Weāve got the tower, now whereās the service improvement?
Foundersā Day, May 19 & 20
Annual event offers something for everyone, from young to old
by PATTI STOKES
SUMMERFIELD ā Summerfieldās Foundersā Day Committee has been working since last fall to plan the annual Foundersā Day celebration on Friday, May 19, and Saturday, May 20, and Cheryl Gore, the townās events planner and assistant to the town manager, aptly describes it as two big events rolled into one.
Besides the parade ā which weāll get to in just a minute ā thereās āeverything else.ā And itās a lot! Foundersā Day kicks off Friday evening with carnival rides, inflatables, a rock climbing wall, food and craft vendors and performances by local students.
File
Summerļ¬eldās Trails and Open Space Committee was well represented in last yearās Foundersā Day parade. Carnival rides, inļ¬atables, craftspeople, food trucks, rock climbing, dance, theater and music performances ā and a parade will once again be part of the two-day Foundersā Day celebration this Friday and Saturday, May 19-20.
The fun continues on Saturday morning and throughout the afternoon with more of the same ā and then more beyond that, including a
caricaturist, face painting, balloon twisting, and live music, theater and dance performances.
Oak Ridgeās āyear of large projectsā
The Town Council is reviewing a draft of next ļ¬scal yearās budget that funds Heritage Farm Park and an elevated water tank by CHRIS
BURRITTOAK RIDGE ā After years of planning, Oak Ridge Town Council is preparing to develop Heritage Farm Park and erect an elevated water tank in the
fiscal year that starts July 1.
A draft of next yearās budget appropriates $5.36 million for development of the 62-acre park. Another $2.92 million is earmarked for erecting an elevated water tank, along with engineering of the tank and a future 3.5-mile water line from Forsyth County to Oak Ridge.
The draft budget that Town Manager Bill Bruce presented to the Town Council May 4 leaves the property tax rate unchanged at 8 cents
per $100 of property valuation. The spending will consist of state and federal grants, a $3 million bank loan for the park and town funding.
Capital spending is expected to leave Oak Ridge with āadequate reservesāā in excess of $2 million on June 30, 2024, the end of next fiscal year, according to Bruce. As of this past April 30, the townās unassigned fund balance totaled $7.74 million, including proceeds from the $3 million
Food, DIY workshops on tap for historic Martin House
If Summerļ¬eldās Town Council rezones the property next month, Lauren Cox hopes to buy the property, renovate the house and open for business next spring
HEAVY DUT
by CHRIS BURRITTSUMMERFIELD ā Next year, the historic Martin house in Summerfield may be serving food and hosting do-it-yourself workshops, if plans by the prospective buyer of the property work out.
āI love the idea of taking something old and turning it into a place where people can gather,ā Lauren Cox said this past Monday, May 15, during a public informational meeting about her request for a rezoning of the property.
Cox is seeking rezoning from singlefamily residential (RS-30) to the conditional zoning neighborhood business district (CZ-NB) to accommodate her plans for the house at 4118 Oak Ridge Road (N.C. 150).
She envisions creating a destination for locals and out-of-towners, similar to the drawing power of the Table, a popular bakery and bistro in downtown Asheboro.
If the Town Council approves the rezoning request during its meeting next month, Cox said she plans to purchase the nearly half-acre lot at the corner of Oak Ridge Road (N.C. 150)
and Summerfield Road. The property is owned by the town of Summerfield, which hired Preservation North Carolina last year to find a buyer. The Raleighbased nonprofit organization is also trying to sell the historic Gordon Hardware building across Summerfield Road from the Martin house.
In March, the council reduced the townās asking price for the Martin house from $100,000 to $75,000 to accommodate a potential bid for the property. At that time, Town Manager Scott Whitaker said the bidder was seeking a lower price to offset costs for improving the septic system and replacing the water well.
Earlier this week, Cox provided more details about her plans.
Eventually, she said, she plans to prepare baked goods and to-go foods and serve breakfast, brunch and lunch.
However, she said, the extent of her food service will depend upon the availability of water from the well she plans to drill on the property.
Cox, who lives in northwestern Greensboro, said the renovation of the house would be extensive. Dating back to the 1830s, the two-story house doesnāt
have a bathroom and lacks electricity and heating and air conditioning, she said. A contractor would drill a well.
āItās basically a shell,ā said Cox, who hopes to purchase the property in June. On that schedule, she envisions opening for business next spring.
The townās Planning Board plans
to hear the rezoning request during its meeting next Monday, May 22, and forward its recommendation to the council for a final decision during its June 13 meeting.
Public hearings are scheduled for both meetings to gather the view of residents.
Amanda Hodierne, a lawyer representing Guilford County Schools, said a K-8 school proposed for Colfax would offer a STEM curriculum for students in the area assigned to the school. It would not serve as a STEM hub for ļ¬eld trips for public school students from across the county, she said in an interview May 4 after she and district Superintendent Whitney Oakley provided an update of plans for the proposed school at South Bunker Hill and Boylston roads in southwestern Guilford County. Citing trafļ¬c and safety, half a dozen residents of the rural area said they oppose construction of the school.
Council members invite citizens to meet one-on-one
OAK RIDGE ā Citizens who want to discuss projects and issues with Oak Ridge leaders can now do so once a month on Thursday morning, the week before each Town Council meeting. Two Council members will be available on Thursday, May 25, between 8:30 and 10 a.m. at Oak Ridge Town Hall. (Participating Council members will rotate each month.)
āThis first session will be a great opportunity to learn more about the townās budget, which will be voted on at our June 1 meeting,ā Oak Ridge Mayor Ann Schneider said. āAnd if you canāt
attend this monthās meeting, feel free to contact me or any Council member at your convenience. Our contact information is available on the Town website (www.oakridgenc.com). Weāre always happy to talk to residents.ā
want to go?
Two council members will be available to meet one-on-one with citizens on Thursday, May 25, 8:30 to 10 a.m. at Oak Ridge Town Hall, 8315 Linville Road, Oak Ridge.
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When will the Verizon service on the new cell phone tower at Oak Ridge Military Academy be activated? Our Verizon service in Oak Ridge is terrible, and seems to have gotten even worse after construction on the cell tower started.
Weāve been asked this question a lot, and efforts over the past several weeks to get an answer from the Verizon store in Oak Ridge and Communications Tower Group (CTG), the Charlotte-based builder of the new cell phone tower on property owned by
DID YOU KNOW LONG-TERM CARE INSURANCE CAN PAY FOR YOUR LOVED ONE TO RECEIVE IN-HOME CARE?
A 180-foot-tall communications tower disguised (somewhat) as a pine tree was erected behind Oak Ridge Military Academyās gymnasium last December. The new cell phone tower can accommodate as many as four carriers, with Verizon being the ļ¬rst to lease space for installing its antennas and other equipment. After several attempts to get an update on when Verizon will complete installation and activate its service, the Northwest Observer was told this week it will be ālater this year.ā
Oak Ridge Military Academy, proved unsuccessful. Last week, Steve Wilson, the academyās president, said he tried to get an update on the tower but was also unsuccessful. Two rounds of emails to Verizonās media relations officers and we finally got a reply ā but if youāre a Verizon user, you may not like it.
DID YOU KNOW LONG-TERM CARE INSURANCE CAN PAY FOR YOUR LOVED ONE TO RECEIVE IN-HOME CARE?
DID YOU KNOW LONG-TERM CARE INSURANCE CAN PAY FOR YOUR LOVED ONE TO RECEIVE IN-HOME CARE?
āAs Verizon continues to expand our network to serve even more customers in Oak Ridge and beyond, construction on the cell site located at Oak Ridge Military Academy is expected to be completed later this year,ā Verizon spokesman Andy Choi said in an email earlier this week.
Is someone you love confused by the Long-Term Care Insurance Claims process?
Is someone you love confused by the Long-Term Care Insurance Claims process?
Is someone you love confused by the Long-Term Care Insurance Claims process?
Erected late last year, the 180-foot tower is disguised as a pine tree. It sits down a slope behind the schoolās gymnasium and is enclosed by a locked fence.
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This past February, Glenn Pennington, program manager for CTG, told us the new cell phone tower can accommodate as many as four carriers, with Verizon being the first to lease space for installing its antennas and other equipment. At that time, he said Verizonās service might become available in two or three months. Choi didnāt reply to a subsequent email this week asking about the delay.
HISTORICAL MARKER UNVEILED
ļ On May 7, Summerļ¬eldās Historical Committee members unveiled a historical marker recognizing Summerļ¬eld as the Atlantic and Yadkin Railwayās ļ¬rst station north of Greensboro. Dating back to 1886, the railway carried its last passenger train in 1939 and ended service in the late 1970s due to the expansion of the nationās highway system. Near the marker on Summerļ¬eld Road at Rhondan Road is the wooden freight shed used by the railway after the demolition of the depot in 1952.
The second paragraph on the historical marker reads: The depot handled passengers, mail, freight, express shipments, and telegrams and was an integral part of āSummerļ¬eld Properā history as the ļ¬rst āstation stopā north of Greensboro.
SUMMERFIELD town council
May 9 / MEETING HIGHLIGHTS
as reported by CHRIS BURRITTSUMMERFIELD ā Mayor Tim Sessoms called the monthly meeting in Summerfield Community Center to order, with Mayor Pro Tem Lynne Williams DeVaney and council members Jeff Davis, Janelle Robinson, Reece Walker and John Doggett present.
DeVaney offered the invocation, which was followed by the Pledge of Allegiance.
CONSENT AGENDA
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0 to approve the consent agenda after the council agreed with Walkerās request to delay approval of the closed session minutes from the councilās March 30 meeting. After that, the consent agenda included the meeting agenda and approval of open session minutes of the March 21,
March 30 and April 11 meetings, as well as closed session minutes of the March 21 and April 11 meetings.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Foundersā Day. The Foundersā Day celebration is scheduled for this coming Friday and Saturday, May 19-20; the parade on Saturday morning starts at 10 a.m. and will wind down Summerfield Road; all other Foundersā Day activities will take place beside the fire department on Summerfield Road.
Town Hall to be closed. Town Hall will be closed Monday, May 29, for Memorial Day, Town Manager Scott Whitaker said.
Budget meeting. The council will hold a special called meeting at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 30, to review the townās draft budget for the fiscal year starting July 1.
Wedding anniversary. Sessoms recalled performing the wedding ceremony for Councilman Walker and his wife, Sierra, eight years ago, and congratulated the couple on their anniversary.
PUBLIC SAFETY
Summerfield Fire District. The district reported it ran 129 calls in April; 17 were fire-related calls, 60 were EMS-related calls and 52 were miscellaneous calls. Firefighters installed 18 child safety seats and two smoke detector alarms.
Now that the weather has warmed up, the district urged motorists to be especially mindful of cyclists and motorcyclists on the roads. Sheriffās Office. The sheriffās District 1 office said it responded to 260 calls in
WHAT they voted on, and HOW they voted:
Mayor Pro Tem Lynne Williams DeVaney and council members Jeff Davis, Janelle Robinson, Reece Walker and John Doggett voted on the following items during the May 9 meeting. Mayor Tim Sessoms was present, but in Summerfield the mayor votes only to break a tie.
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0: Approve the consent agenda including the meeting agenda and approval of the open and closed session minutes of previous meetings
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0: Approve a request by Trotter Ridge homeowner Joanne Bond to amend the townās unified development ordinance regulating short-term rentals
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0: Approve a code of ethics for the Planning Board
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0: Appoint Jonathan Hamilton to the Finance Committee
Summerfield last month, resulting in 19 formal case reports. Roughly 25% of the calls involved traffic incidents and burglar alarms being set off, along with reports of four thefts, four weapons offenses and one motor vehicle theft.
The sheriffās office also noted there has been an increase in smash-andgrab thefts from parked vehicles, and urged park visitors to ābring only the bare essentialsā and put valuables out of sight. While there were no reports of vehicle break-ins at Summerfield parks last month, thefts occurred at Triad Park in Kernersville.
The District 1 office also reported a rise in social media extortion in which victims are duped into sharing explicit photos online with strangers. Scammers then attempt to blackmail the victims by demanding money in exchange for not sharing the photos with friends and family.
The office reminded people, especially teenagers, to refrain from talking to strangers online and sharing information.
COMMITTEE REPORT
Historical Committee. Chair Bruce Petersen reported the committee dedicated the railroad depot that served Summerfield for 65 years during a ceremony May 7.
Built in 1887 to serve the Atlantic and Yadkin Railway, the depot handled passengers, freight and mail until it fell into disservice and was torn down in 1952. Rail service continued for another half century, with a wooden shed providing storage for freight.
