- The Smithfield Times
Transcription
- The Smithfield Times
THE SMITHFIELD TIMES SERVING ISLE OF WIGHT AND SURRY COUNTIES SINCE 1920 Volume 94 Number 48 Wednesday, Nov. 27, 2013 CASTLE PARK Smithfield, Va. 23431 THANKSGIVING QUOTE OF THE WEEK “ ” Some alternate ways of bringing the turkey to the table. A Council committee gives the OK for frisbee golf among Castle trails. I have been asked not to speak up. — Town Council member Denise Tynes On proposed park additions, p. 8 — See page 13 — See page 8 50 cents Windsor Castle sale near? Town negotiating to sell manor house, grounds By Abby Proch Staff writer The town of Smithfield appears to be in the midst of negotiations to sell the Windsor Castle manor house and grounds. More than two years since bids were first accepted, the town of Smithfield may now sell the circa-1750 Windsor Castle manor house and barn buildings to Smithfield Winery LLC. Smithfield Winery’s Natasha Huff recently expressed the family-owned company’s goal of buying the property, restoring it and incorporating it into the winery’s business model. “We just really want to restore it, that’s been a huge part of what we want to do,” she said. The manor house as well as its outbuildings and surrounding 42 acres are already under a historic easement by the Virginia Department of Historic Resources that requires the land and buildings retain its original appearance. Huff said she wants to turn the roughly 260-year-old homestead into a tasting room and wedding venue. Smithfield put the property up for lease or purchase just three years after buying it in 2008. The conversation lay somewhat dormant since the 2011 request for proposals was issued, but it has been revived as Smithfield Winery has entered into talks with the town about purchasing the property. Earlier this year, Smithfield Winery entered an agreement to lease five acres of land from the town on which it planted its grape vines and leased the basement of the manor house where it is storing some of its equipment. Smithfield Winery has also purchased a building previously owned by the town at 117 North Church St., which it’s converting into a wine production facility and tasting room. The Smithfield Town Council recently voted to extend the negotiation period for the Windsor Castle manor house and sur• See SALE, p. 8 Staff Photo by Abby Proch The entrance sign to Windsor Castle Park features the manor house that the town is negotiating to sell. State: town has ‘lack of vision’ for property By Abby Proch Staff writer Virginia Department of Historic Resources Director Kathleen Kilpatrick has condemned what she says is the town of Smithfield’s “lack of vision” and sparse attention to Windsor Castle Park’s historic buildings. Kilpatrick penned a letter to Smithfield Town Manager Peter Stephenson in July criticizing the town’s approach, or lack thereof, when it comes to main- taining the historic homestead and nearby outbuildings. “I am deeply concerned that this property, which should be the ‘jewel in the crown’ of Smithfield continues to sit vacant marginally attended,” wrote Kilpatrick in her July 26 letter. Kilpatrick noted that the town should be working with DHR to develop a timeline and prioritize the work. State officials visited the 46acre section of the park for a present conditions report on July 10. The report summarizes the park’s features, current use and historical value, as well as gives a summary of the conditions of its buildings and suggestions for repairs. Kilpatrick urged the town to address the physical condition of the park buildings and lay out plans for its future. Kilpatrick said she had received calls from Smithfield residents concerned about the care of the buildings as well as “the Town’s lack of any solid plan for its use.” Those calls, she said, prompted a personal review. “She’s right,” said Smithfield Mayor Carter Williams. “It needs a lot of work. Right now, we’re patching and fixing on as need basis.” Williams said he’d like the town to keep it — if it had the money. Though no cost estimates have been calculated, Williams said the repairs would be too costly for the town. So to keep it in good shape, Williams said he’d like it to be leased or sold to someone who would retain as much public access as possible so weddings, concerts, festivals and events that have been ongoing can continue in the future. He also realizes that that’s a heavy request — telling the future buyer he’ll be responsible • See VISION, p. 8 Morris to push for mental health services And while he intends to secure state funding for the first year, he Del. Rick Morris, 64th-R, plans hopes to work local community to introduce a state budget service boards to create a nonamendment that would create a profit that, with community doregional 24-hour drop-off center nations and contributions from to provide Hampton Roads resi- local governments, would sustain dents with emergency psychiat- the program in the future. “I never believe a long-term ric services. Morris estimates the center answer is going to the state for would cost between $250,000 and funding,” he said. With the input of local law $450,000 each year. By Abby Proch Staff writer enforcement and mental health professionals, Morris drafted a pilot program that would treat people having an acute mental health problem while also reducing the amount of time spent by law enforcement handling those issues. Over the past several months, Morris has been working to remedy a flawed system in which people experiencing mental health crises are often jailed or put back on the street without proper mental health treatment. While the issue is complex, Morris has boiled it down to these points: law enforcement is spending too much time outside their regular duties to detain and seek treatment for those experiencing mental health crises, jails are not the appropriate place to treatment those with mental ill- Seward says financial realities will drive budget By Diana McFarland News editor With the county already short on cash this year, and anticipating a larger hole next year, new Isle of Wight Administrator Anne Seward plans to inject some “reality” into the budget and capital improvement plan process. Isle of Wight is currently $400,000 short on revenue, and next year that goes up to $1.2 million — the result of one-time fixes that haven’t panned out as expected. At the same time, the county is facing the need to come up with $10.6 million just to cover its current debts in fiscal 2015 — and that doesn’t include the cost of running the county government on a day-to-day basis. In an interview Monday, Seward said she’s not opposed to pointing out the truth about the county’s financial situation, even if it means taking a look at property taxes. The Board of Supervisors needs to be honest about where it is, build policies and goals about where it wants to be and make an action plan to get there, she said of the annual budgeting process she plans to roll out in March. And while it’s too far along in the process to make many changes to the capital improvement plan this year, Seward plans to work with staff to restructure the document to better represent actual needs and not just wants — providing a more realistic expectation for the public. Instead of individual departments, Seward also wants to group the document by categories of service. That’s how it’s done in other localities, she said. Another change is to include the operational costs of every new building added to the CIP. The Board needs to know the impact of operational costs, which are ongoing, she said. “It’s eyes wide open.” The Norfolk water deal is perhaps one of the largest pieces of the CIP, and this fiscal year, it’s expected to cost the county $5.1 million in direct and indirect capital costs and expenses mandated by the deal itself. The 40-year deal, signed in 2009, allows the county to eventually purchase up to an additional 3.75 million gallons of water a year, but it doesn’t actually become available until 2014. Seward said there’s no use continuing to fight over what’s already been done. As for the water deal, “those decisions have already been made,” she said, adding that it doesn’t necessarily mean the county is • See FINANCES, p. 9 ness and people with mental illness deserve better treatment. Morris first became aware of the issue at a public safety forum held earlier this year in Windsor. Morris scheduled the most recent meeting with mental health professionals before the attempted murder-suicide of Sen. Creigh Deeds, 25th-D, which po• See MENTAL, p. 10 E C I V R E S R E O I R R A E C P LE SU B A D N DEPE WE INSTALL & SERVICE GENERATORS! $500 OFF NEW STANDBY GENERATOR PURCHASE INCLUDING INSTALLATION *NOT TO BE USED IN CONJUNCTION WITH OTHER OFFERS. EXPIRES 11/30/13 ·24 HR SERVICE AVAILABLE ·FREE PROPOSAL ·SALES ·SERVICE ·INSTALLATION We exclusively use American Made products www.acspecialists.net · 757-558-9122 “A newspaper column, like a fish, should be consumed when fresh; otherwise it is not only undigestible but unspeakable.” FORUM -- James Reston Columnist, The New York Times 1967 (These weekly quotes compiled by The Freedom Forum) Page 2 - Wed., Nov. 27, 2013 Our Forum Giving thanks in America Thanksgiving comes as close as any event can — or should — to being an American religious holiday. That’s because it’s not a Christian holiday. Nor is it a Jewish, Muslim, Hindu or Buddhist holiday. It’s not Christmas, not Hannukkah, not Ramadan, not Vesak nor Akshaya Tritiya. It is a uniquely American holiday (from the words Holy Day) designated for the purpose of giving thanks for what we have, in whatever fashion we choose, to God as we understand Him. That’s not to say Thanksgiving doesn’t have Christian roots. Of course it does. The observance as we more or less celebrate it was begun in the English colonies by early Christian settlers, first in Virginia and then in Massachusetts. But even that hold on history is somewhat tenuous. Rituals of thanks for harvests were celebrated by Native Americans long before the Virginians-to-be or the staid Pilgrims knelt to offer thanks for a safe entry into what, to them, was a New World. As a thoroughly ecumenical event for believers of any faith, Thanksgiving stands as a testament to the wisdom America’s founders showed when they decided to guarantee total freedom of — or from — religion. Few places in the world have a tradition in which people of faith are so completely protected in that faith than we, and that alone is cause for much thanksgiving this week. While Thanksgiving’s ecumenism is important, it is its emphasis on family that makes it dear to many Americans. A family gathered around the Thanksgiving table is as recognizable as any tableau in our history, and while the size, age and even definitions of “family” have changed dramatically over time, the tradition remains the same. This a time for those who love each other to gather, embrace and give thanks in their own way for those blessings they share. And even in times of trial, “counting blessings” is a very positive way to spend one’s time. All of that having been said, we find the rush to Christmas madness on Thanksgiving Day to be crass and insulting to what has been traditionally one of our least-commercialized celebrations. The Big Box drive to move Black Friday ahead by a day only reinforces the image of American consumerism gone mad. It’s not the shopping that so troubling. It’s the demand by major corporations that their employees forego this historic family observance for the sake of their stockholders’ greed. Some of these same corporations will run ads from now to Christmas touting “family values,” but they can’t allow their employees a full day to be at home with their own families. It says much about business in America today. ‘Flavor Hails from Smithfield’ When Shuanghui International purchased Smithfield Foods, company officials went to great pains to reassure Smithfield, the town and Smithfield, the company, would remain close allies. A couple weeks ago, Smithfield Packing Company announced a new advertising campaign that reinforces that pledge in a very important way. The campaign proclaims that “Flavor Hails from Smithfield.” Make no mistake, the Smithfield being referred to is Smithfield, the company. That’s the whole idea. But the historic link between the company name and the town that is its home is unmistakable — and hugely positive for both the town and the company. Smithfield Packing marketing experts have worked for years to capitalize on the historic “folksy” nature of the food giant’s hometown, the place where Smithfield Ham originated two and a half centuries ago. This community, they have said repeatedly, is internationally known as the home of a unique flavor. The new advertising campaign reinforces that concept and further joins the town and company at the hip. That’s huge. 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: [email protected] Web Site smithfieldtimes.com Picking peanuts Shocks of peanuts were stacked on a wagon to be hauled to the picker in this very early photograph of a stationary peanut picking operation. A tractor, meanwhile, provides the power to drive the picker. In the background, peanut vines are stacked after the peanuts have been picked from them. The vines provided winter feed. (Photo courtesy of Carolyn Keene) Reader Forum Shortfall fix? 