Triplet fun Page 4 Indian Summer Festival is Saturday Page 2 Sports Pages 8 and 9 ■ i Subscriber of the Week: Garland Walker Ci j> , 'Jt.r (j ^ £uuo September 3, 2008 Vol. 76, No. 36 Hertford, North Carolina 27944 *^News from NextDoor^^ 911 ceU caUscan goto different county CATHY WILSON Staff Writer Suppose you’re driving along Church Street and see someone lying in the ditch. You grab your cell phone and dial 911 to call for help, thinking your call will immediately go to the Perquimans County 911 dis patch center. But, the emergency phone call emitting from your wireless phone may end up going to another county depending on which cell phone service you use., Local caU center man ager Homeria Jennette said your cell phone 911 call will hit the nearest tower used by your cell phone provider. As a result, your call asking for help on Church Street may end up being answered in Pasquotank, Chowan, or another county. If you don’t tell the dispatcher where you are calling from, rescue might be sent to Church Street in Elizabeth City, Hertford or Edenton. According to the Federal Communication Commis sion, the. number of 911 calls placed on ceU phones has doubled since 1995 to over 50 million a year. Just in this county alone, Jen nette says ceU phone 911 caUs have tripled since 1994. • “The majority of caUs coming in are from cell phones,’’ she said, “If there’s an accident on High way 17, every line lights up. Every Good Samaritan driving by caUs it in on their ceU phone.” 911 calls coming in from land phone lines (home phones) cause the caUer’s address and phone number to appear on the dispatch er’s computer screen, so the operator automaticaUy knows where the emergen cy is located. You should always teU the dispatcher what kind of emergency you’re caUing in. With ceU phones, how ever, the caller must give the dispatcher the location of the emergency as weU, including in which city or county it is located, and CONTINUED on page 11 WbAlMt Thursday High: 81 Low: 70 Thunder Showers Friday High: 82 Low: 68 Scattered T'storms Saturday High: 84 Low: 68 ScAHERED T'storms 6""89076"47143 ■' 5 Perquimans Weekly photo by CATHY Wl LSON THE LAWN OF THE Historic Newbold-White House was littered with people and collectibles Saturday, as individuals and charitable groups participated in the first-ever Attic Attack sale. The event was one of many scheduled by Perquimans County Restoration Association, owners and operators of the historic site, to raise much-needed funds for upkeep of the house, and to bring people to the local treasure. Newbold-White hungry for funds eludes repairing damage to an upstairs stained glass window that occurred dur ing a spring storm. The window will be removed while the roof repair is going on and then neatly boarded up until funding can be found to repair the window. Once the win dow is repaired, it will be ■ reinstalled and then one by one each window will have to be removed for recaming and sealing as recommended by a recent site report from the state preservation office. Additionally, moisture problems still exist with the 18-inch thick brick walls and plaster interior even after the 2006 plaster restoration. This prob lem is not uncommon for homes of the period. St. Thomas Episcopal Church, built 1734 and located in Bath, has had similar issues, PCRA offi cials say. “I understand that they have seen success in deal ing with their m.oisture concerns,” said Weeks. “I hope to talk with officials there soon to see if we can apply lessons learned there to our property.” The Newbold-White House is the oldest brick house in the state. The 1820 David Newby house is also located at the historic site. This cottage serves as the business office and the site manager’s home. The site is also home to the periauger, a one- of-a-kind reproduction of a typical Colonial work boat. The homestead also contains a newly estab lished vineyard, a kitchen garden, a gift shop and vis itor’s center. According to PCRA, over 10,000 people visit the site per year. For more information on how you can help with preservation efforts or vol unteer with PCRA, call 426- 7567 or visit their website at newboldwhitehouse.org Repairs needed, upstairs closed due to damaged beam The historic Newbold- White House is undergo ing repairs to its roof with additional preservation and maintenance work planned for the next two years. The Perquimans Coun ty Restoration Associa tion (PCRA), which owns and operates the circa 1730 Quaker homestead, recently began roof and electrical