Relocated from nearby in 2020, the shed is located on Summerfield Road at Rhondan Road, near the historical marker that was dedicated earlier this month.
PUBLIC COMMENTS
ļ® Gail Dunham said if the town proceeds with construction of an elevated water storage tank, it should be located next to the fire department on Summerfield Road, not on the tract of land owned by the town on U.S. 220 at N.C. 150. Drawing groundwater to fill the tank on the Highway 220 property may take water from the wells of people who live nearby, Dunham said.
ļ® Adrian Williamson told the council it was āwasting a lot of moneyā on improvements to trails and parks and the purchase of a āhigh-dollarā pickup truck for town staff.
He then complimented the council for fighting efforts by landowner/developer David Couch to convince the state legislature to de-annex 973 acres ...continued on p. 8
⯠RIDES + ACTIVITIES: tickets/wristbands available at event for $20 either day (unlimited rides); inflatables, lawn games, rock-climbing, facepainting, caricature drawing, and balloon-twisting
⯠FOOD TRUCKS + 40 CRAFT/BUSINESS VENDORS
⯠TENTS: history and trails/greenways
⯠LIVE MUSIC: Greensboro Performing Arts, Repertory 336, Summerfield Charter Academy, Revolution Academy, Highland North, Northern Guilford Jazz Band
Friday, May 19 (6pā10p) +
Saturday, May 20 (10aā4p)
⯠FESTIVITIES at 7300ā7400 Summerfield Road near fire station #9
⯠SATURDAY PARADE at 10a on Summerfield Rd. (Centerfield Rd. to Oak St.)
⯠EXTRA PARKING and SATURDAY SHUTTLES from Laughlin Prof. Development Center (7911 Summerfield Rd.)
⯠sorry, no pets or alcohol
free, family-friendly entertainment | parade food | live music | vendors & exhibits | rides
SUMMERFIELD TOWN COUNCIL
...continued from p. 6
Couch owns in Summerfield.
PUBLIC HEARING
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0 to approve a request by Trotter Ridge homeowner Joanne Bond to amend the townās unified development ordinance (UDO) regulating short-term rentals.
The vote by the council removed the requirement that short-term rentals be located within the principal dwelling on the property, not in any other structure. Bond plans to convert a two-story barn behind her house into a short-term rental.
MANAGERāS REPORT
Planning Board code of ethics
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0 to approve a code of ethics for the Planning Board stating that board members āshould not allow family, social, or other relationships to unduly influence their conduct or
judgmentā on board matters.
If a board member has āan interest in any official act or actionā before the board, the member is required to disclose the nature and extent of the interest publicly on the record of the board, according to the code of ethics. If required by law and excused by the board, the member must withdraw from any consideration of the matter.
The code of ethics recommended by the board and approved by the council āsubstantially mirrorsā the councilās own code of ethics, according to Whitaker.
In 2022, the council changed the UDO to instruct the board to adopt its own code of ethics. A separate code of ethics for the board ācould be modified in the future with less formality than a UDO amendment,ā Whitaker explained in a memo to the council.
Voluntary annexation update. As the council prepares a timeline for considering voluntary annexation petitions, planning manager Brad Rentz said he learned two dates from the Guilford County Board of Elections.
Anyone wanting to run for a Town Council seat in the Nov. 7 general election would need to be annexed into Summerfield by July 7, Rentz said. People who want to vote in the townās election would need to be annexed by Aug. 15.
Dog park opening. Whitaker reported the grand opening of Summerfieldās Paw Park May 6 went well. āSo far, so good,ā he said.
Council members applauded efforts by town staff, the Trails and Open Space Committee and other volunteers who helped plan and build the park, located behind the amphitheater at Summerfield Community Park.
COUNCIL BUSINESS
De-annexation update. Sessoms said the town received a letter on May 9
Virtual Care from Your Home
from Couchās representatives, which was in response to the townās letter to Couch on April 27. The mayor didnāt elaborate on the content of either letter and said the council would discuss Couchās response letter in closed session later in the meeting.
At the urging of state Senate President Pro Tem Phil Berger, representatives of Summerfield and Couch are attempting to find common ground on the townās opposition to the developerās plans, which include apartments, for the 973 acres he owns.
Board appointment
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0 to appoint Jonathan Hamilton to the Finance Committee.
CLOSED SESSION
The council recessed the open meeting and went into closed session to discuss the letter from Couch. After reconvening about 35 minutes later into open session, the council took no action.
With no further business, the meeting was adjourned at 8:51 p.m.
OAK RIDGE town council
May 4 / MEETING HIGHLIGHTS
as reported by CHRIS BURRITT
OAK RIDGE ā Mayor Ann Schneider called the monthly meeting to order, with Mayor Pro Tem Jim Kinneman and council members George McClellan, Martha Pittman and Spencer Sullivan present.
Rev. Mike Carr, pastor of Oak Ridge United Methodist Church, offered the invocation, which was followed by the Pledge of Allegiance.
PROCLAMATIONS
National Day of Prayer. Schneider read a proclamation declaring May 4 as a Day of Prayer in Oak Ridge, as part of recognizing the first Thursday of May each year as National Day of Prayer.
Professional Municipal Clerks Week. Pittman read a proclamation honoring Sandra Smith, assistant town manager and clerk, deputy town clerk Ashley Royal and office assistant Genevieve Geib as part of Professional Municipal Clerks Week.
PUBLIC SAFETY
Oak Ridge Fire Department. Assistant Chief Sam Anders reported the department is handling more calls, partly because itās taking over some lowergrade medical calls from volunteer fire departments.
PUBLIC HEARING
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0 to approve a request to rezone nearly 19.6 acres south of N.C. 150 and east of the Forsyth County line, from agricultural (AG) to conditional zoning residential (CZ-RS-40) at the request of Debra and Van Duggins, trustees of the Duggins Family Trust.
An estimated 14 to 16 houses are planned for the property, which is located at 1338 Forsyth Road in Oak Ridgeās ETJ (extraterritorial jurisdiction), according to the landownerās representative, Chris Rohrer of Land Solutions.
During a public hearing, nearby property owner Frank Carroll asked
whether the development would get water from Winston-Salem/Forsyth County Utilities or from private wells. He expressed concern that drilling more wells would possibly draw down water from existing wells nearby.
Rohrer said the developer would evaluate both options for water.
MANAGERāS REPORT
Veterans Honor
Green donations
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0 to approve the town matching $7,845 in donations raised by the Special Events Committee for the Veterans Honor Green in the first quarter of 2023.
Matching funds from Oak Ridge brings to $184,932.24 the total raised for the veteransā site at Heritage Farm Park through March 31, Smith said.
The council plans to draw the matching funds from the townās $50,000 Small Town Development Grant, leaving $29,783.38 of the grant unspent.
Later in the meeting, Patti Dmuchowski, chair of the Special Events Committee, said donations and giving pledges through March have pushed donations over $200,000, the previous fundraising goal; due to rising costs, however, she said the goal has increased to at least $240,000.
Records destruction
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0 to authorize town staff to hire a contractor to remove and destroy about 25 boxes of documents that Oak Ridge is no longer required to retain.
Parks fee schedule
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0 to remove a portable propane gas grill from items rented by the Parks and Recreation Department.
Meeting time change
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0 to allow the Parks and Recreation Advisory Board to switch its meeting time on the third Thursday of the month from 7 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.
WHAT they voted on, and HOW they voted:
Mayor Ann Schneider, Mayor Pro Tem Jim Kinneman and council members George McClellan, Martha Pittman and Spencer Sullivan voted on the following items during the May 4 meeting:
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0: Approve the town match of $7,845 in donations recently raised for the Veterans Honor Green
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0: Authorize town staff to hire a contractor to destroy about 25 boxes of documents
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0: Approve the removal of a portable propane gas grill from items rented by the Parks and Recreation Department
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0: Allow the Parks and Recreation Advisory Board to switch its meeting time from 7 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0: Amend the townās budget to appropriate $10,000 to cover startup costs for this yearās expanded Music in the Park concert series
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0: Increase the monthly base rate for the townās new water system
Music in the Park budget amendment
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0 to amend the townās budget to increase expenses for special events by $10,000 to cover marketing materials, band and other costs for the expanded Music in the Park concert series.
Anticipated revenue for parks special events was also increased by $10,000, at the town managerās recommendation.
Schneider recognized deputy clerk Royal for her efforts to organize the
concert series, which started last month and runs through October. Four of the six concerts are being expanded with sponsors, bigger-name bands, alcohol sales and additional food trucks.
NEW BUSINESS
Draft budget presentation. Bruce presented the draft budget for the fiscal year starting July 1; the property tax remains unchanged, at 8 cents per $100 of valuation.
STOKESDALE town council
May
11 / MEETING HIGHLIGHTS
as reported by PATTI STOKES
Mayor Mike Crawford opened the monthly town council meeting in Town Hall at 7 p.m. Following an opening prayer and the Pledge of Allegiance, the five-member council approved the consent agenda after adding one discussion item and a closed session.
PUBLIC SAFETY
Fire Department. Randy Southard, Stokesdale Fire Dept.ās deputy chief, reported the department responded to a higher-than-usual number of calls for service in April; of the 90 calls, 40 were medical-related, seven fire-related and 34 miscellaneous.
Southard said one of the departmentās firefighters recently had a stroke and asked that everyone keep him in their prayers.
Safety tip. Residents were reminded
that burning yard debris is okay, but not manufactured materials, and advised to control the area surrounding their fire, ensure there is sufficient distance between the fire and nearby structures, and to monitor air quality reports.
Sheriffās Department. Sgt. Ryan Seals with the county sheriffās District 1 office reported in writing that vehicle break-ins at area parks have recently increased, with offenders smashing windows and stealing purses and credit cards. Residents were reminded to store only the bare essentials in their cars, and to never leave valuables in plain sight.
Social media extortion scams involving explicit photos have also increased, and residents were warned about talking to strangers online, and to never share explicit photos or personal information.
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Tested for every weather extreme
About seven minutes into the meeting, Councilman Tim Jones called for a point of order because a citizen, Mark Nadel, had brought his bloodhound into the meeting room.
āI think the dog constitutes a disturbance,ā Jones said.
Mayor Crawford said he didnāt object to having a dog in the meeting room and Mayor Pro Tem Derek Foy said he had no objections to this particular dog, but in general, a dog being in council chambers wasnāt appropriate.
With no policy about having a dog in council chambers, council members discussed what immediate action was appropriate.
āIf we donāt have a policy, then someone could bring a horse into the meeting ā or maybe a number of things,ā Jones said. āI donāt object to the character of this dog, or to the dogās breed ⦠but itās a dog. ⦠is is a path the town doesnāt need to go down ā unless this is an ADA service dog.ā
After further discussion, the mayor motioned to allow dogs in council chambers with his approval. Councilman Jimmy Landreth said he didnāt feel the decision should be up to the mayor, and Councilman Jim Rigsbee offered an amended motion that the dog currently in the meeting room be allowed to stay, provided it didnāt cause a disturbance.
āSometimes I think Stokesdale is Mayberry, and this proves it right here,ā Jones said.
When asked, Nadel said he had checked with the deputy clerk before the meeting and confirmed there was no policy against bringing a dog. ļ¾ 3 ļ½ 2 to approve Rigsbeeās amended motion (Jones and Foy opposed).
āThe dog gets to stay,ā Crawford said.
About 10 minutes later, the dog became restless and began barking,
and Nadel and the dog left the meeting.
Administrative. Town Clerk Dale Martin reported on the number of water meters on hold for builders and in stock, applications for transfer of water service and 8-1-1 calls; 752 water customers were billed in April.
Martin then offered a lengthy list of staff activities and accomplishments in April, including meetings they had attended, contracts executed, information provided for grants, the website designer and more.
Justin Snyder, a senior planner with Guilford County, said the county is asking citizens to take a survey regarding updates to the countywide comprehensive plan; the plan and survey can be accessed online by typing āGuilford County comprehensive planā into a search bar. Direct questions to CompPlan@guilfordcountync.gov.
COMMITTEE REPORTS
Events. Foy said the Christmas parade is scheduled for Dec. 9.
Town Property. Landreth said the sewer control in Town Park had been fixed and Foy said an Eagle project planned in the town park now includes a walkway with pavers instead of a firepit.
Deputy Clerk Robbie Wagoner said a new mirror in a park bathroom is ready to be installed, but it will require two people.
Town Park Improvement. Tee Stephenson, committee chair, said the town has entered into contract with Backyard Paradise to install playground equipment. Also, on April 20 the town entered into contract with Fleming Engineering to survey the nearly 10-acre tract adjacent to the town park that the town purchased in late 2021.
