We need some teeth - The Smithfield Times
Transcription
We need some teeth - The Smithfield Times
the Smithfield timeS Serving iSle of Wight and Surry CountieS SinCe 1920 Volume 96 Number 36 Wednesday, Sept 9, 2015 UNWANTED? Isle of Wight has, so far, been unable to find a use for the Stoup property. — See page 5 Smithfield, Va. 23431 50 cents HISTORY LESSON A county resident has undertaken his own living history project. QUOTE OF THE WEEK “ We can’t continue to provide utilities without an agreement. ” — Town Attorney Bill Riddick On Gatling Pointe water supply, begins p. 1 — See page 9 ‘We need some teeth’ Trail’s appearance concerns Council Wide strip of asphalt planned By Diana McFarland News editor It’s the width and materials, not the idea of a way for pedestrians and cyclists to get down South Church Street, that some Smithfield Town Council members object to. One council member wants to see a visual image of what the Nike Park bike trail would look like before writing a check, while others are OK with either a bike trail or sidewalk. Isle of Wight County Project Manager Jamie Oliver recently told the Smithfield Town Council public works committee that the Nike Park bike and pedestrian trail must be about 10 feet wide and made of asphalt. Smithfield’s portion of the bike trail would run from the Cypress Creek Bridge along South Church Street and meet up with • Sere BIKE, p. 7 Council on IW plan for Gatling water By Alyse Stanley Staff writer “We need to have some teeth.” That’s what Smithfield Town Council Member Milton Cook said about the town’s need to get serious in response to Isle of Judge rejects Wight County’s residents’ proposed Nike water line Park waterline. suite. See p. 8 On Aug. 27, the Isle of Wight County Board of Supervisors unanimously approved its staff ’s recommendation to forward the water line study to the Planning Commission for consideration. The $3.7 million project would provide water for 587 homes in Gatling Pointe already receiving utilities from the town of Smithfield. The county has yet to publicize whether or not they will include a sewer line as part of the Nike Park waterline project. That will make Staff photo by Diana McFarland the projected cost increase, said Council Member Milton Cook. Isle of Wight County spokesIt was the first day of school for kindergartener McKynna Anderson and she insisted man Don Robertson has said on wearing her shiny black shoes with the heels, said her mother, Nicole Bailey. that a sewer line has not been Anderson got on the bus with friends Olivia Cramer, who is going into second grade, discussed or recommended, so and first grader Dominic Korff, who was sporting a Mohawk. The students, who live it’s premature to discuss it at in Red Oaks Mobile Home Park, were headed to Carrollton Elementary School. this time. However, the county has estimated the cost of water and a sewer lines, as well as a storage tank, to be $11 million to $12 million. At their Sept 1 meeting, Council members joked about shutting of Smithfield, and more than 20 In July, the developers, Hearn- proffers should be $7,676.69 per off the sewage line to Gatling downtown businesses, signed the don MC Builders, LLC, offered the lot — roughly $5,000 more than Pointe households should the petitions. town $2,496.13 per house to offset what Hearndon proposed. County refuse to build one. This conflicting estimate re“These folks deserve to be financial impact from the project. However, even creating a shutIsle of Wight County consid- sults from the developer’s failure off valve would cost the town respected … not circumvented,” ers this proffer “woefully short,” to address several areas impacted $10,000 according to public works he said. One of their arguments was said Richard Rudnicki, assistant by the project, he said. staff, said Council Member MiFirstly, Hearndon’s current chael Smith. that the developers’ estimated director of planning and zoning infrastructure costs are too low. for the county. proffers do not allocate any monAccording to the Virginia Therefore they do not fully adIn an email to the Smithfield ey for schools. Health Department, the County is dress how the community would Planning Commission dated Aug. The project will add 27 elemen- not required to build a sewer line be affected by the project, said 10, Rudnicki outlined the county’s Cherlette Brownheart, Smithfield. concern. He said the total cash • See PROFFERS, p. 7 • See WATER, p. 8 Dressed for school Opposition to Pierceville plan By Alyse Stanley Staff writer Smithfield residents continued to express their opposition to the controversial housing development on the historic Pierceville farm at a Town Council meeting Sept 1. Smithfield resident Dennis Arinello presented the Council with a packet containing multiple petitions against the development. More than 200 residents Most draw bridge lifts are reported in advance Morris says he wants data on present system By Alyse Stanley Staff writer Ships have the right of way at drawbridges, but an infor mal ag reement with VDOT makes warning commuters possible. Del. Rick Morris, R-64, said this is not enough and continues pushing for scheduled bridge lifts at the James River Bridge. Coast Guard regulation requires draw bridges be opened at the request of passing ships. However, the Virginia Pilots Association and captains can send informal notifications to VDOT estimating what time they need the bridge lifted that day. Maritime vessels are not required to send advanced notice, but VDOT still receives it “most of the time,” said Laurie Simmons, senior public affairs specialist at VDOT. VDOT announces this information on their 511 system, which broadcast news organizations monitor for their morning reports. Morris was unaware of this informal agreement before making his request. However, given that bridge lifts still occur during rush hour, the current system is not without its complaints, he said. If the informal agreement alleviates traffic congestion along the James River Bridge, he has not seen any specific data detailing this. “Hopefully the Coast Guard evaluation can bring some real data for an objective evaluation on it,” Morris said. In August, Morris submitted a request to the Fifth District SR Coast Guard to eliminate bridge lifts during weekday rush-hour traffic at the James River Bridge. The Fifth District SR Coast Guard maintains authority over all waterways in the area. The Coast Guard has since received his request and evaluation, though they have yet to review it in-depth. Morris hopes to speak with them in the coming weeks to establish a timeline pending approval. As part of their requirements for considering scheduled lifts, the Fifth District SR Coast Guard is currently working with VDOT to complete a navigation evaluation. This evaluation takes into account the accessibility to alternative waterways and existing vessel trip frequency and among other factors. SUPERIOR SERVICE DEPENDABLE CARE TAKE AN ADDITIONAL $750 OFF AUTOMATIC STANDBY GENERATORS • 24HR SERVICE AVAILABLE • FREE PROPOSALS • SALES • SERVICE • INSTALLATION On 16KW and 22KW only* lower payments on smaller generators* Not to be used in conjunction with any other offers. *Expires 9/30/15. We exclusively use American Made products www.acspecialists.net • 757-558-9122 “Perhaps we do the minors of this country harm if First Amendment protections, which they will with age inherit fully, are chipped away in the name of their protection.” -- Judge Lowell A. Reed Jr. American Civil Liberties Union vs. Janet Reno Forum Page 2 – The Smithfield Times – Wed., Sept. 9, 2015 Our Forum Georgie D. Tyler missteps The Georgie D. Tyler Middle School, we now know, is costing Isle of Wight county $4.1 million more than the original contract price of $19.4 million. That’s 21 percent more than taxpayers were told the facility would cost — and that’s huge. The overage is a result of the county having failed to include in its bid package the requirement that the contractor building the school would have to comply with the Davis-Bacon Act, a federal labor standards requirement. Davis-Bacon requires that for projects built with federal funds, workers employed in the construction must be paid wages that are no less than the locally prevailing wages and fringe benefits, as determined by the U.S. Department of Labor. The Tyler school clearly fell under the act because the county had obtained $7.5 million in federal funds for the project. By omitting the requirement from its request for bids, the county received a low bid from Richie-Curbow that were based on wages significantly lower than what was required by Davis-Bacon. Workers challenged the contract and Isle of Wight quickly acknowledged that it was responsible for the higher wages. The contractor denied any responsibility because the county had not designated the job as a Davis-Bacon project. Additional wages required by Davis-Bacon total $4.1 million. That money is being paid out of current funds rather than being included in the long-term bonds issued by the county for the school. County staff members say they hope to include the additional money in the county’s next bond issue but, for now, it’s current money and it’s having a negative impact on available county funds. Not classifying the school as a Davis-Bacon project wasn’t the first misstep made by Isle of Wight in connection with the new middle school. In an application for the federal funds, the county declared that the middle school being replaced was serving more students than it was designed to accommodate. The school, in fact, had an enrollment that was well below its design capacity. The misstatement of enrollment gave the county “points” toward approval of the federal funds. Few of the county school officials and none of the School Board members who were involved in the bond application and bid process for the Georgie D. Tyler school are now employed by the county. That’s precious little comfort for county taxpayers, however, because there is no assurance that such sloppy project management will not occur the next time the School Board has an opportunity to spend large sums of money on school property. It is troubling that School Board members have not seemed terribly upset by the missteps made leading up to the Tyler project. If they are not concerned — make that incensed — over what amounts to a falsified grant application and failure to comply with basic federal wage guidelines, what does it take to get these folks upset? It would seem that the School Board would want somebody’s hide over these errors, whether they were intentional or just stupid, but we have failed to see that level of indignation from the School Board. And that, in itself, is cause to be concerned that it could happen again. Where’d the rain go? Who turned off the faucet? Six or eight weeks ago, a couple of good showers each week seemed downright inevitable. Now, much of Isle of Wight and Surry would give anything for a good old-fashioned thunderstorm. Farmers have even taken to looking longingly for a tropical storm and even they seem to die out before they stand a chance of bringing needed rain to the area. There’s an old saying about Hampton Roads that if you don’t like the weather, just wait a day or two and it will change. If only that were true right now. the Smithfield timeS (USPS 499-180) Established 1920 Published Each Wednesday By Times Publishing Company 228 Main Street, PO Box 366, Smithfield, VA 23431 Periodicals Postage Paid at Smithfield Main Post Office, Smithfield, Va. 23430 Postmaster: Send address changes to: The Smithfield Times P.O. Box 366, Smithfield, Va. 23431 Voice (757) 357-3288 / Fax (757) 357-0404 E-mail: editor@smithfieldtimes.com Web Site smithfieldtimes.com A unique find A Native American Ossuary discovered at Claremont Manor on the James River was believed to be the only one of its kind in North or South America. It contained ritualistically arranged skulls and bones, and was believed to have been related to the Quiyoughcohannock, a tribe of priests within the Powhatan Confederacy. (Smithfield Times file photo) Reader Forum Residents as resources Editor, Smithfield Times ISLE 2040 has ended. Or has it? The supervisors need to understand that the opposition was not an example of “not in my backyard,” but due to a breach in public trust. Our founding fathers were called visionaries because they broke away from an unresponsive government and created a government founded of, by and for the people. Staff members stated that they have been working on the revised comp plan for over a year. As with ISLE2040, this seems to also have been done without public input or involvement. There is currently nothing to prevent staff from repackaging and resubmitting the previous plan as “new.” As a member of the Planning Commission, my email is posted on the county website, I receive a lot of emails from other citizens. What I have learned is that there are a lot of intelligent people out there who know how to investigate and unearth NOTE: The Smithfield Times welcomes letters from our readers and asks only that they be a maximum of 300 words.Please avoid personal attacks on individuals. Letters must be signed and an address and phone number included for verification of authorship. The Smithfield Times will edit letters as needed. Please limit letters to one per month. Mail letters to The Smithfield Times, P.O. Box 366, Smithfield, VA 23431, or email to editor@smithfieldtimes.com. Letter deadline is noon each Monday. the facts that seem to have been overlooked by the county staff. I made a statement that the county staff seems to view “residents” as “revenue.” I propose we view “residents” as “resources.” Let’s embrace these valuable resources and conduct partnership studies, which include staff/ resident committees and open resident discussion forums going forward with comprehensive plan revisions. It is my understanding that the current plan was completed with citizen involvement. In summation I would like to repeat a quote attributed a member of the Board. “We are rural, not stupid.” Richard Gillerlain Carrollton Cook for School Board Editor, Smithfield Times I am writing in support of Kirstin Cook, who is running for Isle of Wight School Board from the Smithfield district. I’ve known Kirstin for years, but learned of her dedication to our students in 2009 when she helped spearhead a campaign to change the county’s grading scale. When I approached the school board about our antiquated grading system, I thought it would be a simple matter of pointing to the research that had already been compiled. I soon discovered, though, that the school board was full of old men with old ideas. It became apparent I was going to need help. Kirstin was the first to step forward. At the time, Kirstin was president-elect of the Hardy Elementary PTA. Not satisfied to just be a member, she wanted to help direct the organization towards positive goals. Kirstin carried that same devotion into putting Isle of Wight students on par with others across the nation when vying for college admissions and merit-based scholarships. When it became obvious we would need community support, Kirstin gathered a group of like-minded parents to garner that support. After nine months of meetings, a facebook and email campaign, TV and newspaper coverage, person-to-person conversations, letters to the editor and a county-wide survey of parents and students, we finally convinced the school board to adopt a modified 10 point grading scale. The fight to change outdated thinking wasn’t easy. It took a concerted, tenacious effort to get the word out in a way that was informative and convinc• See LETTERS, p. 3 The days of the drive-in movie T h e m i d - 2 0 th sentation, some n he century was the have been saved by age of big movies being turned into and big screens. cultural centers The Commodore or settings for live in Portsmouth is theater. a surviving examBut if changing ple of what a bigtastes and marketscreen theater was ing have been hard By John Edwards on large movie thelike. It is one of the few of the grand old ladies that aters, they have been even more so continue showing movies regular- for another big screen phenomely, but back in the day there were non — the drive-in theater. plenty of similar venues. America’s fascination with the While few of the old theaters automobile was the catalyst for have been able to compete with the entrepreneurs to combine that marketing changes in movie pre- love with our love of movies. They I T SHORT ROWS turned cow pastures into lucrative parking lots for huge screen outdoor theaters. You could pull in, pay admission, find a vacant speaker on a metal post, hang it on your window and enjoy a movie in the comfort of your automobile. What could be more American? Drive-ins were a great