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 e-mail to [email protected]. Letter deadline is noon each Monday. Editor, Smithfield Times I have the perfect fix for the county budget shortage: Tell the “Land Barons” that run this county to dispose of the land they have purchased that most residents don’t want or need and had no say in the purchase of. That should more than take care of the budget for years to come, providing they don’t purchase more land! Norman Hults Windsor health treatment are seldom seen. Only when people have a tragedy in their own family such as suicide does the stigma of mental illness quickly dissipate. At that time, the disease takes on its true identity as an equal to cancer, heart failure, Alzheimer’s and all the other physical calamities that kill. Why was there no bed available for the son of Editor, Smithfield Times Creigh Deeds? The answer is that money was diNot until the public rected to other items in rids itself of the stigma the State budget, one of mindset associated with which was jail expansion. mental health abnormalIs such a thing just ity will anything ever be justified? No. Statistics significantly done to help prove that jails house control the serious cycle countless numbers who of repeated mishaps. have mental illnesses. Yes, Our mailboxes fill up they have broken the law, weekly with pleas to but treatment should donate to numerous serve to help make them causes, yet such pleas for again become useful improving services to citizens of society. That is those who need mental A prayer for “Gus” Deeds St. Luke’s in capable hands Editor, Smithfield Times: For the past nine years, leadership of Historic St. Luke’s Church has been in the capable hands of Charlotte Klamer, executive director. She worked tirelessly to preserve the Old Brick Church and promote its presence in the community. She will be missed. Charlotte’s retirement will leave a void to be filled by Rachael Buchanan as the new director. In my opinion, it is both a challenge and a privilege to serve as Executive Director of Historic St. Luke’s Church. Rachael comes well qualified and experienced for the position. The Old Brick Church remains in good hands. Barbara Lindley Friend of St. Luke’s Smithfield not likely to happen if a person is housed behind bars in a jail cell. We can only hope that the General Assembly will soon take more action to address this problem as a higher priority and not continue to count it as something lower on its list. The actions of the son of Deeds last week should awaken in us all both prayers and action. Furthermore, if more attention is not given to treat those with mental health issues, then we can expect more losses and deaths, which could have been prevented through proper treatment as a result of adequate funding. It is urgent that we all call on our legislators to Editor, Smithfield Times provide this funding. The Oct. 30 Times Lud L. Spivey Windsor • See LETTERS, p. 3 It’s about the birth rate Recent events are optimistic Two recent N events in our N HE HE community offer compelling evidence that Isle of Wight and Smithfield are maturing in our ability to deal By John with race. One is the Hardy Election District’s selection of a School Board member and the other is the Smithfield Little Theatre’s decision to produce the musical “Hairspray” as its opening offering for the 2013-14 theatre season. I T T First, the election: Two years ago, when the Board of Supervisors was redistricting the county as required by federal and state constitutions and Edwards statute, there was a huge fight over whether to create seven districts, one of which would have been significantly weighted with African American residents. Opponents of the plan, both white and black, argued that the county should keep its five-district plan, SHORT SHORT ROWS even though it requires grotesquely shaped districts in order to maintain one minority-majority district and has a smaller percentage of black residents than would have the seven-district plan. The thinking, so it was argued, was that the five-district plan would guarantee black voters could keep one of five seats on both the Board of Supervisors and School Board, a greater “weight” of power than one of seven. The current Board of Supervisors appears to have swallowed • See ROWS, p. 3 Getting in touch Editor/Publisher John B. Edwards Business Manager Anne R. Edwards News Editor Diana McFarland Advertising Director Dennis A. Frazier Production Manager Jason Peters Marketing/News Allison Lee Marketing Consultant Lee Lovell Marketing Consultant Cassandra Yorgey Staff Writer Abby Proch Staff Artist Dylan Cook Classified/Circulation Shelley Sykes [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] 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., Nov. 27, 2013 - Page 3 Jumping sturgeon are a hopeful sign By Karl Blankenship Bay Journal News Service Two years ago, Bill Harris and his daughter were fishing on Marshyhope Creek on Maryland’s Easter n Shore when suddenly, across the river, a large sturgeon jumped out of the water. “‘That is a once in a lifetime experience!’” Harris exclaimed to his daughter, Susan. “We’ll never see another sturgeon.” He was wrong. During fishing trips last year with his friend, Randy Rowland, the two retired U.S. Department of Agriculture scientists saw sturgeon after sturgeon. They counted nearly 50 jumping sturgeon during their weekly fall fish trips on the creek, a tributary to the Nanticoke River. This year, they got an even closer look. On Sept. 20, Harris and Rowland were carp fishing when they saw a number of sturgeon jumping nearby. They edged nearer. Suddenly, a five-and-a-halffoot sturgeon leapt out of the river and into their 16-foot boat, landing between Harris, who was sitting in the back seat, and the motor. The big fish knocked a rod holder off the boat, sent a fishing rod into the water and brushed against Harris’ thigh. “It went ballistic,” recalled Harris, who leapt from his seat. “I was hoping he wouldn’t beat the bottom out of the boat.” Letters • Continued from p. 2 featured an op-ed that argued we should put a halt to immigration in order to reduce pollution: More immigrants mean more people; more people mean more pollution. The author somehow believes that immigrants don’t immigrate, but are made out of thin air, thus creating new pollution, as opposed to merely transferring it from one place to another. Population is lowered, not by constraining immigration, but by reducing birth rates. Birth rates are lowered by increased prosperity and education. As societies advance, birth rates go down. Allowing more immigration increases overall prosperity, thus lowering birth rates. Rows • Continued from p. 2 the argument hook, line and sinker, and refuses to revisit the seven-district plan. But two weeks ago, voters in Hardy District declared the whole argument to be nonsense. Hardy voters showed wisdom far greater than that of the supervisors and their lawyer. They said with their ballots that their “minority-majority” district can and sometimes will vote for the candidate based on something other than race. And it did. Tina Hill, who won the election, is white. Her opponent, Alvin Wilson, who lost is black. And rest assured that the division went both ways. While Mrs. Hill’s election required the support of black voters as well as white, you may be confident that Mr. Wilson, a county native from a wellknown family, education professional and genuinely nice guy, received both black and white votes as well in his narrow loss. That’s real progress, for it foretells a time when race will truly be set aside in the public as well as private forums. Hairspray There was a time when a musical such as “Hairspray” would probably not have been staged in Smithfield. The subject matter — a liberal-minded 1960s Baltimore teenager determined to advance the cause of racial integration The fish calmed down after less than a minute, and the two men were able to return it to the water. But they also took pictures — photographic evidence of what a number of other people have reported in recent years: large, jumping sturgeon in the Marshyhope and Nanticoke. State and federal biologists, intrigued by the reports, have made excursions to find sturgeon but with no success. “The only things we’re catching are sticks,” said Chuck Stence, a fisheries biologist with the Maryland Department of Natural Resources. “I don’t doubt him that he is seeing them, especially when you have one jump in your boat.” No one knows why large sturgeon leap from the water, but it’s been going on for centuries. During the Revolutionary War, a soldier was killed while rowing across the Potomac River when a sturgeon jumped out of the water and landed on him. The bigger mystery is why there have been so many reports coming from the Nanticoke and Marshyhope. Although large sturgeon are occasionally seen in Maryland waters, breeding populations are considered to be extirpated in the state. One possibility: The Nanticoke was the scene of an That said, considering that Americans constitute 5 percent of the world’s population and consume 25 percent of the world’s energy, it’s more than a bit perverse to focus on population control and not consumption levels. The author also mentioned the huge increase in immigration that started in the ’90s. What he didn’t mention was the reason for this increase: NAFTA. The North America Free Trade Agreement (Don’t let the name fool you. Free trade has nothing to do with it.) opened up industry in Mexico that undermined local economies, as well as taking away U.S. jobs. It also sent in subsidized U.S. corn that non-subsidized Mexican farmers couldn’t compete with. They were — would have been considered a bit edgy for our community. In that not-too-distant past, our community would have preferred not talking about the matter of race so publicly and bluntly. And had the Little Theatre attempted to present such fare a couple decades ago, the chances are that it would have been received lukewarmly, at best. Not so, the recent production. It was sold out from opening week forward. Crowds loved it, gave its performers enthusiastic ovations and embraced the young actors following each performance with a “thank you” for bringing it to Smithfield. Ironically, the young people who carried most of the roles in “Hairspray” probably didn’t realize that they are doing anything special, other than turning in a good theatre performance. For they have grown up in a different world than their parents and, certainly, their grandparents, and have likely found any hoopla over “Hairspray’s” social message to be puzzling. That, too, is progress. But the community’s oldsters knew what a change has taken place and, for the most part, rejoiced in it. And so, congratulations to the voters of Hardy District, and to the Smithfield Little Theatre. It’s appropriate that politics and art are leading our community forward. experimental release in 1996 of more than 3,000 hatcheryreared sturgeon. Sturgeon are an anadromous fish that spend most of their lives off the Atlantic coast but return to their native river to spawn. Sturgeon are long-lived, slow-maturing fish that don’t begin to reproduce until they are about 15 years old. So the timing is about right for some of those fish to return. Dave Secor, a fisheries scientist with the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science who participated in the original Nanticoke release, said that the fish being reported — mostly in the 5–6 foot range — are “in the ballpark” of being the right size for 17year-old sturgeon. Yet he and others are uncertain the fish came from the 1996 release. Those sturgeon were the offspring of adult fish from the Hudson River that were produced at a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service hatchery in Pennsylvania. Not only were the fish not from anywhere near the Nanticoke, they were a year old when they went into the river. Biologists don’t know when young sturgeon “imprint” on their native river so they can find their way back as adults, but they think it’s before a year. Hatchery-reared shad imprint on a river within 45 days of thus pushed off their land and into the United States. Bill Clinton even admitted that his policy of exporting subsidized crops undermined recipient countries’ self-sufficiency. Our government is responsible for this disastrous policy and we are responsible for our government. The least we can do is welcome people who have been displaced by our misguided actions. And NAFTA is just one part of the story. Support for brutal dictators, and their death squads, all throughout Latin America, certainly hasn’t helped matters. The vicious war on drugs and climate change are part of the mix as well. Stephen Warren Waverly Consider UMCOR Editor, Smithfield Times As the death toll continues to climb from the storm that recently hit the Philippines, over 5,000 families have been ravaged with the loss of loved ones. While the rebuilding of their community will take many years, numerous groups are on the ground there now supporting immediate relief efforts there. Groups like the Red Cross support disaster relief from the immediate aftermath of the storm’s devastation. However, there’s hatching, said Brian Richardson, of the Maryland Department of Natural Resources. “It does correspond with the stocking in 1996, as far as these fish coming back,” Richardson said. “But I would be very surprised if a sturgeon stocked at a year of age imprinted to the river.” Secor said there are other possibilities. The large number of adult sturgeon being caught on the James River the last few years suggest that river might have had several strong years of reproduction about 15 years ago. Some of those returning fish might be finding their way into the Nanticoke. “In the grand scheme of things, the Nanticoke isn’t that far from the James,” Stence noted. It’s also possible, Secor said, that they actually are Nanticoke fish. The last eggladen female found on breeding grounds in Maryland was in the Nanticoke River in 1972. Although no breeding population is known, it’s possible a small number of fish survived unprotected, and successfully reproduced about 15 years ago, and their progeny are now returning to the river. After all, in the mid-1990s, most biologists didn’t think there were sturgeon in the James River, either. The origin of the fish won’t another group that will also be arriving to help with relief efforts in the Philippines. UMCOR, the United Methodist Committee on Relief, serves the United States and more than 80 other countries around the world whenever a crisis strikes. While UMCOR is not among the very first organizations to