repairs. The handmade cypress shingles, which have de teriorated over time and with help from Hurricane Isabel in 2003, are being re placed. Over 200 shingles will be restored at a cost of $5-$8 each. Electrical re pairs are estimated to be an additional $400. “PCRA is paying for these critical repairs out of its own meager operat ing budget. We can barely afford to do it, but it has to be done,” said PCRA Trea surer Dee Ponte. PCRA operates the New bold-White House, the Vis itors Center, the site man ager cottage/office and the grounds at a cost of over $100,000 a year, said Sarah Weeks, Heritage Tourism Development officer. While $11,000 comes from county coffers, most of PCRA’s efforts are funded from memberships, private do nations, trust fund, farm lease and fund-raisers. Fund raisers supporting the PCRA this year include the Biennial Gala, three wine events, the Attic At tack sale, and the Haunted Evening. Next year, they hope to revive the Hearth and Harvest Festival there as well. Weeks added. SUBMITTED PHOTO JIM HERBA REPLACES DAMAGED cypress shingles on the roof of the historic 1730 Newbold-White House.There are many re pairs needed in the state's oldest brick house. To find out how to help, call 426- 7567, or log onto newboldwhitehouse.org. Additional repairs in the future will be undertaken provided funding is avail able from grants, fund raisers and other means of private funding that PCRA is currently looking into. “We truly can only af ford to repair the most crit ical work at this time. All conservation and mainte nance work is anticipated to be completed over the next two years as funding becomes available,” added Ann Jones, interim-site manager. On PCRA’s future re pair list is a beam in the parlor that sustained ter mite damage several years ago. Accoif'ding to PCRA President Lynwood Win slow, the termites were eradicated long ago and a plan set in place to prevent future infestations. “Due to a lack of funds, we just have not been able to make the necessary re pairs,” he said. Earlier this year the upstairs was closed to visitors for fear of further damage to the beam. Last week officials installed a temporary support based on advice given by visiting preservation experts who were there to estimate the cost of the beam’s repair . “One look at the con spicuous temporary sup port says volumes about what PCRA has been try ing to tell the public for years” said Winslow. “We need help.” Other needed work in- Tourism dollars increase CATHY WILSON Staff Writer Tourism dollars generat ed in Perquimans County last year rose for the sixth straight year. According to figures pro vided by the North Carolina Department of Commerce Division of Tourism, Film and Sports, tourism im pacted Perquimans County $8.23 million in 2007, up 1.72 percent from 2006. Even so, Perquimans still ranks 93rd in travel impact among the state’s 100 counties. •Local tourism impact 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 $7.01 mil $6.71 mil $7.04 mil $7.15 mil $7.44 mil $7.83 mil $8.09 mil $8.23 mil Tourism here generated a $1.04 million payroll last year and provided $1.31 mil lion in state and local tax revenues. “That’s good news,” com mented Sarah Weeks, the department’s local Heri tage Tourism Devclonment officer. More than 40 jobs in Perquimans County were directly attributed to travel and tourism, visiting such local attractions as the Newbold-White House and Historic Hertford. The county's highest per centage growth occurred in 1995, when the local econ omy was impacted to the tune hf $6.22 million, up 8.17 percent from the previ ous year. Man flips vehicle on New Hope Road CATHY WILSON staff Writer ' L A Hertford man is charged with reckless driv ing and giving a false re port to a law enforcement officer after flipping his ve hicle into a field Aug. 25. According to the North Carolina Highway Patrol, Nicholas A. Cianciolo of 153 Webb Street, was the only person in a 2003 Toyo ta when the vehicle ran off the left side of New Hope Road in a curve around 10 p.m. The vehicle struck an embankment and utility pole, overturned and came to rest in an adjacent field. . Police said Cianciolo denied being the driver of the vehicle and told law en forcement he jumped from the vehicle after it was taken at gunpoint. Police charged the local man af ter physical evidence sup ported Cianciolo being the driver of the vehicle at the time of the collision. Damage to the vehicle was estimated at $6,000. The wreck was investigated by Trooper K.R. Briggs.