i AUG 2 1 litC'il P The ERQUIMANS M^EEKLY "JVetvs front Next Door" AUGUST 21, 2013 - AUGUST 27, 2013 50 cents County sees jump in tourism spending BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor Tourism brought in $9.5 mil lion last year to Perquimans County, according to a state report. The local figure was up 5.4 percent over the year before. That mirrors the statewide in crease in 2012. Sid Eley, the director of the Perquimans County Chamber of Commerce, hailed the $2.8 million increase in spending and a jump in sales tax receipts as great news. “The state and local tax rev enues from travel and tourism amounted to $1.44 million. This represents a tax savings of over $105.42 for ever resident of Per quimans County.” There are 40 people employed in the county in tourism-related businesses. They draw a payroll of $1.1 million, according to the state report. Ely is in charge of the Jim “Catfish” Hunter Museum locat ed inside the chamber building on Market Street. The chamber, Eley says, draws 500 visitors a month. See SPENDING, 4 Tourism Expenditures Percentage change Payroll TAX RECEIPTS (MILLIONS) Impact (MILLIONS) 2011/12 (millions) Camden 1.86. 2.1 0.20 0.15 Chowan 18.13 5.5 2.58 1.117 Currituck 131.15 8.1 23.61 6.05 Pasquotank 54.71 2.9 8.02 1.19 Perquimans 9.52 5.4 1.10 1.05 State 19,409.81 5.4 4,391.25 579.38 ALL FIVE AREA COUNTIES SAW INCREASES IN TOURISM REVENUES IN 2012 SOURCE: NC DIVISION OF TOURISM. FILM AND SPORTS DEVELOPMENT Simmer school aims to get kids prepared BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor M ore than 100 Per quimans County students got two weeks of additional help this summer thanks to a summer program at Hertford Grammar School. Next year, failing third graders will get six weeks of summer school even if they don’t want it. The program this year was voluntary, and open to a wider group than just struggling students. The state now says students who can’t pass the end of grade test at the end of third grade cannot move to fourth grade until they can past the exam. Perquimans Central School educates chil dren from kindergarten through second grade. Then they transfer to Hertford Grammar School for grades three, four and five. Third grade is the first grade where testing plays a critical role. “They’re at Central for three years, then come here and we test them,” said HGS Prin cipal Linda White. “The accountability falls on HGS.” STAFF PHOTO BY PETER WILLIAMS Teacher Carole Purser works with students during a speciai two-week summer program at Hertford Grammar. The summer school program is held at the grammar school. Coordinating teach ers within the walls of a traditional school is one thing. Doing it with two separate campuses three miles away is another. But principals at both schools say they’ve been doing it and now will have to do it even better. It was an issue before, but starting next year, it’s a bigger one. White used to be the principal at Perquimans Central and says she’s got a strong relationship with Melissa Fields, the principal there now. Each school system has some freedom to run schools the way it wants. In Pasquotank County, students can stay at the same school from kindergarten through fifth grade. The Edenton-Chowan system is similar to the one in Perquimans. In Camden, students attend the same school up through third grade so they’ll take the same third grade ex^ in the environment they’ve spent their early years. Plantation golf work finished From staff reports After operating on a re duced basis with tempo rary greens since June 10, The Sound Golf Links will officially reopen with all new greens on Thursday. The renovated course will be formally unveiled at a members-only tour^ nament starting at 9 a.m. In addition, to mark the occasion special rates ard ■ being offered to all golf ers who book tee times between Aug. 23 and Aug. 31. The course is open to - the public year-round and offers membership oppor tunities upon request. “We are thrilled to re^ open The Sound Golf Links after limiting our operations over the pa4t few months as we haviB If worked diligently to o^ timize golfing conditions for our patrons, said KeiJr ny Saunders, the coursed PGA professional. “While the wet weather conditions certainly as sisted with the replanting process, the bulk of the credit goes to Mike Hor- See COURSE, 4 Local trucker puts safety first Group wants to help with area Obamacare education BY REGGIE PONDER Chowan Herald Life on the road isn’t for everyone, but it suits Stacy Boyce just fine. The Rocky Hock resident has answered the call of the open road — and it has paid off with a recent recognition as Driver of the Year for Daily Express Inc. of Carlisle, Pa. Boyce acknowledges mat- ter-of-factly that he’s on the road all the time. He was only home four times last year, he said. When he was home it was for about a week, he added. But what he eqjoys most about being a long-haul truck er is “being somewhere differ ent every day,” he said. As a long-haul tractor-trail er operator, Boyce has hauled cargo in all 48 contiguous states, and also has driven into Canada and Mexico. Typical of some of his lon ger routes is one firom Penn sylvania to Texas. 89076 47144 REGGIE PONDER/CHOWAN HERALD Stacy Boyce has been recognized as Driver of the Year for Daily Express Inc. of Carlisle, Pa. Among his favorite places to go - because of the scenery and wide-open vistas - are Wyoming and Montana When he does make it home to Rocky Hock, he’s glad to be home, he said. “But I’m constantly won dering ‘What am I missing out there?”’ he said. “What am I not seeing today?”’ The 47-year-old driver hasn’t missed too much, though, since he logged 75,000 miles in 2012. That mileage, coupled with a clean safety See TRUCKER, 4 BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor Between Medicare and the new Af fordable Care Act, people are going to be seeing changes in the way they get health care assistance. Jewel Winslow wants to be able to help them navigate that journey. Winslow is an agent with the Perqui mans County office of the N.C. Coop erative Extension service. With new health plans come a flood of toll-free phone lines and Internet web sites. Winslow says they have a place, but they don’t work for everybody. “There is the premise that we’re get ting a 1-800 hotline and that’s not going to cut it. Or we’re going to have some body who presents on a Website, but that’s not going to do it.” When faced with the choices offered under Medicare and the new Affordable Care Act — known by some as Obam acare — some folks are going to want to sit down and talk to another human being face to face, she said. Wmslow believes she and others in Perquimans County would do that. She’s put in bid to help be a part of the implementation of the new healthcare law. “I’m getting the same feeling as when Medicaid Part D just came in in 2005.” The law provided for the first time a nationwide system for people to make See EDUCATION, 4 Medicare changes is meeting focus From staff reports A meeting will be held next month for area residents who would like to learn more about the Medicare. The Medicare: 101 Health Insurance Workshop is scheduled for Sept. 28 at Woodland United Methodist Church. It is co-sponsored by the North Caro lina Cooperative Extension Service’s Seniors Health Insurance Information Program (SHIIP) and the Forestburg Rurtain Club. There will be a 10 am. session to dis cuss basic Medicare updates and dem onstrate how to navigate the Medicare website. A lunch will be provided fol lowed by a 1 p.m. session to introduce See MEDICARE, 4 -CSiary S "• S' & Auctions. & Auctions, LLC NCRL#22873 NCAL#9180 252-426-1380 • www.forbesuc.com Visit www.forbesuc.com For a Virtual Tour This home in Albemarle Plantation is loaded with many upgrades! Kitchen has stainless steel appliances, extensive cabinetry, gas cook-top, & solid surface counter tops. Hardwood floors, a large study/home office space, oversized garage, multi-purpose FROG, copious storage possibilities, and low maintenance features help complete your wish list. National Marketing, Local Expertise Featured Property of the Week www.forbesuc.com 252-426-1380