Thursday, March 30, 2006

Windsor-Bertie Chamber Welcomes New Director

The Windsor-Bertie County Chamber of Commerce held a reception last night for the new Executive Director in the Freeman Hotel. Sharon Davis is recently from the Florida area, but has fallen in love with Bertie County where she was a current resident even before joining the Chamber. In fact, Sharon has had a long term relationship with Bertie County that spans decades. Congratulations to Ms. Davis on her new responsibilities.



Claire Mills, Sharon Davis And Jane Bowen At The Reception

Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Burr seeks HIV funds

By Patrick Campbell - Monday, March 27th, 2006 - Roanoke-Chowan News-Herald
WINTON - United States Senator Richard Burr (R-NC) returned to Hertford County on Thursday.

Burr attended a HIV roundtable discussion in Winton at the Hertford County Public Health Authority building. Hertford County Public Health Director Curtis Dickson, HC Director of Community Health Services Susan Askew, HC Public Health Authority Director of Nursing Diane McLawhorn, Rev. Patrick Young of the New Ahoskie Baptist Church, North Carolina AIDS Director Evelyn Foust and Dr. Thomas Kerkering from East Carolina University Brody School of Medicine attended the roundtable along with other health professionals and interested parties from the area.

“My goal is to reauthorize the Ryan White Act and to obtain a more equitable distribution of funds,” Burr said.

The Ryan White Comprehensive AIDS Resources Emergency (CARE) Act is Federal legislation that addresses the unmet health needs of persons living with HIV/AIDS by funding primary health care and support services. The act was named after Ryan White, an Indiana teenager whose struggle with HIV/AIDS and against AIDS-related discrimination helped educate the nation.

A significant part of the education provided by Ryan White, was that a large number of people are infected with HIV/AIDs through no fault of their own. This includes innocent children and women who are exposed through the acts of husbands and fathers. The image that only drug adicts and gays are infected is simply not true. With the number of new strains of HIV and AIDS coming out of Africa, it is important that we not lose sight of the importance of finishing the battle against this horrible disease. It still has the potential to be the epidemic that truly devastates our nation if we sit idly by.



Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Richard Burr Speaks At Williamston Rotary

Senator Richard Burr was the speaker today at the Williamston Rotary Club. The turnout was impressive, with almost every major local official coming to hear Senator Burr speak.



The Luncheon Was Well Attended


Tom Volk
, President of the Rotary club delivered the opening remarks and then turned the meeting over to Leon Allen to introduce Senator Burr.




Tom Volk, Rotary President


Senator Burr gave an impressive speech. This is not surprising since Senator Burr is a man of passionate beliefs. His speech covered a range of topics, health care, medicaid financing, tobacco, lagging growth in rural areas, energy policy, the off shore drilling moratorium, etc.




Leon Allen Delivers The Introduction


When he spoke of medicaid financing he made one comment that got quite a laugh. First he commented on the fact that North Carolina was the sole state that still required counties to fund a portion of medicaid. He then cautioned that he had to be discreet with his comments on this since the press was present. After a pause he said, "This is insane". So much for discreet.



Senator Richard Burr


Senator Burr concluded his speech with some powerful stories. Richard and his wife try to dine together as often as possible, and on one recent occasion when she came up to Washington, their dinner was at Walter Reed Hospital with some of our troops. Before the meal, they visited with some of the recent arrivals back from Iraq. The first soldier they visited had lost his lower left leg and his left arm from the elbow down. He also had bad shrapnel wounds on his left torso. As they were about to leave the soldier asked him if Senator Burr could help him with a favor. When Senator Burr said he would try the soldier explained that they had some great prosthetics at the hospital and he would soon be nearly as good as new. He wanted to know if Senator Burr would help him get approval to "get back to his unit in Iraq"?

There was a long silence. This is our next generation. Our nation has no shortage of men and women of courage and commitment, who understand as well as any the importance of what our nation stands for and what we are accomplishing in Iraq. If there was a dry eye in the room, it sure wasn't mine.