Stephenson said he and Foy looked at an outdoor basketball court with the same sport court material the town is considering for its basketball courts and found the 13-year-old court to still be in good shape. They also looked at the pickleball courts at Bur-Mil Park in Greensboro, which are concrete and painted; they are only a year old, but already have cracks in them. Sport Court, which manufactures the sport
court surface material that Stokesdale is interested in, is the official supplier/partner with USA Pickleball.
FINANCIAL REPORT
Finance Officer Kim Thacker presented the monthly financial report for the townās general fund and water enterprise accounts. She noted that due to rising interest rates, Stokesdale has earned $23,822 in interest on its certificates of deposit this fiscal year, which is far more than the $5,000 budgeted.
CITIZEN COMMENTS
ļ® Summerfield resident Maria Adams said District 3 residents have been ādisenfranchised by the Guilford County Board of Education, which refused to
appoint Guilford County Republican Partyās nominee, Michael Logan, to a seat vacated by Pat Tillman after Tillman was elected to the countyās Board of Commissioners last fall.
A lifetime Republican, Logan has held several leadership roles within the GOP, Adams said.
āAccording to law, the seat vacated by Tillman was to be filled by the Executive Committee of the Republican Party; by proxy, Mr. Logan was elected by the voters and it was the duty of the BOE to swear him in and seat him ⦠however, the board was derelict in their duty,ā she continued.
Logan attended the BOEās April 4 meeting expecting to be sworn into office, but instead, the
Democrat-led BOE appointed Bill Goebel, Adams noted.
āMr. Goebel is not the legal nominee of the Republican Party. He has been censured and is banned from attending any events sponsored by the Republican Party,ā she said.
In response to a question from Landreth, Adams said Republican Party members and leaders have asked Goebel to resign but he refused.
Foy said he watched the BOE meeting and it appeared āthe majority of that board (Democrats) seemed very well-informed as to what was going to happen ⦠but two of the members (Republicans) had
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Neurostrive currently offers neurotoxins, fillers and chemical peels, and in the future Bong plans to add services including IV infusion, micro-needling, laser treatments, body sculpting and weight loss.
āNeurostrive recognizes and appreciates the importance of mental health,ā Bong said. āWe provide services that can have a deep impact on oneās self-confidence and selfesteem. Our goal is to achieve naturallooking results with treatments curated by our medical professionals in the most efficient and safe way possible.ā
One of the main challenges Neurostrive faces is that the field of medical aesthetic services is constantly evolving.
āBut that can also be exciting,ā Bong noted. āOur team not only is up-to-date and informed in current developments and discoveries, but also maintains a pulse on what the future may hold in the world of medical aesthetics.ā
Educating clients/patients with Neurostriveās products and providing services that exceed their expectations are among the rewards Bong said he and his team experience.
Bong is a member of AOCR (American Osteopathic College of Radiology) and is board certified in diagnostic radiology and in neuroradiology.
On a personal note: Bong was born
and raised in the suburbs of Chicago. He attended the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and earned a bachelorās of science in bioengineering, then went to medical school in Erie, Pennsylvania. He completed his residency at Michigan State ā Macomb, Michigan, and his fellowship at University of Texas Southwestern in Dallas, Texas.
āMy wife is a physician at Brenner Childrenās Hospital in Winston-Salem, which brought us here to North Carolina after our training,ā Bong said. āWhile spending time in the Triad, I met Cathy Montgomery, NP, an Oak Ridge resident. We are collaborating and bringing medical aesthetics to Oak Ridge and the surrounding areas.ā
During his downtime, Bong said he enjoys āchasing my son around the Triad.ā He also likes to cycle, play volleyball, hike and listen to live music.
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Amada Senior Care
Owner/manager: Quinton Kocher
Amada Senior Care opened in 2022 to serve the areaās growing senior community by offering professional in-home caregivers and helping families with LTC (long-term care) policies understand their benefits, which often include affordable homecare and assisted living.
Owner Quinton Kocher describes the company as a āvery caregivercentric organization, focusing on the well-being and work-life balance of
...continued on p. 14
...continued from p. 12
caregivers so that they can care for seniors in their own home. We match clients with experienced, well-trained caregivers who have the skills required for their unique situations.ā
and said serving as treasurer of this large network of local agencies, attorneys, services and non-profits provides Amada with access to a wealth of valuable resources for its senior clients.
DID
One of the companyās greatest challenges, Kocher said, is finding enough qualified caregivers to meet an increasing demand for in-home care.
āWe work tirelessly to recruit, train, hire and retain the best team of in-home caregivers possible,ā he said. āCaregiver burnout is a real thing and we work hard to focus on the well-
On a personal note: When he gets downtime, Kocher said he enjoys watching professional soccer highlights and free news on YouTube.
Is someone you love confused by the
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As for the greatest rewards, Kocher said he loves working with his mom, who is the companyās director of operations, and their team to make great
Is someone you love confused by the Long-Term Care Insurance Claims process?
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Amada specializes in:
Amada specializes in:
Amada specializes in:
⢠In-Home Caregivers
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⢠In-home caregivers
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⢠Paperwork submission and payment monitoring
⢠Paperwork submission & payment monitoring
⢠Policy review and benefit verification
⢠Policy review and benefits verification
⢠Advocacy calls to insurance provider
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⢠Advocacy calls to insurance provider
āBut I donāt have much downtime,ā he notes. āIām really āonā for the agency 24/7... our team is like a family. My wife, Kristin, and I have three extremely active children and we both work and volunteer quite a bit. My mom, Debbie, is living with us right now, so we all team up on transporting the kids, which is great. Kelly Graven, our RN and Director of Client Services, and Pam Mathews, our staffing manager, also both have busy families. So, we all try to look out for one another and make sure we get downtime. My downtime is sitting on the sidelines of one of the kidsā soccer games and just being a proud dad.ā
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āSeeing clients improve in their function is extremely rewarding as well,ā he said. āWe just love supporting individual clients and couples and seeing adult children have peace of mind knowing Amada is assisting with their parentsā daily activities. We also love taking care of our caregivers.ā
Kocher is a board member of Triad Retirement Living Association (TRLA)
The crowd was big and the level of enthusiasm high at Town of Oak Ridgeās ļ¬rst sponsored Music in the Park event held in Oak Ridge Town Park on Saturday, May 14, featuring the band Gipsy Danger. This is the ļ¬rst year the townās Parks and Recreation Advisory Board acquired sponsors for four of its six scheduled Music in the Park events, with the goal of bringing in more widely known bands that attract larger audiences. On a trial basis for this season, beer and wine is being offered for sale at the four sponsored music events. The next sponsored Music in the Park will be on Saturday, June 10, at 6:30 p.m., featuring Radio Revolver.
Did you know Guilford Backpack Ministry provides 280 boxes of cereal a month to students? Help us reach our goal of $200 to buy more cereal during the Town of Summerfield Foundersā Day celebration. Sponsor one box of cereal for $5 (or more)!
Text āORUMC Backpackā to 73256 or visit our table at Foundersā Day on Saturday, May 20.
To learn more about Guilford Backpack Ministry and how you can help, visit https://backpackministry.wixsite.com/ backpacks.
Lack of inventory ādriving forceā in housing market
Buyers
hasnāt stopped because of the strong demand for housing, according to real estate agents interviewed earlier this week.
by CHRIS BURRITTNW GUILFORD ā Although slowing from its frenzied pace of a year ago, Realtors said northwest Guilfordās housing market remains robust as buyers continue to compete for a shortage of supply in homes for sale.
Despite rising interest rates over the past year, sellers of desirable properties are still often entertaining multiple offers, sometimes for more than the asking prices. That exuberance has slowed since last year, but it
ā e driving force is denitely the lack of inventory,ā said Tim Atkins, an Allen Tate agent in Oak Ridge. ā ere is still a lot of buyer demand.ā
Even so, northwest Guilfordās market slowed in the first quarter, according to Triad Multiple Listing Service statistics compiled by the Greensboro Regional Realtors Association (GRRA).
The average price of a house in Oak Ridge and Summerfield slipped 4.5% in the three months ended
March 31, from $558,201 a year earlier to $533,267, according to GRRA.
In Stokesdale, the average price edged up about 6.7%, from $432,150 a year earlier to $461,277.
In all three towns, houses remained on the market for more days during the first quarter than a year earlier, GRRA said. Buyers paid slightly less than asking prices January through March, whereas they paid slightly more in the first quarter of 2022.
Keller Williams agent Gil Vaughan said he believes the decline in sale prices has more to do with some sellers āoverpricing their houses and then having to come down to whatās more reasonable.ā
The slowdown also suggests that higher interest rates have had a dual impact, according to some Realtors. Not only have higher borrowing
costs kept some buyers out of the market, but they also have motivated some homeowners to stay put because theyād pay higher rates to buy new homes.
Earlier this month, the Federal Reserve raised interest rates by another quarter percentage point, its 10th increase aimed at curbing inflation. As a result of the Fedās actions, the average 30-year fixedrate mortgage rate climbed to 6.4% in the first quarter from 3.8% a year earlier, according to Fannie Mae, the government-sponsored mortgage loan company.
Last month, Fannie Mae forecast that rates will slip over the next three quarters and decline to 6% for all of 2003. Thatās still higher than 5.3% in 2022.
āThe higher rates had an initial impact of slowing down buyers who
outnumber sellers in northwestern Guilford County, helping deļ¬ect the negative impact of higher interest rates, according to real estate agents
were used to much lower rates,ā said DeDe Cunningham, a Keller Williams agent who focuses on Oak Ridge, Summerfield and Stokesdale.
āBut for most buyers, it was a pause because they realized that home prices are not decreasing,ā Cunningham said. āHome prices are actually continuing to increase, so if they wait to purchase based on the rates long term, theyāre actually going to be paying more.ā
Along the same lines, Atkins said heās seen an increase in the number of appraisals coming in for less than tentative asking prices, reflecting that sellers are seeking too much. Or, he said, the houses arenāt in tip-top shape.
āMost people want move-in ready,ā Atkins said.
Nationally, the housing inventory is down 40% compared to 2019, according to Lawrence Yun, the National Association of Realtorsā chief economist and senior vice president of research. The shortage is weighing on the growth of the housing market, he said during a conference earlier this month.
to create more than 2,400 jobs over the next decade, leaders in Oak Ridge discussed as recently as this month how they intend to handle growth pressures.
The proximity of the new jobs to the airport āis going to make Oak Ridge a very attractive place to live,ā Ben Walraven, an active town volunteer, told the council during its meeting earlier this month.
āI think weāre all acutely aware of the development thatās occurring, particularly at the airport, which is close by and which naturally is going to put pressure on Oak Ridge,ā council member Spencer Sullivan said.
He added that the townās planning for managed growth is ādesigned to maintain the character of our town and to preserve a quality of life while allowing for that growth.ā
In Summerfield, the prospect of the Triad attracting thousands of new jobs is figuring into the debate over apartments.
Citing the new jobs, state Senate President Pro Tem Phil Berger said the region needs to create more housing opportunities. The Republican senator is weighing whether to support Summerfield landowner David Couchās request that the state legislature approve de-annexation of 973 acres where he wants to build apartments.
Unlike a year ago, he said, āwe may not see 15 offers in two days, but we may get four or five.ā
Northwest Guilfordās housing shortage has longer-term repercussions as the creation of new aerospace jobs around Piedmont Triad International Airport draws people to the area who will be seeking housing, Realtors said.
Spurred by Boom Supersonicās announcement last year that it plans
āWhen all of these jobs start hitting, we are going to need more lotsā for new houses, said Jason Smith, who owns Smith Marketing Inc. with his mother, Betty, and brother Jeff.
Additional jobs āwill put more pressure on the limited supply that we already have,ā Cunningham said. āIāve already had several clients with companies coming into the area looking for housing and our inventory is limited.ā
āInventory is still very short,ā said Phillip Stone, who owns A New Dawn Realty in Stokesdale with his mother, Dawn. āSupply and demand is still in the sellerās favor. If youāve got a desirable property, itās probably going to get multiple o ers.ā
No progress on de-annexation compromise, mayor says
SUMMERFIELD ā In a letter released May 17, Summerfield Mayor Tim Sessoms said that rather than working toward a compromise with the town, David Couch seems intent on pushing for legislation that will allow him to de-annex nearly 1,000 acres he owns. The following is the letter Sessoms wrote this week to update the community on the status of Couchās de-annexation efforts:
āDespite the townās considerable efforts, no progress has been accomplished in terms of moving closer to a compromise with Couch. The town wants to avoid de-annexation, but meeting in the middle requires him at the table and thatās been the struggle. Itās obvious the Couch team is confident they have the political capital to push the de-annexation through and see no value in meeting. Council, our lobbyists, and attorneys continue to communicate Summerfieldās desire to talk details and the latest effort is trying to get Senator Berger to push for the same.