arrive on the scene, they remain in the community long after the Red Cross and other groups leave. For example, 10 years after Hurricane Isabel came to Hampton Roads, UMCOR continues to operate in Poquoson and many other areas affected here by that storm. UMCOR is committed to providing help and relief over the long haul. As the international missions group of the likely be resolved until biologists successfully capture a fish and get a tissue sample that can be analyzed to identify the source of the fish. In the meantime, Richardson said, Atlantic sturgeon will continue to be considered extirpated from Maryland until biologists find evidence of actual reproduction in the form of little sturgeon. “We never really looked for little sturgeon, either,” he added. “So it’s possible there has been some spawning going on that we don’t know about.” Some of those answers could come next year, when biologists hope to return to the river with new nets, new equipment such as side-scan sonar, and new knowledge from people like Harris and researchers in Virginia about how to better find and net large sturgeon. If they catch a fish, they’ll not only get a tissue sample for DNA analysis, but when they make an incision to place a tracking tag, they will be able to peer inside the fish to see if it is “ripe” — ready to spawn. “I’m looking forward to this coming year,” Stence said. “If we do find that we have a spawning population here, that would be great.” Distributed by Bay Journal News Service? United Methodist Church, UMCOR is dedicated to those in need. But to continue providing for relief of the many who suffer from disaster, war or conflict, UMCOR needs support from people like you. As the Christmas season approaches, think of those less fortunate and help those who continue to serve longterm relief efforts, years after news of disaster has faded from the headlines. Visit www.umcor.org. Dave Lyons Smithfield Upton Bill or “Keep Your Health Plan Act,” which will allow individuals to keep their current health plans and offers others the opportunity to continue purchasing plans they deem adequate and affordable. In the spirit of the President’s own words, “If you like your plan, you can keep it” I would urge the President himself, and more members of the Democratic party to support this legislation. As a co-sponsor of the Upton Bill, Randy Forbes is speaking up for not only his constituency, but the nearly five million Americans who saw their policies terminated, and were offered nothing more Editor, Smithfield Times than a choice between I would like to applaud unaffordable premiums or our Hampton Roads exorbitant deductibles. congressional delegation Sharon Burton for their support of the Windsor Kudos to Rep. Forbes G1-021611 Smithfield Family Dentistry Digital subscription The Smithfield Times now offers subscriptions in digital format for $14 a year — or 27 cents per issue. A digital subscription is an exact copy of the newsprint edition, but instead of a physical newspaper, you get a computer file that can be downloaded each week. The computer file — a PDF, which opens in Adobe Acrobat — will open on a PC or a Mac and is viewable from any location that you can access your e-mail. The digital version has excellent image and color quality, and you can zoom, print, cut out and hang your favorite pictures or stories just like you would with the newsprint edition. 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 P. Milton Cook, Jr. DDS 309 Main Street • Downtown Smithfield www.smithfield-dds.com see us on facebook.com/smithfieldfamilydentistry Call Today for a Convenient Appointment! 357-4121 LIFESTYLES Page 4 Western Tidewater MASTER GARDENER Few herbaceous plants can rival, for the attention of gardeners or the passerby, the colorful floral display and foliage of the peony. They are exquisite and can be planted now through the end of November. Bare root planting instructions follow. 1. Well-drained soil, away from roots, full sun with afternoon shade when possible, as well as protection from wind. 2. Peony does best left alone, so provide enriched soil with a 2-foot across, 18-inch deep hole with compost in the bottom. Fill halfway with topsoil, more compost and 1 cup of bone meal. If acidic, add 1 cup of ground limestone. pH 6-7. 3. We have a rather mild winter here and planting shallow is usually acceptable exposing the roots to the winter cold. To avoid air space, fill the soil firmly around the roots. 4. Water gently and surround with a light mulch such as chopped leaves. The mulch will reduce weeds and regulate the soil moisture and temperature. Remove the mulch in winter. Plant needs to be chilled. The plant may not bloom the first year. It should be in top form by the third year. Expect a lush 2-4 foot peony that might need support if it is a tall double hybrid. Two that are grown in home landscapes are Paeonia spp. hybrids (garden peony) and Paeonia suffruticosa (tree peony). The garden peony has five or more large outer petals and a center of stamens or modified stamen. Single forms have centers of pollen bearing stamens. Centers of semi-double forms consist of broad petals inter mingled with pollen-bearing stamens. Double types have dense centers of only broad petals (transformed stamens.) In any case, flowering usually lasts one week in late spring to early summer. By selecting and planting early, mid and late-season bloomers, flowering can be extended for six weeks. There is a variety of beautiful colors with deep red being my favorite. In case you are wondering, they do not bloom blue. Gwen Holt Master Gardener Tween 12 & 20 Why Do Teens Commit Suicide? By Dr. Robert Wallace Creators syndicate Dr. Wallace, Andrew, A University of California research team interviewed over 6,000 teens who had attempted suicide and compared their life histories with teens who had never considered suicide. The data revealed that family problems, death of a loved one, and the breakup of a romantic relationship were the three most common reasons teens took their lives. These three situations can result in confusion, loneliness and depression. The teen then feels hopeless, isolated and abandoned, and decides there is only one way to be at peace, and chooses self-destruction. The teen years, because of all the emotional and physical changes they bring, are difficult for almost everyone. For some teens, these difficulties produce pain that is too much to bear, especially when combined with a major upset or disappointment. I often get inquiries from readers who wonder why a young person would commit suicide when he has his entire life in front of him. Teens have no perspective on their troubles. They don’t know that they’ll emerge from them and that life will eventually feel worth living again. Suicide is the tenth leading cause of death for adults in the United States, but for teens it ranks third. More boys commit suicide because they use more violent methods, whereas girls tend to use sleeping pills, and many times they can be saved. Dr. Wallace, My boyfriend and I have been dating steadily for the past year. Both of us will be graduating in June of next year. In the fall, I will be a student at Indiana University in Bloomington, while he will be going to Purdue University in West Lafayette. I want the freedom to have a social life by dating other guys. He wants us to stay faithful to each other and not date anyone else. He says we can still see each other on the weekends because our two campuses are only about 100 miles apart. I’d appreciate your comments. — Amanda, Carmel, Ind. Amanda, Weekends are a good time to catch up on studies, not to spend time on the highways. I would agree that you both should enjoy a campus social life and see each other occasionally, when time and studies allow. Fall of 2014 is a long way off. I’m wondering why you are concerned about dating others at this early date. Is it possible that you both could be dating others by fall of 2014? Dr. Robert Wallace welcomes questions from readers. Although he is unable to reply to all of them individually, he will answer as many as possible in this column. E-mail him at [email protected]. To find out more about Dr. Robert Wallace and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com. Green becomes platinum Isle of Wight County Schools have been certified platinum in the 2013 Virginia School Board Association’s (VSBA) Green Schools Challenge. The division was one of 38 recognized in the challenge this year. “We are excited to be a certified green school division again this year,” said Superintendent Katrise Perera. “Our staff continues to make great efforts in conserving energy and being more environmentally friendly which has a positive ipact in our community.” The VSBA’s Green Schools Challenge is a friendly competition designed to encourage implementation of specific environmental policies and practical actions that reduce the carbon emissions generated by both the local school division and the broader community. This is the fifth year the awards were given out. IWCS was certified gold last year and won first place in the Student Population 5,000– 10,000 category. The VSBA Green Schools Challenge was sponsored by Moseley Architects and ABM Building & Energy Solutions. IWCS will be honored for this achievement at the VSBA meeting later this winter. For more information on this program, visit http://www.gogreenva.org. Academy names honor roll Isle of Wight Academy recently announced its honor roll for the first nine weeks. •4th grade Headmaster list: Bradley Davis, Hannah Rowland, Rachel Sawyer, Alaina Stallings, Evie Taliaferro, Allison Catlett and Chase Magrisi. Honor roll: Hannah Craun, Maddie Daniels, Lilly Darden, Olga Diaz, Caroline Eure, Joshua Harrell, Brooke Hayden, Trent Holland, Lily Jones, Nicholas Newman, Amanda Barlow, Jacob Chapman, Brylee Clark, Emma Compton, Petra Cutler, Alyssa Donnelly, Riley Goss, Haylie Kavanaugh, Alex Miller, Andrea Savage, Lorraine Upton, Cade White and Hannah Willman. •5th grade Headmaster list: Garett Brown, Anali Castillo, Quinn Hooper, Molly Johnson, Jenna Miltier, Erin Ross, Allison Dolan, Sean McDermott, Joseph Askew, Erica Munford, Daniel Scrivanich and Olivia Upton. Honor roll: Duncan Bryce, Gavin Gregory, Russ Wells, Seth Archer, Amber Domino, MaKayla Donnelly, Aaron Felgentreu, Emily Hill, Caroline Prescott, Seth Baker, Connor Cary, Brooke Davis, Zachary Lightfoot and Kayleigh Yohn. •6th grade Headmaster list: Lucas Baylous, Chip Darden, Jed Davies, William Fricke, Katie Hiner, Alicia Ray, Shawn Rhodes, Kelly Sabin, Zach Stroud, Sarah Wait, Tyler Watkins, Lauren Weeks, Ethan Willette, Blake Atkinson, Andrew Barlow, Melanie Bellavance, Lee Bowden, Dailey Ellis, Mason Goss, Zara Kelly and Madison Lightfoot. Honor roll: Rachel Butler, Lauren Gardner, Juliet Halley, Tyler Hayslett, Morgan Magrisi, Jackson Plott, Peyton Rose, Miranda Upton, Michaela Wampler, Sarah Boynton, Sarah Beth Burnham, Amanda Days, Rett Edwards, Sykler Gray, Kaelyn Hooker, Logan Jones, Canaan Key, Grace Landen and Tucker Leverone. •7th grade Headmaster list: Ryan Boyce, Connor Capwell, Noah Hendricks, Joshua Savage, Alexander Stidham, Natalie Summerlin, Darren Upton, Jacob Hayden, Olivia Newman, Conner Soady, Katelyn Bryant and Mackenzie Wooten. Honor roll: Hannah Couch, William Ellis, Laurel Goff, Sarah KerrApplewhite, Betsy Pollard, Haley Redmond, Ashley Blair, Ellis Bryant, Nathaniel Carpenter, Taylor Jernigan, Noelle Ober, Zachary Thompson, Karl Yohn, Bryce Daniels, Sydney Grimes, Caitlyn Kinsey, Devin Lane, Michael Laskey, Jacob McCrary, Autumn Moody, Madison Rountree, Ethan Sylvia, Martina Viola, Michelle West and Aidan Williams. •8th grade Headmaster list: Jerry Dashiell, Colton Heard, Jaxson Hooper, Nicholas Johnson, Kevin Jurewicz, Kaylin Manner, Jana Nelhuebel, Reagan Nier man, Dylan Robertson, Hayley Stallings, Christopher Vaughan, Anna Wait and Meredith Webb. Honor roll: Brandon Casey, William Ciaston, Joseph Coons, Blake Davis, Lindsay Days, Alexander Gardner, Shelby Hockett, Emaleigh Hooker, Joshua Hooker, Kayce King, Hannah L’Abbe, Alexander LaMothe-Toland, Zachary Murden, Carolann Lynch, Robert Matthews, Victoria McBee, Laura McCann, Sabrina Palmer, Hannah Plott, Ciara Revell, Zachary Rhodes, Cameron Schuett, Spencer Scott, Riane Smith, Taylor Wampler and Madison Wells. •9th grade Headmaster list: William Keyt, Hayley Lane, Jacob Newman, Kaitlin Peterson, Ashley Petroski, Michael Quirin, Alex Simmons, Mackenzie Terry, Peyton Baylous, Brett Bradshaw, Dustin Brown, Georgia Earley, Amber Edwards, Trent Gwaltney and Abigail Hickman. Honor Roll: Stephen L’Abbe, Alison Marshall, Diana McBride, Kendall Parsons, Hunter Sherman, Gavin St. Clair, Rachel Tafoya, Ally Amory, Nathan Eurich, Cheyenne Freeman, Dawson Holmes and Zeph Kelly. •10th grade Headmaster list: Falyn Fentress, Will Morningstar, Kayla Robichaud, Trish Webb, Alexandra Williams. Honor roll: Matthew Byrd, Kaitlin Ciaston, Alec Edwards, Gavin Hockett, Thomas Hutchins, Tara Jeralds, Morgan Jones, Jacob Mintz, Marissa Mullen, Elizabeth Pittman, Madison Saunders, Ariel Smith, Grant Taylor, LJ Walter and Zach Wilson. •11th grade Headmaster list: Taylor Hart, Christopher Hickman, Emily Hooker and Jacob Wait. Honor roll: Andrew Ballard, Arianna Castillo, Madeline Ek, Emmaline Hartley, Gabriella Hooper, Bailey Key and James McRoy. •12th grade Headmaster list: Jessica Atkins, Connor Edwards, Matthew Herrmann, Ben Hickman, Joseph Jernigan, Tabitha Palmer and Amanda Petroski. Honor roll: Kendall Ballinger, Virginia Blair, Lane Blanton, Gaby Bryce, Tyler Carlile, Lexi Castillo, Mackenzie Daniel, Josh Darden, Corey Holleman, Ashlynn Lane, Min Young Lee, Brandon Saxby and Amanda Williams. ere It’s All Right H The Best Happy Thanksgiving to All!!! In The Business Smithfield - 1702 S. Church St. More Listings. (757) 357-3217, (800) 378-3578 More Sales. More Results. Your Local Full Service Real Estate Team G2-032713 I just returned home from the funeral of a 17-yearold friend who committed suicide. All the people