Page 2A Cl SR a SS 1 Crty COUNCIL The Kings Mountain Herald | www.kmherald.com Wednesday, October 8, 2014 Council approves $900,000+ in capital projects « ELIZABETH STEWART lib.kmherald@gmail.com City Council approved spending over $900,000 for capital projects, made appli- cation to the Local Govern- ment Commission to approve $599,980 for the Moss Lake Spillway reha- bilitation project and ap- proved $85,000 for storm water improvements for a grand total of over $1.5 mil- lion last Tuesday. In a related action, the board awarded bid to Strick- land Waterproofing in the amount of $520,140 for the spillway project pending ap- proval of the LGC. City taxpayers will be paying for the $34 million borrowed from the state re- White fears grouting pipes could be grave error Retired city planning and economic development director Gene White asked city council to delay, even if the state approves, the grouting of pipes under the dam at Moss Lake because “it could be the gravest error committed since the dam was constructed in 1968-72." He made the remarks during the citizen recognition portion of the Tuesday night meeting. White said that if the pipe is grouted it would rule out forever any possible low level drawdown of the city-owned lake. Engineers have told city officials that the main source of a leak under the dam at Moss Lake is a valve in the end plate in the front toe of the dam and under 80 feet of water. City council has approved $175,000 to fix the leak by grouting the pipe full to eliminate the potential for water flow. White said the 60” pipe was lined and grouted in January 1983 due to damage in the original building of the dam. “The 560’ pipe is in perfect See MOSS LAKE, 8A volving fund to fund major water system improvements, some of which are under way. A 7 1/2% water and sewer increase to utility cus- tomers began in 2013-14 and will continue for two more years. Paving of streets that were impacted by the con- struction of new waterlines is under way and those funds come from the city's general fund, not from the water and sewer project funds. The total cost of spillway repairs at city-owned Moss Lake is $599,980, which in- cludes construction repair and the engineering cost. The bid award was to BB&T Governmental Fi- nancing with an interest rate of 2.59%, contingent upon LGC approval. Sun Trust Equipment Financing & Leasing Corp., with a low bid of 1.64%, was awarded the bid for $307,846.68, the cost of equipment for the electric department and storm water department. City Manager Marilyn Sellers said that many proj- ects in the storm water fund can be completed in-house at a lower cost with the proper equipment. The $85,000 appropriated in- cluded $47,520 for a dump truck purchase, $25,000 for upgrading the shed at Public Works for equipment to be stored and $12,480 added to the Sharon Drive project. A 55-foot hydraulic articulat- ing device will be purchased at cost of $230,467 for the Electric department from Altec Industries, the low bidder. In other actions, city council: + Recognized electric employees Dean Causby and Chris Welch for com- pleting all four levels of the lineman career development program and successfully passing their final exam to See COUNCIL, 8A Debate continues on benefits, detriments of possible casino w+ ELIZABETH STEWART o lib.kmherald@gmail.com A standing-room-only crowd listened to 10 people, six who asked city council to. withdraw support of a proposed Catawba Indian Nation resort/casino, two who stated support of the casino project, a former city department head who ques- tioned how the city plans to stop a leak at Moss Lake dam, and a: woman who wants support for bringing a Math Academy to Kings Mountain. Each had three minutes on the agenda during the cit- izen recognition of the Sept. 30 regular meeting at city hall. David Dear, former county manager and a leader in the Cleveland County De- velopment Partnership, thanked council for its vi- sion and support of the Catawba Indian project. He told the board a substantial majority ~ of Cleveland County citizens are in sup- port of jobs this project will bring. “The decision is not yours, not locally or state, but rests with the Bureau of Internal Affairs in Washing- ton, DC," he said. “Some are criticizing this project but we can't let it hamper us be- cause of economic develop- ment that could bring to our area, not just money but po- tential businesses that could make Cleveland County home," he added. Dear read excerpts from a Shelby Star editorial under date of Aug. 16,2013, Order your commemorative license plate today! LICENSE PLATE Regular Battle of Kings Mountain $20.00 BATTLE OF KINGS MOUNTAIN The $20.00/$50.00 special fee is an NOTE: You are allowed four (4) spaces for a personalized message. MVR-27 Name of Organization: Rev. 09/14 