āRepresentatives met with Couchās team on March 23 and followed up with a letter on April 5 outlining some initial concessions. Couchās April 17 response was unfortunately critical of our efforts, minimized our offerings, and showed no interest in meeting or seeking common ground. Nevertheless, Council delivered a letter on April 27 to his attorneys, again seeking a path for timely discussions toward a compromise. We encouraged their side to respond prior to Councilās May 9 evening meeting so officials
could discuss details in closed session.
āCouchās response came late the afternoon of our meeting and instead of moving closer to compromise, it offered no hint of willingness to talk. The intent is clear ā they are posturing for Sen. Berger to push the General Assembly toward de-annexation. Our communication to Berger this week is that weāve tried to broker a compromise, but the town wonāt negotiate against itself and Couch needs to earnestly engage. Staff is on standby to prepare a revised text amendment, which would include compromises already communicated to Couchās team. Weāll know soon if thereās any movement or desire to meet with our leadership and hammer out UDO and project parameters that remain obstacles.
āSummerfield and our neighbors maintain that a legislative de-annexation of nearly 1,000 acres would have wide-ranging negative implications across our state. These arenāt perimeter properties ā theyāre in the heart of our town. Iāve urged Senator Berger to use his political capital to impress upon Couch the townās desire to reach a compromise solution. We will keep our residents updated as thereās more to share.ā
The letter was signed, āMayor Tim.ā
In a text earlier this week, Couch said that āout of respect for all involved, Iām not going to speak publicly about the status right now.ā
In recent weeks, weāve reached out to Kelli Collins, chief operating officer of Diagnostic Radiology and Imaging
I noticed that renovation of the former Southern States store in Summerfield into a medical imaging center hasnāt started yet. Has the
project just been delayed, or has it been scratched?File photo A representative of Diagnostic Radiology and Imaging, which operates three imaging centers in Greensboro, told the Northwest Observer last August that DRI plans to expand into the space formerly occupied by Southern States Cooperative store at N.C. 150 and Lake Brandt Road. Recent atempts to get an update on the project have been unsuccessful.
Quality Craftsmanship
Disney Construction
Providing homebuyers with hands-on, personal attention for over four
Disney Construction Co. owners (L to R) Francis and Patti Disney, along with their son, Mark, and his wife, Jennifer, offer homebuyers high-quality craftsmanship and a personal commitment to creating their vision for a new home.
Over the last 42 years, Disney Construction Co. has established a timetested reputation for quality home building. Buyers wanting to build a custom home are attracted to the company because they want to work with a trustworthy builder who they know will be personally committed to their vision for a new home.
Francis and Patti Disney started the company in 1981 and are still very active in the business, remaining focused on the craftsmanship they know is paramount to the construction of the companyās homes.
Coming June 29
Greater Greensboro Builders Associationās āBuilder Member of the Yearā and the Eugene Gulledge Award for Distinguished Service ā all recognitions that reflect the companyās commitment to its customers and the communities it serves.
Since joining his parentsā company over 15 years ago, Mark Disney has served as president of the Greater Greensboro Builders Association and was one of Triad Business Journalās 2018 āForty Under Forty.ā His wife, Jennifer, assists with selection and design of new homes and oversees the companyās marketing and social media program.
āOur hope is to gain your familyās confidence by giving you the opportunity to see our craftsmanship and dedication to our customers,ā Patti said. āWe pride ourselves on providing our homebuyers with hands-on, personal attention.ā
As one of the most trusted and respected builders in the northwest Guilford County area and beyond, Disney Construction Co.ās well-earned reputation has brought recognition from both inside and outside the building industry.
In 2019 the company received Triad Business Journalās annual Family Business Award and has been a recipient of the
Outside the industry, the Disneys have found many ways to give back to the community and have been especially supportive of Christ-centered organizations that focus on the family, such as Room at the Inn and Amyās House.
The Disneys know a successful construction business depends on a partnership between subcontractors, sales representatives and suppliers to turn truckloads of building supplies into a beautiful home. As a result, theyāve found some of the best folks in the industry and have have forged close relationships with them.
āOur subcontractors and suppliers are more like extended family,ā Patti said. āWe rely on them to help provide our homebuyers with personal attention and walk them through the process of building their custom home. In the end, they take as much pride in the nished home as we do.ā
Homeowners working with Disney Construction Co. have said they value
to you by Smith Marketing
the personal attention they received throughout the building process and knowing they could be as involved as they wanted to be.
āWeāre there along the way to assist the homeowner in every aspect of the project,ā Patti emphasized.
With the reputation Francis and Patti have earned for quality construction and homeowner satisfaction over the years and the youthful energy and leadership Mark and Jennifer have provided, this family business is well-positioned to stand on solid ground for generations to come.
DESTINATION ARTS RIBBON CUTTING
Photo courtesy of Terri Quintal Photography
Summerļ¬eld Merchants Association held a ribbon cutting ceremony on May 9 for one of its newest members, Destination Arts, at its new studio at 4446 U. S. 220, Suite J in Summerļ¬eld. Cameron Ligon (center, in green dress), who owns Destination Arts along with her husband, Joseph, said they have been in business in Oak Ridge Commons for almost 10 years and she is excited to bring more opportunities for students in Summerļ¬eld to be introduced to dance, music and theater. āThe arts are awesome and I love dance, but most of our students are not going to be professional dancers or musicians ā but theyāre going to be great people because of the arts ⦠people who can stand in front of a board room and make a speech or lead a team because of the conļ¬dence that the arts has given them,ā Ligon told those attending the ceremony.
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District 1 Sheri ās O ce
ACCIDENTAL SHOOTING
May 4 | Law enforcement officers responded to a report of an accidental self-inflicted gunshot wound to a resident in the 3400 block of Edgefield Road in northwest Greensboro.
ASSAULT
May 5 | A 65-year-old female was arrested in the 7000 block of Summerfield Road for simple assault and trespassing, and a 53-year-old male was arrested for assault on a female.
May 6 | Officers responded at 1:12 a.m. to a reported assault involving the discharge of a firearm and damage to property in the 3300 block
of Rebecca Drive in Summerfield (off Strawberry Road).
May 11 | Officers responded to a reported assault involving a physical altercation in the 7700 block of Alcorn Road in Oak Ridge.
FRAUD
May 2 | Wells Fargo bank sent law enforcement notification of possible elder financial abuse in the 3700 block of Oak Ridge Road in Summerfield.
May 9 | A resident of the 8300 block of Knight Village Circle in Stokesdale (near U.S. 158) reported an unknown suspect defrauded him of $2,000.
May 11 | A resident of the 8600 block of Belews Creek Road in Stokesdale reported that between April 28 and May 11 an unknown suspect defrauded her of $1,116.
LARCENY
Road in Stokesdale (off N.C. 65) for larceny.
SUSPICIOUS ACTIVITY/ TRESPASSING
May 1 | Suspicious activity involving a possible burglary was reported in the 8500 block of Merriman Farm Road in Oak Ridge (near Oak Ridge Road).
May 11 | An employee of Northwest High School reported that an unknown suspect had entered the school building via an unlocked window; no items were reported as damaged or stolen.
May 11 | Suspicious activity involving a possible burglary was reported in the 8400 block of Spicer Lane in Stokesdale (near U.S. 158).
THEFT
May 1 | An employee of Wendyās in Oak Ridge reported an unknown suspect entered the business through an unlocked door and stole $4,268.67.
May 2 | A resident of the 7200 block of Henson Forest Drive in Summerfield (off Oak Ridge Road) reported that between April 28 and May 2 an unknown suspect stole from his vehicle a Beretta firearm, three firearm magazines, some explosives and some camo bags.
shoplifted four Visa gift cards worth over $2,000 altogether.
May 10 | An employee at CVS Pharmacy in Summerfield reported that between April 26 and May 10 an unknown suspect shoplifted $255 worth of facial cleansers and allergy medication.
May 11 | A resident of the 7900 block of Fogleman Way in Oak Ridge (near N.C. 68 N) reported an unknown suspect stole a red/black Honda push lawn mower worth $700 from his property.
May 12 | A resident of the 8000 block of Daltonshire Drive in Oak Ridge (off N.C. 68 N) reported that between April 21 and May 12 an unknown suspect stole three firearms from his property.
May 12 | An employee of Piedmont Carolina Landscaping in Colfax reported an unknown suspect cut the lock to enter the building and stole three gas cans, two orange/white STIHL backpack blowers and a red Honda push mower, worth about $1,800 altogether.
May 12 | A resident of the 7800 block of Athens Road in Stokesdale (off U.S. 158) reported an unknown suspect stole $200 from her residence.
336-298-8387
May 1 | Officers responded to a report of an employee committing larceny in the amount of $679 at Hilco Transport on Pleasant Ridge Road in northwest Greensboro.
May 8 | A resident of the 7700 block of Eversfield Road in Summerfield (off Oak Ridge Road) reported an unknown suspect stole a black trailer and a gray GE washer and dryer from his property, worth $2,200 combined.
May 8 | A 33-year-old female was arrested in the 8400 block of Southard
May 9 | A manager at Dollar General in Colfax reported an unknown suspect
May 14 | An employee of AAA Self Storage on Pleasant Ridge Road in northwest Greensboro reported that between May 11 and May 14 an unknown suspect stole a red/black Hilti drill, a yellow/black Fluke hand pump, a testing kit and a set of hand tools, worth $6,600 altogether. www.bobrents.com
has recently responded to the following incidents in northwest/northern Guilford County ...
The proposed budget appropriates $2.9 million for construction of a 250,000-gallon elevated water tank and engineering of a 3.5-mile water line from Forsyth County to the tank; Bruce noted the projects will be covered by state and federal grants.
The budget also allocates spending for construction of Heritage Farm Park and the Veterans Honor Green and renovation of the historic Redmon House. (See related article on front cover of this issue.)
Kinneman urged fellow council members to remove from the budget a $100-a-month increase in their stipend for serving on the council. Over 12 months, the increase would amount to $6,000 for five council members.
If approved, the mayorās monthly stipend will increase from $600 to $700 and council member stipends from $300 to $400.
The proposed increase is part of
a three-year effort to make council membersā pay comparable to what council members in other municipalities earn; Schneider said it accounts for a half of 1% of the townās administrative budget of about $1 million.
āI think itās appropriate to value the work done by council members,ā Schneider said. āNot because Iām sitting in this seat, but because someone else will be soon sitting in this seat or in any of our seats. We want to reward reasonably those who serve our town.ā
Later during public comments, Jacob Binder, a sophomore at Northwest Guilford High School, said, āI donāt think we can reasonably be getting to the point where $6,000 is just a drop in the bucket of our budget.ā
Water rate increase
5 ļ½ 0 to increase the monthly base rate for the townās new water system to $24, plus $7.50 for 1,000 gallons.
Due to rising costs for chemicals and other supplies, the Water Advisory Committee recommended the rate increase from the previous monthly rate of $21, plus $6.50 for 1,000 gallons of water.
āNo one likes to raise prices, but it is something our Water Advisory Committee felt was necessary to do,ā Sullivan said. The town is preparing to add the Honeycutt Reserve subdivision as the water systemās first customer.
PUBLIC COMMENTS
ļ® Mike Stone criticized the draft budget, including the proposed higher stipend for council members.
āThis budget is a spending spree of large and pet projects,ā he said.
Last yearās property reappraisal in Guilford County resulted in higher property values countywide, leading to āa 20% tax increaseā on Oak Ridge residents, Stone added.
ļ® Later during public comments, Finance Committee member Jim Harton said the committee went to āgreat effort to ⦠accommodate all of the things that this town has been working on for several years.ā
ļ® Matt Schneider thanked the council, town staff and committee volunteers for āthe careful preparation of this budget, but even more important than that, for embracing a vision for the future of this town thatās worthy of its citizens and worthy of the proud history of Oak Ridge.ā
ļ® Ben Walraven urged the council to focus on preparing for the likelihood that some employees of Boom Supersonic and other new tenants at Piedmont Triad International Airport are going to want to live in Oak Ridge.
FINANCIAL UPDATE
The town closed its $3 million loan from Truist Financial for development of Heritage Farm Park last month, according to finance officer Sam Anders. He said he deposited the loan funds into a separate account to keep expenses for the new park separate from other town spending.
COMMUNITY UPDATE
Water Advisory Committee. Chair
Jim Harton reported the committee reviewed a draft 25-year timeline of the townās efforts to establish a municipal water system.