idea for families with little children. They could sit in the back seat and if they got a bit noisy, they didn’t disturb anyone other than Mom and Dad. And if they fell asleep during an airing of Ben Hur or some other • See ROWS, p. 3 Getting in touch Editor/Publisher Business Manager News Editor Advertising Director Marketing Consultant Marketing Consultant Staff Writer Classified/Circulation Staff Artist Staff Artist John B. Edwards Anne R. Edwards Diana McFarland Tim Golden Kathy Jones Wendy Kantsios Alyse Stanley Shelley Sykes Jameka Anderson Daniel L. Tate editor@smithfieldtimes.com aedwards@smithfieldtimes.com news@smithfieldtimes.com timgolden@smithfieldtimes.com kathyj@smithfieldtimes.com wendyk@smithfieldtimes.com astanley@smithfieldtimes.com classified@smithfieldtimes.com production@smithfieldtimes.com graphics@smithfieldtimes.com MEMBER: Virginia Press Association, National Newspaper Association To Subscribe Call (757)357-3288) Isle of Wight, Surry Counties $25/Year $40/Two Years (Includes Digital Subscription) Elsewhere $40/Year $60/Two Years Electronic Subscription $14/Year The Smithfield Times – Wed., Sept. 9, 2015 – Page 3 A free press is not the enemy By Gene Policinski Journalism is neither criminal activity nor the action of an enemy, at home during domestic strife or overseas in a time of war. Still, charges have been brought in Ferguson, Mo., against two journalists a year after they were detained in a McDonald’s restaurant by police in the first days of violence during protests over the police shooting and death of Michael Brown. And a new, 1,176-page Department of Defense “Law of War” manual distributed in June opens the door for U.S. military commanders — and, ominously, for repressive regimes around the world — to deem reporters who operate outside of official channels and who resist censorship as “unprivileged belligerents,” military-speak for spies and saboteurs. Reporters doing their jobs may be inconvenient or irritating, or witnesses on behalf of the public to activity that is later challenged as illegal, unwise or just plain embarrassing. None of that ought to be subject to official sanction, arrest or worse. And to connect that Orwellian “unprivileged belligerents” turn-of-phrase with journalists just buys into the kind of despotic thought process that has a Washington Post reporter facing a secret trial in Teheran, accused of espionage and distributing propaganda against the Islamic Republic for simply doing what journalists do: Gather news and fairly report the facts. Let’s clear out the easy criticisms: The issue is not actions that clearly interfere with lawful police activity, inflame tense situations to create a sensational atmosphere, that directly or intentionally place bystander, police, or American military lives at risk or aid an enemy nation. Civil authorities and military commanders ought not to have a right — or think they have a right, based on fuzzy guidance from above or by virtue of trained bluster and bravado — to ignore, override or punish journalists in the performance of their legitimate, constitutional “watchdog” role protected in the U.S. by the First Amendment. A year ago in Ferguson, in one of the first nights following the police shooting and death of Brown, reporters for The Huffington Post and The Washington Post were working in a McDonald’s restaurant. Just in the last few days, the pair was charged with trespassing and with interfering with a police officer’s performance of his duties. Police say the journalists didn’t leave the restaurant fast enough. About two dozen journalists have been arrested while reporting on the continuing Ferguson protests. Officials recently settled at least one lawsuit brought by a reporter who was arrested, agreeing to pay $8,500 and dropping three charges. At the same time, similar charges against another reporter were dropped. Editors at the The Huffington Post and The Washington Post have criticized police conduct in the arrests of their staffers. Washington Post executive editor Marty Baron said the decision to pursue charges “represents contemptible overreaching by prosecutors who seem to have no regard for the role of journalists seeking to cover a major story and following normal practice.” Police and prosecutor conduct around events in Ferguson also seems part of the artful pattern that persists in police actions nationwide, around not just civil disorders but also protests at political conventions or economic summits, of “arrest now, clean it up later” — often with an accompanying financial settlement at cost to taxpayers. The new U.S. military manual represents a less direct — but just as misplaced — threat to journalists doing their jobs. A New York Times editorial on Aug. 10 also said it would make journalists’ work “more dangerous, cumbersome, and subject to censorship.” The manual says that U.S. armed forces may withhold protection, censor reports and even deem journalists as “unprivileged belligerents” — which it elsewhere defines as including “spies and saboteurs,” with fewer legal rights in war zones than the ar med opposition forces. Driving home a point, the manual says that “reporting on military operations can be very similar to collecting intelligence or even spying.” The Times’s editorial notes that “to cover recent wars, including the civil war in Libya in 2011 and the war in Syria, reporters had to sneak across borders, at great personal risk, to gather information.” The editorial also properly says, “Authoritarian leaders around the world could point to it to show that their despotic treatment of journalists — including Americans — is broadly in line with the standards set by the United States government.” The 1,176-page manual’s introduction says it “reflects many years of labor and expertise, on the part of civilian and military lawyers from every Military Service. It reflects the experience of this Department in applying the law of war in actual military operations, and it will help us remember the hard-learned lessons from the past.” I would add that the manual also ignores the very “hardlearned lessons from the past” — from the world wars to Vietnam to the Gulf wars — that more news re por ted independently bolsters the public’s understanding and support for the U.S. military, not the reverse. More than two decades ago, in explaining the Defense Department’s rationale then for journalists to “embed” with active U.S. combat units, officials got it right: “We need to tell the factual story — good or bad — before others seed the media with disinformation and distortion.” The “fog of war” — or the confusing circumstances surrounding civil disorder — may well make confrontations inevitable between authorities and a news media charged with closely and critically observing and reporting on them. But that’s no reason for poor judgments, or for policies set in the light of day and calmer times, which encourage or institutionalize a disregard for the needed presence of independent journalists and a free press. Gene Policinski is chief operating officer of the Newseum Institute and senior vice president of the Institute’s First Amendment Center. He can be reached at gpolicinski@newseum.org. Letters • Continued from p. 2 ing. Kirstin never wavered in her commitment to implement a better, more just system of ranking our students alongside millions of others across America. Her efforts will make college education more accessible and less costly to numerous Isle of Wight students for years to come. We need a person of Kirstin’s experience, character and commitment to our children on the Isle of Wight School Board. Chuck Dunlap Newport News Burckard for supervisor Editor, Smithfield Times Some have a political machine to back them in this local campaign. “No Frills” Albert Burckard is financing his own campaign. Our county has become a bedroom community. We need jobs, not ISLE 2040 apartment complexes for more big companies to monopolize for their employees who work outside our beautiful county. Albert was a leader in this opposition. He has been a part of county politics for years and has had a hand in letting our public know the issues by being a part of local civic organizations. The best of the best, Grace Keen, has taught him well! We need more persistent activists to know what their local governing body Rows • Continued from p. 2 mega-production, there was no harm. Just let them sleep until you got home. Drive-ins were perhaps even more popular for teens and young adults who were dating. They offered a relatively safe “parking” place for young lovers, sometimes patrolled but only loosely. For them, the movies of choice were often a bit more racy than the family shows, though “racy” in the mid 20th century was pretty tame by 2015 standards. We had several choices in drive-ins in Hampton Roads. The most convenient and most popular for Isle of Wight youth were the Plantation Drive-In on U.S. 460 in Nansemond County (the county later merged with the city of Suffolk), and the Anchor Drive-In on Jefferson Avenue in Newport News. The Plantation big screen featured a fake plantation porch complete with columns and windows and was a prominent structure on 460 from its opening in 1949 until it finally closed in 1970s. The Anchor opened in 1952 and lasted until 1985. Like many 1950s activities, drive-ins have their nostalgia fans. There is even a website titled driveins.org that lists all the known drive-ins from the mid-20th century and those that remain open today. According to the website, there were more than 200 such theaters in Virginia alone during the peak of the craze. They were scattered throughout the Commonwealth, with significant concentrations in Hampton Roads and the Richmond area. Today, the website reports that there are 10 active drive-ins in Virginia. If you have a hankering to watch a drive-in movie for old time sake, the closest of the remaining ones appears to be in Hadensville, west of Richmond. It’s actually a new facility, opened in 2009 and accommodating 340 cars. Older drive-ins, some dating back to the late 1940s, are scattered through the piedmont and mountain regions of Virginia. All you’d ever want to know about them can be found at the driveins.org site. is doing or not doing and to make suggestions that can improve conditions. Burckard loves the history of Isle of Wight. Did you know he shares personally, not only with tourists monthly in costume, but also with school children, local history that is found not in our schools’ history books, at no charge to the county? He loves the people of Isle of Wight County enough to risk his life for them going into fires. Albert also goes to youth camps to teach fire safety — more freebies. Having served in the U.S. Army, Albert Burckard got really close to God in the jungles of Vietnam. His actions have spoken volumes serving others, not only for our country but also in our county and even at a local Christian food pantry. Do you think he would do anything to intentionally jeopardize his granddaughters who are also a part of our county’s future? Albert cares. Do you? Albert Burckard would appreciate your vote to continue to serve us in another capacity as our next county supervisor representing the Newport District. Together we can make a difference. Clayton Johnson Windsor Supporting Phillips Editor, Smithfield Times At the Republican forum, the candidates for Commonwealth’s attorney each spent their allotted time expounding on their campaigns and why they should be Commonwealth’s attorney for Isle of Wight County. I was impressed by the level of commitment that current Commonwealth’s Attorney Georgette Phillips displayed. Having worked her way through law school at the same time being a young mother of two and a devoted wife, she obviously knows what hard work and determination is all about. Secondly, having worked for various Commonwealth’s attorneys in our county who ended up being promoted to judgeships, she never has sought one for herself, nor has she taken the experience and training that was invested in her and gone into private practice. Instead, she has been committed to serving here in Isle of Wight County. Lastly, I was struck by the respect she has for our local law enforcement officers. That working relationship and apparent mutual respect speaks volumes. The relationship between the Commonwealth’s attorney and law enforcement must be a team effort founded in trust. If not, the effectiveness and stability of the team will be affected. This is something that will affect all the citizens of Isle of Wight County. Again, it is apparent that Phillips is trusted by law enforcement and that speaks volumes to me. That is the reason why we need to keep Georgette Phillips as our Commonwealth’s attorney. Lance Morgan Windsor The death of a cell murder? Editor, Smithfield Times Anti-abortionists say that a fertilized egg is a human being because it has all the information necessary to make a walking, talking person. But with few exceptions, every cell in your body has all the information necessary to make another you. Therefore, a blood cell is just as human as a fertilized egg. It’s true that a blood cell, on it’s own, won’t turn into a person while a fertilized egg will. But anti-abortionists aren’t saying that a fertilized egg will become a human, but that it already is, because it has all that information. But, again, that’s also true of virtually every cell in your body since they each have all the information needed to make another you. Now, think of the trillions of people that are killed every year in blood tests, biopsies, etc. Who will stand up for them? It won’t be egg supremacists since skin cells and blood cells aren’t their favorite people. I say it should be illegal to perform any procedure that results in the death of a cell. But that would mean that you might die because you couldn’t get a procedure that could save your life, and if you die, then trillions of people that make up your body die with you. But they will have died a natural death. They wouldn’t have been murdered. This may sound like a bad joke, but if you believe, or pretend to believe, that a fertilized egg is a human being, then the consequence of that bad joke is the unavoidable result of that belief. Jim P. McAdaragh Ivor Enjoyed playing Editor, Smithfield Times Our acoustic group (The Windbags) was fortunate enough to have been selected to play our first public gig at the Smithfield Farmers Market this past Saturday. As you can imagine, it was a memorable occasion for the four of us! Everyone from Cheryl Ketchum and her staff, to the other vendors, and — most importantly — the patrons of the market, treated us so well. Our only regret was that we only had three hours to play! To all of you who stopped by to speak with us or put a dollar or two in our tip “briefcase”, we thank you and look forward to playing in Smithfield again. (P.S. We spent our paycheck at Wharf Hill on a great lunch after the gig!) Mark Calhoon Chip Joseph Bobby Mawyer Axel Rasmussen Booster support Editor, Smithfield Times On behalf of the SHS Band Booster Club, we would like to thank all of the individuals who played in our golf tournament on Aug. 29. We had 49 golfers enjoy a great day and meal with our band Director SGM Joel Joyner providing entertainment. We also had several sponsors that included either hole sponsorships, food, monetary donations or raffle prizes. Our sponsors included Chick- Fil A, Smithfield Fast Lube, Wharf Hill Brewery, Home Sweet Home, TL C Electric, Smithfield Lions Club, Windsor Lions Club, Ken & Charon Hirlinger, and David Knight. We would also like to thank Cypress Creek Golf Course and the many parents and students who volunteered their time. Again thanks for all the generous donations to make this tournament a success and supporting our students in their quest to reach Tampa for the Outback Bowl. Margaret Bachman Smithfield The SmiThfield TimeS . . . Your Information HUB LiFestyLes Page 4 The Smithfield Times – Wed., Sept. 9, 2015 Western Tidewater master Gardener You choose: sun or shade. Impatiens are here to please home gardeners with a wide array of colors to complement patio furniture, water features or garden statuary. These plants are popular bedding plants in the Tidewater area for their low maintenance requirements and splashy nonstop habit of flowering. Impatiens for shade (Impatiens walleriana) are tender perennials, but treated as summer annuals because they are not cold hardy in this USDA zone. These plants are often sold in cell packs by local nurseries because you’re sure to want more than just one. Wait until the plants are in bloom so that you can choose between colors ranging from white to magenta or even bicolor. Seeds of the Bizzy Lizzy (a common name) are equally easy to sow with quick germination