' t v - ■KT THE PERQUIMANS WEEKLY Volume 4>u, no. ii Hertford, Perquimans County, N.fi., Thursday, May 23, 1991 30 Cents ' . Farm: Storing Vidalia onions is a cinch with pantyhose * « * v;? : Hi Wl Sports: Pirates whip Camden in conference tie-breaker 19-6: Page e i : : • 4^' vs#* Briefs Wc5*r«i»6(i#dto^^^ hunter safety courses ~-As of July 1, 1991, It Is man datory for all first-time hunting . license buyers to take a Hunters Safety course. " *.; 1 Due this new law, the Wild life Resource Commission is seeking volunteers to help teach this course. Anyone interested in helping needs to complete a Hunters Safety Instructor Course. To sign up or for more information please call J.C. Sta ley at 426-5662. Church plans sale • The New Hope United Meth odist Church UMW will be hold ing their annual yard sale and . bake sale on Saturday. May 25. . The sale will begin at 10 a.m. on the church grounds. Driver training sat Bus driver training classes will be held 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., June 12-14, at Perqui mans County High School. If you are interested in registering for the bus driver training, please contact Tom Monti at the Perquimans County Board of Education office at 426-5741. Persons intersted in attending' the training must call prior to the workshop date to pre- regis ter and attend all three days of the training. This training is re quired for anyone interested in driving a school bus during the 1991-1992 school year. Basketball camp sat ' The First Annual Perquimans County Instructional Basketball Camp will be held at Perqui mans High School from June 17-21. The camp is set to teach the fundamentals of basketball to girls ages 9-13. The camp staff will include area high school and middle school coaches who have an interest in improving overall basketball skill. Application deadline Is June 8. Bassball camp planned From June 17-21 will be the second annual Perquimans County Baseball Camp. This camp will be held at the high school baseball field. Sports Camp schadulsd t • "The first annual Perquimans Cpunty Sports Camp will be held at Perquimans Middle School June 24-July 19. This s , camp Is set up to provide chil i difen with a worthwhile summer I activity, while teaching them ba sic skills In the following activ ities: soccer, softball, basketball, racket sports, gymnastics, wres tling (boys), volleyball, and track • .and field. The camp will be held from 8:30-12 noon. Parents interested to any of ■. the above camps should contact : Roger Morgan at 426-8468 or 426-7355. / I County grabbles with solid waste management Solid waste management and i its effect on the county’s budget consumed much of the county commissioner’s time In regular session Monday night. The total solid waste man agement budget for the present fiscal year was $132,000. That figure will skyrocket to $227,320 in 1991-92, according to county manager Paul Gregory. State mandates to cut by 25 percent the amount of solid waste deposited into landfills by 1993 has left the county with few alternatives. Manned conve nience centers will be built around the county. Residents will deliver their separated gar bage to the centers for recycling. There will be receptacles for glass, aluminum, paper and plastic, as well as for general unrecyclable garbage. Tentative plans for 1991-92 call for erecting three recycling centers at a cost of $25,000 30.000 per center. Operating the three sites will cost the county $133,812, which is reflected In the $227,230 in the budget pro posal. However, the $75,000 90.000 cost to construct the convenience centers is not In eluded in the proposal. One option discussed by Gregory and the commissioners which looks likely is assessing every household in the county a $25 annual solid waste fee. Gre gory said the fee could be in cluded on the ad valorem tax statements mailed in September and would be due by December 31 as are tax bills. Even with the $25 fee. the commissioners will probably be forced to raise ad valorem taxes by 2-3 cents per $100 of valu ation. Commission chairman Lester Simpson said that the . -;V" ‘ Photo by Susan Harris A Belvidera man escaped unharmed when turned on Swamp Road Monday, this Ford wrecker he was operating over Locals attend state education event Education officials, commu nity leaders and parents from across the state traveled to Ra leigh last Thursday to attend the sixth annual Public Education Day sponsored by the North Carolina