Historic Preservation. Barb Engel said the commission approved a certification of appropriateness for the water tower to be built behind Town Hall on Linville Road.
Planning and Zoning Board. Chair Jason Streck reported the board approved the site plan for the water tower.
Mountains-to-Sea Trail. Co-chair Anne Steele said committee member Stephanie Ferrell set up a booth at Canine Capers last month and spoke with many folks interested in local trails and in potentially volunteering.
Special Events Committee. Chair Patti Dmuchowski reported the committee is working on plans for several upcoming events ā the July 4 kidsā parade, the 100th anniversary of the Benbow House, the 25th anniversary of Oak Ridge and Light Up the Night.
Dmuchowski thanked those who have donated to the Veterans Honor Green.
Tree Board. Board member Gigi Williams Danner reported the board will set up a booth at Heritage Day in September to share information about its activities, such as the townās inventory of Treasure Trees.
Parks and Recreation Advisory Board. Co-chair John Browning reported the committee extended use of the Town Park parking lot for pickleball courts from dawn until 4 p.m. Monday through Thursday. The area will also be available for pickleball games on some weekends when there is enough parking.
Finance Committee. Chair John Jenkins reported the committee āwent through the operational budget line item by line item. We asked a lot of questions, we got a lot of responses and I believe it is a responsible budget.ā
Triad Municipal ABC Board. Jimm Barbery, Oak Ridgeās ABC Board representative, said the townās share of profits totaled $42,003 in the first quarter, boosting the townās distribution
to $240,593 so far this fiscal year. Oak Ridge Elementary. Principal Penny Loschin reported the school has raised $38,768 so far this year from parents and the community as part of its annual fundraising that āgoes directly back to our students.ā
COUNCIL COMMENTS
ļ® Sullivan said the proposed budget reflects years of planning for āmanaged growth thatās designed to maintain the character of our town and to preserve a quality of life.ā
ļ® Pittman said she was one of four speakers at the 2023 annual gathering of Friends of the Mountains-to-Sea Trail earlier this month and Oak Ridgeās trail efforts were highlighted as a model for other towns.
ļ® Kinneman concurred with concerns about growth pressures from economic development around the airport, such as the unexpected announcement in January 2022 that Boom Supersonic would build a $500 million factory to produce passenger planes flying faster than the speed of sound.
āWe need to plan much more aggressively,ā he said. āWe need to think much more outside the box and plan as best we can for things like that and be willing and be flexible when things do come out of nowhere.ā
ļ® McClellan said he was pleased by the opening of Oak Ridge Bagels and Deli and Starbucks on N.C. 68. National chains such as Starbucks āarenāt just putting their stores here haphazardly; theyāre doing their homework,ā he said.
McClellan also thanked John Jenkins for his many years of service as he prepares to step down as chair of the Finance Committee.
ļ® Schneider said council members plan to set up hours to meet with residents in Town Hall to foster stronger community engagement in town projects; details are being finalized, she said.
With no further business, the meeting was adjourned at 9:02 p.m.
Farewell to Laura, Welcome Carlo
Thank you, Laura, for 15+ years!
Itās with mixed emotions that we bid farewell to our long-term team member, Laura Reneer. Laura started working for PS Communications in 2008, first as our office manager and then for the last several years as our marketing manager. This past week she turned over the reins as she embraces a new chapter in life that will afford her more flexibility to travel, camp, garden, spend time with her husband, Dave, and embark on other life adventures.
Lauraās husband recently retired from corporate life and started his own small job/ home repair business. āApparently I am his trusty sidekick!ā Laura said. āWe work well together and are looking forward to this new part-time, flexible-schedule adventure!ā
In the 15+ years that Laura worked with us, I received nothing but positive feedback on her level of customer service, her attitude, and her willingness to help our readers and our advertisers in any way she could. She hails from the St. Louis area and has the calm level-headedness of a true mid-Westerner. She enjoys watching baseball and especially loves her St. Louis Cardinals, enjoys camping and riding motorcycles (in fact, after riding on the back of Daveās Harley during many road trips, about five years ago, while representing our company at an event held in the local Harley-Davidson showroom, she spotted a beautiful red and white Harley on the showroom floor and later mentioned it to Dave. That Harley ended up being her birthday present and she rides it like a champ!).
We canāt thank Laura enough for the many ways she has contributed to our team. Selfishly, we would love for her to have stayed with us longer, but although we will miss her greatly, weāre happy for her as she heads down a new path. And, itās at least a small consolation that we know sheāll continue to be a reader of our publications and one of our biggest cheerleaders!
Patti Stokes, PS Communications president
Welcome, Carlo Gagliardo
Carlo Gagliardo is a lifelong resident of northwest Guilford County and a long-time, avid reader of the Northwest Observer. He lives in Oak Ridge with his wife, Alex, and their two children, Will and Olivia.
āIt is a privilege to serve our great community as PS Communicationsā new marketing manager,ā Carlo said. āI look forward to working with all of the incredible businesses and community members who make our area so special. If you see me at a local restaurant or event, please come say hello!ā
P.S. Carlo expressed special thanks to Laura Reneer for her service and invaluable training during the transition period.
Summerļæ½ieldDentist.com
FOUNDERSā DAY ...continued from p. 1
Gore expressed her thanks to Greensboro Performing Arts for their help in organizing the many stage performances on Friday evening and Saturday, and said it will be exciting to see such a wide variety of theater, dance and music.
New this year on Saturday is a car show, with an anticipated 15 to 20 classic and muscle cars to be on display in the former Sport Auto parking lot, across from Summerfieldās post office.
And then, thereās the parade on Saturday morning, which starts at 10 a.m. in front of Summerfield Elementary School and winds down Summerfield Road. Expect to see a variety of big trucks, little cars, classic cars and trucks, a marching band, dancers, businesses, churches and other nonprofits and organizations with decorated floats, vehicles and some on foot. And parade participants arenāt just human āyouāre sure to see some dogs, horses, and even donkeys and mini cows this year!
Prizes will be given for āBest Overall,ā āMost Patrioticā and āMost Creative.ā
Younger spectators will want to bring something to hold all the candy that parade participants will be tosssing out, which is always plentiful.
This yearās grand marshal will be David Layton, Summerfield Elementary PE teacher, who is retiring at the end of this school year. The Foundersā Day Committee unanimously selected Layton because of his āabove and beyondā contributions to Summerfield children and the community over the last few decades.
āHe
Town Council member Lynne Williams DeVaney
serves on the Foundersā Day Committee and said committee members wanted to recognize someone āwho is there for the kids, for the town, for the people. Mr. Layton has always made a difference in studentsā lives, he encourages them to do their best, and tries to make everybody, with all different abilities, feel they can excel at all types of activities ā not just football or basketball.
āFor many years he organized an overnight campout where kids and parents spent the night,ā DeVaney added. āItās a sleepless night for the parents, but a miraculous thing for all the kids to get together, and many of them talk about it years later.ā
Town Council member Reece Walker, 31, remembers having Layton as his PE teacher in elementary school.
āAs a PE teacher, he has taught every kid at the school ⦠he goes above and beyond for the school and also has a long history of contributing to the community. He is going to leave some huge shoes to fill,ā Walker said.
Walker, whose grandfather was heavily involved in organizing the townās earliest Foundersā Day parades and many parades afterward, also remembers being in the first or second Foundersā Day parade with his cousins; heās volunteered with the parade ever since. Between taking college classes, working full-time as a firefighter, running a family farm, serving on the town council and spending time with his wife and two young children, his parade volunteer time has been much more limited this year and he thanked Mark Brown, a former town council member and mayor, for all the
time he has given to organizing this yearās parade.
āMark has done 90% of the parade stu this year,ā Walker said. ā e parade probably wouldnāt happen if it werenāt for him.ā
Another major contributor to Foundersā Day is the Summerfield Fire Department, which not only hosts the annual celebration on its Summerfield Road property, but helps set up and take down tents, equipment, etc., before and after the event, sets up its inflatable in front of the department for kids to enjoy, and has extra personnel on standby in case of medical or other emergencies that might arise during the event that draws thousands of people.
āThere is so much that has to be done, and the fire department is very gracious to let us host it there and being willing to help however needed,ā Walker added.
Coming together as a community is what Foundersā Day is all about, Gore noted.
āWe know itās been a challenging year and we want people to see the positive in Summerfield and to celebrate the community,ā she said.
want to go?
Foundersā Day takes place this Friday, May 19, 6 to 10 p.m., and Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., beside Summerfield Fire Department on Summerfield Road; the parade on Saturday morning starts at 10 a.m. at Summerfield Elementary School and winds down Summerfield Road. For more info, see ad on p. 7 and visit www.summerfieldnc.gov (select the āAboutā tab at the top of the homepage, then āEvents,ā then āFoundersā Day 2023.ā
is a rock star at Summer eld Elementary,ā Gore said of Layton.
BUSINESS/RE
OAK RIDGE BAGELS AND DELI OPENING DAY
J. Olmsted, DDS MS
Ridge Commons Shopping Center
Kubis retiring after 30 years
After 30 years of teaching, most of which have been at Stokesdale Elementary School, Christy Kubis is retiring at the end of this school year. Friends and co-workers are asking that those whose lives have been impacted by Kubis take a few moments to share some comments and memories in writing and email them to: kubisretirement@gmail.com.
GCS announces new principals
GCS announced last week that Louis Galiotti, interim principal at Northern High, has been appointed principal at Northern High. Galiotti has been serving as Northernās interim principal since January, and upon coming to the school he wrote on the schoolās website that he had recently celebrated his 43rd birthday, has five children, and over winter break moved his oldest child to college.
āIn my spare time I enjoy hanging out with my family, exercising, and listening/ reading various podcasts and books (mostly while I walk our dog),ā he wrote.
The team at Oak Ridge Bagels and Deli pose for a photo on opening day, May 4; the restaurant is located behind the Quality Mart Shell station and convenience store at the corner of N.C. 150 and 68 in Oak Ridge. Earlier this week, owners Corey Crites (back row, far right) and his wife, Nicole (front row, center), wrote on the restaurantās Facebook page: āThank you so much for the support that you have shown our small business this past week! We have been shocked at all of the love we have been given.ā
YOUR QUESTIONS ...continued from p. 18
(DRI), for an update on the project, but have not been able to get a response.
Last August, Collins told the Northwest Observer that DRI, which operates three imaging centers in Greensboro, plans to expand into the space formerly occupied by Southern States Cooperative store at N.C. 150 and Lake
Brandt Road. The building has been vacant since Southern States closed the unprofitable store in July 2020.
Collins said construction of the Summerfield-based imaging center was scheduled to start last November or December, with the center becoming operational about a year later.
Galiotti has worked as a wilderness youth counselor for at-risk youth and a wilderness resource teacher for at-risk youth at two Eckard Youth Alternative camps; was a middle school teacher; a part-time elementary resource teacher; a principal intern; assistant principal at a middle and high school; and principal at the Doris Henderson Newcomers school.
āWhen I interview people for jobs, I always ask, āWhat makes you want to be a teacher/work with students?ā he wrote in his introduction to the Northern Nighthawks community. āHere is my response: āI am not where I am today without my teachers/mentors believing in me and helping me see my potential. I am forever indebted to them and the only way I can repay them is by being that teacher/
mentor to the people around me.āā
Nicole Weeks will become principal at Northern Elementary. She has been interim principal there since earlier this school year and has been assistant principal since 2018. In that role, a GCS representative said she improved teacher evaluations and developed a staff website to streamline communication within the school. Weeks holds a bachelorās degree in corporate communications from Elon University, a masterās degree in curriculum and instruction and a masterās degree in school administration from UNCG.
Earlier this year, when Weeks assumed the role of interim principal, she wrote, ā⦠I believe in being student-centered, working together, being accessible, and inclusive to all. It is my hope that this is visible through not only my words, but also my actions.ā
mark your calendar
EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT
ļ GriefShare | Oak Ridge First Baptist Church at 2445 Oak Ridge Road is hosting a GriefShare meeting every Wednesday from 6 to 8 p.m. Each week, this support group will watch a video seminar about moving through the grieving process, followed by a discussion of the material presented in the video. Learn more at www.griefshare.org. To register, visit www.griefshare.org/groups/166856.
FRIDAY & SATURDAY, MAY 19-20
ļ Foundersā Day | Town of Summerfield will host its annual two-day Foundersā Day festival Friday, May 19, 6 to 10 p.m. and Saturday, May 20, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at 7300-7400 Summerfield Road, next to Summerfield Fire Station #9. More info: see ad on p. 7, article on front cover, or visit
www.summerfieldnc.gov/foundersday.
