INSIDE TODAY
Trump’s May Day was true distress call
Holtville falls to LAMP in second round of playoffs
OPINION, PAGE A4
SPORTS, PAGE A8
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THE WETUMPKA HERALD Elmore County’s Oldest Newspaper - Established 1898
Wetumpka, AL 36092
50¢
WEDNESDAY • MAY 3, 2017
THEWETUMPKAHERALD.COM
VOL. 119, NO. 18
Broom, Traylor take Sewell Awards By DAVID GRANGER Managing Editor
Robert Broom of Holtville High School and Hannah Traylor of Elmore County High School in Eclectic have been named the winners of the 2017 Joe Sewell Memorial Awards and $3,000 John Sewell Memorial Scholarships. Broom and Traylor were presented their awards Tuesday night at the annual Sewell Award banquet, held at the Wetumpka Civic
Center. The Joe Sewell Memorial Award and the John Sewell Memorial Scholarship are presented each year to senior Elmore County high school athletes – one male and one female – who consistently represent the highest ideals of Christian leadership. The award has been presented annually since 2005. “I believe I can speak for the entire Joe Sewell Memorial Award Board of Directors when I say what an outstanding group of
nominees we had this year,” said Mark McGhee, this year’s chairman of the awards committee. “As done since the inception of the award, each high school nominates up to four seniors for the award. We are looking for the most well rounded Christian athletes in Elmore County who demonstrate a high standard of moral character and leadership, excel in academics, and are involved in their church and community. Broom “Each school nominated students who all See SEWELL • Page 2
Youth art contest set for Tuesday
Cool quackers to ride river for charity, prizes
By DAVID GRANGER Managing Editor
The Elmore County Art Guild will sponsor its annual “Sparking the Arts” youth art awards ceremony on Tuesday, May 9, from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. at the Wetumpka Civic Center. Some 350 to 400 young artists from public and private schools in Elmore County are expected to participate, according to Shirley Esco of the Elmore County Art Guild. “The purpose of the competition is to promote the arts in the Elmore County School system,” said Esco. “There are only two high schools in the Elmore County system that have an art teacher (Stanhope Elmore and Elmore County High in Eclectic). Now, Wetumpka High School – I don’t know if Ms. (Fagale) Grant is actually called an art teacher, but she always has a lot of her students See ART • Page 2
By DAVID GRANGER Managing Editor
Cory Diaz / The Herald
The only good snake is . . a live one? A gray rat snake visited the Herald office on Thursday, sunning in the road for a while before escaping up a tree. According to an Alabama Nature Center expert, such a snake can consume 50 rats annually and a pair of brown rats can produce approximately 1,000 offspring a year. Motto: Some snakes are good.
Council establishes medical authority for land transfer
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By COREY ARWOOD Staff Writer
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CONTACT US 334-567-7811 Fax: 334-567-3284 Corey Arwood / The Herald
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They are, without a doubt, the coolest quackers in town. They’re so cool, in fact, that people are still asking Wetumpka Rotary Club president Eric Hyde how to get one. “I get email from people that aren’t getting the big ducks,” said Hyde. “Well, you have to be a sponsor to get a big duck. A lady out in Emerald Mountain that has a plant farm told me yesterday that she wanted one of the big ducks and I ended up getting another sponsor.” The “big ducks” are the bright yellow ducks sporting shades sitting out front of several Wetumpka businesses and they are indicative that the time is approaching for the five minutes of annual madness the Wetumpka Rotary Club calls Duck Dash, set for 5 p.m. on Saturday, May 6, at the Bibb Graves Memorial Bridge. “If you’ve never seen it, it’s worth seeing,” said Hyde, a financial advisor in Wetumpka’s Edward Jones office. “It only takes five minutes, but it’s five See CHARITY • Page 2
Today’s
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Former Boy Scouts among those at Monday night’s Wetumpka City Council meeting recite the Boy Scout Pledge during the presentation of the citizen’s badge to current Scouts.
The Wetumpka City Council voted on a resolution establishing a healthcare authority that could be the recipient a land transfer of property currently owned by the city in order to develop it into medical complex. The ordinance regarding the transfer of property received its first reading at the meeting by City Attorney Regina Edwards. A subsequent resolution established the incorporation of the entity, or The Coosa River Health Care Authority, that
would receive the property. In her reading of the ordinance it stated the CRHA would pay the city annually 50 percent of income it generated from leases or development of the property on each Sept. 30. Edwards spoke about the ordinance and the latter resolution. “This is to be able to establish the health care authority for the city,” she said. “The purpose of that is to be able to hone and develop property that would be for medical purposes and provide additional healthcare in the city and the community.” See COUNCIL • Page 3
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