for mature mounding during the same growing season. Place these impatiens in full or part shade; they even tolerate heavy shade with confidence. Blooming will continue in earnest from June until frost provided enough moisture is available. There is no need to fertilize if planted in rich humusy soil. A simple clean-up practice allows offspring to return in subsequent years with as much vigor and fullness as the initial planting. Instead of discarding the plants before frost, pull up the plant but leave the carcass atop the soil. The foliage will quickly decompose enriching the soil, and the explosive discharge of seeds will await germination in spring. Pair these impatiens with shade-loving ferns to anchor the mass of color and cleome for contrasting height. See Virginia Cooperative Extension publication PPWS-19 for tips to avoid downy mildew (causing defoliation) and for plant alternatives for sunnier locations. Which brings us to the SUNPATIENS SERIES, a hybrid mix of New Guinea and wild impatiens, for part shade or better yet full sun. They even thrive in areas such as ours with soaring temps and sweltering humidity. Impatiens foliage will usually scorch and wilt in too much sun. But the petals, leaves and root systems of plants in this series are extraordinarily heat-tolerant and hold up under the pressure. They are available in three habits: compact (mounding), spreading (best for containers) and vigorous (tallest). Pick your favorite vibrant color from a wide selection. With consistent moisture, these plants provide striking accents to entrances, walkways or garden paths. SUNPATIENS are also stellar additions to window boxes on a sunny street. Large, 5-petaled flowers express a welcoming invitation to explore behind the garden gate. Mass them for waves of color, but select a site that is easily watered. Pair with foxtail ferns. Contact Master Gardener Helpline volunteers with impatiens questions Wednesdays, 10-noon, 757-356-1979. The program is a VCE educational program. VCE programs are open to all. Kristi Hendricks Master Gardener Tween 12 & 20 Windsor Castle beauty This mushroom caught the eye of Bill Laine of Smithfield while he was at Windsor Castle Park. Send in your favorite photo of Isle of Wight and Sur r y counties for possible publication in The Smithfield Times to news@ smithfieldtimes.com. A revamped Aiken Fest Smithfield’s annual Aiken Fest is trying something new this fall. Now in its 10th year, organizers are moving the live musical entertainment to three stages in downtown Smithfield. The festivities begin Friday, Sept. 25, 7:30 p.m. with a songwriters in the round concert at the Smithfield Little Theatre with Mike Aiken, Austin Cunningham and Bonnie Bishop. On Saturday, Sept. 26 the music is playing from noon to 5 p.m. with Gratiot Lake Road, David Glaser, Susan Greenbaum, Jacob Vanko, Beaucoup Blue, Paul Norfleet and Ryan Scarberry. Workshops will cover songwriting, guitar and indie music promotion. The weekend winds up Saturday night with Mike Aiken’s Tall Tales and Troubadours Show, 7:30 p.m. at the Smithfield Little Theatre. Tickets for Friday and Saturday nights are $25, or buy a weekend pass for $40. Saturday afternoon concerts are free. All proceeds benefit Smithfield Music, which promotes youth music education in Isle of Wight County. For more details, visit AikenAndFriendsFest.com. Those with questions can email info@ aikenandfriendsfest.com or call 357-7707. Take It Slow and Easy By Dr. Robert Wallace Creators syndicate Dr. Wallace, I’m a 14-year-old boy. Where I live, all the kids go on dates when they are in high school. I’m in the 9th grade, and my father won’t let me go on dates until I’m 15. I’ve had a girlfriend for the past five months and she expects me to go out with her. Do you think my father is doing the right thing? — Nameless, Charleston, W.Va. Nameless, The key word is “date.” First of all, don’t tell Dad you want to date because all the other kids your age are dating. That’s a real parent turnoff. Is studying in the city library considered a date? Give it a try. Ask Dad if he will allow you and your girlfriend to study together some Saturday. If he says no, then you will have to accept the rule Dad has laid down. If he says yes, slowly build his confidence in you and ask for more opportunities to see your girlfriend, such as spending a few hours window-shopping at the mall and getting a snack. Take it slow and easy! Brown, Bailey Lamonte Doron Brown and Kanicole Shamisha Bailey plan to wed Sept. 5, 5 p.m. in Suffolk after being together for 17 years. Brown is the son of Shiela Ridley and Jame William and Bailey is the daughter of Judy Candis and Alphonso Graves. Dr. Wallace, I’m a 19-year-old girl who needs your help. I’m concerned about my mom. She is 49 years old and lives with my stepfather. To help with finances, she babysits several children in her home during the week. The problem is that she never leaves the house, and if she’s invited somewhere, she always says she is sick. Once in a while, she will go out in the yard, but never any farther than her own yard. When I graduated, she didn’t even show up for my graduation. I have my own apartment and I’m planning to get married next year. I’d like to be able to share many things and do some planning with her, but whenever I invite her out for lunch, she always seems to be sick and we never get time together. My older brothers and sisters also think she is out of touch and secluding herself from the outside world. We all agree that she probably needs help, but we don’t know what to do. Do you have any suggestions? — Kelly, Fort Wayne, Ind. Kelly, Your mom’s behavior is definitely troubling. You and one of your siblings should have a serious talk with your stepfather and see what he thinks can be done. Does she ever go out of the house with him? If not, he must also be frustrated. You should also let him know that all of the children are concerned that she is behaving much like a hermit. Perhaps he will have some insight and also some ideas for helping reach your mom and encourage her to participate in a few activities away from her house. If all attempts to pry your mom away from the house fail, I would suggest that a family member contact a professional therapist -- and soon. © Creators Syndicate Get your news Roz McCoy anywhere, anytime at Friday, Sept. 11th 9pm Saturday, Sept. 12th 8pm & 10:30pm www.smithfieldtimes.com! Admission $13 Reservations: 757-595-2800 www.cozzys.com 9700 Warwick Blvd. Newport News, VA The Smithfield Times – Wed., Sept. 9, 2015 – Page 5 Reaching out to a Chinese city By Alyse Stanley quest since Luohe is home unanimously to proceed to their parent company. with the Community of What do a Virginia town Isle of Wight County and Friendship exchange. The of 8,000 people and a Chi- Smithfield officials will Isle of Wight Board of Sunese city of 3 million have review it before extending pervisors also approved a in common? Smithfield the invitation. motion to send a letter to Foods. At their Sept 1 meeting, Luohe at its Aug. 27 meetAnd now the two are the Town Council voted ing. entering into a Community of Friendship. Smithfield Mayor T. Carter Williams and Isle of Wight County AdministraSmithfield Times file photo tor Anne Seward recentEfforts to find a use for the Stoup property at the foot of the James River ly met with the mayor of Bridge have thus far been unsuccessful. Luohe, China to discuss collaboration between the two counties. WH Group, the parent company of Smithfield Fine Wines, Craft Beers and Terrific Coastal Gifts Foods, is headquartered in Luohe. The parties discussed entering into what they later called a Community of Friendship, a municipal Located at the By Diana McFarland kayak launch, boardwalk, Al Casteen was concerned exchange to promote comNews editor an events pavilion, such as with people trying to ac- munity development. After being rejected for for weddings, and a visitor cess the property with cars As part of the exchange, a state planning grant for center. coming off the James River a contingent of officials the Stoup property, Isle of The old garage on the Bridge at 55 mph or more. and residents from Luohe, Wight County is now seek- property could be converted Isle of Wight Project China would be invited to ing bids from vendors for into a visitor center and Manager Jamie Oliver said visit Smithfield. other possible uses. kayak and canoe rental the county was meeting Due to the country’s Included in that plan is space, Ring said. with VDOT to discuss ac- communist government, demolishing the house and Exasperated, Newport cess, safety and the possible the individuals would need allowing VDOT to place its District Supervisor Buzz use of the emergency signal to be formally invited to trailer off to the side of the Bailey wanted to know what on Route 17. come to the United States in one-acre site, for which the happened to the person who The Board of Supervi- order to leave the country, county paid $1 million in offered to buy the property. sors voted 3-2 to allow staff said Williams. 2008. Did the person die or go to issue RFP’s for possible Smithfield Foods reThe VDOT trailer, now away, he asked, and named vendors for the property, as quested they write the relocated on the southbound an offer of about $140,000. well as demolish the house approach to the James Riv“This is a terrible in- for $20,000. er Bridge, is considered vestment for the county,” Bailey and Casteen cast unsightly and moving it Bailey said. the two dissenting votes. off to the side of the Stoup The county has received The property has several property would allow it to a few offers for the property, BUILDING be screened by trees, said but none have been consid- challenges, including being or located in a flood plain and Isle of Wight County Ad- ered viable. It is currently no public water or sewer. REMODELING? ministrator Anne Seward. assessed at $435,700. As for the house, it’s also The Board decided to The Stoup property beWE CAN HELP! considered unattractive put the property, along with came controversial because and is a barrier to selling some county-owned parcels, the purchase was made •Windows & Doors •Architectural Features •High Grade Lumber the property, said Isle of up for sale in 2012. without public input and Replacement Specialist Colonial Reproductions Treated & Decking Wight Assistant Director Seward said this was her without any obvious pur•Engineered Floors •Quality Prehung Doors •Custom Millwork Columns - Mantels - Mouldings In-House Design Any Sizeor Style of Economic Development staff ’s best recommenda- pose other than to prevent Amy Ring. tion to deal “with the cards undesirable uses. Also, a Suggested uses of the we were dealt.” portion of the property is property now include a Smithfield Supervisor under water. Exclusively for the Quality Conscious Staff writer Are you interested in the Stoup site? (757) 357-7700 CUSTOM BUILDER SUPPLY COMPANY OFFICE • 757-229-5150 Williamsburg www.custombuildersupply.com Page 6 – The Smithfield Times – Wed., Sept. 9, 2015 ‘TipSoft’ allows digital and text crime tips Staff writer “I’ve got less than 100 deputies for 35,000 people. Now I’ve got 35,000 pairs of eyes,” said Lt. Tommy Potter of the Isle of Wight County Sherriff ’s Office. He was speaking about TipSoft, a line of software products that allows people to send tips to the police without ever speaking over the phone. The Isle of Wight-Smithfield-Windsor Crime Line recently updated its arsenal to include TipSoft text, mobile application and web interactivity services. To text a tip to the sheriff ’s office, address the text to CRIMES and begin the message with IOWCL. Neither is case-sensitive. The sheriff ’s office does not receive any personal information, as the system assigns a randomized number to each tip. Authorities can respond to the tipster using said number if more information is required. However, if the individual does not wish to continue the exchange, he or she can text “stop” at the end of their message. Tipsoft also has an app, TipSubmit. Available free through Apple and Android stores, users input the information they have about a suspect into a series of blank prompts. This encourages a consistency in the information gathered, said Potter. With the human element behind the crime line, that is more difficult to achieve, he said. TipSubmit also allows users to send their tips to locations across the country. Finally, tipsters can visit www.tipsubmit.com and turn in information online. All infor mation submitted becomes stored on a server, the location of which is unknown to the sheriff ’s office or the crime line volunteers. “ We c a n n o t s t r e s s enough that it’s anonymous,” said Potter. “Every step of the way, there are safeguards. And there are safeguards guarding those safeguards.” The Isle of Wight-Smithfield-Windsor Crime Line is part of the Greater Hamp- ton Roads Crime Lines, in which each county has an individual line run by civilian volunteers. All share the same number: 888-LOCK-U-UP. Volunteers answer the calls at a central station before directing them to individual sheriff offices. A major weakness of the crime line is time delay, said Potter. Tips received at the call center over the weekend might have to wait two or three days before being reviewed. Potter said most tipsters call after they have seen a crime reported on the news or in the newspaper — a significant time after it occurred. Because of this, the crime line became somewhat known as a system for cold case tips, he said. Still, the new method of sending tips won’t replace the crime line, he said, “that’s still our bread and butter.” And one of the biggest advantages with the new services is their appeal to younger generations, said Windsor Chief of Police Rodney Riddle. Cellphones are their method of communication, and with TipSoft the police can cater to this, he said. “The younger generation has a sense of anonymity with the app or text prompt” that they don’t necessarily feel with phone conversations, he said. Rewards of up to $1,000 can be dispensed for tips that lead to the arrest and successful prosecution of an individual — even ones sent through anonymous text, web or mobile. The Isle of Wight-Smithfield-Windsor Crime Line is run by volunteers overseen by a board of volunteer representatives from Smithfield, Isle of Wight and Windsor. All funds to continue its operation, including those used to update to TipSoft, come from public donations. They perform local fundraisers, including their annual “Top Cop” awards dinner. The group meets every third Tuesday at noon at Smithfield Center. Volunteers are always welcomed, said Edmund Mortimer, a member of the board. Specializing in SMALL BUSINESS & INDIVIDUAL TAXATION T. Craig Stallings, CPA 210 Main St., Smithfield, VA 23430 (757) 365-0200 phone G1-091912 By Alyse Stanley STALLINGS & ASSOCIATES, P.C. (757) 365-0111 fax craig@stallingsandassociates.com These Local Churches welcome you and your family to weekly services 300 Smithfield Blvd., Smithfield 10270 Central Hill Rd, Sat. Vigil Mass 5pm; Sun, Mass 9am Windsor 357-2225 Weekday Mass: Tues & Thu at noon, at 6:30pm Fri at 9am, Sun School 10am, Sun Worship 11am Wed Phone: 365-0579 Fax: 757-365-4749 Pastor: Fr. Oscar . Paraiso Wed Bible Study & email: admoin@cgsparish.org Prayer Meeting 7pm 1/16 www.cgsparish.org Healing Waters Worship Center 12172 Smith’s Neck Rd, Carrollton, VA 356-1515; www.hwwcnow.com Pastor William M. McCart, Senior Pastor Sunday am Worship 9 & 11am w kid’s church Wednesday worship 7pm & Bible study with Girsl Club & Royal Rangers Nursery available for all services 12/15 Mill Swamp Baptist Church Sandy Mount fall revival Sandy Mount Sandy Mount Baptist Church is hosting its fall revival, Sept. 8-10, beginning at 7 p.m. each night. The guest revival speaker will be the Rev. Dr. Melvin T. Blackwell of Little Zion Baptist Church, Smithfield. All are invited to attend. Woodland UMC Woodland United Meth- obituaries Obituaries are posted as received, complete with visitation and funeral dates/times at: www.smithfieldtimes.com Peggy Joyner Britt Peggy Ann Joyner Britt, 72, passed away on Monday, Aug. 31, 2015. She was a loving mom and a giving person and will be missed by all who knew her. Peggy is preceded in death by her parents, Bennie Edward Joyner and Esther (Peachie) Viola Britt Joyner Crumpler Crocker; sisters, Christine Clark and Marjorie Lilly; and brothers, B.E. Joyner and John B. Joyner. L e f t t o ch e r i s h h e r memory is her husband, Kenneth L. Britt; daughter, Penny Gardner; son, Bill Lynn; grandchildren, Ashley Beale, Samantha Whitman, Amber Irvin and Christopher Lynn; brother, Bobby Lee Crumpler; sisters, Mary Alice Freeman and Jean Paige Goodrich; 10 great-grandchildren and numerous nieces and nephews. A funeral