4 THE PERQUIMANS WEEKLY, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21,2016 School Menus Perquimans Schools (Menus subject to change) PERQUIMANS CEN TRAL, HERTFORD GRAMMAR SCHOOL, PERQUIMANS COUNTY MIDDLE SCHOOL ■ SEPT 21: BREAK- FAST: Sausage biscuit, apple slices, fruit juice. LUNCH: Pizza sticks with marinara dip, corn, baby carrots and ranch dip, diced pears, milk. GRAB AND GO: Cobb salad or yo- gurt/cheese munchie pack. ■ SEPT. 22: BREAK FAST: Yogurt and fruit parfait, applesauce or fruit juice. LUNCH: Hamburger steak with gravy and whole grain roll, mashed pota toes, seasoned collards, apple, milk. GRAB AND GO: Grilled chicken salad or yogurt/cheese munchie pack. ■ SEPT. 23: BREAK FAST: Morning pizza, or ange slices or fruit juice. LUNCH: Chicken dippers and sauce, oven-baked fries, broccoli with cheese, spiced apples, milk. GRAB AND GO: Chicken Caesar salad or yogurt/cheese muchie pack. ■ SEPT 26: BREAK ¬ FAST: Cereal bar, ap plesauce or fruit juice. LUNCH: Hot dog with chili on bun, baked beans, sweet potato puffs, applesauce cup, milk. GRAB AND GO: Chef salad or PB&J Box. ■ SEPT. 27: BREAK FAST: Cereal bar, peach cup or fruit juice. LUNCH: Chicken quesadilla, sea soned pintos, lettuce and tomato cup, seasonal fruit, milk. GRAB AND GO: Chicken fajita salad or ham/cheese wrap box. ■ SEPT: 28: BREAK FAST: Sausage biscuit, ap ple half or juice. LUNCH: Pizza sticks with Marinara dip, corn, baby carrots and ranch dip, diced pears, milk. GRAB AND GO: Cobb salad or cold cut sub box. PERQUIMANS COUN TY HIGH SCHOOL ■ SEPT. 21: BREAK FAST Sausage biscuit fruit or juice. LUNCH: Pizza sticks with dippin’ sauce, corn and/or baby carrots and Ranch dip, diced pears and/or fresh apple. GRAB AND GO: Hot ham and cheese, cobb salad. ■ SEPT. 22: BREAK FAST: Yogurt and fruit par fait. LUNCH: Hamburger steak and gravy with roll, mashed potatoes and/or seasoned collards, apple and/or pineapple tidbits. GRAB AND GO: Western burger or grilled chicken salad. ■ SEPT. 23: BREAK FAST: Morning pizza. LUNCH: Chicken dip pers with sauce, baked fries and/or broccoli with cheese, spiced apples and/ or peach cup. GRAB AND GO: Chicken Caesar salad or chicken filet. ■ SEPT. 26:BREAK- FAST Fruit muffins. LUNCH: Chicken filet on bun, peas and/or sweet po tato fries, applesauce and/ or orange slices. GRAB AND GO: Bacon cheese burger or chef salad. ■ SEPT.27: BREAK FAST: Cereal bars. LUNCH: Taco cups with chips, sea soned pintos and/or taco trimming cups, fresh fruit cup and or peaches. GRAB AND GO: Chicken fajita salad or Chicken filet. ■ SEPT: 28: BREAK FAST: Sausage biscuit. LUNCH: Cheese or pepper oni slices, side salads with dressing and/or baby car rots and Ranch dip, diced pears and/or fresh apple. GRAB AND GO: Cobb sal ad or hot ham and cheese. ALS WALK Continued from 1 signs came when he had pain in his legs and lower back. He went to a doctor in Kitty Hawk who in turn referred him to the medi cal center at East Carolina University. “Finally Dr. Frere did a test that determined it was ALS.” ALS is a relatively rare disease. About 6,000 peo ple a year are diagnosed ^ ALBEMARLE URGENT CARE NO Appointment Necessary • Walk-In On-Site Lab & X-rays • Sports & DOT Physicals Open 7 Days A Week Most Insurance Plans Welcome Mon - Fri Sam - 7pm • Sat - Sun Sam - 4pm 709 N Broad Street, Edenton vwwvw. albemarleurgenware.com with it in the U.S. each year, according to the ALS Asso ciation. That compares to the 1.6 million new cases of cancer. For ALS patients that often means there are few people they can really talk to. The monthly ALS sup port group in Edenton ad dresses that problem, Dix on said. “It means a lot to me,” DixOn said. “The biggest thing it gives us is informa tion and support. We sup port each other. With ALS it’s important to have a caregiver and for me that’s my wife. She’s been through it. This was a crushing blow to our lifestyle and she gets to get out and talk to others who are going through it.” The group meets on the third Monday of each month at 1 p.m. at Vidant Chowan Hospital. Tommy Harrell, a life- long friend of Jimmy Hunt er. is one of the big support ers of the local ALS group. The money raised through efforts like this weekend’s walk and a softball tour nament in Winfall Sept. 30 through Oct. 2 gives the foundation a way to sup port victims directly. Registration for the walk starts at 8 a.m. at Perqui mans County High School. There