The ERQUIMANS "Neivs front Next Door” June 9, 2010 - June 15, 2010 Summer Breeze set for Sunday, page 3. Good year for sports for PCHS, page 9. EECEIVED JUN 0 9 2010 HPD investigated for excessive force DA requests SBI to look into complaints By CATHY WILSON Staff" Writer The Hertford Police De partment is under investi gation by the State Bureau of Investigation amid alle gations of use of excessive force. Child found safe near Causeway By CATHY WILSON Staff Writer The Causeway was closed for about an hour Sunday afternoon while officials searched the adja cent water for a child after a bicycle was found on the grass, a few feet from the Perquimans River. Police later discovered that the child apparently left the bike on the Cause way and walked home. Hertford Police Chief Joe Amos said police re ceived a report from a woman who saw a young girl walking a bike on the Causeway just past the S- bridge as the woman was traveling from WinfaU to Hertford. However, when the woman returned home via the Causeway about 25 minutes later, the bike was seen lying on the grass be side the road with no girl in sight. “The caller was con cerned about the girl be cause of the water in that area,” Patrolman David Putnam wrote in his po lice report. Police searched the ground area and found nothing, and there were no visible signs that any one had gone into the river or signs of a collision. The bike was not damaged, po lice reports state. Area residents and the S-bridge tender were con tacted, and there were no reports of a child missing in the area. “I didn’t think anyone was in the water, but you just have to check it,” Chief Amos said. See CAUSEWAY, 10 Weekend Weather Friday High: 88 Low: 72 Partly Cloudy Saturday High: 90 Low: 72 Partly Cloudy Sunday High: 89 Low: 74 Scattered T-Storms District Attorney Frank Parrish confirmed Tues day morning that his ofiice requested the SBI investi gation involving more than one incident. A complaint made by the Perquimans County NAACP was received by Parrish on Monday “When that complaint was received by my ofiice, I had already made the re quest to the SBI,” Parrish noted. Vanora Brothers, chair man of the legal redress committee of the local NAACP chapter, said she could not comment on the matter since it w^ under investigation. Parrish would not say which incidents or officers are included in the investi gation or complaints. The investigation follows a May 22 incident during which a Hertford black man was injured during a scuffle with two Hertford police officers who were responding as members of the Hertford Fire Depart ment to a reported gas leak on Dobbs Street. The man, Kenneth Ferrbee, received a cut on his head when he reportedly head-butted one of the officers who was wearing a fire helmet at the time. According to police re ports, Chief Joe Amos and Sgt. Shawn Swindell responded to the Dobbs Street residence with the fire department and found that the gas leak came from an outside gas meter, which Amos believed had been damaged intentionally The The top of the class STAFF PHOTO BY BRETT A. CWRK The top 10 members of the graduating Class of 2010 at PeTquimans County High School include: (front row, from left) Kendall Spaugh, Btyana Bass, Bradley Miller, Kahliah Gordon, Brittany Cartwright. (Back row, from left) Raeann Gates, Jazmin London, Casey Dail, and Colby Brooks. Not pictured is Savannah Black. Approximately 120 seniors will graduate Thursday evening at PCHS. Graduation day is Thursday at PCHS By CATHY WILSON Staff Writer A S local graduates receive their high school diplomas Thursday, several of them have their sights set on futures that include the medical/health profession. An estimated 120 seniors at Perquimans County High School wfil walk across the graduation stage on the school’s football field and be^ their quest towards the future. Out of the top 10 academic students of the Class of 2010, seven say they plan to seek a future career in some sort of health-related field. Bradley Miller plans to foUow a career path to sports medicine and wfil begin at either College of the Albemarle (COA) or Eliza beth City State University while Brittany Cartwright and Raeann Gates both plan to attend COA to study nursing. Kahliah Gordon and Savannah Black wfil attend the University of North Carolina- Chapel Hfil to focus on a medical major. Jazmin London has her sights set on becoming a pediatri cian and will begin with studies at UNC-Chapel Hfil as well. Casey Dail plans to work towards a degree in health sci ences next year at Pitt Community College. While the health-related field seems to be popular with