of an ordinance aimed at cleaning up Shallotte and the outlying communi ties within its extraterritorial juris diction (ETJ). Aldermen Carson Durham. Bill Allen and Morris Hall voted in favor of the controversial regulations, which were opposed by board mem bers Roncv Cheers and David Gause. "Why do you want to plant flow ers when you have junked cars sit ting around?" Durham asked at Tuesday night's board meeting. "I think as a town board we need to look at the total town." Said Gausc. "1 think we really need the ordinance, but I'm not sure the people of this town are ready to go along with it." The new set of rules, which take effect Oct. 31. basically outlav. cars and trucks that arc considered a nui sance or a health hazard or lower property values. Mayor Sarah Tripp said she re ceived a lot of telephone calls about the proposal. "Since I've been may or I probably got more calls on this ordinance than anything, in protest of it." she said. During a 90-day grace period that ends on Halloween, town staff has been instructed to prepare a list of potential vehicles that could be con sidered in violation of the rules. The regulations, a combination of state statutes and ordinances current ly used in Sunset Beach and Yaupon Beach, will apply to vehicles parked on public and private properjy. The ordinance defines a "junked" vehicle as one without a current li cense plate that is partially disman t'ed or wrecked, cannot be driven or is more than five years old and ap pears to be worth less than Si 00. "Nuisance" vehicles are defined as cars or trucks on public or private property that are determined to be a health or safety hazard or a public nuisance. "Abandoned" vehicles are those that arc parked illegally, left on a public street for more than seven days, left on property owned or op erated by the town tor more than 24 hours or left on private property for more than two hours without the owner's consent . The ordinance will allow each properly owner to keep one "junked" vehicle as long as it is in the rear yard and "is entirely con cealed from public view" in a garage or shed. Shallottc native Mercll Hawes spoke out in opposition of the ordi nance Tuesday night. He's afraid the rules will force him to dispose of one or more of the half dozen vehi cles parked at his White Street resi dence. Hawes said he stores his tools in the cars, and has been doing it for 4() years or more. "I've got from S200 to S2.(XX) worth of tools in cars. One reason they're spread out is if somebody gets them they won't get all of them." Hawes explained. Hawes said the guidelines are "mightv strict," although town offi cials said Tuesday they aren't sure if any of Hawes' vehicles would be classified as "junked" cars. Mayor Tripp said there arc several factors to consider. "Just because you park a car and take the license off of it docs not make it a junk car." she said. Cause said he thinks the town needs the ordinance, but he ques tioned how officials arc going to en force the rules in the expansive. ETJ territory outside the town. "I've got some reservations about it." he said. "I don't know how many cars you got out there but there's a lot of them. It's gonna take personnel if this is passed to stay af ter it." Chief Appointment Postponed Shallotte officials decided Tues day to postpone the appointment of a fire chief for the 1 994-95 year un til after an Aug. 16 meeting with fire department members. Aldermen said they want to meet individually with each of the three men recommended by the depart ment as possible fire chief ap pointees: Tim Carter. David Moore and Tony Hewett. Carter has been fire chief for the last seven years, but he said two weeks ago he didn't expect to be reappointed because of recent ten sion between the department and town board. Aldermen said Tuesday they want to meet with the entire department in an effort to improve relations. The meeting is scheduled Aug. 16 at Host 3 foreign exchange student. Your friendship is their American dream. Each fall. Europe sends us its best students Choose from among hundreds of English speaking teenagers who are eager to spend a year attending high school and becoming a member of an American family All students are fully insured and bring their own spending money Host families provide room, board, ana a caring family environment Hosting an EF Foundation exchange student is an eduational and cultural e?perience for the whole family For more information on hosting call MICHEL & DAVID HUNT CT fF (Founda,KH' (91 0)278-5052 for Foreign Study x ' Foundation a non-profit organizulum Of Call 1 -800-44-SHARE ENJOY MORE AFFORDABLE INSURANCE Save with Nationwide's Home & Car Discount! Insure both your home and car with Nationwide, and get r a special money-saving discount on your homeowners insurance AND another money saving discount on your auto insurance Call today I I I f I Main cm 0 Phillip W. Cheers 4700 Main St., Shallotte, 754-4366 NATIONWIDE ! INSURANCE Nittonwint i? on your riUMymmtl ? * Uutw* CO****? 