service was held on Friday, Sept. 4, 11 a.m. at the R.W. Baker & Co. Funeral Home, Wakefield Chapel and officiated by Pastor Curtis Faison. Burial followed in the Tucker Swamp Baptist Church Cemetery. Condolences may be posted at www.rwbakerfh.com. odist Church is hosting a community barbecue for the Orbit area on Saturday, Sept. 26 from 3-7 p.m. The church is located at 20051 Orbit Road. For more information, call 630-6518. Campbell’s Chapel The usher’s ministry of Campbell’s Chapel AME Church will be observing another year’s journey on Sunday, Sept. 20th at 3 p.m. The Rev. Gilbert Harper and Brown’s AME Church of Smithfield is the guest church. Shiloh Baptist Bible studies at Shiloh Baptist Church have returned to its regular schedule on the first and third Wednesday evenings at 6:30 p.m. and noon day on the second and fourth Tuesdays at 11 a.m. The annual Rainbow Tea is Sept. 13, 2 p.m. New Bethany UCC Annual Homecoming/ Family and Friends Day is Sept. 13 at 3 p.m. Elder Clarence Sellers and the congregation of Mount Tabor COGC, Smithfield will render the service. Fall revival will be held nightly Sept. 14-16 at 7 p.m. Guest pastors are as follows: Mon- day, the Rev. Dr. Tremayne Johnson of Zion Baptist, Newport News; Tuesday, Pastor Wendell Waller of Christian Home Baptist, Windsor; Wednesday, the Rev. Dr. James E. Jones Jr. of Grace Fellowship Worship Center, Virginia Beach. For more information, call 357-5092. Solomon’s Temple Leading Lady Day service will be held on Sunday, Sept. 13, 2015 at 9 a.m. to celebrate Leading Lady Elder Edith R. Shivers. Mt. Sinai Mt. Sinai Baptist Church is hosting homecoming services Sunday, Sept. 13, with the Rev. P.D. Wells Jr. delivering the 11 a.m. service, followed by the Rev. Dr. James Harrison of Main Street Baptist Church delivering the homecoming service at 2 p.m. Weekly revival services will be held Tuesday, Sept. 15 through Thursday, Sept. 17 at 7:30 p.m. Guests for the week include the Rev. Leslie Holloway of Oak Grove Baptist on Tuesday; the Rev. Gilbert Harper of Brown’s A.M.E. and the Rev. Daniel Baltimore of Mt. Nebo Baptist Church. Big bang rattles neighbors By LAURA PETERS The News Leader MIDDLEBROOK, Va. (AP) — Over the past few weeks, residents of the quiet town of Middlebrook have been hearing loud explosions at random times. “The big booms were rather scary,” said resident Lynn Norley. She star ted hearing them a week ago out at her farm on Dutch Hollow Road in the early afternoon and evening. “The first one we heard we thought was like dynamite or something,” she said. “On the other side of the farm we heard it. A little bit later we were walking up the steps of my house. We could actually feel in on our steps. It was really frightening.” She thought they were bombs, terrorist attacks or something unexplainable. “The dogs were terrified, they were just running for cover,” Norley said. Shortly after hearing them the first time, she was at a friend’s home for dinner, just down the road and the booms happened again. Her neighbors had heard the loud explosions one other time, she said. “They said the same thing ... their horses were scared, we were all very concerned about this,” Norley said. “It’s one thing people for people to do target practice. Having things sound like bombs going off is not good.” Middlebrook Fire Department’s Chief Operational Officer Jason Shultz says the cause of the racket is Tannerite, an exploding target. Hunters and those doing target practice have turned to using the exploding targets for an added adrenaline rush. According to Henley Gabeau, who writes a weekly Middlebrook newsletter sent out via email, many residents had been talking and reporting the loud explosions. “It sounds like a very loud firework,” said Kevin Harris of Dominion Outdoors in Fishersville. The sport shop, which specializes in guns and hunting gear, sells Tannerite and other exploding target brands. According to Shultz, if someone hears an explosion and is concerned, they should call 911. “The explosive targets, depending on how they are used, can emit a smoke or dust clouds and make a lot of noise,” he said. “There are many different factors in the size of the explosion because the Tannerite is shipped in its separate components per federal shipping laws and then has to be mixed by the end user of the product.” Harris said there are various different target options that can be used for target practice. There’s a range in noises some will make, like a cowbell can be attached to a target. Some are made of iron and make a ping sound. The ones filled with the Tannerite mixture make the loudest noise, Harris said. Tannerite combines ammonium nitrate, which acts as an oxidizer, and aluminum powder for the fuel, according to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. When the two separate powders that are mixed and shaken it produces an explosive material. The combination is relatively stable, nonflammable and is detonated with a high-velocity shot, which makes it explode and produces a loud sound. Tannerite falls under the same laws as black powder and all other explosives that are exempt for sporting use, its website said. Harris said it’s not a huge seller at his store. “It’s just for fun,” he said. “It gives something for people to aim at and the reward of hitting it is the loud sound.” As a way to avoid further confusion, Shultz offers a suggestion. “I would also mention that if someone is going to be using the Tannerite or other similar explosive targets that they should call the Emergency Communications Center prior to their use at 540-245-5061,” he said. “This will allow the dispatchers to be aware ahead of time of the use of the explosive targets and will allow them to notify any dispatched emergency responders of this information.” Good Shepherd Catholic Church Central Hill Baptist Church 6329 Mill Swamp Rd, Ivor, VA; 357-2575 “A church that is alive is worth the drive!” Sunday: Sun. Sch. 9:30am, Worship 10:45. Camp fire ministries for teens 7-9pm Sundays. Wednesday 6:00-7:30 pm “THE LOFT” childen’s program, bible studies. Calvary Baptist Church 12/15 To find out how you can have your Church’s services listed here, call: (757) 357-3288 Sandy Mount Baptist Church 16091 Scott’s Factory Rd, Smithfield Church School - 9:00-9:45am Prayer & Praise - 10-10:15 am Worship Service 10:15 am Bible Study - 2nd & 4th Wed. @7pm Office Hours - 2-5 pm 12/15 12/15 Rev. Dr.Bobby L. Taylor Pastor 15155Turner Drive, Smithfield,VA 23430 Pastor Dan E. Gray Phone: 357-5718 “A Church Home for Your Family” Sunday: 8:30 am; 11 am; 6:30 pm Sunday School: 10:00 am Wednesday Bible Study, Prayer Mtg. & Children’s Ministry @ 7 pm 2/16 Smithfield Baptist Church 100 Wainwright Dr., Smithfield, 357-2536 Sun. Sch. 9:40am/Worship 8:30am & 11am Wed, 5:15 Cherub Choir, 5:30 Dinner, 6:30 Bible Studies & Missions, 7:30 Adult Choir, 7:30 Children’s Choir Dr. Donald R. Rhoton, Pastor sbchurch@smithfieldbaptist.org 1/16 Joy Church For Worship Service Hours see web address: www.smithfieldjoy.com Rev. Dr. Bryan Brooks - Senior Pastor Offers Professional Pastoral Counseling Adding Joy in a complicated world. Main Office: 320 Grace St., Smithfield, VA 1/16 757-542-3070 Trinity United Methodist Church 201 Cedar St., Sunday School 9:30 Worship 8:30 & 11am, 9:30am Rivers of Life 357-3659 12/15 Benn’s United Methodist Church Christ Episcopal Church Sunday Services 8:30 and 11:00am Sunday School 9:45am Rev. O.H. Burton, Jr., Ph. 357-3373 Bennsumc@yahoo,com 1/16 Woodland United Methodist Church 20051 Orbit Rd. Windsor, VA 23487 Traditional Worship Service 9:30AM Sunday School 10:45AM Rev. Mandy Newman (757) 357-7499 www.woodlandumcwindsor.org FB: Woodland United Methodist Church 8/16 Be At Home Community of Believers 15042 Carrollton Blvd , Ste K Carrollton, Virginia 23314 Sunday Worship Celebration: 10:15 am Wednesday Word Revelation: 7:00 pm 3rd Friday: Family & Youth Night: 7–9:00pm 4th Sunday: Family and Friends Day: Pastor Ricky B. Wamble 757-603-1790 Revvrick1@gmail.com 9/15 111 S. Church St. Corner Church & Main Smithfield • 357-2826 9AM – Contemporary Service 11AM – Children’s Chapel 11AM – Traditional Service Rev. Derek Pringle, Rector www.christchurchsmithfield.org 6/15 Bethany Presbyterian Church 5358 Zuni Circle, Zuni, Va. 23898 Sunday School 9:30am Worship 10:30am Rev. Dr. Steven Frazier, Pastor 9/15 www.bethanyzuni.org Oakland Christian United Church of Christ (757) 255-4353 Rev. Greg Ryan,M.Div.,M.A. (pastorryan@oaklanducc.com) Services: Sunday at 8:45am and 11am Sunday School (all ages) 10am www.Oaklanducc.com 8/15 Smithfield Assembly of God Church Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints 1800 South Church Street, Smithfield 357-5539 Sunday Sch. 9:45am Worship Service 11:00 amWednesday Evening (including Children’s Services) 7:00pm 12/15 Donald E. Watkins, Pastor List your church’s services, location and contact information here, call: (757) 357-3288 Sunday Sacrament Service -- 11AM Sunday School -- 12:15PM Young Men & Women -- Wednesday 7PM Bishop Paul Stoecker -- 757-621-8091 10/15 Riverview United Methodist 10696 Smith’s Neck Road P. O. Box 288; Rescue, VA 23424-0288 Sunday Bible Study 10:00 a.m. Sunday Worship 11:00 a.m. Michael D. Guminsky, Pastor 757-645-5687 e-mail: michaelguminsky@vaumc.org 5/16 Carrollton Holiness Church 16144 Carrollton Blvd, Carrollton, VA 23314 Phone: 757-238-8866 Sunday School 10:10 am; Worship Service/Children’s Church 11:00 am; 6:30 pm Thursday Worship Service 6:30 pm Free Hot Meals 2nd Monday, Red Oaks Mobile Home Park 2:30 - 4:30 pm Free Hot Meals 4th Monday, Jersey Park Appartments. 2:30 - 4:30 pm 3/16 Words of Encouragement “Fantasy is a necessary ingredient in living, it's a way of looking at life through the wrong end of a telescope, and that enables you to laugh at life's realities.” -Dr. Seuss Brought to you by Rev. Greg Ryan, Pastor Oakland Christian United Church of Christ www.oaklanducc.com Call 757-357-3288 to obtain info on how to include your church and/or pastor in the Have Faith and Words of Encouragement sections Proffers The Smithfield Times – Wed., Sept. 9, 2015 – Page 7 When buying or selling, try... • Continued from p. 1 tary school-aged children, Rudnicki said. Westside Elementary and Hardy Elementary, where many of these children would be enrolled, already exceed capacity. Accommodating more students would require $4,504 per lot, said Rudnicki. The project would also generate several middle and high school-aged students. Smithfield Middle and High Schools are currently at capacity, and additional students would not push them over, so no additional proffers are required for those students. Other neglected areas of impact included several county services such as libraries, animal control and courts. The combined, estimated infrastructure cost per lot for these elements would be $675.56, he said. Rudnicki also pointed out that the developers offered the entirety of the proffers to Smithfield. The amount would be divided amongst the town’s recue squad, fire department, police department and rec- Pierceville Proffers Developer’s (Hearndon) Offer Recreational Facilities: Smithfield Police Department: Rescue Squad: Fire Department: Total: Isle of Wight County Estimate Proffers to Town Recreational Facilities: Smithfield Police Department: Total: Proffers to County Rescue Squad: Fire Department: Libraries: Animal Control: Courts: Schools: Total: Combined Total Proffers: reational facilities. The county provides rescue squad and fire department services, and therefore should receive any money to offset increased use of services, he said. According to this argument, the town would receive only the amount offered for police services and recreational activities, $511.94 $597.92 $299.00 $1,087.27 $2,496.13 The Smithfield Times Classified Call now for information! 357-3288 $511.94 $597.92 $1,109.86 $299.00 $1,087.27 $285.00 $43.09 $347.48 $4,504.00 $6,565.83 $7,675.69 totaling just over $1,000, said Rudnicki. The developers would then proffer the remaining $6,565.83 to Isle of Wight for their services, including those neglected in the initial offer. These include animal control, court, fire department, library, school and rescue squad services according to Rudnicki. Staff photo by Diana McFarland County’s plan for a bike trail would mean paving a 10-foot wide multi-use lane of asphalt alongside Church Street. Bike • Continued from p. 1 the county’s portion of the trail that runs along Battery Park and Nike Park roads to Nike Park for a total of four miles. Mayor Carter Williams and Council member Milton Cook would rather use the money the town has committed to the project to construct a sidewalk with curb and gutters that match the sidewalk that already runs along a portion of South Church Street. That sidewalk is concrete, about four to five feet wide and has curb and gutter. Council member Randy Pack is OK with asphalt, as long as it’s attractive and fits in with the rest of town. However, he wants to see a picture of what it’s going to look like before actually spending any money. So far, the design is only about 30 percent complete, Pack said. But as far as having a connection between both sides of town and all the way to Nike Park — “that’s not a bad thing” and is “forward thinking.” Vice Mayor Andrew Gregory and Council member Mike Smith don’t care if it’s a 10-foot wide asphalt bike trail or concrete sidewalks as long as it’s attractive and allows pedestrian access. Either version would help clean up driveways and entrances along that portion of South Church Street that are now ill-defined, Smith said. Gregory said it would be a boost to businesses along that portion of roadway who have long felt like “red-headed stepchildren of the town” because other areas have gotten upgrades and that part hasn’t. The 10-foot width is an American with Disabilities Act requirement, and asphalt is being used because it is an approved material and less expensive than concrete, said Isle of Wight County spokesman Don Robertson. So far, the town has verbally committed about $1.2 million of its VDOT urban funds to the bike trail project, estimated at a total of $7.3 million. Of that total, about $5 million is from state and federal grants and the remainder is a match from Isle of Wight County. Isle of Wight has spent about $1 million in planning and design, and Oliver was asking the town to commit about $200,000 to begin the planning and engineering for Smithfield’s portion of the project, Cook said. Cook is reluctant to spend the money because, if that portion is ultimately deemed unfeasible due higher than anticipated costs, then the town loses the $200,000. Gregory wants to get a firmer grasp of how much urban funds are actually available before making a firmer commitment. Williams takes issue with the width of the bike trail proposed by the county, because of the number of businesses and residences along that portion of South Church Street. It’s already a challenge getting in and out of 7-Eleven — imagine taking up 10-12 feet of the parking lot with a bike trail, he said. Besides, Cook doesn’t see the point in building a 10-foot asphalt bike path that would allow access to Windsor Castle Park when the park doesn’t allow bicycles on its walking trails. Pack said a bike trail has to be at least eight feet wide to allow for two-way traffic. Efforts to reach council members Denise Tynes and Connie Chapman were • See BIKE, p. 8 HAMPTON ROADS CHAMBER OF COMMERCE SMALL BUSINESS OF THE YEAR “SUFFOLK WINNER” THE TEAM THAT GIVES YOU THE PERSONAL SERVICE YOU DESERVE Investment Management | Financial Planning 1510 Breezeport Way, Suite 800 | Suffolk, VA 23435 Page 8 – The Smithfield Times – Wed., Sept. 9, 2015 Bike Supers approve ATV trail By Diana McFarland News editor • Continued from p. 7 unsuccessful. When the town of Smithfield initially discussed committing its urban funds to the bike trail project in 2010, the plan was to build a five-foot sidewalk for its portion of the bike trail. The urban funds were originally set aside years ago to add a tur n lane along that portion of South Church Street, but ultimately state budget cuts and high costs caused those plans to be abandoned. Smithfield can reallocate its urban funds for a sidewalk outside the realm of the county’s project, said VDOT spokesperson Laurie Simmons. There is no deadline for use of the funds, but if the town does pull out from Isle of Wight’s umbrella, it would have to administer the project itself. Currently, Isle of Wight County is administrating the entire length of the Nike Park bike trail. The county must maintain movement on the project for state and federal funds to remain available, Simmons said. If Smithfield pulls out of its commitment to the bike trail project, it will not affect Isle of Wight’s portion, Simmons added. However, if Isle