some members of this class, other students plan to enter a variety of studies at selected institutions of higher learning. Colby Brooks wfil attend East Carolina University to become a computer engineer and hopefully, one day, design video games. Salutatorian Bryana Bass wants to become a college professor. She’ll start by attending Meredith College. Kendall Spaugh, valedictorian, is planning to work towards an aeronautical engineering degree See GRADUATION, 5 homeowner indicated she had experienced problems with a man who was stay ing at a vacant house near by, police reports state. Stfil wearing his fire turn out gear, Amos found Ken neth Ferrbee in a neighbor-, ing house and talked with him. Neighbors in the area told Amos that Ferrbee See HPD, 10 Woman rescued from wreck By CATHY WILSON Staff Writer Firefighters and emer gency medical personnel had to walk underneath a live electric line to free a woman trapped in a wrecked vehicle on Swamp Road Monday night. Lewis Smith, assistant chief for Winfali Volunteer Fire Department, said the Mercury Grand Marque traveling on Swamp Road apparently hit a drive-way culvert before striking a utility pole, breaking the polb and causing live electric wires to hang low between the road and the car. Four people were inside the vehicle at the time of the accident, he said. Hertford firefighters re sponded with their crash truck and used extrication equipment to cut the wom an out of the vehicle. She was transported by Perquimans EMS to a landing zone manned by Belvidere firefighters and flown to a Norfolk hospital by Nightingale helicopter. Perquimans EMS, re sponding with three am bulances, transported the remaining injured to a nearby hospital. Albemarle Electric Membership Cooperative responded to the scene quickly and cut the power off, putting 270 area resi dents in the dark for about three and a half hours. “It was a real hazardous situation for emergency responders there for a See WRECK, 2 Tax up 1 cent on $11.9M budget proposal Area still affected by tough economy By CATHY WILSON Staff Writer While preparing the coimty’s budget for next year, it didn’t take County Manager Bobby Darden very long to realize that the next fiscal year wfil be worse than the current one. “The economic recession continues to take its toll on local governments’ operat ing budgets,” said Darden as he presented his pro posed $11.9 mfilion budget to commissioners Monday night. Revenues such as sales tax, land transfer tax, and building inspection fees re main down because of the economy, so the county has to rely on generating more property tax revenue to an chor the budget. The budget proposes a one cent prop erty tax increase, giving the county an ad-valorem tax rate of 42 cents per $100 valuation. A one cent tax increase generates about $165,000 in revenue that wfil be used to give schools a 3.7 percent increase in operat ing funds, pay for a coimty- wide drainage study, and provide county employees with a 1.5 percent increase in pay. “The one cent tax in crease is not intended to resolve aU of the coimty’s budget problems for next year, nor is the increase intended to fulfill every re quest received by the board of commissioners,” Darden pointed out. “The proposed budget stfil eliminates over $800,000 in requests for' county funding for next fis cal year, which I venture to say is the largest amount of budget reductions ever made by Perquimans Coun ty” With the one cent tax in crease, the typical taxpayer should see their annual tax bill increase by about $18, Darden said. Slow growth in the prop erty tax base due to the economy, coupled with sales tax projections at the same current level account for the dim revenue picture needed to support opera tional costs for the county. The county’s tax base growth slipped to less than a one percent increase from last year, compared to a 10 percent growth just three years ago. Local sales tax is expected to generate about $278,500 next year, com pared to almost $600,000 in 2008-09. County departments will see a number of proposed cost-saving measures im posed including a 20 per cent reduction in travel and training budget, over $200,000 in reduced capital expense requests, eliminat ing a part time fire mar shall position, and cutting out an optional retirement supplement for employees. The proposed budget calls for a $75,000 increase See BUDGET, 5 Swindell Funeral and Cremation Services 509 Dobbs St, Hertford 426-73 I I Traditional * Cremation Green Funerals * Biker Funerals Veterans Funerals * Pre-Arrangements www.swindellfuneralhome.com I Over 57 Years of Service to the Community