Tuesday, March 21, 2006

Colerain's Seagull Cafe Becomes Heliport

Barry Knight is a Seagull Cafe fan who uses an unusual vehicle to make his visits. We caught some pictures of his latest trip to Colerain.



Barry Knight's Transportation For His Regular Visit
To The Seagull Cafe In Colerain



Steve And Wanda Simpson, Barry Knight, and Mike Salmons
Enjoy The Herring

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Schools Ordered Closed

Earlier today, Judge Terrence Boyle accepted the Board of Education (BOE) and Department of Justice (DOJ) negotiated consent decree and said he would sign it. That means that J.P. Law and Askewville Elementary Schools will be closed to punish Bertie County for the claimed discrimination being practiced by the BOE. The BOE majority concedes by this ruling that it is practicing discrimination!

The most interesting exchange in this hearing came when the lawyer for the BOE claimed the BOE held "adequate" public hearings on both the Heery study and the need to close the schools and that since the public had been allowed to comment, they must agree with the closings. The BOE attorney never acknowledged that during the public hearings, public input opposed the closings. Nor did the Judge ever acknowledge the petition filings by Community Schools SOS, even though he had allowed the filings. The Judge argued that since the BOE was elected, they were the exclusive representatives of the public's wishes and he would accept their desire to close the schools.

It was at this point in the hearing that the Judge said to the BOE attorney that "Judges do not close schools. If the schools are closed it is the responsibility of the Bertie County BOE."

The Judge did not grant full unitary status but kept the case open for further rulings, based on concerns about claimed ongoing facilities discrimination and student assignment discrimination by the BOE at West Bertie and Aulander. This does not bode well for Aulander or West Bertie, or even Colerain, if the BOE negotiates further school consolidations with the DOJ.





Friday, March 10, 2006

National Guard Update

The Rotary Club was very pleased to welcome as speaker a local Windsor man who is actively working to defend our nation during this time of war. Brigadier General David L. Jennette, Jr, Deputy Adjutant General of the North Carolina National Guard, opened his presentation with a film about the National Guard in North Carolina. The film showed numerous local men and women serving our nation during this most important time.



General David Jennette Jr. Receives Traditional Thank You Cup
From Holland Cayton Of The Rotary Club


General Jennette spoke with us about his pride in the job our local troops are peforming in Iraq. He talked about each of our local units, and spoke of those few who have died in the service of our nation, and the many whose patriotism has led them to stick with this duty during such trying times.

David Jennette, Jr. is also President and Timberlands Manager of Timerberlands Unlimited, Inc., a local land and timber management services firm, an important local industry. Their services can be investigated on the web site at
http://www.timberlandsunlimited.com/

We thank General Jennette for the update, and for his service to our nation.


Wednesday, March 08, 2006

Duffy R.I.P. - By Bob Fringer


Story By Bob Fringer


Last summer I lost one of my most favorite hunting buddies. I met him about 15 years ago in Raleigh, North Carolina. He was frightened, bewildered and a bit groggy after arriving at the Raleigh-Durham Airport after a long flight from Kansas City, Missouri. I could see that he had not regained his equilibrium as he staggered to me and meekly put his head between my knees. I scratched his ears, patted his head and reassured him that everything was O.K. My new friend was an eight month old English Setter. We became immediate buddies. That bond remained until he died on June 23, 2005.

I called him Duffy, naming him after his previous owner, Jim Duffy. His thick white coat was dappled with small lemon specks. As he grew older, he carried himself with the style and grace similar to those old English Setter poses you see on hunting calendars in hardware stores and auto repair shops.