of Wight were to drop the project, it would lose the $1 million it has already spent, Robertson said. M e a n w h i l e, I s l e o f Wight has a non-binding settlement with 21 of the 26 properties along the trail allowing them to build a pathway on the land, Oliver said. For properties not willing to negotiate, the county has approved the use of eminent domain on a case-by-case basis. Development for the trail has been in the planning stage since 2006 and is part of Isle of Wight’s Pedestrian and Bicycle Facilities Master Plan. Staff writer Alyse Stanley contributed to this story. The Board of Supervisors Thursday agreed 3-2 to apply for a grant to create an ATV trail at Heritage Park. Windsor District Supervisor Dee Dee Darden and Hardy District Supervisor Rudolph Jefferson cast the dissenting votes. Darden and Jefferson were concerned with safety and enforcing compliance with signing a waiver and following the rules. “Kids don’t need to be on ATVs,” Jefferson said. The proposed trail, part of the park’s 2010 master plan, is envisioned as a oneof-a-kind beginner facility geared for children learn- Writ dismissed By Diana McFarland News editor SUFFOLK — A Suffolk judge ruled in favor of Isle of Wight Tuesday and dismissed a petition to stop the county from building a water line to Gatling Pointe. The petition for a writ of mandamus, filed by five residents — Betsy Eagan, Lawrence Pitt, Albert Burckard, Bill Egan and Herb DeGroft — alleged the proposed water line violates the county’s comprehensive plan and that the Isle of Wight Board of Supervisors violated the Code of Virginia by authorizing funding for it. Suffolk Circuit Court Judge Robert H. Sandwich Jr. said he was hesitant to involve the court in the legislative process, particularly since the waterline has not yet begun construction, said Burckard, who was present for the decision. The plaintiffs have 30 days to appeal and are discussing that option, but want to see what the Planning Commission does with the waterline when it meets Sept. 22, Burckard said. “I think we did what we intended to do, what we had to do,” Burckard said. Water • Continued from p. 1 standing before the water line is completed. to accompany the Nike Park “We can’t continue to water line, said Jay Du- provide utilities without an ell, environmental health agreement,” he said. manager with the western The Board of SuperviTidewater health district. sors has continually refused Smithfield Town Attor- to have a dialogue with the ney William Riddick insist- town about the project, said ed the Council and Board Cook. come to a mutual underHe said the Council must demand their concerns be taken seriously in future proceedings. In attendance at the August Board of Supervisors meeting was Vice-Mayor Andrew Gregory. He said the Board’s frequent referral to the water line as a “win-win” situation for the town and county particular- ly worried him. Currently, Smithfield charges Isle of Wight County $6.04 per 1,000 gallons for its sewage services. This cost would rise should the Nike Park project be completed without an accompanying sewer line, said Mayor T. Carter Williams. OLDE TOWNE REALTY INC. Property Management Service WEVSHFLDOL]HLQrHQWDOSrRSHrW\PDQDJHPHQWRIVLQJOH IDPLO\KRPHVDQGFRPPHrFLDOSrRSHrWLHVLQWKH Tidewater area. EOLPLQDWHWKHKDVVOHVRIrHQWLQJSrRSHrW\E\ DOORwLQJXVWRDVVXPHWKHrHVSRQVLELOLW\IRr\RX. We’ve Moved to: 14170 Carrollton BLVD, Carrollton VA 23314 (757) 630-8664 va-west@exis.net www.TrailercountryLLC.com 1oldetowne@gmail.com AVDIXOO-serYLFHPDQDJHPHQW IirPwHRIIHr: Tenant credit screening 3HULRGLFSURSHUW\LQVSHFWLRQV WD[UHFRUGV 0DLQWHQDQFHVHUYLFHV &ROOHFWLRQVDQGHYLFWLRQV 1RKLGGHQIHHVRUDGPLQLVWUDWLYHFRVWV 5HIHUHQFHVSURYLGHGRQUHTXHVW “We manage all properties as if they were our own.” Give us a call today at 757-357-4156 ing to ride ATVs, said Isle of Wight County Director of Parks and Recreation Mark Furlo. The total cost of the project is estimated at about $300,000 and the grant, if awarded by the Virginia Department of Conservation Recreational Trail Program, would require a 20 percent match, which is estimated at about $60,000, Furlo said, adding that a portion of that could be offset by volunteer labor. As for liability issues, Furlo said the county is protected by sovereign immunity, and that immunity is even stronger for parks and recreation facilities. There would be an issue if the county planned to charge a fee, but it does not, Furlo said. Furlo said the site appears to be amenable for the project, and a buffer of trees will remain to cut down on noise. Riders will also need to sign a waiver before using the course, he added. Those who do not sign a waiver can be charged with trespassing, Furlo said. Cell: (757)572-3092 Team to Make It Work!! Have You Heard: “ A goal without a plan is just a wish” –Unknown Smithfield Sales Center 319-C Main Street, Smithfield, VA 23430 (757) 356-5541 Johng550@gmail.com Prudential Towne Realty is an a liate of Towne Bank. An independently owned and operated member of Prudential Real Estate A ates, Inc. SMITHFIELD DENTAL A Division of Atlantic Dental Care, PLC 12746 Courthouse Hwy. 357-6779 Su McNeil, D.M.D. James E. Harrison, Jr., D.D.S. Eric E. Smith, D.D.S., P.C. 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For non-members a $10 premium and $25 materials fee will apply. For more info or to register call The Arts Center @319 at 357-7707. Friday, Sept. 11 BLUEGRASS CONCERT—Carrollton Volunteer Fire Department will host its monthly “Firehouse Bluegrass” music benefit concert Friday, Sept. 11, 7:30 p.m. at Fire Station 10, 15020 Carrollton Blvd. The concert will feature Heritage Bluegrass Band of Richmond. A donation of $5 is requested. CRUISE-IN—Daniels Performance Group final Friday night Cruise-In, Sept. 11, 6-9 p.m., rain or shine. Open to all vehicles. $3 donation for show cars. Proceeds help benefit Toys for Tots. Food vendor and DJ. Wear red, white and blue or display a flag in vehicle to remember and honor the fallen of 9/11. Daniels is located at 20128 IWIP Road, Smithfield. For more information call 356-1156. Saturday, Sept. 12 RIDING LESSONS—Mill Swamp Indian Horses is hosting two sets of classes – “Introduction to Natural Horsemanship” and “Introduction to Trail Riding.” Both classes are for novices or those who have not ridden in years each Saturday in September from 2:15-4:15 p.m. For more information contact Steve Edwards at msindianhorses@aol.com. YARD SALE—Paul D. Camp Community College will hold a community yard sale/flea market Saturday, Sept. 12, 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. on the Franklin campus, 100 North College Drive. All proceeds will go toward incentives for GED and adult education students. Booths are $25 for a 12 X 12 space and include a table and chair. Contact Stacy Pauley, 569-6790, for more information. DIABETES EXPO—The Victory Over Diabetes Franklin Health and Wellness Expo will be held Saturday, Sept. 12 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Paul D. Camp Community College Regional Workforce Development Center, 100 North College Drive, Franklin. Health-related activities, children’s activities, door prizes and complimentary Subway lunch are provided. For more information contact Avanti Allen-Benson at 424-6662 ext. 3277 or email aallenbenson@diabetes.org. Staff photos by Diana McFarland Lex Stevenson, 2, and his mom, Rebecca, checked out some heritage goats recently at the Gwaltney replica farm. IW once considered the “frontier” Visit a replica of a 1600s colonial farm this month By Diana McFarland News editor R eleased from indentured servitude, Thomas Gwaltney arrived in what is now Surry County in the mid-1600s. Gwaltney settled near what is now called Pons in Isle of Wight, and eventually received a land patent for 200 acres. In the mid-1600s, Isle of Wight was considered the frontier, the edge of the British Empire, said Steve Edwards, one of Gwaltney’s descendants. Edwards has recently recreated what Gwaltney’s early frontier farm might have looked like at Mill Swamp Indian Horses, and the site is open to the public each Saturday evening this month at about 6:30 p.m. In the center of the clearing a wood fire smolders. Circling the fire is a tiny wooden cabin with a loft bed and crude stove, a tobacco barn, smokehouse and corncrib. The recreated farm is also home to colonial-era crops and goats, such as San Clementes, heritage pigs and colonial-era chickens — in between fox attacks, that is, Edwards joked. The centerpiece of Edwards’ replica farm, however, is his herd of colonial-era horses — Spanish Corolla and Choctaw ponies, descendants of those brought over by early Spanish explorers. The ponies are part of Edwards’ non-profit breeding program designed to restock the two breeds, which are both endangered. The Corollas are from North Carolina, while the Choctaws are more recently from Oklahoma. They arrived there along with the Choctaw and Cherokee Indian tribes along the famed Trail of Tears, Edwards said. Visitors to the evening program will also encounter a costumed interpreter describing what life was like in the mid-1600s, Edwards said. For example, by 1650, there were no Indians left in Isle of Wight County, having been destroyed by massacre and disease, This small settler’s cabin contains a loft bed and a crude but they were living just on the stove. Other replica outbuildings include a corncrib and a other side of the Blackwater Riv- tobacco drying barn. er and were a concern, Edwards said. Gwaltney’s descendants have pieced together Thomas’ life, and learned he was born in Wales in Beginning at 6:30 p.m. each Saturday evening in September, guests will 1613 and came to the colonies by be invited to observe the training techniques that have been used for over a decade to tame and train wild horses, such as the Corolla wild way of Barbados at the age of 21horses that live at Mill Swamp Indian Horses. 22, probably seeking adventure, said another local descendent, Mill Swamp Indian Horses and the Gwaltney Frontier Farm is located Gerald Gwaltney. off Moonlight Road outside of Smithfield. Seating is limited for the four An indentured servant, Thomperformances in September. There is no charge to attend. The Gwaltney as arrived in Jamestown in 1635 Frontier Farm, Inc is a 501 (c) 5 non-profit breed conservation program and came to Isle of Wight a few that is administered completely by volunteers. Want to go? • See FARM, p. 11 For more information contact Steve Edwards at msindianhorses@aol.com. VFW BREAKFAST—VFW Post 8545 invites the community to a breakfast of salted fried spot fish, Saturday, Sept. 12 and 26, 7-10 a.m. at the VFW post located at 223 Washington St. across from the Smithfield Library. Additional menu items include scrambled eggs, bacon, sausage, grits, biscuits, cornbread, mixed fruit and omelets to order. Coffee and juice are included in the $8 donation. All proceeds benefit local veterans and community projects. STEAK DINNER—The Dendron Volunteer Fire Department will hold a steak dinner Sept. 12 from 5-7 p.m. at their firehouse at 325 Rolfe Hwy, Dendron. Menu includes steak, salad, baked potato, roll and dessert. $15 donation per plate. Monday, Sept. 14 CITIZENS ASSOC.—Dr. Jim Thornton, superintendent of IW County schools will be the guest speaker of the IW Citizens’ Association Monday Sept. 14, 7 p.m. at Sentara St. Luke’s on Brewers Neck Boulevard. For more information, call 357-5352. • See CALENDAR p. 10 Liam Stevenson, 7, is learning to tame and ride the Corolla The Gwaltney replica farm also includes pigs, but they’re a mix of modern and heritage breeds. Steve Edwards greets one of the pigs, who are quite friendly. horses. Save $500 * *Any job over $3,000. Good only when presented at time of free inspection. Not to be combined with any other offer. Jesse Waltz, PE & Stella Waltz, Owners Foundation Problems? Damp Crawl Space? Wet Basement? Call Today! 888-717-7058 F REE Inspections & Estimates! Page 10 - The Smithfield Times-Wed., Sept. 9, 2015 What’s Happening?... At your local with you, your neighbors, your community... Let us help you get the word out! Send us your ideas for stories, items for the community calendar, letters to the editor,... tell us about people, places and events that impact the lives of residents in Isle of Wight and Surry counties. Send the who, what, when, where, why and contact information by fax: 357-0404 email: news@smithfieldtimes.com telephone: 357-3288, mail: P.O. Box 366, Smithfield, VA 23430 or visit the office located at 228 Main Street in the heart of downtown Smithfield The Smithfield Times offers the Community Calendar to promote events of community interest by nonprofit or community organizations within this area. The deadline for submitting items for the current week is noon Monday. calendar • Continued from p. 13 HABITAT AT HOME—Learn about conservation practices in your landscape and the value of native plants and wildlife. Surry County Historical Society and Museums will host guest speaker Carol Heiser of the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries at the Surry Recreation Center, Monday Sept. 14, 7 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 15 SOCIAL SERVICES—The public is invited to attend the meeting of the Isle of Wight Department of Social Service Board on Tuesday, Sept. 15, 4 p.m. in the Public Services Building, Isle of Wight County Courthouse Complex, 17100 Monument Circle. Wednesday, Sept. 16 AARP—Chapter 5309 of the AARP meets Wednesday, Sept. 16, 10 a.m. at the Windsor Ruritan Clubhouse, 14 Community Drive in Windsor. Jackie Langston of Jackie Langston Cruises will speak on “It’s never too late.” Bring a non-perishable food item for the community food drive. For more information call 2426567 or email at urquha8aol. com. Thursday, Sept. 17 GOLF FUNDRAISER—The Paul D. Camp Community College Foundation and Smithfield Foods are sponsoring the 12th annual golf tournament Thursday, Sept. 17, at Sleepy Hole Golf Club, 4700 Sleepy Hole Road in Suffolk. Registration begins at 11:30 a.m., with a shotgun start at 1 p.m. Prizes will be awarded. Sponsorship levels and team registration are available at www.pdc.edu/golf. A rain date has been set for Thursday, Sept. 24. For more information, call 569-6790. PHOTOGRAPHY CLASS— Paul D. Camp Community College Division of Workforce Development will offer a digital photography class for beginners titled “Get More from Your Camera” at PDCCC, 253 James St., Smithfield on Thursdays from Sept. 17 – Oct. 15, 5:30-7:30 p.m. Additional photography classes will be taught Wednesdays from Sept. 16-30, 9 a.m. To noon at the Hobbs Suffolk Campus, 271 Kenyon Road. Registration deadline is Sept. 14. Cost is $115. For more info, call 5696050. MEMBERSHIP COFFEE—The Woman’s Club of Smithfield is holding a coffee for prospective members on Thursday, Sept. 17 at 10 a.m. at The Smithfield Center, 220 North Church St.Call 3569441 for more information. COUNTY MUSEUM—Children ages 3-5 and their families are invited to visit the Isle of Wight County Museum for Tell Me a Story, where children will be introduced to the symbols of Isle of Wight County through books, games and crafts. Free story times will be held Sept. 17, Oct. 15, Nov. 19 and Dec. 17 from 10-10:30 a.m. Themes for each storytime are as follows: Sept: apple trees, Oct: fall and spiders, Nov: thanksgiving, Dec: gingerbread. Children must be accompanied by an adult. For more information call J.L. England at 356-1223. FIELD CROPS—The Virginia Tech Tidewater Agricultural Research Extension Center (AREC) will hold its pre-harvest field crops tour Thursday, Sept. 17, 8 a.m. at the Center’s research farm at 1045 Hare Road, Suffolk. Registration begins 7:30 a.m. Lunch served after the tour. For more info call 657-6450 ext. 401 or email pamdw1@vt.edu. BLOOD DRIVE— The Smithfield Community Blood Drive will be held Thursday, Sept. 17, noon to 6 p.m. at Trinity United Methodist Church, 201 Cedar Street. The Food Canteen and sponsor will be the United Methodist Women’s Group. For more info call Willie Rountree at 365-9130. Friday, Sept. 18 ART SHOW—The opening reception for The Arts Center@319’s exhibit of “Out of the Box” paintings by Laura Gibbs and Don Williams will be held Friday, Sept. 18, 6-8 p.m. The exhibit will be on display Sept. 2 through Oct. 31. For more info call 357-7707. CRUZ-IN—The Smithfield Lion’s Club will host Cruz-Ins at the Sentara/St. Luke’s Friday, Sept. 18, 6-9 p.m. featuring the Classic Cruisers Car Club and the Bombers & Betties. RELIGIOUS DISSENT—Historic St. Luke’s presents Mark Summers speaking on religious establishments and dissent inside James Fort at early Jamestown, Sept. 26, 7 p.m. Register online at www. historicstlukes.org. Early registration by Sept. 21 is $25 per person, $40 per couple. Late registration by Sept. 25, 5 