will be an opening ceremony at 8:50 a.m. and the walk starts at 9 a.m. The foundation offers grants of up to $725 each quarter for things like pre scriptions, home goods and transportation for pat ents going back and fourth to clinics. Dixon has received some of that help. “The first thing I had done was we put handi capped bars around the house,” Dixon said. “I got a handicapped toilet which was good. We’ve also got a loaner closet for things like lift chairs, and electric re cliners for people that need them.” The local foundation also supports an ALS clinic in Greenville. That’s impor tant, Harrell says, because the only other clinics in North Carolina are in Dur ham, Winston-Salem and Charlotte. The foundation also offers a voice for pa tients. “We just got a lady from South Mills this summer who came to our support group,” Harrell said. “She needed to get to the clinic real bad and she had an ap pointment for October.” Harrell said they got the appointment moved up to August. ALS made national head lines in 2014 with the Ice Bucket Challenge. People agreed to get dunked in ex change for donations that in turn went to efforts to find a cure for the disease. It raised more than $100 million and scientists have since discovered a new ALS gene, NEK1, known to be among the most com mon genetic contributors of the disease. While the Ice Bucket Challenge did raise awareness for the disease as well as money for research both Harrell and Dixon said the money didn’t filter down to the lo cal level with programs like those supported by the Cat- fish Hunter Foundation. “The Ice Bucket Chal lenge got the word out and it helped with funding some research projects,” Dixon said. “Cancer gets a lot of money because of research and the drug com panies.” Because the potential market is so small for ALS, drug companies aren’t pushing for a cure for ALS as strongly, Dixon said. “With ALS there is no cure. There is a one pill, but they say it will extend a life by a couple of months, and from what I heard people don’t like it.” “It (ALS) happens to some of the greatest peo ple in the world,” Harrell said. “I just think it’s great that people care enough about the foundation that support us to help with the needs that wouldn’t be taken care of.”, For more information on the walk, contact Helen Hunter at 426-7988. For more information on the softball tournament, call 340-0210. The Rotary Club of Hertford 11th Annual Scholarship Concert THE DIFFERENCE Saturday, October 1, 2016 at 7pm Perquimans County High School Auditorium 305 S. Edenton Road Street, Hertford, NC 27944 Reserved Tickets $18.00 Call 252.426.5246 General Admission Tickets $15.00 available at Perquimans County Chamber of Commerce, Carolina Trophy, Hertford Hardware, or from your favorite Rotarian from The Rotary Club of Hertford. Opening Performance The Center Players from the Arts of Albemarle! FUNDING Continued from 1 (Friday) from the holder of federal funds and we should have it by October. That’s good, but that’s not great.” The project is more than just a boat ramp to county officials. They see it as a way to spark the even larger ^We always welcome new patients.” COMFORT • QUALITY • EXPERIENCE Modern Dentistry in a relaxed environment for the entire family. DR. CHRIS KOPRELMAN^DDS DR. ETHAN NELSON, bDS 482-5131 103 Mark Dr. Edenton, NC (behind Chowan Hospital) ALBEMARLE DENTAL ASSOCIATES Qenetal and Cosmetic ^bentishy STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA UTILITIES COMMISSION RALEIGH DOCKET NO. E-22, SUB 535 BEFORE THE NORTH CAROLINA UTILITIES COMMISSION In the Matter of Application of Virginia Electric and Power Company, d/b/a Dominion North Carolina Power for Approval of Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Portfolio Standard Cost Rider Pursuant to G.S. 62-133.8 and Commission Rule R8-67 PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the North Carolina Utilities Commission has scheduled a public hearing in the annual Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Portfolio Standard (REPS) cost recovery application and compliance report filed by Virginia Electric and Power Company, d/b/a Dominion North Carolina Power (DNCP), in the above-captioned docket. The public hearing has been scheduled to begin immediately following the hearings in Docket Nos. E-22, Subs 534 and 536, which are scheduled to begin at 1:30 p.m., on Monday, November 