who knew him are in shock. All I heard at the service was that he was the last person you would have thought would want to take his own life. All kinds of rumors were floating around, including some that were farfetched. What I really need to know is — why do teens kill themselves, and do more girls or guys commit suicide? — Andrew, Philadelphia. Pa. The Smithfield Times - Wed., Nov. 27, 2013 D! LAN Smithfield - $285,000 Spacious 5 Bedroom, 2 ½ Bath Home is Situated on Cul-De-Sac. Large Family Room with Brick Gas Log Fireplace, Large Remodeled Kitchen, Attached 2 Car Garage & Detached Workshop. Jan Ayers 757-371-1025 T! REN R FO Gatling Pointe $2,000 Gorgeous, All Brick Custom Home Features Open Floor Plan, 4 BR, 2.5 BA, Formal Living & Dining Rooms, Large Master with Sitting or Office Area. Private Backyard with Beautiful Landscaping. No Smoking. Call for Appointment to View. Linda Haymes 757-334-9184 $49,900 Build Your Dream Home on this 1.71 Acre Lot. Country, But Close to Town. Debra Coombs 757-692-7016 D! LAN Isle of Wight $159,900 A Rare Find! Almost 8 Acres Approximately 10 Minutes From the James River Bridge. Ready to Build. Paved Road Frontage. Wonderful Barrier of Trees on Side & Back. Call for Copy of Plat or Additional Information. Melissa Montgomery 757-237-2447 CE! PRI W NE Smithfield $114,000 Cozy Home on Cul-de-sac. 1056 SF, 3BR, 1 Bath. New Paint, Carpet, Recessed Lights. Wood Floors in Great Room & Hall. Ceramic in Kitchen, Dining Area & Bath. Large Deck. Marilyn Oliver 757-328-2587 Smithfield $294,900 Beautiful Home, Like New Condition. BIG Kitchen w/Lots of Cabinets, Lovely Tiled Floors. Open Floor Plan, Neutral Décor. Quiet, Rural Location on 1.3 Acres Near Smithfield. JoAnn Olson 757-377-7265 NEWING! LIST Surry $349,000 Cape Cod on 4+AC. 4 BR, 3 BA, Huge Family RM w/Vaulted Ceiling, Wood Burning Stove & Hardwood Floors Open to 2nd Floor Loft, Sunroom Overlooking Backyard & Tranquil Pond. Det. Garage & Full Apt. Above. Access to Private Community Beach. Cathy Saccone 757-573-9610 Founders Pointe $495,000 Beautiful 4 Bedroom, 3 ½ Bath English Cottage Style Home with Stone Veneer Accents. Loaded with Amenities - Hardwood Floors, Gas Fireplace, Granite Counter Tops, 2- Story Foyer, First Floor Master Suite. Community Pool and Clubhouse. Janet Salmon 757-434-6047 E! RIC P NEW Elberon $169,900 Carisbrooke $224,900 Lovely 3 BR 2 Bath Rancher on Wooded 1.33 Custom Built Home. 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths. Great All Acres. Privacy is a Focal Point. Spacious Kitchen, Season Room. Wonderful Established NeighborLiving Room with Open Floor Plan. hood. New Carrier HVAC Less Than 5 Years Old. Kaye Stanley 757-650-6685 Patty Coaker 757-295-8598 It’s difficult to find the perfect home... Kandi Rowe 302840 NMLS But it’s easy to make every home perfect! Accredited Let me show you how an FHA 203K Renovation will work for you. Conveniently Located Here in Smithfield - Stop in to See Me. Mortgage Banker Contact Me Today! Call & Let’s Discuss the Details! Direct (757) 409-9078 G2-071013 The Smithfield Times - Wed., Nov. 27, 2013 - Page 5 Church St. winery work progresses By Abby Proch Staff writer Like a fine wine, wineries, too, take time to come to fruition. Such is the case with Smithfield Winery, which has put roots down at Windsor Castle Park with its grapevines and is now outfitting an old storage building on North Church Street. The cavernous room at 117 North Church still looks much like its old self — barren, dank and a bit dusty — but soon it will be renovated and outfitted with the latest in winemaking equipment and decor. The one-room building will be part tasting room in the front and part wine production area in the rear, said Natasha Huff with Smithfield Winery. Huff, an engineer who recently obtained a viticulture certificate, and A rendering shows the eventual facade of the Smithfield Winery on North Church Street. her parents Michelle and Denton Weiss are embarking on the project together. Huff ’s husband, Matt, has a doctorate in chemistry with a focus on soil amendments and will monitor the vineyard’s soil content. The family started leasing the park property and bought the Church Street building earlier this year. New machinery is slowly trickling in, with the bladder press, crusher/ de-stemmer and hopper be- ing the first to arrive. Huff is looking into buying stainless steel tanks now and just recently secured a trademark for their American champagne, Southern Bubbly. Huff said the winery’s focus will be small batches of mostly white wines, with some table reds and a port. Huff expects the building’s construction to take four months as soon as the contractor is selected and permits are finalized. Even still, they won’t be quite ready for the public. Production is a long way’s away, with the grapes at Windsor Castle still two years out from harvest. Because grape harvests happen in November, and she didn’t harvest her own or buy any grape juice from another grower this month, Huff will likely have to until next November to purchase grape juice and wait until spring of 2015 to have any wines ready. In the meantime, Huff has been busy with the build out and checking in on the fledgling plants at the park. To date, no sour grapes to speak of. “We haven’t had any issues,” said Huff, including any foraging deer. Huff said some growers complain the deer eat the leaves, others say the fruit, but she hasn’t witnessed either. Of the 560 Muscadine grape plants, about 10 will need replacing, she said. It’s considerably less than the 10 percent loss they anticipated. “People are always walking up and taking pictures — it’s awesome,” said Huff of the vineyard’s popularity. “It’s part of the fun of being at Windsor Castle Park,” she said. “That would’ve been the wrong property to pick if you were bugged by that.” But just prior to harvesting, Huff would like the public to be hands off to make sure the grapes are as sterile as possible before harvesting. As renovations to the processing facility and tasting room on North Church Street grow near, Huff still has her attention on the vineyard. When the weather warms up again, Huff will be out fertilizing and painstakingly pruning each plant — all by hand. “That’s pretty much my life, but I love it.” TRINITY UNITED METHODIST CHRISTMAS PAGEANT Staff Photo by Abby Proch Natasha Huff explains what will eventually occupy the Church Street building. When & Where: Trinity United Methodist Church, 201 Cedar Street, Smithfield, VA 23430 Saturday, December 14, 2013 at 6:30pm 757-357-3659 [email protected] "Love Was Born For Us to Share" Come join us for a music filled night of the Christmas story. The pageant will feature the Chancel Choir, Rivers of Life Praise Band, Children's Choirs, Handbells, and costumed actors. A reception will follow in the Family Activity Center (with a special guest in a large red suit for the children). Page 6 - The Smithfield Times - Wed., Nov. 27, 2013 OBITUARIES Obituaries are posted as received, complete with visitation and funeral dates/times at: www.smithfieldtimes.com Katherine Lynn Taylor Katherine Lynn Taylor, 54, passed away peacefully at home with her devoted family by her side, Sunday, Nov. 24, 2013, after a courageous battle with pancreatic cancer. Born in Norfolk, Katherine was the daughter of the late Oliver Kenneth Sr. and Jean Rae Murphy Harris. She had been a Smithfield resident for the past 23 years. A beloved wife, mother, grandmother and sister, Katherine is survived by her husband of 23 years, Robert P. “Robbie” Taylor III; her daughters, Jamie L. Mott of Smithfield and Anne Taylor Lewis (Mike) of Virginia Beach; her sons, Neil Harris (Jenny) of Carrollton and Thomas A. Mott of Smithfield; grandchildren, Neil, Katie Carly, Shane, Thomas, Ava and Griffen; her sister, Donna Rae Garbus (Hal) of Smithfield; Oliver K. Harris of Chesapeake, Timothy M. Harris of the Outer Banks of N.C., Jeffrey P. Harris of Smithfield; nieces and nephews and a host of extended family. Katherine will be remembered for her love and passion for the great outdoors, and she was an avid member of many outdoor organizations. She was a member of Calvary Baptist Church. Katherine was a nurse for doctor practices in Norfolk and Virginia Beach. For some 13 years, she was a nurse of Dr. John Lyle and Dr. Eugene Gray, ENT doctors, a experience and opportunity Katherine appreciated the most. Family and friends will gather Wednesday, Nov. 27, 4-6 p.m. in Colonial Funeral Home, followed by a service celebrating Katherine’s life at 6 p.m. The Rev. Kawal Rampersad will officiate. Burial will be private at a later date. The family suggests memorial contributions to a local rescue squad of choice or to the IW Relay for Life, c/o Pam Jordan, 18214 Far mview Lane, Windsor, VA 23487. Arrangements are in the care of Colonial Funeral Home, Smithfield. Edward T. Remick II Edward Timothy Remick II passed away Nov. 19, 2013 after a long battle with cancer. He was predeceased by his father, Robert Remick; Worthington mother, Wortley Stott Remick; sister, Betty Lou Fentress; stepmother, Charlotte Ferguson Remick; and stepbrother, Nathaniel Remick. Ted was bor n March 16, 1926 in Smithfield. He attended Emory and Henry College V-12 Navy Program, but he preferred to see action and went to sea aboard the sub chaser SC 1504 in the Atlantic. Ted served a tour of duty in the Pacific aboard the USS PGM II, a navy gunboat. He saw action at Okinawa and served through the end of the Pacific War. Ted attended VPI and RPI (now VCU). He began a career in advertising. He was cofounder and vice-president of Martin Remick Moore Advertising. Ted was an ardent sailor, boat lover and water colorist. He was a member of the Virginia Motor Sport Club, the Jack Woodson Sketch Club, a member of the Sons of the Revolution and a member of the Pumpkin Hill Club. He is survived by his wife, Kay Gwaltney Remick; son, Edward Timothy Remick III (Anne); daughters, Charlotte Remick Wetzel (Scot) and Kate Remick Kurtz (Patrick); his six grandsons, Charlie, Teddy and William Wetzel, Remick and Bernard Kurtz, and Micah Remick. Ted is also survived by a sister, Edith Remick of Williamsburg; and a brother, Commander (Ret.) William C. Remick of Norfolk. A memorial service was held Nov. 25 at St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church, 6000 Grove Ave., Richmond, followed by a reception in the Parish Hall. A graveside service followed Nov. 26 in Ivy Hill Cemetery, Smithfield. Memorial contributions may be made to Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden, 1800 Lakeside Ave., Henrico, Va. 23228. Thanksgiving services slated Surry Baptist Surry Baptist Church Thanksgiving service is Wednesday, Nov. 27, 7 p.m. Mt. Sinai Baptist Deacon James Clarke Jr. will preach his initial sermon Saturday, Nov. 30, 4 p.m. at Mt. Sinai Baptist Church. Pentecostal Holiness T h a n k s g iv i n g servicewill be held at Pentecostal Holiness Church Nov. 28, 9 a.m. Guest church is New Covenant #2, Zuni, with Pastor Kenneth Powell, Dec. 1. The Christmas program is Dec. 22, 1:30 p.m. Watch night service will be Dec. 31, 10 p.m. Brown’s AME Brown’s AME Lay Organization will be hosting a musical extravaganza featuring the Smithfield High School Band, the Brown’s Mass choir and others musicians on Sunday Dec. 8, 2:30 p.m. Little Zion Little Zion Baptist Church is having an indepth study of the book of Revelations Wednesday evenings at 6:45 p.m. Join Little Zion, Main Street, and First Gravel Hill Baptist Church for a Thanksgiving Service Wednesday, Nov. 27, 7 p.m. at Little Zion. Info: 357-4830. Ruth Ann Thompson Ruth Ann Dunning Thompson, 81, passed away Friday, Nov. 22, 2013, after a brief illness. Bor n in Hampton, Ruth was the daughter of the late Leroy and Nellie May Gray Dunning. She grew up in Rescue/Battery Park and attended Isle of Wight County schools. She had lived in Georgia and New York. Ruth retired from Erie County Home and Infirmary in New York after 30 years of service. In her retirement, she retur ned to Isle of Wight County. Ruth was a member of Riverview United Methodist Church. Ruth was a beloved mother, grandmother and sister. She is survived by her daughters, Karen Fitch Linda Sangbush, Debra Fraley and Patty Gibbs; and her son, Jim Jones; sisters, Irene Buchanan, Janice Martin and Brenda Tew; and a brother, Leroy Dunning Jr.; 16 grandchildren and 22 great-grandchildren; and a host of nieces and nephews and extended family. In addition to her parents, Ruth is preceded in death by her first husband, When buying or selling, try... The Smithfield Times Classified Call now for information! 357-3288 Be sure to visit us one last time before heading home from Turkey Day! Join Us for Sunday Breakfast Buffet! 