Name/Address of Contact Person: Phone number: ( ) TURNING POINT of the REVOLUTION : ; Battle of Hing cHownlain APPLICATION EOR A ; ¢ 00 Remit a $20.00/$50.00 check or money order with this application. Any refund requests to potential purchasers is the responsibility of the Person, Organization, or Legal entity seeking the plate and not the NCDMV. * All minimum required paid applications must be collected by the organization before submitting to the NCDMYV for approval/issuance of the plate. The fee amount of the check or money order submitted by the Person, Organization, or Legal entity must equal to the number of the paid applications. *N.C.G.S. 20-63(b1) 500 or more applications /N.C.G.S. 20-79.4 (a3) standardized format background plate Personalized Battle of Kings Mountain $50.00 When applying for a Personalized Battle of Kings Mountain license plate, the prefix or suffix assigned will be the first or last letter on the plate. This leaves only four (4) spaces for a Personalized message. The four spaces may be a combination of letters and numbers, but cannot be numbers only or conflict with another classification of license plates. ANNUAL) fee due in addition to the regular license fee. 005 NAME(To agree with certificate of title) Home FIRST MIDDLE LAST AREA CODE-TELEPHONE NUMBER Office ADDRESS AREA CODE-TELEPHONE NUMBER CITY ST ATE 71P C ODE Current North Carolina Plate Number Driver License # Vehicle Identification Number Year Model Make Body Style Owner’s- Certification of Liability Insurance I CERTIFY FOR THE MOTOR VEHICLE DESCRIBED ABOVE THAT I HAVE FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AS REQUIRED BY LAW. PRINT OR TYPE FULL NAME OF INSURANCE COMPANY AUTHORIZED IN N.C. —- NOT AGENCY OR GROUP SIGNATURE OF OWNER POLICY NUMBER - IF POLICY NOT ISSUED, NAME OF AGENCY BINDING COVERAGE DATE OF CERTIFICATION The application and check or money order payable to NCDMV should be dropped off or mailed to the Kings Mountain City Hall, 101 West Gold Street, Kings Mountain, NC 28086, or Rep. Tim Moore, 305 East King Street, Kings Mountain, NC 28086. The deadline is no later than October 31st. “Casino, Hotel would create jobs, businesses” in which the Star editor voiced wholehearted support of ef- forts to land the project. He asked that the full text of the editorial be included in the minutes of the meeting. The casino project could. be a very significant source of tax revenue for all of Cleveland County, said Don Peeler, Shelby realtor who spoke in support of a com- mercial resort that would bring 4,000 jobs and a pay- roll invested in the local economy. Naomi Toberson, 107 Sellars Road, Marie Jack- son, 565 Lake Montonia Rd., Beauford Burton, 322 Margrace Road, all of Kings Mountain, Tim Stalcup, 145-1 Hicks Road, Grover, Karen and Noah Clarke, 35 Drewery St., Shelby, pre- sented concerns they have about a casino coming to Kings Mountain. Toberson said the city council has held 74 regular council meetings from July 2008 to August 2014, ad- dressed 112 times by citi- zens, of which 36 citizens spoke about liquor license issues, another four were concerned about crime and drugs, and 34 have been concerned about the coun- cil's position on inviting a gambling casino to come to this area. "In the course of the last six years, more than 66% of the times that citizens have addressed the council for any reason they have come to express their concern re- garding businesses which make a profit by preying on citizens," she said. “I believe it is a mockery for this council to proclaim our proud heritage as we celebrate the 234th anniver- sary of the Battle of Kings Mountain on one hand, while refusing to factually represent our citizens on the other hand.” She continued, “You enthusiastically and emphatically express your strong support of the casino, please enthusiastically and emphatically express your strong support of the citi- zens of this community, rather than for an outside or- ganization whose business model can only wreak havoc on the life, liberty and hap- piness of the citizens of this community.” Burton began his re- marks by apologizing to council for previously ques- tioning their Christianity. "T do still question your understanding of what God expects from us when it comes to standing against evil in its many forms and particularly the proposed casino," he said, adding, “I have told you before that I've seen the damage casinos do and the way they do it, their methods are uncaring about downfall of the people they lure into addiction. A casino acquires money like a parasite lives by sucking value from an unwilling or unknowing host." Stalcup said that all costs and profits are from the losses of other people. "Even when someone wins it doesn’t create profit, it creates even more losses from the community. We are See CASINO, 8A