QUIMANS EEKLY “News from Next Door" THURSDAY, JANUARY 27, 2022 $1.50 @ SCAN ME PAGE 5 God's righteousness provides perpetual peace, safe shelter PAGE 6 Tower warned boaters of adverse weather for 80 years PAGE 7 Pirates use strong 4th to beat Falcons at home Hertford begins close look at flooding concerns Housing Authority director recalls flooding from Isabel BY REGGIE PONDER Staff Writer Hurricane Isabel happened nearly two decades ago but Rhonda Waters remembers it like it was a week ago. Waters, who retired as di rector of the Hertford Housing Authority, recalled last week that eight Housing Authority units on Stokes Drive were flooded with four feet of wa ter from the Perquimans River during the 2003 hurricane. Waters was among the first people who showed up Jan. 18 for an open house on flooding conducted in Hert ford by SWCA Environmental Consultants as part of the N.C. Division of Coastal Manage ment’s Resilient Coastal Com munities Program. The town of Hertford, one of 26 communities in the state’s 20 coastal counties par ticipating in the project during its first year, has its eye on fixing flooding woes as a com ponent of its Riverfront and Community Development Plan. Other nearby communi ties that are participating in the project’s inaugural year include Currituck County, Bertie County, the town of Windsor, Hertford County, and Dare County. SWCA staff at the Hertford open house explained that their first step was to learn about flooding concerns in the town and listen to resi dents’ stories about flooding. A second session will focus on proposed projects to ad dress flooding. Waters said eight house holds on the first floor of the Stokes Drive building were displaced by flooding from Isabel. “They were never able to come back in those units,” she said. The first floor units were condemned for four years. About two years after the storm, U.S. Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., visited Hertford and learned about the damage. He helped secure federal funding to rebuild the units, Waters said. Waters said she hail been to Washington, D.C., numerous times before that to try to get funds to rebuild the units on higher ground. She said she was glad to get money to re build but had hoped for a new location that does not flood. Prior to Isabel the site was not considered part of the flood plain, she said. Now it is, and the Housing Authority carries flood insurance for the property. Waters said the building was on a four-foot foundation so the floodwaters must have reached eight feet in order for people to have water four feet high inside their home. Waters recalled that staff explained to residents of those flooded units that they needed to go to the sec ond floor until help arrived. As soon as Waters and other staff members were able to get their own vehi cles out they went to the site and got the families out of the building and into tem porary shelter. See FLOODING, A3 REGGIE PONDER/THE PERQUIMANS WEEKLY Rhonda Waters (right), retired director of the Hertford Housing Authority, points to a flood-prone spot on a map as Larry Sandeen of the Hertford Community Action Team looks on during an open house on flooding and resiliency in Hertford on Tuesday, Jan. 17. Snowstorm causes no major incidents Officials: Residents mostly heeded warning to stay home From staff reports The winter storm that blew through eastern and central North Carolina late Friday and early Sat urday blanketed Perquim ans County with snow but didn’t cause any serious incidents. Various parts of Perqui mans received between 3.5 inches and 7 inches of snow. But the county es caped serious weather-re lated incidents, according to county emergency offi cials. Jonathan Nixon, the county’s emergency ser- incidents were reported, county emergency officials said, vices director, credited the public for not unnecessarily venturing out on snow-cov ered roads. “Thanks to the public for heeding the warnings and being cautious and not trav eling if they didn’t have to,” Nixon said. A blanket of white SUBMITTED PHOTO This reader-submitted photo of Oak Grove United Methodist Church on Chapanoke Road shows the church blanketed with snow Saturday following a snowstorm overnight Friday and early Saturday morning. Areas of Perquimans received between 3.5 inches and 7 inches of snow during the storm but no serious weather-related The Perquimans Sher iff’s Office assisted a few disabled motorists but no major accidents were re ported. Emergency vehicles were able to traverse roads safely as needed. No power outages were reported in connection with the snowstorm. The Perquimans County Schools were closed Friday and because of the threat of icy roads offered remote learning to students on Monday. Citing the possibility of roads refreezing Sun day night, Perquimans officials also elected to open county offices on a three-hour delay Monday. The town of Winfall also opened on a three-hour delay Monday. The town of Hertford, however, opened at 8 a.m. The county’s landfill and solid waste convenience sites opened after a two- hour delay on Monday. Hertford renames BLM Ave. Hyde Park Name switched back after residents opposed change BY REGGIE PONDER Staff Writer Hyde Park is again Hyde Park. Hertford Town Council changed the name of Black Lives Matter Avenue back to Hyde Park riming its meet- ingJan. 10. Councilwoman Connie Brothers said she had spo ken with members of First Missionary Baptist Church, which is located on the street, and many of them expressed concern about the name change by the pre vious council to Black Lives Matter Avenue. Brothers said church members were adamant in their belief that “all lives matter.” “They would like it changed back to Hyde Park,” she said. During the public com ment period at the council SeePARK,A3 Active shooter drill set for courthouse Council ramps up communication efforts Feb. 4 drill to generate real response to simulated event BY REGGIE PONDER Staff Writer The Perquimans County Courthouse will be the site of an “active shooter” drill on the afternoon of Feb. 4. Participants will meet at the Hertford Fire Depart- 6 ■ 89076 47144 Vol. 87, No. 4 WWW.PerquimansWeekly.com @2021 Perquimans Weekly All Rights Reserved ment at noon for a pre-drill briefing and then around 1p.m. travel to the court- house for the drill. Jonathan Nixon, emer gency services director for Perquimans, said county officials want the public to know that the drill will be taking place so they won’t be frightened when they hear the sounds of simulat ed gunfire coming from the courthouse area. “It’s a planned event,” Nixon said. 2 Because some of the newest 911 emer gency tele-commu nicators will handle See DRILL, A3 Manager must respond to a citizen concern within 30 days BY REGGIE PONDER Staff Writer Hertford Town Council has adopted a policy that requires the town manag er to respond within 30 days to citizen concerns expressed at public meet ings. The new policy was proposed by Councilwom an Connie Brothers at council’s Jan. 10 meeting. Brothers, a first-time town councilor elected in November’s municipal election, raised the issue at the council’s organizational meeting in December. Brothers recommend ed at the meeting that council adopt a policy allowing councilors to re spond directly to citizens at public meetings. Brothers said citizens had expressed to her frus tration at bringing con cerns or questions to the council during the public comment period at coun cil meetings, and then never hearing anything back in response. However, Mayor Pro Tern Ashley Hodges sug gested that Brothers bring a formal proposal for a policy change to council at its January meeting. The new policy, which was unanimously ap proved at the Jan. 10 meeting, calls for the town manager to respond within 30 days to con cerns expressed by citi zens. The change is part of an overall emphasis that Brothers has placed on improving communica tion between town offi cials and residents. Im proved communication with residents was also a key platform issue for Brothers in her campaign for council last fall. Sandra Anderson, the other new member of town council elected in November, shares Broth ers’ concern about im proving the town’s com munication with citizens. Anderson spoke at the organizational meeting in December about her con cern that many residents were not getting import ant information from the town. She said she want ed the council to work together to find improved ways of getting informa tion out to citizens. Councilors also ap proved utility bill inserts at the Jan. 10 meeting as a new way of communicat ing with residents about things that are happening in the town. Councilman Jerry Mimlitsch’s motion to approve black-and- white utility inserts was approved unanimously. Acting Town Manager Janice Cole said the cost for the inserts would be $113.58. She said she didn’t think that cost would be burdensome for the town.