SATURDAY, MAY 20
ļ Community yard sale | Stokesdale Christian Church at 8607 Stokesdale Street will host a community yard sale May 20, 7 a.m. to 12 noon. Register online at www.stokesdalechristianchurch.com or call (336) 310-9695 to rent your space(s).
MONDAY, MAY 22
ļ Lions Club | Oak Ridge Lions Club will meet May 22 in the Oak Ridge Room, 2205 Oak Ridge Road (next to Bistro 150), from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. More info: Frank Kelleher, president, (336) 327-7786 or frankxk95@gmail.com.
SATURDAY, MAY 27
ļ Food pantry | Good Samaritan Ministriesā food pantry in Stokesdale will open for those in need of food on May 27, 9 to 10:30 a.m. at Stokesdale Business Center, 8500 Ellisboro Road. To receive assistance or to make a donation to the ministry, contact Terri Johnson, (336) 643-5887 or terrij1957@yahoo.com.
TUESDAY, MAY 30
ļ Town Council meeting | Summerfield Town Council will hold a special called meeting to review the proposed draft budget for FY2023-24 on May 30, starting at 6:30 p.m. at Summerfield Community Center, 5404 Centerfield Road. Visit www.summerfieldnc.gov for more info.
THURSDAY, JUNE 1
ļ Town Council meeting | Oak Ridge Town Council will meet June 1, starting at 7 p.m. at Oak Ridge Town Hall, 8315 Linville Road. Attend in person or watch the meeting livestreamed on the townās YouTube channel. Visit www.oakridgenc.com for more info or a meeting agenda.
FRIDAY, JUNE 2
ļ Community movie night | The Summit Church in Oak Ridge will sponsor a movie night June 2 at Oak Ridge Town Park, 6231 Lisa Drive. Food trucks will be on site at 6:30 p.m., games start at 7 p.m. and the movie āHigh School Musicalā begins at dark. Admission and concessions are free. Bring a lawn chair or blanket. More info: www.thesummitchurch.net.
MAX imizing your real estate experience
Memorial Day WORD SCRAMBLE Kidsā Korner
What is Memorial Day?
Memorial Day, which became a national holiday by an act of Congress in 1971, is always celebrated on the last Monday in May. Some people get Memorial Day and Veterans Day confused; Veterans Day is a day to honor all the men and women who have served in our countryās armed forces, while Memorial Day is a day to honor those who lost their lives while in service to our country.
Did you know?
Thereās a special way to raise the flag on Memorial Day. The proper way is to first raise it quickly to the top of the pole, then slowly lower it to half-mast until noon, and then back to the top for the rest of the day.
GRINS and GRIPES
Delighted or dismayed by something in your community?
Share your thoughts in 40 words or less
online: nwobserver.com
email: grinsandgripes@nwobserver.com
Grins & Gripes are published based on available space and editorās discretion.
ļ® Everyone who stopped to help as well as those who proceeded with caution when they saw a puppy on the loose on Strawberry Road on May 1. Special thanks to Tracy OāBrian for skillfully leashing him and getting him to safety!
ļ® Tire Max. We are not only fortunate to have a business like this in our community, we are blessed!
ļ® Natalie at Bank of Oak Ridge, who went out of her way to make a
complicated situation much more manageable. She demonstrates the type of excellent customer service that all service providers should aspire to!
ļ® Elizabeth Jernigan with Greensboro Parks & Recreation, for so quickly responding when condition of the gravel parking lot off Strawberry Road was brought to her attention. Three workers, a truckload of gravel, and this A&Y Greenway access is usable again!
ļ® Denise, who works at McDonaldās in Oak Ridge. Sheās always happy and kind, and has a wonderful smile. Sheās
become our favorite at this location. The world needs more people like her!
ļ® Mr. Rasch at Oak Ridge Elementary School for going the extra mile and attending his studentsā sporting events. The kids love seeing him cheer them on!
ļ® To the Moon and Back Frozen Treats for your over-the-top generous support of our Odyssey of the Mind teams. And to the rest of the community who supported our fundraising efforts!
ļ® Organizers and volunteers of the Oak Ridge Canine Capers event. My pup and I enjoyed it. We appreciated all of the goodies and opportunity to chat with the vendors.
ļ® Michelle Bardsley with Revolution Academy. She welcomes the families at the crosswalk with a smile every morning and her passion for serving the community is evident. Thank you for leading the children in the right direction.
ļ® Friendly smiles and great prices at our hometown Food Lion in Stokesdale. Does anybody that grew up in Stokesdale remember when we had to drive miles for a decent grocery store? Not anymore!
ļ® Town of Summerfield for hosting the Movie in the Park on May 5, and to First Baptist Church Summerfield for the free popcorn. Looking forward to bringing my grandkids to more of these events!
feel grass in their own yards, guarding them from injury/death by cars or wildlife, along with protecting other animals from cat predation.
ļ® Nate and all the great employees of Bank of Oak Ridge. Always friendly and helpful, whether by phone or in person, and no issue is too small or great for them to handle with skill and kindness.
ļ® The Stokesdale Elementary School community who participated in the 2nd Annual Fun Run and Bike Parade! Special thank you to Patti Stokes, the Stokesdale Fire Department, Stokesdale Deputy Town Clerk Robbie Wagoner, and Jaxson Franklin for being part of the event!
ļ® From local dogs and their friends to Oak Ridge town staff, volunteers and sponsors for making another wonderful Canine Capers event possible this year!
ļ® Stokesdale Elementary PTO for planning and organizing another great bike race and decorating contest in the town park. So much fun to see all the kids on their bikes and families spending time together outside!
~SPACE IS LIMITED to 50 kids ages 6ā12.
~Registration begins May 22, the form is available at www.summerfieldnc.gov.
~Bring your rod & reel or use oursābait provided. ~Free t-shirt!
ļ® April Hairston at Oak Ridge Elementary School for loving our students and for going the extra mile!
ļ® Feline caregivers who safely allow their beloveds to smell fresh air and
ļ® The boys who told us theyāre nephews of Parkerās View and Bethel Ridgeās developer, for using our neighborhood as their personal dirt bike racing track. Violate countyās noise ordinance, warning; violate again, fines to $500. Trespass, 60 days jail and $1,000 fine.
ļ® McDonaldās. Gave them another chance and ordered one item ā a large Diet Coke. Got a large regular Coke. I guess I am the stupid one for going back.
ļ® Northwest Observer and Bill Goebel for slanted article attempting to sweeten people on him. He stole the seat. His is not the right choice for District 3. Doesnāt have what it takes to stand up to the BOE and fix GCS.
ļ® Oak Ridge Commons Shopping Center owners, for installing that ridiculous speed bump/hump. I am handicapped and drive a van for handicapped. I wonāt be going to the Commons since my van is low ā and yes, it scrapes even going slow.
ļ® To the women and boys running
their mouths to the Northern girls at last Fridayās conference softball game. We need to raise a generation that doesnāt call girls degrading names when āsmack talking.ā Do better!
ļ® Cyclists who ignore a long row of cars behind you. Instead of taking up the entire lane, do us a favor āmove over and let us pass. This isnāt Tour de France.
ļ® The man who brought his dog to the Stokesdale council meeting. What was your purpose, other than to stir up trouble? Get a life or go back to where you came from if you are not happy here.
ļ® Organizers of Oak Ridgeās April Music in the Park event, for moving
it inside at a local church due to bad weather. It takes away from the pleasure of listening outdoors. Keep it outside and just reschedule.
ļ® Those who believe that one can only have compassion for wildlife and domestic pets. FYI, my heart also breaks for farm animals and any animal treated or killed cruelly. You have no idea whatās on my plate.
ļ® The Shell gas station in Oak Ridge. Apart from your gas being so much higher than in Greensboro, we donāt want our eardrums assaulted by the non-stop racket coming from loudspeakers 6 feet from our heads.
ļ® Apartment complexes that advertise available units through the use
of flags, balloons and other similarly garish attention grabbers. No one in the internet age looks for housing by questing after evidence of kitschy incontinence signifying a vacancy.
ļ® The citizen who brought a dog to Stokesdaleās Town Council meeting⦠really? Another self-serving distraction and disregard for Councilās and fellow citizensā time. Shameful, irresponsible and absurd action, especially from a citizen so vocal about concerns for Councilās efficiency and effectiveness.
ļ® NWHS PTA for changing to the national PTA, a politically charged organization. I will no longer donate due to this change. Should keep it local.
...continued on p. 39
eldMerchantsAssociation
Thanks to Josh Cockman (shown in photo, at right), owner of Village Beverage Co. in Summerļ¬eld, and his sidekick, Sarah Hooven, for graciously hosting our May 1 meeting.
(L to R) SMA Scholarship Committee members John Mazza (chair) and Cyndi Brown, 2023 scholarship recipients Matthew Adams and Jenna Scheponik, and Scholarship Committee member Elaine Thomas at SMAās May 1 meeting. Congratulations, Matthew and Jenna! Look
An association of professionals supporting each other and our community
no idea.ā
Adams said state Rep. Jon Hardister (R, 59th District) has been working on a resolution to the issue and been quoted as saying, āItās certainly not over ⦠the School Board has defied the law twice now. We are strongly considering taking additional actionā¦ā
PUBLIC HEARING
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0 to approve a rezoning request for 22.65 acres on Eversfield Road, from AG to RS-30 (Residential, minimum average lot size of 30,000 square feet). Prior to the councilās vote, a public hearing was held and no one spoke in opposition to the rezoning request.
Closed session recordings. Continuing a discussion from the councilās April 13 meeting, town attorney Chuck Winfree explained why recording of closed sessions is usually prohibited; Stokesdale, however, has no policy on the matter. Winfree offered the council five options for consideration if/when adopting a policy.
Jones asked if a council member was legally prohibited from recording a closed session, and Winfree said no.
āI have recorded closed sessions and I plan to continue,ā Jones then said.
Winfree explained that if a council member recorded a meeting which later got out into the public and caused damage, the council could be held liable.
ļ¾ 2 ļ½ 3 (Rigsbee and Crawford in favor) to adopt a policy allowing the town clerk to record closed sessions to assist with preparing minutes, with the recording to be secured and then deleted after the minutes are approved.
Since the motion failed, Rigsbee then motioned to adopt a policy of no recording by anyone. Martin said until she came to work for the Town of Stokesdale, she had never recorded a closed session and had relied on her notes.
āI canāt take notes as fast as others,ā Jones responded. āIām not surrendering my Constitutional rights.ā
ļ¾ 1 ļ½ 4 (Rigsbee in favor) to adopt Rigsbeeās motion.
After further discussion, Foy motioned to adopt a policy stating that only the town clerk can record a closed session, with the recording being preserved indefinitely but secured.
More discussion and a brief recess followed, after which the council reconvened and voted on Foyās motion.
ļ¾ 2 ļ½ 3 (Rigsbee and Foy in favor) to approve Foyās motion.
After failing three times to adopt a policy regarding recording closed sessions, the council opted to move on.
ļ¾ 4 ļ½ 1 (Jones opposed) to adopt a resolution setting the filing fee for candidates in the upcoming November election at $5 (Jones wanted to raise the fee to $10).
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0 to fund sending deputy clerk Robbie Wagoner to municipal clerksā school in August and a master clerksā academy in November, at a cost of up to $4,000, to be included in the FY2023-24 budget.
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0 to approve a capital budget ordinance for purchasing and installing playground equipment, basketball and pickleball courts and nature trails in the town park, noting the funding will come from a $50,000 small town development grant and federal ARPA (American Rescue Plan Act) funds.
ļ¾ 4 ļ½ 1 (Jones opposed) to have the town attorney draft a contract with Stokesdale-based CJ Builders to oversee construction of outdoor basketball and pickleball courts in Town Park and manage the installation of sport court materials.
ļ¾ 5 ļ½ 0 to accept Yates Constructionās $4,500 proposal to address erosion issues in Town Park and pay for it with ARPA funds.
ļ¾ 2 ļ½ 3 (Jones and Crawford in favor) to continue discussion on the relocation of a water blow-off assembly on Curraghmore Court in Angelās Glen. Jones, who had requested this topic be placed on the agenda, said he wanted to continue it until he obtained more information, and Foy said that since Jones felt it should be an agenda item, they should go ahead and discuss it.
Foy then explained the issue involved him personally, because the end of his driveway had recently been dug up after it was discovered the driveway had been installed over a water system blow-off assembly. Foy said he didnāt learn his driveway needed to be dug up until receiving an email from Jones the evening before it was done ā and furthermore, during the process of digging up his driveway, the water line was cut and several of his neighbors were temporarily without water.