p.m. is $35 per person, $50 per couple. PDCCC scholarships— Applications for Paul D. Camp Community College scholarships is now open for the spring 2016 semester for new and continuing students. Deadline for submissions is Tuesday, Oct. 6 at 11:59 p.m. and will only be accepted electronically. For more information, call 569-6790 or log onto www.pdc.edu/ financial-aid/scholarships. HEALTH FAIR—The Isle of Wight Senior Health and Educational Fair, “Looking Good, Feeling Good,” is Thursday, Oct. 1, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at The Smithfield Center. Continental breakfast, lunch, speakers and more are featured. Tickets are $7 per person and can be purchased at the following locations. Home Sweet Home Care, 246 Main St. and AmeriCare Plus, 938D S. Church St., both in Smithfield; Windsor True Value, 5 Joyner Ave., Windsor; Isle of Wight Parks and Recreation, 13036 Nike Park Road, Carrollton; and Camptown Park, 33475 Carver Road, Carrsville. ALUMNI FAME—Nominations are being sought for the new Alumni Hall of Fame for graduates of Windsor and Georgie Tyler high schools. Three graduates will be inducted at the Windsor High School homecoming festivities Oct. 9. Nominations accepted through Sept. 18. Call 2424546 for more information. BUSINESS CONSULTING— The Isle of Wight Chamber of Commerce is accepting reservations for prospective business owners and smallbusiness owners to meet with consultants from from the Small Business Development Center of Hampton Roads. To schedule a free appointment for Sept. 18 call 357-3502 or email sgill@theisle.org. Carrollton KNIT, CROCHET—Knitting and crocheting classes meet Wednesdays from 6-8 p.m. Beginners welcome but more experienced knitters are needed. Registration required. SEEDS—Bring in seeds to share and swap. COMPUTER— Computer tutoring sessions will be available every other Wednesday beginning Sept. 9. Tutoring is by appointment only, call or visit the front desk to register. WEATHERIZATION—The Williamsburg-James City County Community Action Agency provides a free seminar on weatherization Monday, Sept. 28, 1-3 p.m. to families who qualify based on income. Families who receive SSI are automatically eligible. Services discussed include attic and wall insulation, hot water tank and pipe wrap, and more. Check us out online at www.smithfieldtimes.com library Carrollton Public Library 14362 New Towne Haven Phone: 238-2641 Claremont Public Library Phone: 866-8627 Smithfield Public Library 255 James Street Phone: 357-2264 Surry Public Library 11640 Rolfe Highway Phone: 294-3949 Windsor Public Library 18 Duke Street Phone: 242-3046 On the internet: www.blackwaterlib.org Library Book Club will meet Wednesday, Sept. 19 at 3 p.m. to discuss “One Summer” by Bill Bryson. Light refreshments provided. Smithfield COMPUTER—Computer help is available from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on Wednesdays. KNIT—Knit at Night is the second and fourth Wednesday of the month at 6:30 p.m. STORYTIMES—Miss Eva will be starting children’s story times for the school year, Mondays and Thursdays from MUSIC—Musical story time Sept. 14-Dec. 17. Stories for is from 10:30-11:30 a.m. on children ages 2-3 will be read Tuesdays. Mondays at 10 a.m. Stories for children ages 4-5 will be Windsor read Thursdays at 10 a.m. STORY TIME—Story time for MEDICARE—Join Medicare ages 2 through 5 will be Access resource specialists at 10:45 a.m. Tuesdays. for counseling Tuesday, Sept. Registration is not required. 22 from 1-3 p.m. KNITTING—Come learn to GARDEN PARTY—The Friends knit on Wednesdays, 10:30of the Carrollton Library are 11:30 a.m. hosting a garden party to benefit the library Saturday, Surry Sept. 12, 4 – 7 p.m. Wine, live music, dancing and SUMMER READING STORY more. Tickets are $15 TIME—Story time, every per person or $25 for Monday at 10 a.m. Ages 3-5. couples age 21 and over. Purchase tickets at www. LEGO CLUB—Lego Club will friendsofthecarrolltonlibrary. be held Saturday, Sept. 12, com/events or pick up from 10-11 a.m. and is open tickets at the library. to ages 5-11. ART GALLERY— The Carrollton Library is looking for two-dimensional art pieces themed around the word “imagine,” which will go on display from Jan. 1 through Feb. 29. Submission deadline is Dec. 15. Be sure to attach a regional library artist agreement form, found at: www.blackwaterlib.org/ carrollton/. BOOK CLUB— The Carrollton UGLY ART—Ugly Art Workshop for adults will be held Wednesday, Sept. 16, 6:308:30 p.m. TEEN MOVIE—Teen Movie Night for ages 12-18 is Tuesday, Sept. 22, 6-8 p.m. Popcorn provided. FAMILY MOVIE—Family Movie Night is Wednesday, Sept. 23, 6-8 p.m. Popcorn provided. Library discounts Blackwater Regional Library is partnering with over 30 local businesses to provide discounts for library patrons. All the patron has to do is show their library card and enjoy their discount. This promotion is running through Sept. 30. Libraries are doing their part to close the digital divide and level the playing field by providing free access to information and technologies that many in their communities would be hard pressed to find elsewhere. Libraries promote democracy by providing service to all regardless of race, ethnicity, creed, age, ability, sexual orientation, gender identity or socio-economic status. Following are offers in Isle of Wight and Surry counties. •Isle of Wight County and Smithfield Aaron’s Inc. — Half off first month’s payment Anne of Smithfield – 10 percent off purchase Anytime Fitness, Carrollton and Windsor — No enrollment fee Bon Vivant — 20 percent off purchase of any 12 bottles (case) of wine The Christmas Store — 20 percent off purchase El Burrito (Carrollton) — 20 pecent off purchase of $20 or more on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Encore Pilates and Physical Therapy — Two private sessions free, to schedule call 408-4068 First Colony Engraving — 10 percent off purchase Hometown Rentals — 25 percent off total purchase of any item. Oaks Veterinary Clinic — One free vial of Advantix flea preventative for dogs (value $20) SESROH Tack Shop — 10 percent off purchase (excluding feed, bedding, hay, consignment, used items, saddles and sale items) Smithfield Ice Cream Parlor — One free ice cream cone Tropical Smoothie — 10 percent discount off purchase •Surry County: Claremont Circle Store — 10 percent off of groceries Farmer Joes — 10 percent off gift items •Johnson Brothers, Southern States — 10 percent off home décor •Kingdom Thrift — 20 percent off purchase •7 Eleven — Free medium Slurpee coupon, while supplies last (coupon available at Surry Branch of BRL, valid at Surry 7 Eleven location only) Governmental meetings •Isle of Wight Board of Supervisors, 6 p.m., Thursday, Sept. 17, 2nd floor, county courthouse, 17100 Monument Circle, 357-3191 •Isle of Wight School Board, 5 p.m., Thursday, Sept. 24, 2nd floor, county courthouse, 17100 Monument Circle, 357-4393 Buy - Sell - Hire Trade - Rent in The Smithfield Times Classified Pages Call Now! 357-3288 The Smithfield Times-Wed., Sept. 9, 2015 - Page 11 Town eager to save Pierceville house By Abby Proch The town of Smithfield will send a letter to Pierceville owner Mary Crocker in hopes of helping to restore her home. Built in 1730 and one of the town’s oldest structures, Pierceville has experienced severe neglect rendering it both an eyesore and a safety hazard. In June, Frazier Associates quoted $73,000 to “mothball” the home and its outbuildings, a “solid figure” and plan that meets historic preservation guidelines, said Town Manager Peter Stephenson. Improvements would include weatherproofing the home, removing all debris and furniture, conducting additional assessments, cutting down vegetation, removing an oil tank and repairing outbuilding roofs, according to a report from Frazier Associates. The town has the authority to make the improvements and put a lien on the property, which will allow it to recoup the money it spent on mothballing when the property sells. The town’s letter isn’t part of a formal process, but rather a gesture of goodwill. Crocker and her lawyer, Al Jones, can decline the town’s efforts, accept them or choose to make the renovations on their own. Stephenson has met with attorneys for Crocker and the proposed developer, Hear ndon, and believes Hearndon is prepared to ad- dress the issue if the town grants its rezoning request to make way for a 151-home residential development. The town’s Planning Commission recommended denial of Hearndon’s application this month, meaning it won’t go before the Town Council until November. Stephenson suggested working with the developer, but if its application doesn’t receive approval or if they withdraw their plans, then the town could seek to repair the home under the town’s “demolition by neglect” ordinance. For some council members, the wait is too long. “I think we need to move forward with this…” said Council member RandyPack. “We have a respon- Cole earns Keen citizen award Mary Cole, the founding and managing director of the “Sundays at Four” classical music and performing arts series, has been named the 2015 Grace Keen Distinguished Citizen of the Year by the Isle of Wight Chamber of Commerce. Cole was recognized for her service to local churches and the community through promotion and education in classical music and performing arts. The award will be presented at the Chamber’s annual meeting and awards reception on Thursday, Sept. 10, 6 p.m. at Smithfield Foods corporate offices, 220 Commerce St. in Smithfield. Davis Drug and Specialty Compounding in Carrollton is being recognized as the Chamber’s 2015 Business of the Year. Dr. Dwain Wilk- erson, president and owner of Davis Drug was chosen for providing high-quality pharmaceutical care while exemplifying exceptional customer service with compassion, humility and honesty. The award recipients were selected by the chamber’s board of directors from nominations submitted by chamber members. Sabrina Barnes, guidance counselor at Georgie D. Tyler Middle School in Windsor, has been selected as the Isle of Wight County School Division’s Teacher of the Year for 2015, and will be recognized at the awards reception. The Chamber’s annual meeting and awards reception features food by The Smithfield Inn and beverages from Bon Vivant Market. In addition to the awards presentation, the event celebrates the installation of the chamber’s new officers — Board Chairman Charlie Broadwater, Vice Chair Mike Adams and Treasurer Bob Moore Jr. Tickets are $40 per person. Registration is available online at www.theisle.org or by calling 357-3502. Bayport Credit Union and Sentara Healthcare are reception sponsors of the annual meeting and awards reception. Bon Secours Hampton Roads Health System and the town of Smithfield are supporting sponsors. For more information, contact the chamber office at 357-3502, email acripps@ theisle.org or go to www. theisle.org. School administrators named Isle of Wight County schools division recently announced several additions to school administration this year. Rebecca Tidwell will be Smithfield High School’s new assistant principal. Tidwell previously served as the dean of students in Hampton City Schools since 2014. Prior to this, she served as an English teacher for nine years with Hampton. She has a Bachelor of Science degree in psychology, an endorsement in secondary English and a master’s degree in education leadership services. Nicole Stephens is the new assistant principal at Windsor High School. Stephens comes from Newport News Public Schools where she served as an earth science and science department lead teacher since 2011. Prior to that, she worked for Charles City County Public Schools as a physical science teacher and biology and physics teacher at St. Mary’s County Public Schools in Mary- land. She has an Associate of Science degree, a Bachelor of Science degree in biology with a minor in chemistry and a Master of Education degree. She also graduated from Smithfield High School. Zachary Haney is the new assistant principal at Westside Elementary School. Haney previously worked in Suffolk Public Schools as an English 8 and geography teacher at John F. Kennedy Middle School since 2008. Haney has a Bachelor of Arts degree in English literature and history, a Master of Science degree in education and a Master of Arts in educational leadership. Farm • Continued from p. 9 years later after working off his servitude. It is thought he lived here for several years before receiving the land patent from Gov. William Berkeley in 1666, Gwaltney said. Thomas was able to receive 200 acres because colonists were given 50 acres for each person they brought over, and he brought four, Gwaltney said. Unfortunately, Thomas died of unknown causes two months later, he added. Thomas was married to Martha, who was thought to already be living in Isle of Wight County at the time, Gwaltney said. Thomas’ son William inherited the farm and the family grew from there. Today, Gwaltneys from all over the United States come to Isle of Wight County in the summer to celebrate their heritage and family. Two years ago, the family celebrated Thomas’ 400 th birthday. Gwaltney said he and Edwards are second or third cousins. Edwards, whose father is from another early Isle of Wight County family, likes to joke that, “I am related to myself by marriage.” sibility as council to protect our heritage.” Pack called the move to mothball the “right thing to do” and timely too, as winter weather could further damage the home. “Are we willing as council to put essentially $73,000 of work into a private individual’s home with the hope that one day... maybe 30 years from now, you’ll get your money back?” asked Council member MiltonCook. Cook agreed the home has historical significance, “but probably the majority of people that live in Smithfield had no idea where that house is” until it became an issue. “This is a structure that really needs to be saved,” said Mayor Carter Williams. To Sell or Buy, look to the Classifieds Call 357-3288 Welcome Our New Stylist CAROLINE! Call & Make Your Appointment Today! Buy 2 Get 1 HALF OFF! 15139 Carrollton Blvd., Suite C, Carrollton,VA Call (757) 238 - 9410 Open Daily 9am, Tues.-Sat. Page 12 - The Smithfield Times-Wed., Sept. 9, 2015 G1-021611 Smithfield Family Dentistry IW promotes agri-tourism Old Fashioned Caring & Twenty-First Century Dentistry! • Personal, Advanced Artistic Dentistry with Care & Concern • New Patients are Always Welcome • Delta Dental Provider Now offering expanded Friday hours Online market for ag products 309 Main Street • Downtown Smithfield www.smithfield-dds.com see us on facebook.com/smithfieldfamilydentistry Call Today for a Convenient Appointment! 