8am-12pm Rufus Jones and then by husband Oakley Thompson; and two brothers, Keith Dunning and Pat Dunning. A graveside funeral service will be held Saturday, Nov. 30, 11 a.m. in St. Luke’s Memorial Park, with the Rev. Leon Basham officiating. The family suggests memorial contributions to Riverview United Methodist Church, P.O. Box 288, Rescue, VA 23424 or to the Isle of Wight Humane Society, P.O. Box 273, Smithfield, VA 23431. Arrangements are in the care of Colonial Funeral Home, Smithfield. We have a large variety of breakfast favorites, fresh fruits, Belgian waffles and a made to order omelet station just waiting for you! Oyster harvest a recent record RICHMOND — Governor Bob McDonnell announced Monday that Virginia’s most recent oyster harvest has greatly exceeded recent years, reaching the highest level since 1987. The 2012-13 harvest of 406,000 bushels was also 60 percent greater than just one year prior. The oyster has an economic value of $42.6 million last year. The $2 million for oyster restoration included in the current budget is the greatest appropriation for the sector in Virginia history. “This is very gratifying news, even better than I’d hoped,’’ McDonnell remarked. “Good management has allowed us to put Virginia’s exceptional oysters on dinner plates around the world, creating good jobs, and generating new revenue for our state. Today’s announcement should also remind consumers everywhere to grab some delicious Virginia oysters next time they’re at dinner or in the store; thanks to Virginia’s sound management practices there are more for everyone to enjoy.” The Virginia Marine Resources Commission’s harvest data showed 406,000 bushels of oysters were harvested in the 20122013 season, up from 257,000 bushels harvested in the previous year. This is an almost 60 percent increase from year to year. The harvest boom came from both wild-caught oysters and from dramatically increased yields in oyster aquaculture operations on privately leased water bottoms. The agency had projected Virginia’s oyster harvest last year potentially could reach 320,000 bushels but the year-end numbers revealed the harvest was, in fact, a whopping 406,000 bushels. Of that, 149,000 bushels were harvested from public oyster grounds and another 257,000 bushels were harvested from privately leased oyster grounds. “We had high expectations for the oyster harvest, but this is substantially better than we dared to hope,’’ said VMRC Commissioner Jack Travelstead. “This year’s oyster season opened last month and the initial reports we’re hearing indicate we’re off to a very good start. The oysters being caught are big, tasty, and plentiful.” The previous year’s (2011-2012) harvest totaled 124,000 bushels from public oyster grounds and another 133,000 bushels from oyster aquaculture operations. “Over the past 12 years, the oyster harvest in Virginia has exploded from 23,000 bushels in 2001 to 406,000 bushels in 2013,” said Doug Domenech, Virginia’s Secretary of Natural Resources. “In that time, the dockside value of the oyster harvest increased from $575,000 to more than $16.2 million.” The ripple effects through the economy from last year’s unexpectedly large oyster harvest resulted in an estimated $42.6 million in economic value, using a multiplier of 2.63 on a dockside value of $16.2 million, a formula established by the late Dr. James Kirkley, a well-respected Virginia Institute of Marine Science seafood industry economist. The state’s oyster harvest is poised to increase even further, if weather and other environmental factors remain unchanged, due to this year’s historic $2 million investment in oyster replenishment. This is a program in which empty oyster shells are spread on state-owned public oyster grounds to provide habitat so naturally occurring oyster larvae can attach to the shells during spawning and grow to form new adult oysters that reach market size in roughly three years. “This investment provides significant ecological and economic benefits, and will present consumers with more delicious, highquality Virginia oysters in the years to come,” said Anthony Moore, Deputy Secretary of Natural Resources, who leads the restoration efforts in the Chesapeake Bay. A single adult oyster can purge up to 50 gallons of water a day. Oyster reefs provide important forage and refuge habitat for invertebrates, as well as juvenile crabs and finfish species. VMRC estimates every $1 spent by the state to plant oyster shells yields $7 in economic benefits in the form of larger harvests and increased jobs for oyster harvesters, shuckers, and packing houses. General fund appropriations for oyster replenishment funding have ranged from zero to as much as $1.3 million over the past two decades, and have never surpassed the $2 million allocated to the program in the 2014 state budget. The appropriation was proposed by Gover nor McDonnell and approved by the Virginia General Assembly earlier this year. These Local Churches welcome you and your family to weekly services. Central Hill Baptist Church 10270 Central Hill Rd, Windsor 357-2225 Rev. Roger Johnson, Pastor Parsonage 757-539-7759 Sun School 10am, Sun Worship 11am Wed Bible Study & Prayer Meeting 7pm 12/13 Good Shepherd Catholic Church 300 Smithfield Blvd., P.O. Box 840, Smithfield Mass 9am Sun, Weekday Mass: Tues & Thu at noon, Wed at 6:30pm Fri at 9am, Sat 5pm Phone: 365-0579 Fax: 757-365-4749 Pastor: Fr. Oscar P. Paraiso www.goodshepherd-smithfield.org 12/13 Healing Waters Worship Center Hope Presbyterian Church 12172 Smith’s Neck Rd, Carrollton, VA 356-1515; hwwcnow.org Pastor William M. McCarty, Senior Pastor Sunday am Worship 9 & 11am w kid’s church Wednesday worship 7pm & Bible study with Girls Club & Royal Rangers 255 James Street Meeting at Smithfield Luter YMCA Worship: 9:30 am Sunday School” 11:00 am www.hopepca.com Pastor George Boomer, 771-2243 Mill Swamp Baptist Church Riverview United Methodist 12/13 6329 Mill Swamp Rd, Ivor, VA; 357-2575 “A church That is Alive is Worth the Drive!” Sunday: Sun. Sch. 9:30am, Worship 10:45am, AWANA 5:30pm, Teens WOL, Adult Prayer Time 5:45pm. Wed:. Adult Prayer Time 6:15pm, Children & Teen Rec. Programs 6:15pm, Adult Bible Study 6:45pm Rev. James “Jim” Jones, Pastor 12/13 6/13 10696 Smiths Neck Rd Rescue Tuesday covered dish dinner/bible study 6:30pm Worship & Childrens Church 11am Leon Basham, Minister 357-0738 email: c.basham@charter,net 12/13 Saints of Runneymede Holiness Church Sandy Mount Baptist Church 7711 White Marsh Rd, Elberon, VA Intercessory Prayer Sunday: 8:30 - 9:30 am Sun. School 10am; Morning Worship 11:30am Wed Noon Day PrayerPrayer & Bible Study 7pm Andrew L. Cypress - Pastor 12/13 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 [email protected] 12/13 16091 Scott’s Factory Rd, Smithfield Church School - 9:00-9:45am Worship Service - 10am Bible Study - 1st & 3rd Wednesday 2nd & 4th Tuesday @ 7pm Rev. Dr. Bobby L. Taylor, Pastor 12/13 Southside Vineyard Community Church “Real, Reaching & Ready” 14353 Benns Church Blvd., Smithfield, VA Services Sunday @ 10:00 am Nursery, Children, Youth Ministries Casual with a Real Life Message www.southsidevineyard.com Pastor Bill Eley, (757) 357-SVCC (7822) 6/13 Trinity United Methodist Church Benn’s United Methodist Church 201 Cedar St., Smithfield, VA 23430-1303 Sunday School 9:30 Worship 8:30 & 11am, 9:30am Rivers of Life Rev. Jeff Cannon 357-3659 12/13 Smithfield Christian Church 18420 Battery Park Rd. Smithfield, VA 23430 Ph: 357-6644 Sunday Sch. 10am Worship 11am Wed., Study 7:00pm Jack Perry, Minister www.smithfieldchristian.org 14571 Benns Church Blvd., Smithfield Sunday Services 8:30 and 11:00am Sunday School 9:45am also offering preschool M-TH Rev. O.H. Burton, Jr., Ph. 357-3373 Bennsumc@yahoo,com 12/13 Christ Episcopal Church 111 S. Church St., Corner Church & Main Smithfield • 357-2826 9AM - Contemporary Service 10AM - Christian Education 11AM - Traditional Service Rev. Derek Pringle, Rector www.christchurchsmithfield.org12/13 Smithfield Assembly of God Church Uzzell United Methodist Church 1800 South Church Street, Smithfield 357-5539 Sunday Sch. 9:45am Worship Service 11:00am Wednesday Evening (including Children's Services) 7:00pm Donald E. Watkins, Pastor 15363 Uzzell Church Rd, Smithfield VA Sunday School 10:00am Sunday Worship Service 11:00am Becky Gwaltney, Pastor 810-9397 COME WORSHIP WITH US! 01/30 Bethany Presbyterian Church CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH 5358 Zuni Circle, Zuni, Va. 23898 15155 Turner Drive, Smithfield, VA 23430 Pastor Dan E. Gray Phone: 357-5718 Sunday School 9:30am "A Church Home for Your Family" Worship 10:30am Sunday: 9:45 AM 11 AM 6:30 PM Rev. Dr. Steven Frazier, Pastor Wednesday Prayer Mtg. & Children's www.bethanyzuni.org Bible Clubs @ 7 PM Call 357-3288 to be listed The Smithfield Times - Wed., Nov. 27, 2013 - Page 7 Battle of Smithfield commemoration tunity to capture the Union troops. On Feb. 1, a skirmish along Main Street ensued. During the threehour engagement, the Union gunboat SmithBriggs arrived, and the Union troops attempted to escape. Capt. Joseph Norsworthy cut off the Union retreat with cavalry. The gunboat was destroyed by Confederate cannon fire, and the Union forces were captured. The Smith-Briggs’ gilded eagle figurehead remains intact and will be on display during the Isle of Wight County Museum’s two-days of Sesquicentennial events, Jan. 31 – Feb. 1 in Smithfield. Friday, Jan. 31 is set aside for local school chil- dren and includes an opportunity to visit the Virginia Civil War 150 HistoryMobile hosted by the Virginia Historical Society. The HistoryMobile draws together stories from all over Virginia and uses state-of-the-art technology and immersive exhibit spaces to present individual stories of the Civil War from the perspectives of those who experienced it — young and old, enslaved and free, soldiers and civilians. The HistoryMobile will be available to the public on Saturday, Feb. 1, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Isle of Wight County Museum, located on the corner of S. Church and Main streets in downtown Smithfield. Also that weekend, Civil War re-enactors will have an encampment at Windsor Castle, demonstrating how soldiers lived during that time. Julius Octavious Thomas, Capt. Joseph Chapman Norsworthy, Capt. Nathaniel A. Sturdivant, Junious Wilson, Boat Capt. Cheshire, Mayor William The Museum plans to W. Joyner, Euphonius have living historians on Seeds, Edwin Morrison, hand there and at the 1750 Mollie Cowper and others Courthouse, as well as a downtown walking tour about the Battle of Smithfield. The Civil War Sesquicentennial Committee is also looking for local residents who may have letters, diaries, photos, drawings or newspaper articles from that time that can be used to add to the story. Descendants of those involved in the battle are also being sought, such as Richard Sidney Thomas, Supers firm on charging fees By Diana McFarland News editor A request to waive the fee for a Relay for Life soccer tournament was unanimously denied Thursday by the Isle of Wight Board of Supervisors. The Smithfield Soccer Club asked the county to waive $1,725 in fees to use Nike Park for its annual Kickin’ It for Cancer tour- nament, which draws teams from all over south Hampton Roads, as well as North Carolina, according to its Facebook page. So many teams participate in the annual event that it closes the park for county residents for the day, Furlo told the Isle of Wight Board of Supervisors at its Nov. 21 meeting. Now in its fifth year, the tournament is scheduled for Feb. 22-23. The tournament typically generates more than $17,000, so subtracting the rental fee doesn’t cause a significant loss to the American Cancer Society Relay for Life contribution, Furlo said. The tournament also requires additional park staff, resources and sup- plies, as well as causes Parks and Recreation to deny other rental requests that day due to lack of parking. That’s another possible revenue deficit of $500, according to county staff. Fees for the tournament were reduced in previous years, but the county hasn’t ever waived the entire amount, Furlo said. Windsor High School. At Smithfield High, 93 percent of the 1,269 students have received iPads, compared with 92 percent last year. Just 10 students have opted out of the iPad program altogether, and as of October, 120 students have been denied access pending outstanding obligations like fees, forms and digital citizenship. At Windsor High, the number of students now using school-issued iPads has grown from 88.5 percent of the student body to 97 percent. This year, 471 students have received iPads, three students have opted out and 10 have outstanding obligations. Neither school has students that have opted to be day users only, but last year there were one at each school. Criticisms of the program include poor plan- ning, little teacher training, lack of educational materials and inadequate digital safety measures. Since then, the schools have implemented stronger security controls and more teacher training. In April, Assistant Superintendent Laura Abel said year two is for setting specific expectations and training for individual needs and by year three, the iPad will be part of the school environment. iPad acceptance improving By Abby Proch Staff writer After a shaky first year, Isle of Wight County schools’ one-to-one iPad initiative has gar nered more high school users the second time around. School administrators pushed through poor public perception and debuted the three-year, $1.3 million program last fall. It appears interest in the program has grown overall, but most notably at who were involved in one way or another in the engagement. For more information call Historic Resources Manager Jennifer Williams at 357-0115 or local historian Albert Burckard at 613-6183. G1-112713 The Battle of Smithfield is the centerpiece of Isle of Wight County’s two-day commemoration of the Civil War Sesquicentennial, Jan. 31 – Feb. 1. The weekend event tells the story about a unit of Union soldiers who sailed up the Pagan River 150 years ago on Jan. 31, 1864 to investigate Confederate activity in the area. After landing and heading inland, the Union soldiers encountered a small Confederate unit, and after a minor skir mish, the Union detachment headed back to Smithfield to leave the area. Their gunboat departed without them forcing the soldiers to spend the night. Confederate Maj. N.A. Sturdivant took the oppor- COMEDY CLUB & TAVERN ESTABLISHED 1991 Kenny Miller with Bill Boronkay Admission: $12.00 Friday, November 29 9:00pm Saturday, November 30 8:00 & 10:30pm Reservations: 757-595-2800 • www.cozzys.com Friend us on 9700 Warwick Blvd., Newport News, VA Facebook Saturday December 14, 2013 8 am - 10 am at the Smithfield Center Have breakfast with Santa and the Elves! Enjoy a hot pancake breakfast provided by the Smithfield Kiwanis Bring your camera to capture your child sharing their Christmas wish with Santa (Please be in line for Santa before 9:30am) Tickets are $5.00 and children under 2 are free! Cash or check only. Please purchase tickets in advance. Call 356-9939 for more information. Sponsored by: The Smithfield Kiwanis and The Smithfield Center HAPPY THANKSGIVING to all our customers. We will be closed Thursday the 28 till Sunday th the 1st of December. See you