āI would request that in the future, when we have a contractor who is going to dig up someoneās driveway āor if work is going to negatively impact a resident or neighborhood ā that they
(homeowners) be notified more in advance,ā Foy said.
The town was billed $1,250 for the water blow-off assembly work, which Foy reimbursed (along with paying over $3,000 for driveway repair).
āThe town should have had the blow-off valves marked,ā Rigsbee said. āAnd the town should reimburse Mr. Foy for five hours at $250 per hour⦠We need to be consistent and āownā our water system. I wouldnāt want this to happen to anyone else in this town ā we donāt need to bust someoneās driveway up without a plan for how weāre going to pay for it.ā
Council decided to continue its discussion of whether to reimburse Foy, and whether to cover future costs regarding moving or repair of any valves.
CITIZEN COMMENTS
ļ® Tee Stephenson asked if county planners or inspectors should not have determined where the blow-off valves were during the site plan review and Jones responded that every licensed contractor is responsible for knowing the location of gas lines, utility lines, etc.
CLOSED SESSION
Council entered into a closed session at 9:54 p.m.; about 30 minutes later Jones came out of the conference room and then left the meeting. The remaining four council members reconvened into open session at 10:29 and Foy announced that Jones had been excused from the meeting.
COUNCIL COMMENTS
ļ® Foy wished all the moms a happy Motherās Day.
ļ® Landreth said this day was his 36th wedding anniversary and that he loved his wife, Karen, very much. Karen was present at the council meeting and stayed until the end, as she does every month. Landreth said he and Karen have never had a fight in all their years of marriage.
With no further business, the meeting was adjourned at 10:31 p.m.
ļ¢ AUTO SALES & SERVICES
MOTORCYCLE for sale. 2019 Honda Shadow āPhantom.ā 1,900 miles. Good condition. Asking $6,950. Call John, (336) 501-3222
SAM'S AUTO BODY SHOP. Any type of body work. 45 years exp. (336) 965-7955
ļ¢ EMPLOYMENT
ļ¢ HOME CARE AVAILABLE
(336) 891-3876
EUROHAUSAUTO.PRO
Place
CHOICE TIRE AND AUTOMOTIVE. Oil changes, inspections, alignments and general automotive repairs. 1080 US Hwy 66 S, Kernersville, NC. (336) 992-9002.
KNIGHT IMPORT SPECIALTY SERVICE
European Auto Service & Repair. Specializing in factory-scheduled maintenance and repairs. BMW, Audi, Volvo, Mercedes, Volkswagen, Mini, and Porsche. 32 years experience. 4559 US Hwy. 220, Summerļ¬eld (across from Food Lion). (336) 337-0669
ļ¢ EMPLOYMENT
LAWN CARE WORKER. Part-time. Flexible hours. Wages negotiable. Experience with lawn equipment helpful. Call Ken, (336) 508-7400
Seeking SOCIAL MEDIA EXPERT. Must have experience creating and running ads on social media platforms. Work from home. Flexible hours. $15-$18 per hour. Call Ken, (336) 508-7400
CHURCH FINANCIAL ADMINISTRATOR 20 hrs. per week. Candidate should be proļ¬cient in processing and monitoring payments, expenditures, receipts and preparing and monitoring the payroll system. For more information contact JoAnn Hampton, (336) 665-1944 or joann.hampton@cbc-gso.org
Hiring? www.nwobserver.com
An award-winning HEARING CARE practice in Greensboro is seeking a full-time Patient Concierge to join their passionate and caring team. They are looking for someone who is a great ļ¬t for their special culture, with a positive attitude, helpful nature, and a commitment to teamwork. The ideal candidate will play a critical role in delivering patient success by providing excellent customer service, handling phone calls, scheduling appointments and assisting with admin. duties. A bachelor's degree or equivalent experience is preferred, as well as a willingness to learn new skills. The base wage is $16 with opportunities for career growth, 401(k), health insurance and paid time oļ¬. Applicants are encouraged to send their resume to hear.jobs@outlook.com.
WEBSTER & SONS PLUMBING. Hiring experienced service plumbers. Vacation and holiday pay. Truck provided. Please call (336) 992-2503
THE GARDEN OUTLET is hiring. Landscaping crew, Bobcat operator, delivery driver. For more info, give us a call at (336) 643-0898
SUMMERFIELD VETERINARY HOSPITAL is seeking a full-time Kennel Assistant. Weekends and holidays a must. Drug and background check required. Please apply in person at 4318 US Hwy 220N, Summerļ¬ eld, NC, or email resume to lydia@summerļ¬eldvet.com.(336)643-6326
The SHRIMP CONNECTION is hiring. Great for those wanting 12-15 hrs./wk. Fri./ Sat. We've been having fun serving the Triad fresh seafood since 2001. Text/call Joy, (336) 848-9361
ļ¢ HOME CARE AVAILABLE
SENIOR HELPERS. Homecare for seniors and others including: companion, personal needs, transitional, chronic disease, VA, respite, post-surgery assistance. Can provide house chores as part of service at no extra charge. Knowing your loved one is happy, safe and cared for is your priority and ours too! Locally owned and operated. Call (336) 554-2187
The Northwest Observer Keeping you connected since 1996!
NOT AN AGENCY. Hands-on caregivers. Excellent references. Ready and willing to work with seniors NOW. Guilford, Forsyth and Rockingham counties. (276) 206-9275
ļ¢ PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC HEARING. Oak Ridge Town Council will hold a public hearing to consider the ļ¬scal year 2023-24 budget ordinance on Thursday, June 1, 7pm, at Oak Ridge Town Hall. Copies of the budget are available at Town Hall and on the Town website at www.oakridgenc.com
ļ¢ VBS
LIVING WATER BAPTIST CHURCH VBS
June 19-23, 6-8pm. Lite Dinner 5:30-6pm. Ages 3-adult. Register @ lwbctriad.org
ļ¢ YARD SALE
WILLARD OAKS YARD SALE. Saturday, May 20, 7am-12pm. Sponsored by Ramilya Siegel. Highway 150 to Chalet Dr.
ļ¢ HOME SERVICES
AIR CONDITIONING & HEATING
A-ACTION AIR. Air conditioning check-up, $79.95. (336) 268-6768 or (336) 382-3750
CLEANING
CHRISTIAN MOM needs work cleaning houses, running errands. Quality cleaning/ budget friendly. Pet sitting also avail. References. Call Laura Bennett, (336) 231-1838
ANNASARAH'S CLEANING. Excellent references. Trustworthy. Family-owned business. Free estimates. (336) 543-3941.
MAID-2-SHINE. Excellent service, 15 years experience. Free estimates, excellent references. (336) 338-0223
PAOLA CLEANING SERVICE. Residential & commercial. Insured. (336) 669-5210
continued on p. 36
ļ¢ HOME SERVICES
CRYSTAL CLEAR WINDOW CLEANING
Gutter cleaning, pressure washing. Fully ins. windowcleaningnc.com. (336) 595-2873.
DECORATING
EXPERIENCED INTERIOR DECORATOR
& personal furniture shopper will help you with style, color, shopping & furniture placement. E-mail appeninc@gmail.com or call Ann Appenzeller, (336) 314-1411
ELECTRICAL
CKH ELECTRIC, LLC. Give us a call for your next residential, commercial, or industrial project. Free estimates. Licensed, insured, and BBB accredited. (336) 414-4899
BALEX ELECTRICAL COMPANY, LLC
Residential, commercial and solar electrical services. (336) 298-4192
Do you have ELECTRICAL NEEDS? Call Coble Electric, LLC at (336) 209-1486
FLOORING / TILE
MONTERO'S HARDWOOD FLOORING
Installation of hardwood, laminate & tile; hardwood sanding & ļ¬nishing. Commercial & residential. Insured, 17 yrs. exp. Free est., exc. references. Call (336) 215-8842 or visit Monteros-hardwood-ļ¬ooring.com.
GENERAL REPAIR & SERVICES
AFFORDABLE HOME REPAIR
Why move when you can improve?
construction well pumps ā plumbing ā foundations sagging floors...and much more!
licensed general contractors
One call fixes all!
(336) 643-1184
GARYāS HANDYMAN HOME SERVICES
āProviding value for the home-ownership experience.ā Gary Gellert, serving NCās Piedmont Triad area. Garygellert@gmail.com, (336) 423-8223
ļ¢ HOME SERVICES
LOW-COST GARAGE DOORS. Repair and sales. 35 years exp. (336) 207-1003
ļ¢ HOME SERVICES
ļ¢ HOME SERVICES
āNo Job Too Smallā
Contact
(336) 669-7252
oldschoolsjhr@triad.rr.com
CLOCK SERVICE. Free house calls for sick clocks. 8103 Windspray Dr., Summerļ¬eld. (336) 643-9931
L & T SMALL ENGINE SERVICE
āWe get you mowing!ā Comm./res., all models. Oak Ridge, NC. Please call (336) 298-4314. Ltsmeng16@gmail.com.
GENERAL HANDYMAN. Repairs, installations, assemblies, etc. Light electrical and plumbing. Yard work and power washing. Insured. No job too small. Give Gordon a call, (336) 253-7700 handyman ā painting ā kitchen & bath residential & commercial ā free
336.554.5007
kjhomeservices4u@gmail.com ā kjhomeservicesnc.com
APPLIANCE REPAIR ā Call Mr. Appliance
A step above the rest! (336) 609-5707.
GRADING / HAULING
EXCAVATION, GRADING and LAND
CLEARING. New driveways or ponds. Drainage. Please call Douglas Construction, (336) 413-5050
ANTHONYāS GRADING & HAULING
Excavating, land clearing, demolition, dirt, available. Zane Anthony, (336) 362-4035
H&L GRADING, LLC. No job too tough or too small. Call us ļ¬rst! We are a full-service grading company that specializes in residential projects. Owner/Operator Timmy Hart has more than 30 years of grading and equipment experience. Fully licensed and insured. Land clearing, debris removal, driveways, French drains, portable sawmill and much more. We also do custom rough-cut lumber. Call owner/operator Bobby Lipstreu, (336) 543-7867.
GAULDIN TRUCKING, grading & hauling, bobcat work, lot clearing, driveways, ļ¬ll dirt, gravel, etc. (336) 362-1150
E&W HAULING & GRADING INC. Driveways, ļ¬ll dirt, demolition, lot clearing, excavating, bobcat work, etc. (336) 451-1282
BRAD'S BOBCAT & HAULING SVCS
LLC Debris removal, grading, gravel/dirt, driveways, concrete work. (336) 362-3647
GUTTERS / SIDING / WINDOWS
S&M SEAMLESS GUTTERS. Install new gutters. Repair and clean old gutters. Free estimates. Fully insured. (336) 587-8223 or (336) 709-5944
WILSON Seamless Gutters
Installation, repair, replacement, Leaf Guard
Stokesdale
336-420-0200
LAWNCARE / LANDSCAPING
ORTIZ LANDSCAPING, complete lawn care. Trimming, cleaning, planting & mulch, gutter cleaning, patios & pavers, waterfalls, retaining walls, sidewalks, stonework. Residential and commercial. (336) 280-8981.
SOUTHERN CUTZ LAWN CARE. Oļ¬ering complete lawn maintenance services, landscaping, bush hogging, privacy fence installation/repair/staining, and stump grinding. Nathan Adkins, (336) 430-6086
STRAIGHT EDGE LAWN CARE. Free estimates. Please call (336) 306-0274
GUZMAN LANDSCAPE & MAINTENANCE
Pine needles, mulch, leaf removal, tree pruning, complete lawn maint. (336) 655-6490
R C LAWN CARE. Res./comm. lawn service. Fully insured. Call/text (336) 231-9599
McCOLLS'S LANDSCAPE. Full lawncare service. In business 24 yrs. Call/text, (336) 339-1356. emmccoll@gmail.com.
HILL LAWNCARE & OUTDOOR SERVICES
Free est. Call (336) 669-5448.
AQUA SYSTEMS IRRIGATION. Quality irrigation systems. NC licensed contractor. We service all systems. Free est. (336) 644-1174
WILSON LANDSCAPING, INC
Lawn maint., landscaping. Irrigation/landscape contractor. Hardscaping & landscape lighting. 26 years exp. (336) 399-7764
ARBOR MASTERS TREE SERVICE
Total tree removal, storm damage cleanup, shrub and tree pruning. Free estimates. Licensed & insured. (336) 643-9157
STEVE NEWMAN TREE SERVICE. FREE EST. Fully insured. Topping, pruning and removal. Natural area thinning and cleanup. Oak Ridge. (336) 643-1119
COLFAX LAWNCARE. Core aeration & seeding. Fertilizing, mowing, trimming. Complete lawn care/maintenance. Res./comm. Fully insured. Serving the Triad for 34 years. (336) 362-5860
DILLON TREE SERVICE. Certiļ¬ed arborists. BBB accredited. Fully insured. Familyowned. Tree removal and trimming. Available for emergency removals 24/7. Free estimates. (336) 996-6156. www.dillontreeservice.com. info@dillontreeservice.com.