357-4121 See detailed listings and larger photos at HowardHanna.com It’s the Right Time to Buy a Home! Congratulations August Agents of the Month! Listings: Cathy Saccone 757-573-9610 W LIS TIN G Sales: Janet Salmon 757-434-6047 NE Historic District $159,900 Victorian with Garage, Fenced Rear Yard, Ample Parking. Hardwood Flooring Throughout, Vaulted Ceilings. A Little Bit of TLC Will Carry This Beauty to Become The Bell of the Block. Church Square $269,900 Downsizing? This Home is for You. Beautiful Hardwood Floors, Crown Moulding, Ceramic Tile, Open Floor Plan, Spacious Rooms, Huge Kitchen, Family Room w Gas F/P. Master & Guest Room on Main Level & Huge 3rd Bedroom Over the Garage. Debra Coombs 757-692-7016 RR PR EN ICE T Jan Ayers 757-371-1025 FO Suffolk $950 Move in Ready Cottage. Beautiful Hardwood Floors, New Heat/Air, All Appliances. Easy To Maintain. Nice Fenced Yard. Close to Downtown Suffolk. Call for Appointment to View. Pagan Point $235,000 Immaculate Well Maintained Brick Rancher on Corner Lot. Beautiful Hardwood Floors, Large Living Room with Wood Burning F/P, Kitchen Open to Family Room with View of the Pagan. Sun Room, Newer Windows, Roof & HVAC. Melissa Montgomery 757-23 7-2447 G Linda Haymes 757-334-9184 G Isle of Wight $234,900 Smithfield $267,000 Welcome Home. Move-In Ready, Immaculate, Open Floor Plan. First Floor Master, Eat-In Kitchen, Large Loft Perfect for Family Room, Office, Etc. Fenced Back Yard. Marilyn Oliver 757-328-2587 JoAnn Olson 757-377-7265 W LIS TIN G Brick Ranch on Almost an Acre Lot in Country. Well Maintained. Fresh Paint & New Carpet in 2012. FP w/Gas Logs. Huge Shop/Garage w/2 Large Bays & Extra Room w/Heat. NE time of driving to Saturday farmers markets in hopes of finding specific ingredients. “The MarketMaker website will be a valuable marketing tool for our Northern Virginia constituents,” said Kenner Love, agricultural and natural resource Extension agent for Rappahannock County. “I have a lot of interest in a tool like this as an agent because I know how difficult it is to run a farming operation and still have time to turn your product into a profit. It’s a great marketing tool that will assist farmers and buyers to form profitable business alliances.” The national MarketMaker portal operates in several states in the Southeast and the District of Columbia, and stretches from Florida to Texas and from Ohio to Wyoming. “This is good business for producers and buyers alike,” said Shaena Muldoon, owner and operator of the Palisades Restaurant in Eggleston, Virginia. “Being able to get our name out there so farmers know that we are a buyer for their products would also be important to us. Researching takes valuable time that we don’t have to spare in the restaurant business, so this puts all the pieces in one place. It’s a great idea and I’m looking forward to using this resource.” LIS TIN excited that we can offer this as a tool for producers and consumers and to see Virginia join the MarketMaker team,” she said. “The key to gaining access to MarketMaker was the support and funding from our partners Farm Credit of the Virginias, Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, Virginia Agribusiness Council, Colonial Farm Credit, and the Virginia Far m Bureau. All the Virginia MarketMaker partners welcome the support and participation of all interested parties and agencies for future programming.” The benefits for producers are many. For example, a rancher can search for very detailed information about a beef processor including types of cuts and packaging offered, pricing options, and which facilities offer processing that best meets the needs of their customers. Once producers register, they have access to an account that can be updated up-to-the-minute to make restaurateurs and consumers aware of their selections of herbs, meats, and produce. Consumers who have struggled with scanning markets far and wide for a fresh or hard-to-find ingredient can now locate them without leaving home, saving the added costs and NE W BLACKSBURG — One of the many important parts of making a living as an agricultural entrepreneur is not only being a successful producer, but also finding markets for your goods. An online tool called MarketMaker now offers a portal to a virtual marketplace that will provide increased access and acquisition of Virginia products, further connecting the farm to the fork. Farmers and ranchers, fisheries, farmers markets, processors and packers, wineries, restaurants and individual consumers can benefit from the online resource. The MarketMaker portal is the largest and most in-depth national database of products and services offered for the agricultural industry. Completing the registration process immediately provides access to search tools that connect buyers of farm products with producers and distributors. Kim Morgan, assistant professor of agricultural and applied economics and Virginia Cooperative Extension specialist in the Virginia Tech College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, spearheaded the initiative to bring MarketMaker to the commonwealth. “MarketMaker has proven to be a valuable resource for industry members in 21 states since 2004. I am very P. Milton Cook, Jr. DDS W ual business logos are not included on the sign, said Isle of Wight County spokesman Don Robertson. This program is not meant for advertisement, but instead serves as a directional prog ram. The overall theme of the sign program is to coincide and compliment the county’s “Visit the Farms Brochure.” Choosing to allow only the farm name allows for consistency in design and simplicity, Robertson said. NE In an effort to promote local far ms offering agri-tourism opportunities, the Isle of Wight Board of Supervisors approved a plan to offer producers a standardized sign for a fee. The sign consists of a template adorned with the county’s logo and the catch phrase, “Visit the Farms of Isle of Wight County,” as well as the name and distance to the farm. Under the sign program, the far mer or producer pays for the sign, said Isle of Wight Director of Tourism Judy Winslow at a recent joint tourism meeting. The cost is $300 plus $35 for a zoning permit. The permit must be renewed every five years for $35. Since the signs will be placed on private property, rather than VDOT right-ofway, permission will have to be granted, Winslow said. The signs were designed to provide uniformity to the signage and individ- LIS TIN News editor NE W By Diana McFarland Carrollton $235,000 Desired Location in Carrollton. Awesome Rancher on 1 AC, Private Setting. Beautiful Functional Floor Plan w/Large Family Room. 3 Large Bedrooms. Retreat to Your Front Porch or Backyard Deck. Great Home for Family & Entertaining. Must See. Cathy Saccone 757-573-9610 Carisbrooke $375,000 Come Home to the Sights & Sounds of Nature in this Charming Home. Features Include A Deep Wooded Lot, Huge Family Room with Fireplace, Formal Living &Dining and New HVAC & Siding. Community Offers Optional H.O.A. & Pool Membership. Patty Coaker 757-295-8598 VA The Smithfield Times-Wed., Sept. 9, 2015 - Page 13 Bay has increase in underwater grasses By Karl Blankenship Bay Journal News Service The amount of underwater grass beds in Chesapeake Bay surged 27 percent last year, one of the largest single-year increases since monitoring of the critical habitat for fish and crabs began three decades ago. While a rebound was seen Baywide, much of the recovery in 2014 was driven by a huge expansion of widgeon grass in the Mid Bay. Widgeon grass is notorious for its boom-and-bust cycles, which means it can disappear as quickly as it pops up. Bob Orth, a researcher with the Virginia Institute of Marine Science, who oversees the annual aerial underwater grass survey, said 2014 was interesting because widgeon grass was found in areas where it had never before been mapped. He and others were so surprised when the photos showed beds in certain areas, such as parts of Pocomoke Sound and the Honga River, they had people visit the sites in person. “Sure enough, it was,” Orth said. M e a n wh i l e, b e d s i n freshwater and low-salinity areas, while having an increase in grasses, remain at half the record-high levels observed in 2010, before the devastating impacts of Hurricane Irene and Tropical Storm Lee in 2011. Those storms pushed huge amounts of sediment-filled water into the Bay, blotting out grass beds. In the high-salinity areas of the lower Bay, eelgrass is rebounding after a heat-related die-off in 2010, but scientists are concerned that the critical species remains in long-ter m downward trajectory. The overall results from the annual Baywide aerial survey showed 75,835 acres of underwater grass beds in the Chesapeake and its tidal tributaries last year, up from 59,711 acres in 2013. “What we do know now is that restoration and conservation efforts to clean up the Bay’s waters are paying off,” said Brooke Landry, a biologist with the Maryland Department of Natural Resources and chair of the Bay Program’s SAV Workgroup. It was the second straight year of increase for submerged aquatic vegetation, or SAV, after a dramatic three-year decline from 2010 through 2012 that saw underwater grass acreage plunge to its lowest levels in the Bay since the 1980s. Photo courtesy of the Chesapeake Bay Program Widgen grass accounted for a good amount of underwater grass recovery. Still, SAV acreage remains well below its recent highs of 89,659 acres in 2002, and is just 41 percent of the Chesapeake Bay Program par tnership’s ultimate goal of 185,000 acres. But, Landry said, shorter term Bay Program goals of 90,000 acres in 2017 and 130,000 acres in 2025 are achievable. “I think we have a good chance of meeting both of these interim goals if we continue efforts to cut pollution that runs into the Bay,” she said. Submerged aquatic plants need clear water to get the sunlight they, like all green plants, need to survive. Because of its tight link to water clarity, the annual survey of Bay grasses — formally known as submerged aquatic vegetation, or SAV — is one of the most closely watched indicators of how the Bay is doing. “I can’t stress enough the importance of underwater grasses as a measure and indicator of the Bay’s overall health,” Landry said. Grass beds are also one of the most critical components of the Bay ecosystem. They pump oxygen into the water, trap sediments, provide food for waterfowl and shelter for fish and blue crabs. Because of the importance of underwater grasses to the Chesapeake ecosystem, much of the nutrient and sediment reductions required as part of the Bay cleanup are aimed at helping SAV rebound. Sediment, along with algae blooms spurred by excess nutrients, blocks sunlight needed by the plants. All salinity zones of the Bay saw overall increases last year: •The tidal fresh salinity zone, which occupies the uppermost portion of the Bay near the mouth of the Susquehanna River, as well as the uppermost tidal reaches of most tributaries, had 15,305 acres last year, a 9 percent increase over 2013. That’s 74 percent of the goal for that zone. •The slightly salty oligohaline salinity zone, which occupies a relatively small portion of the Upper Bay and tidal tributaries, had 7,413 acres last year, a 32 percent increase from 2013. That’s 72 percent of the goal for that zone. •The moderately salty mesohaline salinity zone contains the largest potential underwater grass habitat. It stretches from around Baltimore south to the Rappahannock River and Tangier Island and includes large sections of most tidal rivers, including most of the Potomac. It had 37,260 acres of grasses last year, an increase of 47 percent over 2013. That’s 31 percent of the goal for that zone. •The very salty polyhaline salinity zone is the second largest zone, stretching from the mouth of the Rappahannock and Tangier Island to the mouth of the Bay, and includes the lowermost parts of the York and James rivers. It had 15,857 acres last year, an increase of 8 percent from 2013. That’s 47 percent of the goal for that zone. While the overall increase is good news, scientists remain concerned that the increases in recent years have been disproportionately driven by widgeon grass in the midsection of the Bay. That species often disappears as rapidly as it pops up. Once, those vast grass beds included a mix of other species, such as eelgrass, red head grass, sago pondweed and others, which gave the beds more stability. “In the historical past, it was mixed with other species, so when widgeon grass flamed out, other species picked up,” Orth said. “Now if it flames out, you have nothing.” Scientists remain con- • See GRASS, p. 16 In-Home Personal Care & Homemaker Agency “We offer Home Care Solutions to All Ages” Service by Design – Customized by You Personal Care & Homemaker Aides • 3 to 24 Hours per Day • Live-In Companions • Errands & Transportation for Appointments & Social Outings • Bed & Breakfast Private Pay • Long-Term Care Insurance • Medicaid • Veterans Benefits • CCC Credentialed 938 D South Church Street, Smithfield (757) 356.1700 or 800.573.3134 www.americarepluspc.com M Your FY ngs 1.01 15-Month % APY* Come see our selection of Appliances, Electonics, Computers, Furniture and more! Help us make a donation to a Smithfield charity. 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Send resumes to the Staff Parish Relations Committee at bennsumc@yahoo.com or Benn’s United Methodist Church, 14571 Benns Church Blvd., Smithfield, VA 23430 BLACKWATER Regional Library is seeking a PT Cataloger (15/ hours/week) at our Central Headquarters in Courtland, Virginia with a starting salary of $9.20/hour. High school d iploma or GED required. Moderate experience in library operations and cataloging preferred. Sept9/1tc/709 ———— ORDER ENTRY & CUSTOMER SERVICE Edwards is looking for a dedicated professional who can join our customer service team for our holiday season. Qualified individuals should be able to handle inbound telephone, mail and internet order processing for our direct-to-consumer sales. Applicant must have excellent customer service skills, enjoy talking with customers, and be able to handle a fast-paced environment. Must be dependable and willing to work some Saturdays in November and December. Numerous daytime seasonal positions are available. If interested, please email your resume to: jobs@edwardsvaham.com with "Edwards Customer Service" in the subject line. Apply in person to: S. Wallace Edwards & Sons, Inc. 11455 Rolfe Hwy., Surry, VA Edwards Virginia Smokehouse is proud to be an Equal Opportunity Employer I NTER IOR N EW Constr uction cleaning contractor. Seeking responsible dependable employees ASAP. 5-8 hours per day, 4 to 5 days a week. No weekends. Good st a r t i ng p ay, w i l l train. 757-286-8141. Must have valid DL & acceptable background. EOE/AA, M/F/Vet/Disability Apply online at peninsulacleaning.com 757-833-1603 HANDYMAN & REPA I R Work, years experience with Period homes! Please call Bob Lewis a t 7 5 7 - 6 8 1 - 17 9 8 Aug26/4tp/23794 ——— HANDY MAN SERVICES, Inc. - Electrical/plumbing repairs, installations. Doorknobs, locks, fence, g at e r e p a i r s , r o of leaks, window glass and screens. Licensed and Insured. Free estimates. Call Larry Williams 757-357-7408. 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Sept2/8tp/23888 ———— For All Your Insurance Needs 1702 South Church St. 357-4900 Loving Thoughts Vehicles 1997 FORD Explorer, Eddie Bauer, 4 door, automatic, 4WD, 160K miles, V6, no k now n mechanical issues, good inspection, Michelin tires, fair condition-needs body work. Kelley Blue Book $2,100 asking $1,400. For quick sale. 757-812-3736 Sept2/3tp/23853 ———— 2010 Honda Interstate motorcycle, perfect condition, 4000 mi., 1312cc, blue w/custom flag design tank, garage-kept in Morgarts Beach area, text Frank at 757-617-1168 Aug26/3tp/23792 ———— Let the news come TO YOU! Subscribe now... Call 357-3288 to subscribe Another Happy Advertiser... to all from Norman Newby’s Family WANTED: Power Equipment Sales Associate (PESA) Overview: Power Equipment Sales Associate is responsible for the daily power equipment and merchandise sales, inventory, and customer interaction. The PESA is also responsible for repair work and parts sales knowledge. Requirements: This position requires in depth knowledge of the Power Equipment sold in the store. General knowledge is required in the other area of the store to help the Sales Associates with general counter sales. The PESA must have computer skills allowing for easy and efficient use of the POS equipment. Training is provided. Education and Experience: High School diploma or GED with 2 years retail experience. Extensive knowledge is required in small engines and in the product lines carried in the store. Some knowledge of feed, seed, chemicals and fertilizers is necessary as well as knowledge of gardening, farming and general hardware. Forklift and heavy equipment operation experience is a bonus.Training provided as necessary. Contact Gordon 757-357-4367 AFFORDABLE MARINE SERVICE Keeping You on the Water Since 1992 Don’t miss a day on the water! “We had a lot of responses to ad you ran for us on November 26, 2014 for our Pet Sitting Service. Everyone commented on how great the advertisement looked. 