again on Monday December 2nd. FARMERS SERVICE COMPANY 865 Main St. • Hwy 258 • Smithfield 357-4367 • Open: M-F 7am-5pm • Sat. 7am-Noon Page 8 - The Smithfield Times - Wed., Nov. 27, 2013 Committee OKs Frisbee course, theatre By Abby Proch Staff writer Smithfield is forging ahead with plans to add amenities to Windsor Castle Park — despite not knowing the costs —at the request of the park’s fundraising foundation. The Smithfield Town Council’s Parks and Recreation Committee — chairperson Connie Chapman, Randy Pack and Denise Tynes, also council members — roundly approved all amenities in a natural playground plan recommended by the Windsor Castle Park Foundation last week. The plan will go before Smithfield Town Council on Dec. 3 for final approval. The committee agreed to: three play areas, traditional and “military-style” fitness stations, a labyrinth, a wooded classroom/ stage, a fairy garden, a disc golf course, a picnic shelter and ravine sheltered overlook, a community garden, a per manent restroom/ storage facility with drinking fountain and expanded, paved parking lots. Foundation President Sue Ivy asked town officials to decide quickly what amenities they want so that the Foundation can begin fundraising. Ivy said the Foundation needs to know all the approved amenities up front because it would only hold one capital fundraising campaign. Vision • Continued from p. 1 for expensive repairs and asking him to allow public access. “I just wish we could afford to keep it,” he said. Kilpatrick also noted the uncertainty of the property’s future. “Of equal concern to me is the Town’s apparent lack of vision for this property,” she continued. “… The only proposed use that has been brought to my attention is for a winery that frankly is unrealistic given that the interested party’s overly ambitious vision for new construction is inconsistent with the terms of the easement.” Kilpatrick continued to say that potential buyers were not alerted to the easement requirements until recently. On Sept. 6, Stephenson Sale • Continued from p. 1 rounding properties until Feb. 5, 2014, said Town Manager Peter Stephenson. In 2007, retired Smithfield CEO Joseph Luter III gave the town $5 million to purchase the land for a park. In November 2008, the town purchased, with a At first, council members regarded the list of amenities as a master plan that they would approve in phases, with the most popular approved first. But as the conversation unfolded, council members brought more amenities to the forefront until all were on the table and ultimately approved. Several council members affir med that the amenities they approve must stick, because they cannot renege on an amenity once the Foundation has raised funds for it. In a later interview, Pack said he wasn’t concerned about approving all the amenities, even those they weren’t popular in the public survey, because plans can change. “We are in no way locked into having a Frisbee golf course or having a community garden,” he said, even though he likes both. Committee and council member Denise Tynes said she wants more public input. “Put the big map up so they can see it,” said Tynes in an interview Monday, referring to drawings of the proposed amenities. “If they don’t show up, that’s fine. We tried.” Until then, “I’m going to ask them to pull it and bring it back [to the committee level] until we can get more public input,” she said. “…It’s their property.” Tynes said she only voted to move the plans forward to be “a team player.” The Foundation, which had been a committee appointed by Town Council in 2010, recently dissolved as a government body and reformed as a tax-exempt organization. While it awaits approval from the Internal Revenue Service, it has linked up with Historic Smithfield, a local non-profit, to handle its donations. As a tax-exempt organization, the Foundation’s sole purpose will be to raise funds. It will not have the ability to directly impact the park, as it remains in the town’s ownership. What is not known is how much the amenities will cost and whether Natural Playground Company, the firm that designed the plans, will also handle construction, or if it will be sent out for bid. Some town officials still appear confused about what each other’s roles are when it comes to managing the park, asking whether the Foundation will serve as project manager or consultant. It will not, said Ivy. But, it has begun collecting cost estimates from Natural Playground Company, said Ivy. Ivy said she should have those estimates for the Dec. 3 Town Council meeting. Tynes said she’s concerned about the construc- tion of a disc golf course, as well as lack of a price tag. “This committee (the Foundation), if their fundraising is not successful, it’s going to fall back on the citizens. Don’t do anything in that park until you have the funding for it,” Tynes said. Chapman said if the funds aren’t raised, they won’t build all of the amenities. “When the foundation is able to gain support for the project, we will offer amenities that will benefit all park users from children to seniors - without compromising the natural park atmosphere,” said Chapman, who could not be reached by phone, in an email Monday. Pack said he wasn’t worried about approving the plans without an estimate because “cost estimates aren’t a huge part at this point, because they aren’t asking the town for money.” Rather, the Foundation is raising money, and the only taxpayer-funded amenity at this point is the $200,000 public bathrooms included in the town’s capital improvements program, he said. Also in the CIP is $350,000 for a playground area, set aside for fiscal year 2014-15, and $25,000 for a community garden in 2015-16 — but those are all placeholders until dona- requested assistance in establishing a timeline and budget to complete the renovations. He also requested help with creating a request for proposals for the work. Stephenson also said the town is interested in amending the easement to allow for “commercial wine making operations beyond the permitted agricultural use” and more flexibility when it comes to the tenant farmhouse. In January, Town Council discussed ways in which to repair dilapidated twostory tenant house, which dates to around 1910. Since then, no work has been done to the tenant house but the town is working with a contractor, said Stephenson. Williams said he’d like to demolish the farmhouse because it’s too far gone and too costly to fix. Stephenson said he has not heard from DHR since he sent the letter to Kilpatrick on Sept. 6. Repairs suggested in the present conditions report include: • For the manor house — repair flashing on the east side of the north porch, trim weeds and remove vines from the building, address the deterioration of the stucco, remove debris from perimeter drain, clean gutters and downspouts, repair a leak in the second floor dormer, investigate and repair flashing leak at chimney, remedy moisture in basement (with fans or dehumidifiers or by cutting back floors from the historic walls), replace missing baluster on staircase, conduct structural evaluation of the stair landing to ensure stability, investigate and repair cause of moisture and spalling on fireplaces, and conduct structural evaluation of the basement foundation for soundness. •For the tenant house, bar n office, granaries, smokehouse, sheds, children’s house and log cor ncrib — secure the buildings to prevent water infiltration and further deterioration with priority to roof repairs and repair deteriorated wood siding. •For the kitchen — secure the buildings to prevent water infiltration and further deterioration with priority to roof repairs, repair deteriorated wood siding, conduct a structural evaluation of the foundation walls and repair to the chimney cap. portion of Luter’s donation, the 163-acre Windsor Castle property for $3.8 million from Lewis McMurran, who had bought the property for $2.2 million in 2007 with plans to build a large “new urbanism” development. In addition, McMurran donated the manor house, outbuildings and about 46 acres to the town. tions come in, said Town Manager Peter Stephenson. An estimate from 2012 said the construction of a natural play area could cost between $100,000 and $350,000, depending on how many elements are included. There has been no public discussion of maintenance costs for the new amenities. Council members verbally agreed that the first elements to be built will be a toddler area, main children’s area and a hill slide. No one spoke strongly against anything in the plans — but Tynes said she was told to stay quiet. “I really didn’t approve it, but I’m a team player,” said Tynes, who said she was told by an unnamed “superior” to hold her comments until the council meeting on Dec. 3. “I have been asked not to speak up.” Tynes said naming a proposed butterfly garden after Rhonda Ralph, who worked at the YMCA and at 7-Eleven and died earlier this year, should go through an application process, and it should be named for someone all citizens know. “Sometimes I feel like I might be out there on a limb by myself,” said Tynes, who said she trusts council members Mike Smith, Randy Pack and Carter Williams because they are “for the citizens” and “have no agenda.” Mayor Carter Williams briefly aired complaints from residents about plans for a disc golf course. In a later interview, Williams said he’ll approve all the recommended amenities at the Town Council meeting, but said they’ll start with the playground and build in phases as money comes in, and disc golf is toward the bottom of the list. “We’re not bulldozing for disc golf,” Chapman clarified, adding that some people are misguided about • See AMENITIES, p. 9 The Isle of Wight Museum Foundation will host a Holiday Party on Saturday Dec. 7th, from 2:30-5:00pm at the Museum on Main Street. The party is open to the public. Victorian Shadowlight Theater’s Magic of the Holidays, 2:30-4:00pm 757-356-1223 A.V.E.S. Thanksgiving Holiday Schedule Isle of Wight County and Surry County Make Up Day Thursday’s Isle of Wight County Trash will be picked up on Friday November 29th Thursday’s Surry County Trash will be picked up on Friday November 29th HAPPY THANKSGIVING! G1-101613 Two (2) Bedroom Apartments in historic Downtown Smithfield CEDAR STREET APARTMENTS LORDY, LORDY, Look Who’s 40!!! Glenn T. Rountree 11/24/1973 Love, Our Children, Madison, Taylor, and Graham. 545 Cedar Street, Smithfield, VA 757-356-0717 TDD #711 [email protected] Rents range from $658 to $851 a month Rental Assistance may be available Dishwasher, stove, refrigerator, and wall-to-wall carpeting included; on-site laundry facilities and playground area. We pay water, sewer, and trash pick-up. Tenant pays own electric. One-year lease and security deposit required. Contact the Site Manager for more information. This institution is a Equal Housing Opportunity Provider and Employer The Smithfield Times - Wed., Nov. 27, 2013 - Page 9 Critics worry town will spoil natural park By Abby Proch Staff writer Critics of a proposed disc golf course are worried it will ruin current woodlands and interfere with walkers on Windsor Castle Park’s walking trails. A relatively new sport, disc golf is a game in which players toss discs — or Frisbees — toward a target, called a basket, in as few throws as possible. Courses can be nine or 18 holes like traditional golf courses, but differ in that they are usually partially wooded and have a narrower field of play with more obstacles. Current plans at Windsor Castle show a 4,000 linear-foot course snaking through a wooded area of the park. Critics of a potential Windsor Castle disc golf course have expressed concerns over whether trees will be cleared to make way for the course. Smithfield’s Parks and Recreation Committee chairperson Connie Chapman said last week that they will not be “bulldozing” to make way for the course. The fine print on the park’s plan says in red ink, “No existing trees are to be removed!” Terry Baronner, parks manager with the city of Suffolk, said the “extremely popular” 18-hole course at Bennett’s Creek was built without cutting down a single tree. “We just took the natural contour of the woods … we didn’t do a whole lot,” Baronner said. Baronner said his course cost $9,000 to construct, with labor offered by volunteers from a Portsmouth disc golf club, and left the woods intact. Also a concer n was whether players will come in contact with walkers, increasing the chance a walker might be hit in the Amenities • Continued from p. 8 what disc golf actually is. Chapman suggested holding a community forum to educate the community, but the suggestion didn’t gather traction. Pack, whose family busi- ness, Smithfield Station, sits across the street from a park entrance, said he doesn’t feel he has a conflict of interest in making decisions regarding the proposed amenities. Pack said he’s never seen someone visiting the park walk over and have lunch or drinks, though it can happen. “You put the interest of the town first and there are no conflicts at that point,” he said. Town Council will vote on the natural playground plans on Dec. 3, 7:30 p.m. at The Smithfield Center. Wight Volunteer Rescue Squad building at $5.4 million and the Norfolk water deal at $10 million. In 2002, the county was carrying $49.3 million in debt. Debt spending began in earnest in 2009 when the total debt shot up to $84.3 million — despite the global economic downturn. Two years later, it was at $135 million. At the same time, the county’s largest taxpayer, International Paper, closed its mill in 2010 and took with it more than $5 million in revenues. Some of that has been recouped with the limited reopening of the mill, as well as the opening of Green Mountain Coffee in the intermodal park. Finances • Continued from p. 1 stuck with the contract, but it’s more useful to look forward. In the past 10 years, the county’s debt has grown by 175 percent, with major purchases requiring debt including the Smithfield Volunteer Fire Department building at $5 