Alliance for Public Edu cation. A delegation of eight from Perquimans made the trip to hear from education and legis lative officials about the crisis In education and the state budget. Trudy Blake, president of the North Carolina Association of School Administrators and a member of the Alliance, told the group that the state will not grow and achieve without a commitment to education. She said that today's schools must be restructured and priorities must be set so that North Caro lina can become an example for Other states to follow. Senate President Pro Tem Henson Bames said that the uenerai AssemDiy musi iacc tough decisions in balancing the budget for both this fiscal year and next He said that while budget shortfalls will affect pub lic education, teaching children is a state priority. He noted that two-thirds of the state budget; goes to education. Bames said that there are only two wayB to deal with the budget deficit spending cuts or a tax Increase. He said that his research had found that most people favor tax increases if ed ucation will be the benefactor, tt Speaker of the House Daniel Blue stated that the state is fee ing the worst budget crisis in memory. He said that the state, has a tremendous obligation to' fulfill to its citizens, and the state must put meaning to the priority position of education. ! Legislators have looked fear duplicity and waste to come up ' with ways to cut the budget. I Blue added that federal! mandates have crippled the state budget. Human services and corrections, he said, were areas controlled in large part tty federal legislation. “We have cut as much out of the budget as we can cut out of ft,’* Ittue said. “There is no way : ■ ’■ aS'-';': 4 Photo by Susan Harris Eight Perquimans parents and educators attended Public Edu cation Day in Raleigh last Thursday. Making the trip were (standing, I to r) Ben Hobbs, Dr. Randall Henion, Henry Felton and Linda Godfrey, (seated) Lynn Lassiter, Betty Phelps and Jeanie UmphletL Not pictured is Susan Harris. (to balance the budget fay cut ting!” Blue aaid that legislators must find $700-800 minion “Just to hold the status quo. Over the next six weeks, we will come up with some solutions, long-term we hope.” Blue and Barnes agreed that the House and Senate are in agreement on budget woes and now enjoy the most cooperative relationship either can remem ber.; : ? State Superintendent of Pub lic Instruction Bob Etheridge said that he was pleased with the cooperative ana committed tone of both Blue and Barnes. He said that the calls, letters, and visits by parents and edu cators had shown legislators that North Carolinians are com mitted to education. “The most powerful lobby is citizens," Etheridge said. Other speakers during the day included Judy Mountjoy, chairman of the Alliance and <;. —1 president of the state PTA and N.C. School Boards Association Executive Director Gene Causby. Visits to legislators planned for the afternoon were nixed when the legislators convened at noon. Thursday was the last day for bills requiring funding to be submitted to the legislature, and therefore legislators were In ses sion and unavailable to speak with their visiting constituents. Those who made the trip from Perquimans County were superintendent Randall Henion, principal Henry Felton, school board member Ben Hobbs, com munity schools coordinator Jea nle Umphlett. Hertford Grammar School PTA co-presidents Linda Godfrey and Betty Phelps, Cen tral School PTA co-president Lynn Lassiter and Susan Hams, media representative and Cen tral School PTA treasurer. , e -r ~ ' / . : • , ■ ■ • ■- ‘.-V, ‘ *' - .. Y'i V" ‘ budget must be balanced and tiie county will be forced to ab sorb state budget cuts. Commissioners Leo Higgins and Thomas Nixon said that the county must give residents an Incentive to recycle and not to litter the county with garbage. Higgins suggested the county consider door-to-door pick-up on a regular basis for white goods. He said the residents who use the service can be charged per pick up. The commissioners must de cide how many convenience cen ters to build, and where they will be located. The cost of oper ating the centers will more than likely dictate the number to be built. The commissioners will meet In a work session on May 29 to discuss with officials from the towns of Hertford and Winfall solutions to the solid waste di lemma. Gregory will also outline the 1991-92 budget proposed by the finance committee