ļ¢ HOME SERVICES
DSL DRAIN SYSTEMS & LANDSCAPING
(336) 362-4354
INTEGRITY TREE SERVICE, LLC. Tree removal, risk assessment, tree pruning, dead wood removal. Aļ¬ordable/competitive pricing. Fully insured. Owner-operated. Call for free estimate, (336) 210-8310
CM STUMP GRINDING, LLC. Family owned and operated. Commercial/residential. Free quotes! (336) 317-4600
EXTERIOR GREENSCAPES. Lawn maintenance service. Call for a free estimate (336) 682-1456.
MASONRY
SOUTHERN STYLE Concrete, LLC & Outdoor Living can design any concrete project you need, from stamped patios, sidewalks, driveways, basketball courts and ļ¬re pits. Our workers are experienced craftsmen who can customize any project to exceed your expectations. Call us at (336) 399-6619
COLONIAL MASONRY. 40 yrs. exp. Specializing in outdoor living spaces; dry-stack natural stone and ļ¬agstone. Let us help you plan your patio, ļ¬re pit, ļ¬replace, kitchen āor anything else you would like! Call (336) 949-9019. www.colonialmasonry.com.
NEW PHASE CONCRETE. Here for all your decorative concrete needs. Specializing in decorative stamp, stained, epoxy and all other concrete poured ļ¬nishes as well. Also oļ¬ering refurbishment of existing stamped concrete. Make your existing stamped look like new again! (336) 399-1474 or (336) 595-4654
ļ¢ HOME SERVICES
MISC. HOME SERVICES/PRODUCTS
Certiļ¬ed Mold Inspections
Certiļ¬ed Mold Remediation
Crawl Space Vapor Barriers
Crawl Space Cleaning
Insulation/Foam Board Sealing Basement Moisture Issues
locally based in Stokesdale ā (336) 937-4983 northstarmoisture@gmail.com www.northstarmoisture.com
JUNK & DEBRIS REMOVAL, construction, remodeling, and general cleanup, outbuildings, garages, basements, yard waste, etc. Also can haul mulch. Call (336) 706-8470
PEARMAN QUARRY LCID. Inert debris landļ¬ll. Yard waste, concrete, etc. Mulch and ļ¬ll dirt available. (336) 803-2195 or (336) 558-7673
ON EAGLE'S WINGS residential home design/drafting. Call Patti, (336) 605-0519.
PAINTING & DRYWALL
BEK Paint Co.
Residential & Commercial
David & Judy Long, owners (336) 931-0600
BEKPaintCompany.com
⢠References Available
⢠Licensed & Insured
⢠All Work Guaranteed
LAWSON'S PAINTING. Custom decks, pressure washing, boat docks, block ļ¬ll, wood repair, stain work, textured ceilings, sheetrock repair. Call (336) 253-9089
ļ¢ HOME SERVICES
PLUMBING
WEBSTER & SONS PLUMBING, Inc
(336) 992-2503. Licensed, insured, bonded. 24/7 service. Plumbing, drain cleaning, well pumps. Give us a call, we do it all! Go to www.webstersplumbing.com for more info.
BRANSON PLUMBING & SOLAR No job too small! Experienced, guaranteed. Lic./ Ins. Cleanliness in your home is our #1 priority. Call Mark, (336) 337-7924
POOLS
COX POOL SERVICE. Openings, closings, routine maintenance, weekly service. No contracts; free estimates! (336) 327-5122
PRESSURE WASHING
CUTTING EDGE PRESSURE WASHING
Aļ¬ordable. Dependable. Call anytime for free estimate. (336) 706-0103
PRESSURE WASHING, gutter & window cleaning. Fully insured. Crystal Clear, www. windowcleaningnc.com or (336) 595-2873
HOUSE and ROOF SOFT WASHING
Martin's Pressure Washing. (919) 931-0856
The Northwest Observer Keeping you connected since 1996!
REMODELING / CONSTRUCTION
RENOVATION WORKS, INC.
New construction, remodeling, additions, kitchen, bath and decks. We are a locally owned, full-service design and build company, A+ accredited with the BBB. Visit www.myrenovationworks.com or call (336) 427-7391 to start your next project.
AFFORDABLE HOME REPAIRS. One call ļ¬xes all! A+ with BBB. For a free estimate call (336) 643-1184 or (336) 987-0350
ļ¢ HOME SERVICES
ORTIZ REMODELING ā Total restoration & home improvement. Drywall, painting, kitchen cabinets, interior trim & more. Free estimates. (336) 280-8981
KEITH SMITH CONSTRUCTION, LLC.
N.C. general contractor with 30 years experience. Specializing in new homes, room additions, kitchens & baths, garages, decks, vinyl siding and windows, painting, tile, laminate and vinyl plank, and remodeling of all kinds. Quality for the right price. Free est. Please call (336) 362-7469.
Construction Services, INC
Roof and window replacement
(336) 644-8615 office
(336) 508-5242 cell
PAINTING, DECKS AND MORE. Call Premier Construction for free estimates. (336) 430-9507
ROOFING
Roofing, Gutters, Leaf Guards Oak Ridge Based. Free Quotes.
(336) 310-4133
WWW.VILLAGEROOFS.COM
CONCRETE COATINGS
Flake Epoxy Systems
Garage Floor and Concrete Resurfacing
Decorative Concrete Overlays
Stamped Concrete Rejuvenation
Eric Sauls, Owner ā (336) 970-3543
Call for your free estimate
PAINTING INTERIOR & EXTERIOR , 40 yrs. exp. Sheetrock repair. Average BDRM walls $100. Insured. Call Brad Rogers, (336) 314-3186.
STILL PERFECTION PAINTING. Reliable, skilled, aļ¬ordable. Painting, pressure washing, handyman services. Scott Still, (336) 462-3683, stillperfectionpainting.com.
AMERICAN BUILDER CONSTRUCTION, INC. Remodeling/repairs/decks. Any size job. Short wait. (336) 225-7478.
BELEWS CREEK CONSTRUCTION
Kitchens/baths, custom decks, garages, dock work, siding, windows, rooļ¬ng, rotted wood. Sr. disc., 41 yrs. exp. (336) 362-6343
PREMIER ROOFING. Commercial/residential. Providing service for all of your rooļ¬ng needs. Locally owned. Please call (336) 430-9507 for free assessments.
DUSTIN CLINARD ROOFING. Shingles,
ļ¢ HOME SERVICES
CLINARD & SON ROOFING, LLC
40 + years experience. (336) 643-8191
BELEWS CREEK CONSTRUCTION. Lifetime shingle and metal rooļ¬ng. We ļ¬nance. Free estimates. Since 1979. (336) 362-6343.
ļ¢ MISC. SERVICES
PORTABLE WELDING SERVICE. Welding & fabrication services. Call (336) 908-6906
WELDING AND TRAILER REPAIR Call Tim, (336) 402-3869.
ļ¢ MISC. WANTED
Information on WILLIAM J TURNER, Confederate veteran buried in Oak Level Cemetery. Call (336) 706-0714. If no answer, leave message and Iāll return call.
$$$ ā WILL PAY CASH for your junk / wrecked vehicle. For quote, call (336) 552-0328.
FREE PICK-UP of unwanted riding & push mowers, tillers, generators, power washers, 4-wheelers, mini-bikes, golf carts, bikes, other gas-powered items, tools, air conditioners, computers, most metal items, etc. (336) 689-4167
Wanted: FARM EQUIPMENT to buy. All kinds. Please call (336) 430-9507
ļ¢ PETS/ANIMAL SVCS.
locally owned & operated
6705 US Hwy 158, Stokesdale (336) 643-9963
(affiliated with Stokesdale Storage)
CHEER LESSONS. All levels and ages. Get help to make your team. (336) 420-6605
BOAT N RV STORAGE. $70/$100 monthly. Located on Brigham Rd., Greensboro, near Pleasant Ridge Road. Call (336) 663-3051
ļ¢ MISC. FOR SALE
CUSTOM FRAME BUSINESS for sale. I have been at this location for 18 yrs. Great visibility on 220N, Summerļ¬eld. Equipment, mats, moulding, everything you need to step into business. Call (336) 404-9639
EXERCISE BIKE! This stationary bike provides low-impact cardio workout without back strain. Price $150. Please call David, (336) 643-0282
SEASONED FIREWOOD. $90/pickup truck load, delivered & stacked. (336) 253-7615
PEYTON'S PET SITTING. Daytime, dropin and overnight care provided by a CPRcertiļ¬ed veterinary student. Booking now for Aug.-Dec. peytonspetcare@gmail.com.
ļ¢ REAL ESTATE
HOME FOR RENT
2BD/1BA DUPLEX in Oak Ridge. Appliances included. W/D hookup. Available May 5. $1,200/mo. $1,200 dep. (336) 312-0305
HOME FOR SALE
OAK RIDGE
ļ¢ REAL ESTATE LAND FOR SALE
SUMMERFIELD LAND FOR SALE. Large lots and tracts of land for sale. If youāre looking for land or a great building site, call now, (336) 430-9507
SELLING or RENTING?
Tell over 28,000 readers!
ļ¢ REAL ESTATE
LAND WANTED
WANTED: LAND. Any size or shape. Vacant or with dwellings. Matters not. We pay CASH! Quick closings! Call (336) 430-9507
Single family WANTING TO PURCHASE land in NW Guilford or Rockingham County for personal home. We are NOT a developer or realtor! Looking for 10 to 100 acres. Please call Brian at (336) 416-6506
index of DISPLAY ADVERTISERS
8112
$1,049,000 Building Dimensions Inc.
OAK RIDGEāS āYEAR OF LARGE PROJECTSā
...continued from p. 1
loan and some of the grants, he said.
The proposed budget projects revenue and spending of $6.43 million. It does not include the $5.36 million appropriation for the park. That spending is funded in a separate capital project ordinance, a tool that allows local governments to spread costs over more than one fiscal year, Bruce said in an email earlier this week.
āThis is the year of large projects,ā councilman George McClellan said during the council meeting. āWe are living within our means. We are trying to address what people will want as they move here.ā
Town leaders have been planning the expansion of Town Park over the past five years after acquiring the tract of fields and woods behind Town Hall. The idea of establishing a municipal water system goes back two decades and is coming together now with the help of nearly $3 million in state and federal grants that will pay for tank construction and engineering.
The draft budget also allocates $650,000 for the renovation and expansion of the historic Redmon house into the Farmhouse Community Center, with $380,000 coming from a federal grant
and the remainder from town funds. A mix of donations, town funds and a $50,000 state grant is earmarked for the Veterans Honor Green, estimated to cost about $240,000.
Oak Ridge resident Mike Stone criticized the proposed budget as āa spending spree (of) large and pet projects.ā Instead of spending, he favors a reduction in the property tax rate and urged the council to ātighten your belt.ā
Mayor Ann Schneider offered a different view, saying, āthis is another tight budget, even as it is ambitious.ā
āThe budget is ambitious, but we also have significant grant funds,ā council member Martha Pittman added. āThat means we can move forward without compromising our fund balance or raising our tax rate.ā
want to participate?
A public hearing during the councilās June 1 meeting will give residents the chance to provide feedback on the proposed budget. The council plans to consider adoption of the budget during the meeting.
GRINS & GRIPES ...continued from
p. 33
Outside the ā¦
The following reader-submitted GRINS and GRIPES express opinions about state and/or national topics, and have been separated from the other Grins and Gripes as a courtesy to those who do not want to read othersā opinions on state and/or national political and other non-local topics in a local newspaper.
GRINS to...
ļ® North Carolina Republicans changing their voter registration to āunaffiliatedā in order to cast a ballot for RFK Jr. for the Democratic presidential nominee. Give our country two good options.
GRIPES to...
ļ® State Sen. Michael Garrett for co-sponsoring a $750,000 bill to entice Disney World to relocate to North Carolina. Our state is in dire need of teachers, police, fire and other
essential workers. WDW seems like political grandstanding if you ask me!
ļ® Those who want to blame everything they donāt like on racism. Please stop rushing to judgment and do your own research when stories are sensationalized on the news and shows like āThe View.ā
ļ® Those who disrespect America by brazenly and shamelessly breaking in āand the Democrats who enable them. No surgeons or engineers, bringing nothing to the table, not even love for America as they defiantly wave their foreign flags.