6:30 p.m. at the fire station. Mayor Tripp said she thinks most of the problems in the past have been the result of misunderstanding and lack of communication. "We're open-minded about it. The fire department wants to sit down with the mayor and board of alder men." Moore said. Added Hewett. "We need more communication between the two de partments We need to work closer together." "Whatever happened in the past, let's start anew if we can." Durham said. "Shallotte could not get along without a volunteer fire department. We could not afford to pay for one." Said Allen. "We're looking to make the fire department happy with us also. We want the fire depart ment. need it and we're here to sup port it." Annexation Approved Town board members voted to an nex approximately 30 acres of com mercial property Tuesday night at the request of two landowners. Aldermen voted unanimously in favor of annexing two tracts owned by Jo Ann Simmons that are con tiguous to the town limits. One is a 14- acre tract just east of town that stretches from Holden Beach Road to Main Street. The oth er is a nine-acTe tract at the north end of town off the U.S. 1 7 bypass. Aldermen voted 4-1, with Cheers dissenting, to bring into the town limits a non-contiguous. 6.79-acre tract owned by Jason Simmons. The property is on Holden Beach Road across from Alice T's restaurant and adjacent to Shallotte Moose Lodge. Shallottr Planning Board had rec ommended against annexation of the Jason Simmons property in part be cause it is not contiguous, according to member Shirley Waggoner Eisenman. She said last month the planning board also based its recommenda tion on the town's limited sewer sys tem capacity and the small size of the sewer line serving the area. However, Durham disputed those The public is cordially invited to the Dedication and Open House of the Brunswick Community College Odell Williamson Auditorium with an address by The Honorable James B. Hunt, Jr. Governor of the State of North Carolina on Wednesday, the tenth of August Nineteen hundred ninety-four at six o'clock in the evening Supply, North Carolina Reception immediately following claims. He said the town has plenty of sewer system capacity and the 2 1/2-inch sewer line that serves the property is large enough. Jason Simmons told the town hoard Tuesday he plans to put a small business on the property. ABC Meeting Shallottc officials have agreed to invite members of the Brunswick County ABC Board to a future meeting to discuss the possibility of merging the town and county sys tems. Raymond Babson. a Shallottc res ident and former member of the county ABC board, said he thinks the county board would be interest ed in consolidating the systems and it would benefit both the county and town. Babson said a consolidated ABC system would be more efficient than the existing town and county sys tems and it would give the stores greater buying power and increased profits. Shallottc officials have been at odds with the county ABC board sincc it opened a store on Holden Beach Road four years ago. Town revenues from the Main Street store have dropped more than 60 percent sincc then. The county ABC board's latest proposal to build a liquor store in the Ash community also has drawn fire from Shallotte officials, who fear a store west of town would re sult in further revenue cuts. No More Flyers Fed up with flyers and handbills littering town parking lots, aldermen passed an ordinance Tuesday pro hibiting people from sticking no tices, postcis and similar materials on vehicle windshields. The rule makes it illegal for any one to "nail, stick or otherwise affix bills, posters, advertisements, no tices or others graphic matter upon automobiles, trucks or any other ve hicle within the town."* Exceptions have been made for parking tickets and other citations issued by law enforcement officers. Treatment For Back Pain For 86 million Americans , chronic pain is a way of life. But now. thanks to the COASTAL CAROLINAS PAIN CENTER, there's a place to go for pain that won't go away. ?Back pain is sec ond only to childbirth as a reason for hospi talization. ?Back pain is the second leading cause of absen teeism from work in the U.S. ?Early intervention can prevent chronic pain CALL KENNETH L. W1LLEFORD. M.D. Anesthesiologist / Pain Management Specialist COASTAL CAROLINAS PAIN CENTER FOR INFORMATION /APPOINTMENTS CALL 754-3099 ?1W4 TM? BRUNSWICK BtACC* We've cxpandc^d around the comer! MAIN STREET HIGHWAY ? - Visit the new location to place an ad, subscribe to the Beacon and bring news releases. The Brunswick Beacon has outgrown its present quarters on Main Street, where it has been for the past 23 years. Part of our operation has moved around the corner to 106 Cheers Street, formerly the law offices of Stanley & Stanley, next door to Shallotte Town Hall. This is where you should come now to place classified and display ads, subscribe to the Beacon or to bring news releases. The same office hours, 8:30 a.m. until 5:30 p.m., Monday-Friday, are in effect. The Printing Division of The Beacon remains at the Main Street location. Your local newspaper continues to be printed right here in Shallotte by Brunswick Beacon staffers. We plan to mark this expansion soon with an Open House. We hope you will visit us and help us celebrate. THE BRUNSWICICfifEACON PHONE NUMBER REMAINS THE SAME: (910) 754-6890 tEMAINS THE SAME: (910) 754-6890 FAX NUMBER REMAINS THE SAME: (910) 754.5407 MAILING ADDRESS REMAINS THE SAME: P.O. BOX 2558, SHALLOTTE, NC 28459