— *****caR-RT LOT“C 001 A0027 PERQUIMANS COUNTY LIBRARY 110V\/ ACADEMY ST HERTFORD NC 27944-1306 ANS A .VV EEKLY Loftis earns scholarship, 4 "News from Next Door 11 WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 2018 JAN 0 3 REC'D JAN 1 6 20^50 cents Library to feature high tech (EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the second of a two-part series on the new Perqui mans County Library.) BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor Books still play a vital role in a modern library, but technology is also making a big difference. The new Perquimans County library will have both. Judi Bugniazet serves as regional director of the Pettigrew Regional Library system. Perquimans is one of four in the system. She started as the Perqui mans librarian in 2010. The foundation for the new library was laid when then librarian Jeri Oltman got a grant to review the library’s future needs, Bug niazet said. “When I was hired, they were already working on that,” Bugniazet said. It was not a quick process. At one point, Bugniazet was asked about her thoughts of just remodeling the old one. Bugniazet and board members were willing to wait for a new one. “I knew what the flooring was like in the old library,” she said. It wasn’t built to be a li brary. Instead it was built as a lunchroom for a school. And the sheer weight of tons of books was causing the concrete flooring to crack. “You could hear the crunching when you See LIBRARY, 2 STAFF PHOTO BY PETER WILLIAMS A car travels down U.S. 17 in Hertford last Wednesday morning through a flurry of snow. While the snow fell, it wasn’t sticking to road surfaces. Bitter weather coming BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor The region was bracing for even colder weather and snow this week. A coastal low is expected to bring accumulating snow and gusty winds this after noon into Thursday. As of Tuesday morning, three to five inches of snow was expected across the lower Eastern Shore south into Hampton Roads and interior northeast North Carolina from Wednesday afternoon into Thursday morning. Lesser amounts of up to one inch are expected along the 1-95 corridor, with little to no accumulating snow across the Piedmont. So far area utilities have been able to handle the de mand for electricity. Chris Powell, a spokes man for Albemarle Electric Membership Corporation, said the utility has not suf fered mqjor cold-related outages during the past few days. • Hertford Town Manager Brandon Shoaf said no records have been set in teins of demand. He said last winter had equally nasty weather. “Just last year, roughly See WEATHER, 2 MOST LIKELY SNOWFALL E% \ ■.«:OMWU55^ EB\ 1 Lau^y 'Uji™ vxW«4 IMn *• (khUk '^ the VrguM lxxd«« Son# ^»ng ’*' a Me (M^W Kfou ' W'* ^o^ erf th# '?»*«» »*n ^ ’ wrunw^w* ^i ’tw-li’S'wiwdw A«hm«>^. . - ... — -.^ . - . - • - NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE Areas of eastern North Carolina and Virginia can expect three to five inches of snow today into Thursday. Schools to add golf program (EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the first part of a two- part series on sports in the Perquimans school system. Next week we take a closer look at football.) BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor Perquimans County High School will add a co-ed golf team this spring, a JV foot ball team next fall and is looking at looking at adding an all-female soccer team. The school has been field ing co-ed soccer team. Athletic Director Justin Roberson made an informa tional presentation to the school board last month. “We’re excited about it,” Superintendent Matthew Cheeseman said. “We’re looking at increasing our academic successes and increasing our academic of ferings and now we’re look ing at increasing our athletic offerings.” The school system is moving forward on having a new football field in place by August. It will be across the street from the high school on Edenton Road Street. It will be fitted with new bleachers, lights and a field house. The football field is only the first phase in a larger plan to develop the 32-acres of donated land into a full athletic complex complete with a running track, soccer field, tennis courts and practice fields for both football and soc cer. “We’re also looking at the SeeGOLF,2 STAFF PHOTO BY PETER WILLIAMS Beverly Gregory (left) has been named the new coordinator of the Perquimans County Senior Center. Penny Trueblood, (right) has been named the new assistant coordinator. Delphine Madre, the former director, retired on Dec. 31 after 24 years of service. Faye Myers also retired after 18 years. Gregory, Trueblood