P , THE ERQUIMANS h WEE K ly Habitat Honors Top Volunteers, Page 4 "News from Next Door" APRIL 2, 2014 - APRIL 8, 2014 APR 0 2 RETD 50 cents Fire damaged apartments will be repaired STAFF PHOTO BY PETER WILLIAMS BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor See GROWTH, 4 BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor Plywood covers a window and blue tarps still cover holes in the roof of a four-unit apartment that was damaged by fire in February. The interior of the unit off Wynne Fork Road will be gutted and restored in the coming months. County Slow, steady growth The Albemarle region as a whole grew in population between 2010 and 2013 de spite losses in two of the five counties. Perquimans County add ed 148 more people during the period, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. While that amounts to a jump of 1.1 percent — a third of the statewide average — the growth along with more people in Camden and Cur rituck counties more than made up for the 747 people that were no longer counted in Pasquotank and Chowan counties. Slow and steady growth is a good thing according to Perquimans County Manger Frank Heath. “I think good, steady growth is the kind we like to see. Explosive growth can overwealm you,” Heath said. The county manager said new homes are being built in Albemarle Plantation as well as elsewhere in the county. “We’re not to where we need to be for residential, but growth has been starting to trickle in,” he said. Too much growth too quickly can overwealm the infrastructure. The growth Perquimans County has been seeing can easily be ac commodated with the exist ing water utility. The agency used a base figure from the April 1, 2010 Census to start with. Popula tion was then estimated ev ery July 1 for the 2010, 2011, A four-unit apartment complex heavily dam aged by fire in February will be repaired and the 18 people who were displaced have been or soon will be resettled elsewhere. The actual cause of the blaze was never deter mined. Repairs are expected to cost upwards of $200,000 and will be covered by insurance. At least 30 firefighters from departments in Hertford , Winfall and Bethel responded to the blaze at the Hertford Housing Authority com plex on Wynne Fork Road. Barry Overman, the fire marshal for Elizabeth IN A RELATED STORY ■ Cause of King Street fires unknown - Page 2 City and Camden County was called in to inves tigate. “We had people go in and do some work,” Overman said last week. They were able to determine that the fire started in a bedroom of a unit at 222 Wynne Fork Drive. “Unfortunately we didn’t have enough left in See DAMAGED, 4 Schools pitch traffic solution BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor Officials propose spend ing $81,000 to ease a traffic problem that is impacting Perquimans Central School and anybody who is pass ing through on the road that connects downtown Winfall with Hertford at the wrong time of day. The plan is in two phases and calls for asking the Per quimans County Commis sion for $31,000 in capital money in the 2014-15 bud get to pay for the second phase. “We want parents to know we really are try ing,” said Brenda Lassiter, a spokesperson for the school system. Traffic snarls in the early morning and mid-afternoon are typical on Winfall Bou levard — a link between Creek Road and Winfall’s Main Street. The school is home to 488 students, and typically 315 ride a bus. The rest — more than 170 of them — are picked up by fam ily members in cars. When the weather is bad — as it’s been a lot this winter — car ridership increases. The current traffic pat tern routes the cars through a traffic circle in front of the school. The new pattern will take the cars around to the back of the school and move the school buses from the back to the north side of the site. The school system has been working on the See SOLUTION, 4 Some road projects threatened BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor The failure to pass a federal highway funding bill would impact 108 road and bridge projects in North Carolina, but replacement of the S-Bridge in Hertford is not one of them. Last week Gov. Pat McCrory and his transportation secretary told members of the North Caro lina Chamber of Commerce that the state is at risk of stall ing $1.1 billion worth of highway and bridge proj ects next fiscal year. McCrory called on Congress to renew a 2012 law that provides federal money to trans portation projects across MCCRORY the country. The $20 million to replace means right-of-way acquisition is scheduled to happen in the 2015-16 fiscal year that starts October 2015. Construction is expected to start in the 2017-18 fis cal year. Nicole Meister, a spokeswoman for the N.C. DOT, said that the S-Bridge project Program urges more grads to attend college 6 89076 47144 the S-Bridge with a fixed-span bridge will require federal mon ey. On federal projects, the state pays 20 percent of the cost and the rest is covered by the federal falls after the 2014-15 federal highway bill. Projects that are scheduled to start in 2014-15 will be impacted, but those that are already underway — like the 2 budget. The Hertford project falls bridge replacement project in downtown Elizabeth City, would beyond the scope of the 2014- 15 federal budget. At this point, See PROJECTS, 4 From staff reports College of The Albemarle’s Eden ton campus will host a program on Sunday aimed at getting local teens in Perquimans and Chowan coun ties to start thinking about pursu ing an education after high school. More importantly, the event will get local seventh-, eighth- and 12th grade students, and their parents, thinking about how to pay for col lege. “It’s a program about college savings and ways to pay for it,” said Lynn Hurdle-Wmslow, dean of COA’s Edenton-Chowan cam ¬ pus, referring to the Gaining Early Awareness and Readiness for Un dergraduate Programs, or GEAR UP event, set for 6 p.m. April 10 in COA’s Culinary Arts building. The GEAR UP event is supported by the GEAR UP North Carolina ini tiative and is funded by a $28.6 mil lion grant from the Department of Education. Perquimans and Chow an County public schools are part of the 46 middle and high schools included as part of the GEAR UP North Carolina initiative and they are two of 11 school districts served See MORE GRADS, 4 Albemarle Master Gardeners April Perquirr Sth, 2014 9 am - 3 pm ns County Recreation Center Granby St., Hertford, NC Show Admission . Fun & Educational Children's Programs. Gardening Demos & Lectures Vendors, Plant Sale, Bake Sale . Ask a Master Gardner Booth. Call 252-482-6585 for more information Raffles-50/50 Breakfast/Lunch available 1 V