7, 2016, in Commission Hearing Room 2115, Dobbs Building, 430 North Salisbury Street, Raleigh, North Carolina. This proceeding is being held pursuant to G.S. 62-133.8 and Commission Rule R8-67 to consider DNCP’s application for approval of REPS cost recovery and compliance with the REPS requirements during the 2015 calendar year. Public witness testimo ny will be received in accordance with Commission Rule Rl-21(g). On August 25, 2016, DNCP filed direct testimony and exhibits in support of its application for REPS cost recovery and 2015 REPS compliance report. By its application, DNCP proposes to implement the following total REPS rates, including regulatory fee, effective for service rendered on and after January 1, 2017: a $0.88 charge per month for residential customers; a $3.87 charge per month for commercial customers; and a $25.82 charge per month for indus trial customers. The Public Staff is authorized by statute to represent consumers in proceedings before the Commission. Written statements to the Public Staff should include any information that the writers wish to be considered by the Public Staff in its investigation of the matter. Such statements should be addressed to Mr. Christopher J. Ayers, Executive Director, Public Staff 4326 Mail Service Center, Raleigh, North Carolina 27699-4300. The Attorney General is also authorized by statute to represent consumers in proceedings before the Commission. Statements to the Attorney General should be addressed to The Honorable Roy Cooper, Attorney General, 9001 Mail Service Center, Raleigh, North Carolina, 27699-9001. Written statements are not evidence unless persons appear at a public hearing and testify concerning the information contained in their written statements. Any person desiring to intervene in the proceeding as a formal party of record should file a petition under North Carolina Utilities Commission Rules RI-5 and RI-19 on or before Monday, October 24, 2016. Such petitions should be filed with the Chief Clerk of the North Carolina Utilities Commission, 4325 Mail Service Center. Raleigh, North Carolina 27699-4300. The direct testimony and exhibits of expert witnesses to be presented by interveners should also be filed with the Commission on or before Monday, October 24, 2016. ISSUED BY ORDER OF THE COMMISSION. This the 31st day of August, 2016. NORTH CAROLINA UTILITIES COMMISSION Janice H. Fulmore, Deputy Clerk development of the 72-acre Perquimans Marine Indus trial Park next door. Even now there is an investor who has bought land and an existing building next to the proposed ramp that is poised to open a business once the ramp is built, ac cording to County Manager Frank Heath. “I don’t anticipate any problems, but we have a business that could be do ing something now that’s not doing it because of the ramp.” The delays have already prompted county officials to get an extension from Golden LEAF once. That gave the county until the end of this year. “I’ve already talked with Golden LEAF about getting another extension if need ed,” Heath said. “They told me that’s fine, but wait until December.” Sherman said she hopes that won’t be needed “Hopefully we won’t have to go that route, but it’s nice to know there is a life raft out there,” Sherman said. Building a small boat ramp requires pouring a concrete slab on dry land and just pushing it into the water. Building one 176 feet long with 100 feet of that un der water requires building a cofferdam and pumping out the water first. Sherman said the Golden LEAF funds can be applied to the cost of building the cofferdam and that expense comes at the start of con struction. The money from wildlife could then be used on the remainder of the project. The size of the project has complicated the issue. The state prohibits marine construction for a period from February through the end of June. That’s to pro tect anadromous fish, a type that is born in fresh water, spends most of its life in the sea and returns to fresh wa ter to spawn. Smelt, shad, striped bass and sturgeon are common examples When the contract was awarded in March it was hoped that construction could start by the first of July when an annual mora torium is lifted. Perquimans County is participating through the in-kind donation of land at the foot of North Granby Street. “First anything going through the formal process is going to take time,” Sher man said.