to lead senior center BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor The Perquimans County Senior Center will have a new face as director. However for anybody who has ever visited the county’s tax office, it won’t be an unfamiliar face. Beverly Gregory has as sumed the position left va cant with the retirement of Delplune Madre. Madre offi cially stepped down on Dec. 31 after 34 years of service. Also new. will be Penny Trueblood. She will serve as assistant coordinator. That position was held by Faye Myers, who also retired last month. Gregory is making the move over from the county’s tax office. She’s been work ing there since 2005. Perquimans County Man ager Frank Heath said Greg ory will be a perfect fit in the senior center job. Heath said Gregory has an “excellent personality” when it comes to dealing with the public. “She’s also got a great worth ethic and she is so friendly and caring about people.” Gregory said she was en couraged to apply for the se nior center job by friends. “They knew how much I care about other people.” Any Perquimans resident age 55 and older can join the senior center. There is no fee. To participate in the senior nutrition program you have to age 60 and over. The. center is located at 1072 Harvey Point Road. Gregory is 58-years-old. “There are so many op portunities here and a lot of people don’t even know about us,” Gregoiy said. “It’s such a great place. Every body takes care of every body else.” “I have so much to learn,” she said and then joked, “but people say I’m ‘trainable.’” After graduating Perqui mans County High School in 1977 Gregory went through a period when she worked with the Elizabeth City- Pasquotank Public Schools doing data and finance. She also worked for attorney El vin Small. Before working at the senior center, Trueblood worked for the Perquimans County School nutrition program. Watson named honor graduate from BLE County again ranked Tier 1 From Staff Reports Brian Watson was named the honor graduate among the 12 people graduating from the Basic Law Enforce ment class at College of The Albemarle in December. Watson is joining the Per quimans County Sheriff’s Office as a school resource officer. “He’s done a good job,” said Sheriff Shelby White. Watson started with the Perquimans office as a part- time animal control officer. At the graduation, Dr. Robert Wynegar, president of COA, welcomed gradu ates, family, local- law en- 6 89076 47144 2 WATSON forcement instructors and spon sors, and friends to the cer emony. Captain H. Travis Jackson from the Pasquotank Sheriff’s Office provided the keynote ad dress for the event. During the 16 weeks of training, the students fin ished 641 contact hours, 36 distinct blocks of instruc tion with 36 topical tests and multiple practical ex ams to include firearms, driving, traffic crash, patrol techniques, domestic vio lence, criminal investiga tion, CPR/first responders, rapid deployment, explo- See WATSON, 2 BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor Perquimans County is once again considered Tier 1, one of the most economi cally distressed counties in North Carolina. In years past, a Tier 1 des ignation meant there were plenty of economic incen tives available to bring in new jobs and investment. That was then and this is now. The only reason Per quimans was. upgraded to Tier 2 status in 2017 was because of a tiny drop in the county’s poverty rate. Counties with fewer than 50,000 people with a pov erty rate of 19 percent can automatically qualify as a Tier 1. Last year Perquimans County’s rate was .015 of a percentage point lower than 19 percent. Perquimans County man- Perquimans is again in a cluster of Tier 1 counties that includes Gates, Pasquotank and Camden. ager Frank Heath said the county has thus far missed out on the economic incen tives that Tier 1 is supposed to attract. “I don’t know how much it really matters unless we did happen to land a big company,” Heath said. Among the 10 economic development announce ments made in the final days of 2017, many of them were for counties that were considered the least eco nomically distressed. The Dec. 22 announcement was for 140 jobs, a $40 million investment in Cumberland County, a Tier 2 county. The day before the announce ment was for projects in Gaston (Tier 2), Iredell (Tier 3), and Burke, (Tier 2). Those projects involved 639 jobs and a $72 million investment. The way the system works, counties get a check mark if they have a popula tion under 50,000. They get another check mark if the population is under 12,000 people. The second one means Camden will automatically be consid- See TIER, 2