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WHEN WHERE Saturday Equal Opportunity Employer Circuit Court September 26th 101 Kings Way, 10:00 am – 1:00 pm Hampton 23669 Please do not bring cell phones, weapons, contraband, or children to this meeting! Sheriff B.J. Roberts Visit our Website: www.hampton.gov/sheriff Catch Me Without My Hat I’ll Buy Ya’ Lunch! Susan Milton Real Estate Hat Lady 757-641-2077 www.realestatehatlady.com The Smithfield Times – Wed.,September 9, 2015 - Page 15 LegaLs NOTICE OF OYSTER by amending and reGROUND APPLICA- enacting Appendix B, TION Zoning, Section 6-4000, Floodplain ManageTy D . F a r r i n g t o n , ment Overlay (FPMO) (2015079) has applied District – Applicafor approximately 90 bility, to specifically -+ acres of oyster plant- reference the updated ing ground in James Flood Insurance Rate River near Burwell Maps for Isle of Wight Bay situated in Isle of County produced by Wight City/County and the Federal Emergency described as follows: Management Agency, to recognize the maps’ North by: D u k e , I I effective date of DePF20782 cember 2, 2015, and East by: Vacant to accept the accomSouth by: Garett panying updated Flood PF18804 Insurance Study. West by: Green PF19217 An ordinance to amend Lat/Long: N37and reenact the follow03.5572 W76-39.6193 ing sections of the Isle Send comments or con- of Wight County Code, cerns to: Appendix B, Zoning: M a r i n e R e s o u r c e s Article III, Use Types, Commission, Engi- Article IV, Zoning Disneering/Surveying De- tricts and Boundaries, partment 2600 Wash- Article V Supplementaington Ave., 3rd Floor, ry Use Regulations; in Newport News, VA order to make changes 23607 to the agricultural use types, expand the uses For more specific ap- allowed in the Rural plication location in- Agricultural Conserformation call (757) vation (RAC) zoning 247-2230 district and allow for one “by-right” division L15-110 of land around an ex9-2/4t isting residence in the ———— RAC, to add an “Agritourism” section, and to add supplementary use P U B L I C N O T I C E regulations. Notice is hereby given that the Isle of Wight County Board of Supervisors will hold a Public Hearing on Thursday, September 17, 2015 to consider the following: be heard in favor of, in opposition to, or to express his or her views with respect to said applications may appear before and be heard by said Board of Supervisors during the Public Hearing to be held in the Robert C. Claud, Sr. Board Room at the Isle of Wight County Courthouse Complex on Thursday, September 17, 2015. The public meeting is scheduled to start at 6:00 p.m. The County of Isle of Wight is in compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. If you will require an accommodation or sign language interpreter to participate in the meeting, reasonable accommodations can be made upon request. Please make requests to the Clerk of the Board of Supervisors at least five (5) days in advance of the meeting at (757) 365-6204. ISLE OF WIGHT COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS L15-111 9-2/2t ———— of Virginia, 1950 as amended that the Planning Commission of the Town of Windsor will hold public hearings on Wednesday September 23, 2015 at 7:00 p.m. in the Town Hall Council Chamber on the matter described as follows: LAND DEVELOPMENT ORDINANCE ZONING MAP CORRESPONDING TO THE TOWN OF WINDSOR LAND DEVELOPMENT ORDINANCE THAT IS UNDER CONSIDERATION- The proposed Land Development Ordinance Zoning Map or “Zoning Map” which indicates the location and configuration of the various zoning districts with their new names to correspond to the proposed Land Development Ordinance where applicable is proposed for public review. A clarification and realignment of the various locations of public properties within the Town in the P Public District and reallocation of properties with a non-governmental purpose to appropriate districts is a part of this Zoning Map. Copies of said applications are on file in the Department of Planning and Zoning at the Isle of Wight County Courthouse Complex, NOTICE OF PUBLIC Isle of Wight, Virginia, HEARING and are available for An ordinance to amend public examination. Notice is hereby given and reenact the Isle of pursuant to Section Wight County Code Any person desiring to 15.2-2204 of the Code The Land Development Ordinance Zoning Map is available for public scrutiny in the Town of Windsor Town Hall, Monday through Friday, or by contacting Mr. Dennis Carney, Planning and Zoning Administrator at (757)242-4288 be- AD NETWORK CLASSIFIEDS September 6, 2015 This is our 2386th series of ads to be published in the Virginia Statewide Classified. You may classify them with your regular ads or run them under an AD NETWORK LOGO. The originating newspaper gives the advertiser a tearsheet if requested. Please remind your bookkeeping department however, about the program and these ads are not to be billed Fast!! Excavators, Dozers, Loaders, Road Tractors, Dump Trucks, Pickups & More!! 10/6 @ 9 AM – Goldsboro, NC. Advertising Deadline 9/11 804-232-3300x.4 www.motleys.com/ industrial, NCAL #5914 ATTENTION AUCTIONEERS: Advertise your upcoming auctions in Virginia Newspapers for one low cost of $300. Your 25 word classified ad reaches OVER ONE to anyone. All ads are screened by the newspaper selling them and then screened by VPS. AUCTIONS BIG AUCTION- Catering equipment and Antiques. 5-Tractor Trailer Loads! Sept 12, 9:00am. Gray Auction Yard 14089 Robinson Rd. Stony Creek VA 23882. www.graycoservices. com. 804-943-3506 Gray Auctions Co. VA#1104 FORECLOSURE SALE 18,747± SF Cold Storage Facility, 5.86±AC. 777 Industrial Park Rd., Mt. Jackson, VA. ONSITE SALE: 9/29 @10AM. Vehicles, Equipment, Tools. Online Only Auction: BID 9/23–10/1. www.motleys.com • 1-877-MOTLEYS VA16 EHO AUCTION - CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT & TRUCKS ACCEPTING TRUCKS & EQUIPMENT. We Sell & Fund Assets tween the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. District. The parcel being requested to be L15-115 added is identified as 9-9/2t Any person wishing to Tax Map Parcel 39-01- ———— be heard in favor of or 064D. VIRGINIA: IN THE in opposition to or to express his or her views Copies of said appli- CIRCUIT COURT on the aforementioned cation is on file in the OF ISLE OF WIGHT Land Development Or- Department of Plan- COUNTY dinance Zoning Map ning and Zoning at the may appear before and Isle of Wight County IN THE MATTER OF be heard by the Plan- Courthouse Complex, THE ADOPTION ning Commission of the Isle of Wight, Virginia, OF DENNIS STEVEN Town of Windsor at the and are available for HALL BY RICHARD ALAN above stated time and public examination. place of the aforemen- Any person desiring to GRIMES tioned public hearing. be heard in favor of, in opposition to, or to ORDER OF PUBLIexpress his or her views CATION with respect to said application may appear The object of this suit Dennis W. Carney before and be heard by is for Richard Alan said Planning Commis- Grimes to adopt Dension during the Public nis Steven Hall born Hearing to be held in Planning and Zoning the Robert C. Claud, Administrator Sr. Board Room at the Isle of Wight County L15-114 Courthouse Complex, 9-9/2t Isle of Wight, Virginia, ———— on Tuesday, September 22, 2015 beginning at 6:00 p.m. The County of Isle of PUBLIC NOTICE Wight is in compliance with the Americans Notice is hereby given with Disabilities Act that the Isle of Wight of 1990. If you will County Planning Com- require an accommomission will hold a Pub- dation or sign language lic Hearing on Tuesday, interpreter to particSeptember 22, 2015 ipate in the meeting, to consider for recom- reasonable accommomendation to the Board dations can be made of Supervisors the fol- upon request. Please lowing application: make requests to the The request of Gregory Clerk of the Board of Scott Butler to add Supervisors at least five 40.26 acres of land to (5) days in advance of the Longview Agricul- the meeting at (757) tural/Forestal District. 365-6204. Said property is located I S L E O F W I G H T on Bob White Road C O U N T Y P L A N (Rt. 652) and Bowling NING COMMISSION Green Road (Rt. 644) By: Melinda J. in the Windsor Election Goodwyn, Secretary May 26,2011. It appearing from an Affidavit that the last known address of the natural father, Kyle Evan Hall, was 608 Delaura Lane, Virginia Beach, Virginia, and that Crystal Lynn Grimes, the natural mother of Dennis Steven Hall, consents to this adoption, it is hereby ORDERED that Kyle Evan Hall, the natural father of Dennis Steven Hall, appear before this court on or before October 28, 2015, and do what is necessary to protect his interests herein. this Order be published once a week for four successive weeks in the Smithfield Times, a newpaper having general circulation the County of Isle of Wight, Virginia. Entered September 1, 2015 Laura E. Smith DC Sharon N. Jones, Clerk of Circuit Court William C. Johnson 424 Market St., Ste 102 Suffolk, VA 23434 757-539-3900 office 757-923-9976 fax VSB17145 It is ORDERED that L15-116 the foregoing part of 9-9/4t THE SMITHFIELD TIMES 357-3288 MILLION Virginians! Call this paper or Adriane Long at 804-521-7585 (Virginia Press Services. EDUCATION MEDICAL BILLING TRAINEES NEEDED! Train to become a Medical Office Assistant! NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED! Training & Job Placement available at CTI! HS Diploma/GED & Computer needed. 1-888-424-9419. EQUIPMENT FOR SALE Machine Shop Liquidation Sale. Lathes, Mills, Grinders, Welders And Much More!!! 20 Hedge Lane, Afton, Virginia 22920. September 18th-20th. www.dempseyandco.com Call 804.355.1619 for Details HELP WANTED – DRIVERS CDL TRAINING FOR LOCAL/OTR DRIVERS! $40,000- $50,000 1ST Year! 4-wks or 10 Weekends for CDL. Veterans in Demand! Richmond/ Fredericksburg 800243-1600; Lynchburg/ Roanoke 800-6146500; LFCC/Winchester 800-454-1400. NEED CDL DRIVERS??? ADVERTISE YOUR TRUCK DRIVER JOBS in Virginia Newspapers for one low cost of $300. Your 25 word classified ad reaches OVER ONE MILLION Virginians! Call this paper or Adriane Long at 804-521-7585 (Virginia Press Services.) MISCELLANEOUS AVIATION Grads work with JetBlue, Boeing, NASA and others – start here with hands on training for FAA certification. Financial aid if qualified. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 888245-9553. SERVICES DIVORCE – Uncontested, $350 + $88 court cost. No court appearance. Estimated completion time twenty-one days. Telephone inquiries welcome - no obligation. Hilton Oliver, Attorney. 757-490-0126. Se Habla Español. STEEL BUILDINGS STEEL BUILDINGS Cancelled Orders MUST GO. Make Low monthly payments on 4 remaining. 20x30, 25x30, 30x40, 42x60. SAVE Thousands Call Now! 1-800-991-9251. Y A R D&E S T A T E PUBLIC NOTICE BOARD OF EQUALIZATION For Isle of Wight County, VA Public notice is hereby given that the Board of Equalization for Isle of Wight County will meet on Wednesday, September 23 at 1:00 p.m. until scheduled hearings are completed for the purpose of hearing complaints of inequalities including errors in acreage. Upon hearing such complaints, either oral or written, the Board will give consideration AND INCREASE, DECREASE OR AFFIRM such real estate assessments. Before a change can be granted, the taxpayer or his agent, must overcome a clear presumption in favor of the assessment. The taxpayer or agent must provide substantial evidence that the assessment of the property is not uniform with the assessments of other similar properties or that the property is assessed in excess of its fair market value. The Board will meet in the Robert C. Claude, Sr. Board Room at Isle of Wight Courthouse located at 17130 Monument Circle, Isle of Wight, VA 23397 To appear before the Board of Equalization, please call (757) 365-6219, from 8:30 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. By order of the Isle of Wight County Board of Equalization. L15-113 9-09/1t SALE GUIDE KNOW WHERE TO GO! Yard/Estate Sales COME AND SEE. H/H, Garden, Linen, Yarn, Holiday, Golf, sunglasses, tools. Fri. & Sat. 7:30. 900 Magruder Rd. Grimesland Sept9/1tp/23946 ——— SATURDAY, 8-1, Stuff from 3 families, Children & Adult clothing, kitchen items, toys, tools, books, HHI, 205 Longview Cir. Smithfield Sept9/1tp/23969 ——— ADVERTISE YOUR YARD SALE HERE. YOU GET A YARD SALE KIT AND 20 WORDS FOR ONLY $15.00. ADDITIONAL WORDS .40 CENTS A WORD. MULTI-FAMILY “TREASURE” SALE September 12th, Isle of Wight Ruritan Clubhouse across from IOW Courthouse 8:00am - 2:00pm. Baby items, furniture, jewelry, toys, books, holiday decorations, baskets, Household, house plants, clothes. Paul D. Camp Community College Yard Sale Located on 100 North College Dr., Franklin 7am to Saturday, Sept. 12th 1pm 12 x 12 VENDORS ALSO WELCOME Call 757-569-6790 Booths $25 or Register at www.pdc.edu AUCTION Choice Items from Local Estates Sat.. Sept. 12th, 10:00 A.M. 101 Philhower Dr, Suffolk, Va 23434 Partial Listing: Signed Salvador Dali Print, 1880’s Oil Paintings, Antique and Vintage Furniture, Fine Glassware, Coins, Estate Firearms, Gun Safe, Bow Front China Cabinets, Victrola, Oak Ice Box, Art Glass, Stoneware, Primitives, Craftique Dining Suit and Corner Cabinet, Collectibles and Much More! For details visit: www.superiorauctionsales.com or www.tomsauction.com 757-539-7707 Vaal#2910 CUT OUT AND TAKE IT WITH YOU The SmiThfield TimeS SportS Sept. 9, 2015 Page 16 Lady Packers shut-out Indians The Smithfield High School lady Packers field hockey team scored a win Aug. 31 against Southampton. Smithfield shut-out the Indians 11-0. The JV girls won too, with a score of 3-0. Emma Claire Stewart led in scoring with six goals, with two assists by Madeline Ericksen, who also scored two goals. Also scoring was Libby Darden with two, and assisted on one by Alexandra Rose; followed by Rachel Lange with one unassisted score. Last week, the lady Packers chalked up another victory against Northampton, 6-0. Emma Claire Stewart and Libby Darden kicked in two goals, followed by Rachel Lange and Madeline Ericksen, each with one goal. Assisting in scoring was Emma Claire Stewart and Libby Darden. THE HUNT IS ON! AND CONTINUES UNTIL THE KEY IS FOUND FIND THE KEY IN NORTHERN ISLE OF WIGHT. THE KEY IS HIDDEN ON FREELY ACCESSIBLE PUBLIC PROPERTY. THIS WEEK’S CLUE: Here’s to the Greatest Generation Third quarter stumble for Dukes The Windsor Dukes fell to Nandua Friday 25-14 in regular season play. Despite leading at half time, the Dukes hit a bump in the third quarter when the Warriors scored on two short drives, said statistician Roland Downing. “ T h e t h i rd w a s n o t ours,” he said, adding that the drives came off one kick-off return and one punt return, making the field hard to defend. Senior running back and quarter back Keshawn Reid scored two touchdowns — one on a five-yard run and one on a 41-yard run. Trevor Kiser scored a twopoint conversion on a pass from Reid. PREVIOUS CLUES: Focus mind and body in your search The Dukes have this Friday off, but travel to Northampton on the Eastern Shore on Sept. 18. Your chosen path will in time lead you astray Grasses • Continued from p. 13 cerned about high-salinity areas of the Bay, where eelgrass is by far the dominant species. While acreage has risen, eelgrass covers only about half the acreage it did in the early 1990s. Eelgrass, which is at the southern end of its range in the Chesapeake, is sensitive to heat and suffered major die-offs during the hot summers of 2005 and 2010. Although grasses bounced back after each of those summers, it never returned to previous levels. “There are whole sections of rivers that don’t have eelgrass anymore,” Orth said. Its recovery is further hampered by poor water clarity which has increasingly forced eelgrass out of the deeper, cooler water where it thrived and into water less than a meter deep near the shore, which tends to be warmer. “There is a downward trend happening there from 2005 to where we are now,” said Dave Wilcox, who works on the annual aerial survey at VIMS. “We are a little concerned that we are leveling off now at a level that is below where we were in 2010.” Low-salinity areas continued to rebound as well, particularly in the Upper Bay which was especially hard hit by Tropical Storm Lee in 2011. In the wake of Lee, the Susquehanna Flats, which at about 10,000 acres was by far the largest grass bed in the Bay, was reduced by half. But grasses on the flats, which are particularly important for waterfowl, continued to rebound, and rose about 7 percent last year as grasses began expanding into deeper water. Overall, Susquehanna Flats has about 5,700 acres of grasses, still the largest of any single bed in the Bay. This year’s aerial survey is under way. Preliminary results, primarily from the lower part of the Bay, suggest continued SAV gains this year, though increases appear smaller than those seen last year, Orth said. “What we’ve seen seems to be a slight increase in some areas over last year,” he said. “It won’t be a huge increase.” But, he added, the survey has yet to cover the Mid Bay area dominated by widgeon grass, and those results will greatly impact Baywide numbers. “That could drive the changes,” he said. FIND ADDITIONAL CLUES AT THESE GPS COORDINATES! N36º57.169, W76º32.101 N36º57.602, W76º33.856 CHECK OUT OUR VIDEO CLUE AT: WWW.SMITHFIELDTIMES.COM FIND THE KEY AND RETURN IT TO THE SMITHFIELD TIMES FOR A BOUNTY OF TREASURE FROM OUR SPONSORS. VISIT THESE SPONSORS TO FIND ADDITIONAL CLUES EACH WEEK 1018 S. Church St., Smithfield. Open Mon. - Fri. 8 am - 5pm www.wallsinsurance.biz (757) 357-4456 CALL NOW! 757-357-0033 Come To Our Smithfield Location For Your Clue! 1809 S. Church St., Smithfield, VA GO ONLINE AT WWW.PAPAJOHNS.COM ULTIMATE TAN of SMITHFIELD ULTIMATE TAN of SUFFOLK (757) 365-9400 (757) 934-0004 15149 Carrollton Blvd. Carrollton, VA 757-238-2148 299 Floyd Thompson Dr. Hampton, VA 757-788-7060 13412 Benns Church Blvd. 2815 Godwin Blvd., Suffolk A Family Business Since 1982 Wraps t4BMBETt Delicious Deli Sandwiches t Milkshakes t & More Come Get Your Clue at Our Carrollton Location! 208 Main Street www.bubbanfranks.com Downtown Smithfield One of Virginia’s Finest Year Round Christmas Stores 108 Main Street - Smithfield www.christmasstoresmithfield.com 357-7891 Open 7 Days a WeFLtMon. - Sat. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.tSunday 1 to 5 p.m. Like Us @The-Christmas-store-of-Smithfield-VA | www.smithfieldtimes.com | 357-3288
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