As I look back over our relationship, I’ m not certain whether I owned Duffy or he owned me. We spent the first couple of years getting to know each other’s peculiarities. I was a slow deliberate hunter while he was a tough, wide-ranging, hardheaded dog that wanted to go, go, go. I tried every trick known to mankind and then some to keep him close while we were in the field. I think I must have worn out 5 whistles during those first couple of years! It wasn’t until I finally resorted to an electronic training collar that I finally gained some resemblance of control over him. He possessed a drive that knew no bounds. With limitless determination he attacked the brush-laded cut-overs of Bertie and Hertford counties, the briar-clad ditches of Hyde County and the wide, spacious grasslands of Nebraska.

He developed into a pretty good bird-hunting dog but would have been much better if he had an experienced trainer (not me) and an ample supply of quail to hunt. Duffy always tried his best. He never handled every covey of quail properly when he found but, then, I never hit every quail he pointed either. I must say that we had many great times together.

As he reached his 10th year I could see the sands of time slowly beginning to run out. After a hard hunt he couldn’t leap up into the dog box like he had done so easily in the past. During the last year he was content to run along the paths and field edges rather than going into the thick cover. Then, again, I was also looking for the easy way pathways!

Last summer it became apparent that those muscles that had propelled his lean body through countless miles of thickets, briars and open fields were no longer up to the task. Then, one morning he could not even get out of his doghouse. The spirit was willing but his body could not respond. Duffy had hunted his last hunt.

Good bye old friend, I’ll remember all those good, and some not so good, times we had together. I can still visualize that icy morning when you made your first solid point on a covey of birds huddled beneath a large wild rose bush that was covered with a beautiful coating of frozen rain. That scene is etched into my brain. You gave me many fond memories. Thank you. I’ll miss you.

One of the greatest things about the Internet is the way one blog will get articles from another and stretch the audience. Bob Fringer is a great writer, and Ben McKean came across this article when I posted it. Ben asked permission to post it on his blog. Bob of course said yes, and if you have an interest in English Setters I highly recommend his blog.

You can find Ben's blog at
http://englishsetterspeak.blogspot.com/

Scan down a ways and you will see Bob's smiling face!

COMMUNITY SCHOOLS – SOS – PRESS RELEASE

Hearing Set for Federal Court On March 14, 2006 - Save Our Schools Celebrates

Windsor, NC - 3/06/2006 – SOS celebrated last Thursday as they announced over 3000 petitions in house and the announcement that Judge Boyle has scheduled a hearing on the case at 2 PM Tuesday March 14, 2006. The group reported that the judge has not signed the consent decree received from the Board of Education and Department of Justice that would close two schools in Bertie County under a federal court order.

The group announces their next meeting will be in the federal court house in Elizabeth City on March 14th. Everyone should meet at the court house steps at 1 PM that day. It will take some time clear security and witness what may be a historic day for a new beginning in education for Bertie County.
No colors, signs, or slogans should be brought to the court house.

The group plans to take all petitions turned in since our last filing to Raleigh on Thursday of this week. All petitions turned in to the Windsor Farm Bureau office by 2 PM Wednesday will be included in the case record.

Update 3/9/2006 6 PM - The final count of petition signatures filed with the Federal Court in Raleigh this morning was 3337.

Monday, March 06, 2006

Dean Stephens Launches Campaign Blog Site

As noted in the article "Bertie County Filing Period Ends" down below, I have filed my papers to run for the Bertie County Board of Education. I believe passionately that we must make a significant change in direction in education in Bertie County. Our children deserve it.

Since the Bertie County Patriot tries to be non-partisan (and even though the Board of Education is a non-partisan campaign) I have set up a separate blog for my campaign site. We will continue to cover education issues here on the Patriot, just not my personal proposals for improving education in our county. I will retain a link on the right column announcing my campaign.



Jennipher Dickens Interviews Dean Stephens
After Filing For Board Of Education


If you have an interest in my proposals and issues for education in Bertie County, you can link to my campaign blog at http://deanstephens.blogspot.com/

Thank you for your interest.




