Roberts to speak at library Page 2 MLK impacts local youth Pages PCHS basketball update Page? January 18, 2006 Vol. 74, No. 3 Hertford, North Carolina 27944 P7;c4 ^ PERQUItmSS CDUBTT^ia^hmT 110 W AC2U3EMT STf, |>. HERTFORD, SC 27aW-*306 ie/2006 Weekly SUSAN HARRIS A breakfast, a motorcade and a service were all held in Perquimans on Monday to honor the fallen civic Tornado splits home SUBMITTED PHOTO COURTESY PERQUIMANS COUNTY SCHOOLS Observance of Martin Luther King Day began Monday with a breakfast at Captain Bob's Restaurant. NAACP President Fred Yates (standing) addressed the group, while schools Assistant Superintendent Dwayne Stallings (seated far left) served as guest speaker. M.L. King legacy is celebrated rights leader, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Schools Assistant Superintendent Dwayne Stallings spoke at the first Continued on page 11 No one in home injured MARGARET FISHER A tornado apparently whipped through New Hope causing three pine trees to fall on a house. Though the damage was extensive, no injuries occurred to the family of four. The tornado might have been the same wind forma tion that tore through Pasquotank County early Saturday morning, or it could have been straight line winds, said Harry Winslow, emergency man agement coordinator for Perquimans County At about 3:10 a.m., the trees fell across the middle of the house located at 618 White Hat Road. The resi dents, Jonnie and Tania White, were at home with their daughter. Hunter, 9, and son. Trapper, 7. Continued on page 8 SUBMITTED PHOTO COURTESY OF KEVIN JACOT A tornado brushed the White Hat community early Sunday morning, sending three trees crashing onto the home of Jonnie and Tania White. The couple and their two children escaped injury as the trees crushed the center living areas of the home, sparing the family asleep on both ends of the house. Water line move may delay Winfall bridge project MARGARET FISHER After 10 years of requests with the N.C. Department of Transportation, the town of WinfaU may stiU not get the bridge on Wiggins Road widened for another year if the water lines are not moved before Feb. 15. The Feb. 15 deadline is also what DOT has to meet in order to comply with a government environmen tal moratorium concern ing fish spawning. Work that takes place in the water, including demolish ing the concrete bulkhead and slope protection, must be done prior to Feb. 15 or the bridge widening will have to be postponed until after Sept. 30, said David Otts, assistant resident engineer for DOT. “If the town’s reloca tion of the water line is not completed in a timely manner, the bridge will have to be put off another year due to the moratori um,” Otts said. Bridge construction over MiU Creek could have begun on Jan. 2, but work cannot get underway imtil the water lines are moved, Otts said. The water line project’s cost, originally estimated to be $19,600, has gone up since last year to about $29,000 because of materi al cost increases and an underestimate in the origi nal breakdown, said Sterling Baker, division maintenance engineer for DOT. Rcom is to begin work on the water lines this week, said Winfall Mayor Fred Yates. DOT wiU reim burse the town of Winfall for the water line work. Construction of the bridge wUl be done by the Tara Group in Lumberton and will cost about $523,000. Once work begins, the bridge will have to be completed in 120 calendar days or the Tara Group will have to pay Continued on page 8 Fire destroys utility barn MARGARET FISHER A trash fire that got out of hand because of heavy winds destroyed a back yard utility barn. The family of Mrs. Joe Louis Walker were burn ing trash in a barrel on Friday night when the wind picked up and car ried the flames out of the barrel, said Fire Marshal John Long. The fire, at 237 Hurdletown Road, spread about 100 feet across a grassy field and the winds sent it back towards the shed. A call was made to central communications about 10 p.m. Winfall Fire Department responded and Hertford Fire Department assisted with a tanker. Long said. Before fire crews arrived, the family and neighbor turned garden hoses on and sprayed the barn. “Their efforts were very small due to the fact the wind was blowing so hard,” Long said. “They did a great job of holding it as good as they did.” The barn was totally destroyed by the fire, but no damage occurred to the home, he said. Voters^ election board sold on DRE MARGARET FISHER Now that the public has had a chance to try out the new voting machines, it seems that the vast majori ty prefers the touch-screen model to the optical scan. Both machines are made by Elections Systems & Software, the only company that has been authorized by the state to supply voting machines. Perquimans County is one of 94 counties that is having to purchase voting machines in compliance with new regulations requiring paper records. The iVotronic touch screen or direct record elec tronic voting machines are an update to what Perquimans residents are PHOTO BY MARGARET FISHER Winfall resident Lewis Smith uses the touch-screen voting machine the Board of Elections hopes to replace its current out-dated equipment with assis tance from E.S. & S. representative Tammy Gaskins (right) and Elections Director Eula Forbes . currently using. The cost for 35 machines, training and supplies is nearly $175,000. The optical scan machines are more expen sive per unit, but less are required. The county would need nine units with AutoMark marking devices that are designed for blind voters and those who have trouble marking the bal lots. The cost would be less than $116,000 for equip ment, training and sup plies. The cost to the county is nearly $62,000 for the DRE and less than $7,000 for the optical scan. The cost dif ference between the two, after deducting the $106,000 Continued on page 8 Program restoring quail population MARGARET FISHER A local farmer has set aside 60 acres of his farm land in the northern end of the county to increase the numbers of dwindling wildlife species. Doug Temple, 55, is par ticipating in the Upland Bird Habitat Buffers initia tive, a part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Conservation Reserve Program. This pro gram compensates farmers for setting aside a portion of their farms as grassy borders to promote the bob- white quail, as weU as other wUdltfe. The bobwhite quail, once prolific throughout the Southeast, have declined over the past decades, most ly because of loss of habi tat. Temple, a native of Pasquotank County, has hunted most of his life with his father on the property located on Turnpike Road. Eventually, he purchased the 600 acres to grow corn, soybeans, wheat and trees for logging. His son, Wade Temple, still likes to hunt there, but hunting is not like it used to be. “We hunted this land years ago,” Temple said, “and there was right many quail and right many rab bits on it. And we noticed, over the years, the popula tion has gone down.” Temple, who co-owns the logging company Swain & Street to be closed MARGARET FISHER Residents walking on Church Street Extended wiU soon not have to walk in the street when they get to the bridge over Skinner’s Creek. Construction of a pedestrian bridge will begin on Monday. A sidewalk was con structed last year by the N.C. Department of Transportation. But, the sidewalk ends at both sides of the bridge, causing walk ers to have to go out onto the street to cross the creek. The new 6-foot walkway bridge wiU be constructed next to the current bridge. Work will take place between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Church Street will be closed from the closest dri veways in both directions for the week of Jan. 23, or sooner if the bridge is com pleted before Friday, said Lee Bundy, transportation supervisor for DOT. Drivers can use Edenton Road Street or the S-Bridge on Church Street as a detour in or out of town to U.S. Highway 17. Temple in Pasquotank County, found out about the buffer program from Quail Unlimited, a national orga nization for quail hunters. “What’s good for quail is also good for rabbit and other species,” Temple said. Temple, and other par ticipating farmers, are compensated with a one time sign-on bonus of about $100 per acre and a maintenance payment of $5 per acre and management payment of up to $100 per acre each year for 10 years. The payments are an incentive, but not as much money as Temple could get if he rented the land for farming, he said. Continued on page 8 Weekend Weather Thursday High: 59, Low; 40 Partly Cloudy Friday High: 66, Low:52 Partly Cloudy Saturday High: 70, Low: 48 Scattered T'storms 'W