million; Smithfield Middle School at $26 million, the new courthouse building at $17 million, the new Georgie D. Tyler Middle School at $24 million, the county administration complex at $9 million; and the new Isle of Correction In Nov. 20 story titled “Windsor Christmas to include 460 tree,” an incorrect address was given for the open house to be held at the new Windsor Police Department on Dec. 7, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. The correct address is 56 East Windsor Boulevard. head with a errant disc. Though park plans show the course separate from walking trails, town officials have repeatedly said the plans are not written in stone. In Bennett’s Creek, when walkers and golfers do cross paths, there isn’t a problem, said Baronner. The 18-hole course at New Quarter Park in York County is mostly separate from its walking trails, said Parks Supervisor Molly Nealer. On a beautiful day, it attracts about 40 players, she said. Hampton Roads has at least six disc golf courses, with one of the most popular being at New Quarter Park. “Oh, it’s fabulous,” said Nealer. “I never imagined it would be so popular.” In the five years it’s been there, the course has become one of the most popular in the state, is often a stop for tourists coming through Williamsburg and plays host to tournaments, said Nealer. New Quarter’s partially wooded course was designed by a York County employee and constructed by volunteers with materials purchased by the county, she said. Baronner said the 18hole course at Bennett’s Creek is “one of our most popular amenities in the park.” It’s free and plays host to tournaments. Disc golf, as well as other proposed amenities to Windsor Castle Park, recently made it through the first round of approval by Smithfield town officials despite gaining little interest a public survey. Smithfield Town Council’s Parks and Recreation Committee approved plans to outfit the passive park with several new features, including children’s playgrounds, a labyrinth, an amphitheater, a community garden and a disc golf course. A new disc golf course got 50 votes compared with 170 for climbing structures, the most popular amenity, from 226 respondents. The town also solicited opinions from focus groups. The majority who participated in the survey & were Smithfield residents between 41 and 60 years old, indicated that they bring kids to the park and said they used the park one or more times each month. Of the current amenities, people most enjoy the walking trails (61 percent), followed by the kayak launch (12 percent) and the overlooks, benches and water views and access (10 percent). When asked what they’d like to see in the natural play area, respondents suggested climbing structures, slides, benches, a butterfly garden, a labyrinth and a fort. In addition to the natural play area, people wanted restrooms, more informational signage, nature lectures, smaller or lower picnic tables, drinking water foundations, farmers market, food vendors, better parking and better accessibility for those with disabilities. The least popular amenities were barometers, disc golf course, magnifying station, compass and something called “‘reach-through holes.” Page 10 - The Smithfield Times - Wed., Nov. 27, 2013 Mental • Continued from p. 1 lice say was committed by Deeds’ son, who was refused extended mental health care services the day before. Morris met Friday with mental health experts from around the state — David Lyons, director of Eastern State Hospital; David Coe, executive director of Colonial Behavioral Health and chair man of a regional leadership team; Dr. Mark Freeze, executive director of Eastern Shore Community Services Board; John Duell, director of Hampton Roads regional projects; and Demetrios Peratsakis, executive director of Western Tidewater Community Services Board. Within hours, Morris and his cohorts developed a pilot program that works similar to an emergency room — but for people ex- periencing acute mental health issues, he said. After receiving treatment that could last up 12 hours, depending on each case, patients would be released or referred for additional treatment, he said. About 50 percent patients will need long-term care, he said. Minimum requirements for a drop-off center are: access to a medical pharmacy, appropriate psychiatric staffing and services and security. Security is key, he said, because police need a proper chain of custody before they can release people into a center’s care, he said. Morris is looking into private security firms. Morris has come up with three options for a drop-off center: a renovated building at Eastern State Hospital in Williamsburg, increasing staffing at local Crisis Stabilization Units or using an existing freestanding, privately-owned medical facility. Morris favors an existing freestanding facility and has two in mind, but he isn’t ready to name them just yet. “That’s the most financially feasible option,” he said, because the building and access to the pharmacy are already there. It just needs more staff, he said. “I’m looking at the most efficient and productive way to do it — and cost effective,” he said. As for retooling a building at Eastern State, Morris says he has encountered “a lot of pushback from that due to the stigma of a state-run mental health institution.” Eastern State Hospital has been tearing down buildings and selling off property in recent years, he said. It’s down to 302 beds from a few thousand, he said. As state-run facilities began closing 40 years ago, patients were transferred to group homes and moved back in with their families, he said. But both types of homes aren’t often prepared to treat people with mental illness that turns violent, Morris said. Now police are being called to group homes in large numbers and are often forced to jail people, he said. “There was some very well-intentioned reasons to get them into the community, but I guess they thought there was someone there that will be there to take care of them and that isn’t always the case,” Mor- Police Department, Hope had wiped out the original payee’s name on a preprinted company check with a solvent and typed his own name in its place. Hope also changed the check amount from $50,760 to $9,760 to be less conspicuous, Valdez said. He then tried to cash the checks at Farmers Bank where bank tellers reported him as acting weird and called police. Hope abandoned his plan and left the bank, leaving the forged check and his I.D. card behind, said Valdez. Hope was not armed and did not threaten tellers, Valdez said. Smithfield Police conducted a search that led to a chase as the man ran toward Council Sales and Service and into the Grimesland neighborhood. Hope reached Magruder Road and hid in the marsh, Valdez said. Smithfield Police searched for the suspect by boat on Cypress Creek and sought the help of a canine unit from Suffolk Police Department, but to no avail. After concluding the search at 4 p.m., police received a tip from a Farmers Bank teller at a little after 11 p.m. that evening saying the man was walking along South Church Street. Police arrested Hope at McDonalds. They believe the man hid from police in the marsh all day. Check forgery draws sentence By Abby Proch Staff writer A North Carolina man chased by police into the marsh and later arrested while ordering a sweet tea at McDonalds recently pleaded guilty to forging checks at a local bank. Bryan Hope, 46, of Charlotte, N.C. pleaded guilty on two felony counts of forging coin and bank notes after trying to cash a forged check at Farmers Bank in Smithfield on Aug. 2. Hope was sentenced to five years in prison with four years suspended, and will serve a year consecutively with another sentence from another jurisdiction. According to Lt. Patrick Valdez with the Smithfield ris said. Private facilities have no obligation to take them and sometimes patients want to stay because they have no family support. Sometimes people are tur ned away because though there may be space in the hospital, there is no space in a psychiatric area equipped to treat people who may be har mful to themselves or others, he said. The third option, using Crisis Stabilization Units, is also less likely as the units would need security upgrades and the addition of a pharmacy, he said. Morris estimates a single drop-off center would cost between $250,000 and $450,000 a year, with a private facility being the least expensive option and retooling Eastern State the most expensive. Morris hopes for the center to start as a statefunded pilot program, eventually moving it to local funding. He believes that the drop-off center will put more law enforcement back in their primary duties and cut costs associated with having law enforcement handle psychiatric crises. One or more officers often spend their whole shift or longer detaining and transferring mental health patients to hospitals or treatment centers clear across the state, he said. “I think there’s going to be a direct savings to every single community here.” The Woman's Club of Smithfield presents The Smithfield Cookbook Continuing Traditions Purchase from these Smithfield Merchants • Arts Center@319 • Taste of Smithfield • Chamber of Commerce • The Christmas Shop • Cloud Nine • IOW Museum • Paisley Pig • St. Luke's Gift Shop • Victoria's Rose • Darden's Country Store • Smithfield Station • Little's Flower Shop • Blackwater Library • Smithfield Ice Cream Parlor A thoughtful gift for all on your list! [email protected] • 357-2312 Board scores SOLs as poor By Abby Proch Staff writer Students aren’t the only ones who dislike standardized tests. Isle of Wight educators recently supported a movement to revamp the state’s Standards of Lear ning standardized testing and school accreditation programs. The Isle of Wight School Board, with the support of Superintendent Katrise Perera and school officials, stood up against standardized testing recently when it approved a resolution for standardized testing reform. The resolution will be presented before the upcoming General Assembly. “I’m not afraid of accountability … but let’s not put so much on one day of a student’s life,” said Perera. “… You can’t get an experience from taking a standardized test.” By way of the resolution, the School Board joined a public school sys- tem movement in Virginia that contends the state relies too heavily on “high stakes testing” that is “strangling our public schools” and undermines teachers’ ability to provide broad and exploratory educational experiences. The Board also alleges that there is no research to suggest that taking the tests will aptly prepare a student for college or a career, and no research to suggest the test results are an authentic measure of student achievement and growth. Windsor representative Julia Perkins, a for mer teacher, lamented that students nowadays don’t get to go on as many exploratory field trips as generations past due to their obligation to testing and testing preparation. 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Evaluation day is mandatory for all basketball players (cheerleaders can come anytime that day, to size uniforms if needed) Evaluations: 12/7/13 (EUMC FLC) K-1 & 2-3 (10am–12pm) 4-6 (12:30–2pm) You only need to come for a 15-20 minute drill session anytime during your designated grade time slot. Practice starts 1/4/14 Season ends 3/15/14 Register online at: www.smithfieldbaptist.org or call: 357-2536 ADOPT A PET sponsored by 357-9787 www.hometownrentalsva.com This big beautiful boy is my friend Mason. He is about 2 yrs old and 75 lbs of best friend. Mason loves people and likes other dogs. He would love a fenced yard to play in and a companion to pal around with. Mason has been neutered and is in excellent health. Come adopt mason! This little 3 yr old lady is Rory. She sits in her pen everyday wondering when she will have a real home. Rory is a small mix breed about 30 lbs of love. She has a lot of energy and would love a yard to play in. Come see Rory and see what I mean. too! PIZZA SATURDAYS! FREE to our customers from 12 to 2pm! Visit The Shelter On Facebook Isle Of Wight Animal Shelter Call The Isle Of Wight Animal Shelter at 365-6318 or search Petfinder.com to see all available animals. Or contact a member of Isle of Wight Humane Society at 357-4214, 365-4207, 238-3313, 356-9119 or 356-9067. G1-102313 at Smithfield Baptist Church A true waterfront home at a remarkably affordable price! $319,900 The Smithfield Times - Wed., Nov. 27, 2013 - Page 11 Sparse acorn crop tough on wildlife ease — that collectively influence acorn development from the time of flower initiation to acorn maturity. Most flowers seem to be aborted between the time of initiation and pollination. Late spring freezes and high humidity during pollination are primary causes (we experienced both of these over much of Virginia in 2013). Later, immature acorns can be lost due to summer droughts, high temperatures or insect predation. In addition, research has shown that the inherent cycles between bumper crops and light crops may be an adaptation to allow the trees to restore their resources following a bumper crop. “In other words, a large crop one year may reduce the trees’ resources resulting in lower production the following year(s). Since 2012 was a bumper crop of acorns for much of Virginia, this could be another explanation for this year’s light crop. The overall consensus seems to be that there are inherent cycles of reproduction that are modified by the impact of weather conditions in a particular location,” Creighton said. Several observers have questioned whether the periodical cicadas that emerged in much of the Commonwealth this year could be a factor. According to VDOF Forest Health Program Manager Dr. Chris Asaro, that is unlikely. “I don’t think they have anything to do with it,” Asaro said, “because the mast failure seems to be a lot more widespread across the state, including areas that saw no cicadas. Plus, cicada activity was pretty spotty even in the outbreak areas, yet mast failures still seem