Sunday, March 05, 2006

Bertie High Threatened With Closure

Several Schools In East On Poorly Performing List

March 5th, 2006 - Associated Press (WITN TV)


RALEIGH, N.C. -- A state judge has warned that unless 19 of the state's poorly performing high schools start doing better, he'll order them closed unless the state makes sweeping changes, including replacing principals at the schools.

"Superintendents and principals have run out of room and run out of time," Wake County Superior Court Judge Howard Manning Jr. said in a 17-page letter to state Superintendent June Atkinson and State Board of Education Chairman Howard Lee. "The state is clearly and ultimately legally responsible."


On the list of schools to be closed are Bertie County High, Hertford County High, and Plymouth High School in Washington County.

One quote from the article is appropriate to our current local school problems at all levels. "Those schools also would be required to begin reform plans modeled after the small-school approach promoted by the state's New Schools Project."


Large consolidated schools have the highest failure rate. More and more people are noting that the education establishment fascination with large schools is losing support among people knowledgeable about the problems.

Why are our educational leaders still promoting consolidation here in Bertie County?



Friday, March 03, 2006

Court Hearing Scheduled - March 14th

The big news at last nights Community Schools SOS meeting was the phone call from the Federal Court calendar clerk that a hearing has been scheduled in the USA v. Bertie County BOE case. SOS has been informed that the consent order has not been entered, but a hearing has been set.

Community school supporters are hopeful that this is the good news they have been waiting for. Community Schools SOS plans to go in force to the hearing so that the Judge will know where the citizens of Bertie County stand.

Community Schools SOS continues to pile up petitions as more and more people sign. They are currently well past 3,000. To introduce a little fun into this process that has been going on for two months now, a skit was performed at last nights meeting to dramatize what it will take to complete this process, and save Bertie's community schools.



Tin Man, Lion, Dorothy, Scarecrow And Wizard Of "Oztie"


The Wizard of "Oztie", granted intelligence, heart and courage to those who are seeking community schools. And in order to send Dorothy "home to her community school in Bertie", the wizard asked the crowd to give Dorothy the petitions she needs to SAVE OUR SCHOOLS.

Because of the hearing on March 14th, SOS plans a supplemental filing in Raleigh, so that the Judge has as many of our signatures as possible when the hearing is held. If you want the Judge to know where you stand, please seek out a Community School representative and sign now. All petitions must be turned in to the Farm Bureau by Wednesday so next Thursday they can be filed in the court case.


Thursday, March 02, 2006

Bertie County Filing Period Ends

The people who will be campaigning to serve our county have filed their papers. Tuesday was an interesting day in the election that is scheduled May 2nd. That will be the day of the Democratic Primary, and the final election for Non-Partisan Positions.

One of the milestones that must always happen in our democracy is the process of identifying those who seek public office.

Shirlie Davenport, head of the Bertie County Elections Department, was very busy Tuesday morning, as she took the filing paperwork and fees from those who were starting the campaign process.



Shirlie Davenport, Elections Board, Hard At Work


I was one of those filing for public office and for me it was the first time in my life. It was an interesting experience. Shirlie is really great at helping people who have never done this before. She made what could have been a complicated process very easy with her knowledge and courtesy. I thank her.

This is a list Shirlie provided of all of the offices for which two or more candidates filed.

County Commissioner Distict 5 (Democratic Primary)
- J. Jasper Bazemore
- Robert Brown Jr.

Sheriff (Democratic Primary)
- Greg Atkins
- S. Daryl Brockington
- Eddie Graham

Board of Education District 3 (Non-Partisan)
- Dean Stephens
- Michael Bracy


Board of Education District 4 (Non-Partisan)
- Gary L. Cordon Sr.

- Alton H. Parker


The following is a list of all the offices where only one person filed, and by that fact they are the winner. They are known for doing a good job, which is why no one challenged them.

County Commissioner District 2
- Rick Harrell

County Commissioner District 3
- J. Wallace Perry

Clerk Of Superior Court
- John C.P. Tyler

Board of Education District 2
- Rickey Freeman

Congratulations to them all.