P The ERQUIMANS Weekly "News front Next Door" ■ /ViKy Ch* I iZ i\\ A Student Chmstims ART, 4 DECEMBER 4, 2013 - DECEMBER 10, 2013 50 cents Tier status change may bring more help BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor Perquimans County will be eligible for more state assistance and grants next year because of a change in how it ranks in terms of poverty. Perquimans and four oth er counties will be shifted from Tier 2 status to Tier 1 next year by the N.C. De partment of Commerce. Tier 1 counties are consid ered the most economically distressed and Tier 3 coun ties have the least number of problems. Perquimans has ranked as a Tier 2 since at least 2007. Now as a Tier 1 compa nies will be eligible for more help when creating jobs in Perquimans and both lo cal and county government should be able to apply for more assistance. In some cases, the dif ference between being Tier 1 and Tier 2 is you may not be able to apply for some grants at all. Being a Tier 2 was espe cially hard on the school system according to local officials. Among children age five through 17, the local pover ty rate is over 29 percent. It’s that group that school sys tem has to deal with. About 20 percent of Perquimans’ population is imder the age of 18. As a whole, Perquimans County has a poverty rate of 20 percent. 'The overall pov erty rate is one of the factors in deciding tier status. “Yoiu" (overall) poverty rate does not always mirror the county’s situation,” said Superintendent Dwayne Stallings. “It does make a difference when applying for grants,” Stallings said. “Many times a See TIER STATUS, 9 BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor A light show, parades and a colonial dinner are all on tap for Perquimans County this weekend. The festivities kick off Friday with the Grand Il lumination in downtown Hertford at the courthouse from 6-7 p.m. There will be holiday music and entertain ment and a visit by Santa, Children get a free gift and downtown businesses will be open late for the event. Parades follow Saturday with Winfall’s parade kick ing off from Perquimans County Middle School at 11 am. Perquimans Coimty Middle School principM Andrea Greene and Perqui mans Central School prin cipal Melissa Fields will be the dignitaries. The Winfall ■parade ends at Winfall Land ing. Hertford’s parade will follow at 2 p.m. starting at Perquimans County High School looping through downtown and then back to the school. On Sunday, downtown will host a progressive co lonial dinner from 6-9 p.m. Tickets have already sold out. The Hertford parade will feature a battleship, pirate vessel and a replica of a co lonial era boat. As of Mon day more than 70 entries had signed up but last min ute entries will be accepted, they just won’t be judged. Corbin Cherry was ap pointed grand marshal of See PARADES, 8 Good Eats . '3 i 'm STAFFPHOTOS BY PETER WtLLIAMS A woman serves up macaroni and cheese Thanksgiving Day at First Baptist Church in Hertford. The program served 500 peopie in 2012 and delivered meals last week to those who couldn’t make it to the church. ji' lT An assortment of pies and cakes cover a table at First Baptist Church in Hertford last week. The church hosted a free meal for anybody who wanted one on Thanksgiving. ^4 .-m Local charter school pitched BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor » A group that has provided after school programs for Perquimans County children in the past has applied to the state for a license to operate a school for students from kindergarten through fifth grade. Hattie Sharpe, the con tact person listed in a letter of intent application, has declined to comment about the plan for RHEMA Stem Institute. The state has re ceived 170 letters of intent from groups interested in opening a charter school in this roimd. Local public school offi cials have not been involved in the process. Dwayne Stallings, the su perintendent of the Perqui mans County Schools sys tem, said he was imaware of the RHEMA STEM school apphcation. “I have not had any dis cussions on it,” he said Mon day. Deanna Townsend-Smith, a consultant for the Office Of Charter Schools, also has no further details on the RHEMA proposal aside from the letter of intent that was submitted. The letter includes a mis sion statement: ‘To provide a student centered environ ment where students can thrive in all subjects, realize their innate talents in matli, science and technology, pass state-mandated exams See CHARTER, 8 High school seniors take advantage of College Application Week BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor More than 90 Perquimans County High School seniors took advantage of a chance to apply to college for free during a one week period last month. “If they don’t ^ply, they can’t enroU,” said Gabby Lassiter, one of the two coordinators of the school’s GEAR UP program. GEAR UP stands for “Gaining Early Awareness and Readiness for Undergraduate Programs.” It is a national college access initia tive funded by the U.S. Depart ment of Education. Lassiter and Starr Gordon work with both students and their par ents to expose them to the idea of attending college. Some students don’t have family members who have gone on past high school and the program is designed to break down barriers, both finan cial and mental that might hold them back. School staff provided help all that week with the apphcation See APR WEEK, 9 SUBMITTED PHOTO At Perquimans High last month, 92 students submitted a total of 248 applications, saving a total of $5,310 in applications fees for students, during College Application Week. DOT, other agencies reviewing options to replace bridge BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor The N.C. Department of TVansportation has met to review options for a new 89076 47144 V bridge in Hertford, but it may be this month before the comments of the meet ing are released. Teresa Gresham, a pri vate consultant working for DOT, said the post-hearing meeting was held Nov. 18. She said it usually takes a couple of weeks before the summary has been reviewed and ^proved. The report includes pub- hc comments on the plan to replace the S-Biidge with one of three options. The state will be responding to pubhc comments about the proposals. TTie che^est alternative — $19.3 milhon — extends straight off Church Street and ends at a point near Larry’s Drive In. It’s also the shortest at six-tenths of a mile. TTie most costly — $31.9 million — also starts on Church Street but uses an other swing-span that paral lels the existing bridge. This options would give boaters 15-feet of clearance imder the bridge which is more than what they have now but half that of the other two others. The other two options would be 33 feet off the wa ter at the peak — the same as clearance under the U.S. 17 Bypass bridge. Alternative E uses Eden- ton Road Street, would cost about $27.2 million and is also the longest at a mile long. DOT held a hearing in September at the Perqui mans County Recreation Center to get public input on the bridge. The bridge replacement project would use federal funds and therefore must comply with the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). NEPA is a law that SeeS-BRiDGE,9