c “News from Next Door” PAGE A2 THURSDAY, MAY 12,2022 $1.50 ^^ - : @ SCAN ME Jackson removed from ABC board PAGE B2 Parker, Benton, Fergu son, Wall earn top scholarships PAGE B3 Pirates take top spots at track and field championships Candidates: Schools need to listen to parents Corprew, Huddleston, Silva, White, Winslow attend forum BY REGGIE PONDER Staff Writer Five candidates seeking the three open seats on the Perquimans County Board of Education in next week’s election said at a candidates forum last week that it’s im portant to listen to the con cerns of parents. Six candidates are run ning for the three seats in Tuesday’s nonpartisan elec- CORPREW HUDDLESTON SILVA WHITE WINSLOW tion: Kristy Corprew, Gracie Felton, Brenda Huddleston, Dave Silva, Anne White and Matt Winslow. Corprew, Huddleston, Sil va, White and Winslow all par ticipated in the May 3 forum held at Bagley Swamp Wes leyan Church and sponsored by the Perquimans County Farm Bureau. Felton did not attend the event. Corprew said she retired last year from Perquimans County Schools but is teach ing part-time this year. She said it is “devastating” when she hears kids tell her they don’t like to read. The schools are working hard to improve literacy and school officials are commit ted to working for children, she said. Corprew also said that more real world, prob lem-solving lessons are need ed in order to engage stu dents, and teachers are doing good work in that area. Huddleston said she had been alarmed to hear about things that were happening in schools around the country. She said she is fortunate to live in this small county that doesn’t have the same prob lems. “But I do worry that it could get here,” Huddleston said. Huddleston cited exam ples of things she is con cerned about: critical race theory, social and emotional learning, and comprehen sive sex education. She said she has met with principals and teachers at the schools. “It was a won derful experience,” she said. Huddleston said she en courages schools to “look at things outside the box” in working to help students catch up academically. See BOARD, A3 A worker’s market County economic consultant Goss to leave May 31 JOHN FOLEY PHOTO Laura Martier (right), You Can Vote regional director, speaks with Perquimans County High School senior Kimari Lashee Parker (left) about job opportunities with the organization. You Can Vote, which hires workers to help register college students to vote, was one of the organizations and businesses attending Friday's Perquimans County High School Job Fair at the Perquimans County Parks and Recreation Center in Hertford. Employers at job fair eager for workers Cohen: Finding entry-level work no longera challenge BY JOHN FOLEY Correspondent Whether it’s searching for a part-time summer job to earn money for col lege or starting on a career path, Perquimans County High School seniors have a wealth of job opportunities available to them right here at home. That was a key takeaway from last week’s PCHS Job Fair at the Perquimans County Recreation Center. With a tight labor mar ket, a number of employers were in attendance to talk with students about then- job openings. “One of the most effi cient ways of finding staff is through local job fairs,” explained Jill Cohen, direc tor of career and technical education for Perquimans County Schools and orga nizer of the Friday, May 6, job fair. “The pandemic has made some mindset changes in our community,” Cohen said. “In the past, students had a difficult time finding entry-level work in our area. The job fair is in response to employers asking, ‘who do we have ready to work?’ “The requests have been coming from local and dis tance employers,” she con tinued. “There is a pipeline gap that we have been pro jecting as the future; howev er, the future is now.” Albemarle Boats manu facturing manager Carroll Bundy said his company is trying to fill a number of po sitions. “The (job) market is tight,” Bundy said. “That’s why we’re here. We have openings at all levels. It can be a summer job situation or the first step in a career of boat manufacturing.” See FAIR, A3 Goss: Working on marine park highlight of county tenure BY REGGIE PONDER Staff Writer Perquimans County’s economic development consultant has resigned to move to Charlotte. Dave Goss sent a letter to County Manager Frank Heath stating his intention to resign effective May 31. Goss plans to move to Charlotte in early June, his letter states. Goss said in an phone in terview Monday that work ¬ Corprew: Boat basin project ‘a mistake’ Unaffiliated commission candidate spoke at forum BY REGGIE PONDER Staff Writer Candidates for county commissioner offered var ied perspectives on eco nomic development at a candidates forum held last week by the Perquimans County Farm Bureau. Perquimans Board of Commissioners Chairman Wallace Nelson, a Repub- lican, and Commissioner Fondella Leigh, a Dem ocrat represented at the ing on the Marine Industri al Park has been one of his favor ite parts about GOSS working in eco nomic development in Perquimans. He also was pleased to play a role in the location of a Fed Ex re gional hub in Perquimans, he said. Goss moved to See GOSS, A2 forum by Tam my Mill er-White, both ex pressed support for the marine CORPREW industrial park boat basin as an important proj ect for economic develop ment in the county. The May 3 forum was held at Bagley Swamp Wesleyan Church. But Tim Corprew, a See CANDIDATES, A3 Voters go to polls for Tuesday primary PCRA seeks help reassembling Plank House West Hertford polling site has moved to DSS building From staff reports Voters seeking to cast then- ballot at the West Hertford precinct on Tuesday should be advised that their polling place has moved. The polling place for the 6 " 89076 47144 Vol. 87, No. 19 WWW.PerquimansWeekly.com @2021 Perquimans Weekly All Rights Reserved West Hertford precinct has been relocated to the Perqui mans County Department of Social Services Building. The building’s address is 103 Charles Street, but voting will take place in a section of the building that will be accessed by a rear entrance. Curbside voting also will be set up in a parking lot behind the building. All other precinct polling places will re main the same. Perquimans vot ers are going to the polls Tuesday to elect three members of the See ELECTION, A3 Nonprofit to hold June 4 Gaitien Party fundraiser for project BY PENNY BYRD AND LYN WINSLOW Special to The Perquimans Weekly Editor’s note: This story is the final story in a four-part series on the history of the Pasquotank Plank House, its travels and final return to Perquimans County. Last week in part three we left you wondering what was going to happen next with the resurrection of the Pasquotank Plank House and its return to a useful, educational life in Perquimans County. IMAGE COURTESY N.C. DIVISION OF ARCHIVES AND HISTORY This image shows the front of the Pasquotank Plank House as it once looked before it was disassembled and its wooden planks stored for safekeeping. The Perquimans County Restoration Association plans to reassemble the house. I even had a quote in mind from the “Field of Dreams” movie to build this final part of the story around: “Build it and They Will Come.” But nothing is that simple because re constructing a 300-year-old house is not at all like build ing a modern house. Today you want and need skilled carpenters, but back then carpenters’ skills had little to do with hammering nails and more to do with joinery. We recently received a file from the N.C. Division of Archives and History that included addition al black and white photo images, a few of which showed the use of joinery at the corners of the Plank House. Also included were different black and white exterior shots and an archi tectural schematic showing See HOUSE, A3