consisting of Gregory, Nixon and Higgins. Final decisions on financing for solid waste management will be made at that meeting. Rain contributes to Monday accident Balding tires on a rain-slic ked road caused a Belvidere man to slide into a ditch Mon day afternoon. James Jacob Hall. 36, of Route 2, Box 324, was traveling west on Swamp Road around 12:30 p.m. Hall told investigat ing officer N.C. State Trooper Craig Garriss that as he came out of a curve, he felt the back end of the 1971 Ford wreck he was driving slide around. The truck left the road on the right, turning completely over and coming to rest In a ditch on its top. Garriss requested assistance from the Winfall Volunteer Fire Department when he noted the truck’s gas tank leaking. The trooper estimated the damage to the vehicle at $1,000. Hall was charged with im proper equipment (tired) and not having the vehicle registered. Friday wreck interrupts town electric power A Friday night wreck at the intersection of Edenton Road Street and Ballahack Road in Hertford sent drivers and pas sengers in two vehicles to local hospitals. According to the accident re port filed by patrolman Tim Bunch of the Hertford Police De partment, a 1988 Ford van driven by Clifford Callis White hurst, 44, of Elizabeth City, col lided with a 1974 Chevrolet truck operated by Marcus Ber nard Downing, 34, of Hertford at approximately 9:14 p.m. White hurst was traveling west on Wynne Fork Road when he failed to stop at a stop sign, and was hit in the side by Downing, who was traveling north on Edenton Road Street. The impact of the crash turned the Chevrolet on its side and sent it 54 feet from the point of impact. The van came to rest in a field 144 feet from the point of impact after moving between two electric poles, strik ing a guideline and causing an electric line to break. The accident caused a power outtage in a small section of town, and lights flickered several times in other areas of the mu nicipality and in the county. Mayor W.D. “BiU” Cox said that North Carolina Power turned off electric current for about 10 minutes to remove the guidewire which was resting across a power line, and to reconnect the broken line. When employees with the Perquimans County Extension Service arrived at work Monday morning, they discovered that their computers would not turn on. Further investigation re vealed that some breakers and surge protectors were damaged, according to County Manager Paul Gregory. It appears that the interruption of power due to the Friday evening wreck caused the problems at the Extension Service. Gregory said represen tatives from the computer com pany will arrive this week to assess the damage. The Hertford Fire Depart ment was called to the scene of the accident, and stayed for ap proximately one and one-half hours, according to fire chief Edgar Roberson. Passengers in the van were transported to Albemarle Hospi tal by the Perquimans County Rescue Squad. The passengers in the truck were taken to Cho wan Hospital. Bunch estimated the damage to each vehicle at $5,000. Whitehurst was cited for failing to yield the right of way in obe dience to a duly erected stop sign and transporting a child under the age of six without be ing properly secured. Durants Neck Fire Department receives matching fund grant Durants Neck Volunteer Fire Department was one of 100 ru ral fire department in North Carolina to receive matching fund grants as part of the Fed eral Rural Community Fire Pro tection Program. Governor James G. Martin announced re cently. The local department will re ceive $1,443 of the $100,189 in federal grant funds dispersed for the program for fiscal year 1991-92. The money can be used to purchase a variety of fire fighting equipment ranging from tum-out gear and hoses to pumps and wildland fire sup pression equipment Th qualify for the Federal :v:u\ ■■4' m .:y:. ^ - Rural Community Fire Protec tion Program, rural Are depart ments must serve fewer than 10.000 people. Fire departments Interested In participating In next year’s program should con tact the local county forest ranger. The departments must file an application with the Divi sion of Fore Resources showing need for the funds, and must be able to match the grant re ceived. The program , Is administered by the Division of Forest Re sources of the Department of Environment. Health and Natu ral Resources through the U.S. Forest Service. . . ' '*vv - ' '->■ v V-,I j. ■ .-‘'if*'''