to be occurring just about everywhere. While I think it’s physiologically plausible that some heavily attacked trees saw lower mast yields than they otherwise might have, I don’t think it’s a complete explanation for what’s going on.” “Acorn production in Virginia in 2013 was low – comparable to the previous low in 2008. The white oak crop appeared to uniformly fail across the state, while some pockets (generally in eastern Virginia) of good red oak production were found. Mast production has alternated from high to low levels since 2010. The impacts of acorns on wildlife populations are extensive and complex. And they are most dramatic where there is little diversity of habitat types and few alternative food sources to acorns,” said Gary Norman with DGIF. DGIF officials are con- County wants ATV trail at Heritage Park Isle of Wight plans to apply for a grant to build an ATV trail at Heritage Park. The $25,000 grant is from the Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation and requires a local match of $6,250, which is already in the fiscal 2014 budget. The ATV trail is part of the park’s master plan. The motorized trail is for young riders with engines not to exceed 50 cubic centimeters, according to the master plan. The trails will be created and maintained by local youth riding groups within Isle of Wight County. Other amenities listed in the Heritage Park master plan include pedestrian trails, equestrian trails and center, restrooms, playground, dog park, picnic shelter, community center and more. cerned about a light crop because acorns are a preferred food for many wildlife species, including white-tailed deer, black bear and wild turkey. Acor ns are rich in fat, soluble carbohydrates and energy, which are important nutritional needs that contribute to the animal’s body condition, survival, harvest rates, reproduction and, eventually, population status. The roaming range of black bear and wild turkey can increase two- to four-fold in years with mast failures, and long-range gray squirrel movement can be significant as they search for acorns. “Oftentimes the search for food creates situations that bring wildlife closer into residential areas to find human-related food sources resulting in unwanted interactions between animals and people,” Norman said. In addition, deer may over-browse their habitats when acorns are not available, thus reducing their habitat’s carrying capacity for future deer populations. Black bear tend to den earlier when fat-rich acorns are scarce, and this tends to limit the build-up of their nutritional reserves (fat). And bear cub survival tends to decline in years with mast failures. How will healthcare reform affect me? Just call. We’ll help you figure it out! 757-356-1200 On The Web: www.HealthInsurance-va.com An Authorized Independent Agent for Planning today for a secure tomorrow. G1-082113 Oaks are among the most common hardwood tree species in many parts of Virginia. Because of their importance both as a source of forest regeneration and as a mast crop for wildlife, each year’s acorn crop is the subject of much attention. It seems almost every year there are concerns as to why there is either an over-abundance or scarcity of acorns. This year is no different. Many reports from various parts of the Commonwealth indicate that the acorn crop this fall is very light, according to officials at the Virginia Department of Forestry (VDOF) and the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries (DGIF). “Acorn production varies widely — from nearly zero to a quarter million or more acorns per acre. Different locations, years, species and even individual trees produce extremely different crops, and heavy ‘bumper’ crops occur only every two to seven years.” sad VDOF Research Program Manager Jerre Creighton. While it is impossible to pinpoint one specific cause that would explain the acorn crop for an entire region in a given year, there are many factors — such as weather, insects and dis- Anthem Health Plans of Virginia, Inc. trades as Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield in Virginia, and its service area is all of Virginia except for the City of Fairfax, the Town of Vienna, and the area east of State Route 123. 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BOX 154 ZUNI, VA 23898 Get 1 Room painted at Regular Price, Get the 2nd Room at 1/2 Price! EXPIRES 12-31-2013 Get 2 Rooms painted at Regular Price, Get the 3rd Room for $1.00! EXPIRES 12-31-2013 SCOOTER GUY “Billy” Scooters Helmets & More! 1802-B South Church St. Smithfield VA (757) 810-1932 AFFORDABLE MARINE SERVICES Keeping You on the Water Since 1992 FALL FISHING IS HERE! Call us if you need any service • Engine Repowering Specialist • Stern Drive Repair • Marine Supplies • Outboard Service • Tune Ups • Winerizations Available 12/11/13 AUTHORIZED VOLVO PENTA DEALER 609 Rotary Street, Hampton, VA 23661 (757) 838-7387 • (757) 838-6660 Fax G1-100913 Leaf Removal Full Yard Clean Up Curb Side Pick Up Available Best Prices in Town & Fast Friendly Service 757-613-9399 www.jonescurbappeal.com The Smithfield Times SECOND FRONT Nov. 27, 2013 Community calendar Thursday, Nov. 28 5K RACE—The second annual Ian Burgett’s Thanksgiving Day 5K and one mile fun run is Thanksgiving morning. Register online at www.runreg.com, search Iansrun, by Nov. 20. Late registration is Wednesday, Nov. 27, 3 - 7 p.m. at the Gatling Pointe Yacht Club. Day of event registration opens at 7:30 a.m., race begins at 9:15 a.m. Event benefits the Ian Burgett Memorial Fund. VOLUNTEERS NEEDED— Food donations and raffle items for the Ian Burgett’s Thanksgiving Day 5K and one Mile Fun Run are needed. Volunteers and sponsors are also needed to help with this event. Contact: [email protected] or 344-4215. Friday, Nov. 29 TREE SALE—Carrollton Volunteer Fire Department’s annual Christmas tree sale starts Friday Nov. 29, 9 a.m. at the Fire Station. Sales continue 6 – 9 p.m. weekdays and 9 a.m. – 9 p.m. weekends. Donations from this fundraiser benefit fire/rescue services. Info: 613-6183. Page 13 Old Bible leads to search By Diana McFarland News editor W illiam L. Folk’s “mama” gave him a Bible for Christmas in 1887. But Sometime between 1888 and the 1960s, the Bible got lost in a heap of papers, magazines and other items stashed in the attic of a house located on South Church Street in Smithfield. That’s where building contractor Fenton Wyatt found it after being asked by his boss to clean out the attic as part of an ongoing renovation. Wyatt decided to keep the Bible, and there it remained with him, untouched, for more than five decades. Recently, the old Bible sparked Wyatt’s curiosity — what if he was able to find a member of the Folk family and return it in time for Christmas — 126 years after it first found its way into the family? Folk was attending the University of Virginia in 1887 when he received the thick, gold leaf-edged King James Bible as a gift. To reassure his mother that he would use it, Folk penned a promise to “read this Bible every night and try to be a better boy.” However, the gold leaf remains pretty much intact — as if fingers hadn’t flipped through the pages very much. The only other information is Folk’s address while at UVA — 45 West Lawn. The fact that Folk stayed in a Lawn room while at the University of Virginia could be a story • See BIBLE, p. 14- Saturday, Nov. 30 OPEN HOUSE—Historic St. Luke’s Church Christmas open house is Saturday, Nov. 30, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m., and Sunday, Dec. 1, 1 - 4 p.m. Live music, tours of the church and refreshments. Free admission. Info: 357-3367. Sunday, Dec. 1 ART OPEN HOUSE— A genuine art from the heart open house at the Arts Center @ 319, 1 – 4 p.m. Hot cider, treats and meet new resident artist Juliette Marshall. Featuring hand crafted figures, oils, acrylics, pottery, jewelry and more. Now offering a layaway program. Staff Photo by Diana McFarland Monday, Dec. 2 MEDCARE INFO—The MedCare Access program will be at Windsor Pharmacy, Dec. 2, 10 a.m. – 12 p.m.; the Windsor Library, Dec. 3, 10:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.; the Carrolton Public Library, Dec. 3, 12 - 2 p.m.; at Mary Wells Senior Center, Nike Park, Dec. 4, 10:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.; and at the Smithfield Library, Dec. 5, 1 - 3 p.m. Event Event will help Medicare beneficiaries navigate Medicare and Medicare Part D. Free and open to public, no appointment necessary. Info: 3284217. Tuesday, Dec. 3 BUDGET MEETINGS—Isle of Wight County Schools community budget meetings will be Dec. 3, 6 p.m., Windsor High School and Thursday, Dec. 5, 6 p.m., Smithfield High School. The meetings will offer open discussion regarding the fiscal 2015 budget process. Friday, Dec. 6 TREE LIGHTING—Smithfield Christmas tree lighting is at The Smithfield Center, Dec. 6, 5:30 p.m. Music by the Smithfield High School Band. Soup and chili will be available after the ceremony. Free admission. Info: 344-5839. IW TREE LIGHTING—The tree lighting is held on the front lawn of the Isle of Wight courthouse complex, Dec. 6, 5 p.m. The Woman’s Clubs of Carrollton and Windsor will hang the wreaths and Dr. and Mrs. B.F. Jamison will light the tree. Music by the Isle of Wight Academy chorus. Refreshments served. The event is free and open to the public and sponsored by the Isle of Wight County Events Committee. Info: 357-2503. Saturday, Dec. 7 WINDSOR PARADE—The Windsor Christmas parade is Saturday, Dec. 7, 4 p.m. and ends with the tree lighting at the Windsor Library. CAR SHOW—The 13th annual community Christmas party at Charlie Daniels Racing is Dec. 7, 11 a.m. – 5 p.m., at 20128 IWIP Road. Event features a car show, the Smithfield High School band, the Heather Edwards Band, Foot Note Dancers, vendors, children’s activities and food. Car show registration is $20 and starts at 9 a.m. Goody bags and dash plaques to the first 100 cars. Santa will arrive by Nightingale helicopter around noon. Info: • See CALENDAR p. 14 Staff Photo by Abby Proch Carrollton resident Fenton Wyatt, above, is looking for the descendants of William L. Folk. He found the young man’s Bible more than 50 years ago while renovating a house in Smithfield. Left: Folk provided some information about the origins of the Bible and where he lived when he received it for Christmas in 1887. dry In the beginning, there was turkey Today, there are alternatives By Diana McFarland News editor Turkey could hardly be considered “fast food,” but it was speed that got Brett England hooked on deep frying. The whole bird, that is. Roasting a turkey in the oven takes all day, he said. But frying it only takes 3540 minutes, England said. “It’s almost a spur of the moment thing when you decide to make a turkey.” England is in charge of the Thanksgiving turkey for himself and his wife, Jennifer, who is the Historic Resources Manager for Isle of Wight County. But before submerging the turkey into hot oil, England soaks the bird in a brine solution – one of the latest solutions – in addition to deep frying – for overcoming the one of the biggest challenges of Thanksgiving dinner – dry breast meat. There are many reasons suggested as to why turkey becomes dry when it’s roasted in the traditional oven — from being very lean to not being stimulating enough for the taste buds to secrete saliva. Back in the day, as they say, cooks tried to overcome that tendency by slathering the bird with butter. But basting wasn’t foolproof and sometimes the meat still came out dry. That’s where the gravy came in – but that’s another challenge all its own. By brining the bird in a solution of salt and water, the meat soaks up the liquid and allows the muscle fibers to swell and unwind. For a whole turkey, it takes about a gallon of water, two cups of salt and a 12-24 hour soak in the refrigerator to get the best results. England likes to add some brown sugar to his brine solution, and there are many recipes online that call for a variety of herbs, spices and other additives. But all brine mixes contain salt and water. The brine doesn’t make the turkey salty. “It just adds a nice mellow flavor that is exceptional,” England said. Once his bird is brined, England pats it dry and lets it sit out long enough to warm up to room temperature before moving onto the next step – deep frying. Deep frying is a little trickier than soaking it in salt and water. England uses a store-bought turkey fryer and peanut oil to add the hint of dry-roasted peanuts to the bird. A 10-14 pound bird needs about five gallons, he said. England uses two thermometers – one to measure the temperature of the oil and the other, the bird itself. The fryer is In the 1960s, most cooks were limited by a roasting pan, an oven and a basting brush to achieve a moist turkey. hooked up to a propane tank and the oil is heated to no higher than 350 degrees. Above 350 degrees the oil can scorch and ignite, England said, adding that it would take a lot of propane to get past 350 degrees. It’s also important to make sure the turkey is completely thawed and thoroughly dry before putting in the oil, or there can be some splattering. England waits until the breast is 150 degrees before removing it from the fryer. Once out of the fryer, he lets the bird sit until the internal temperature reaches 160 degrees. England isn’t particular about his brand of turkey. He’s not hung up on free range or “natural” either. Whatever is on sale, he said. However, for brining, it’s im- portant to get a bird that isn’t “pre-basted,” which is basically the same as brining. Other methods for overcoming dry turkey have also popped up recently, such roasting the bird on the grill, or grilling it with a can of beer inside. Cooks advise using smaller turkeys on the grill. England said there’s nothing quite like the look of a deep-fried turkey. “They’re amazing to look at when they come out … it’s the prettiest turkey you’ve ever seen.” There’s only one drawback, though, he said. The bird can’t be stuffed if it’s deep fried. “It’s a small price to pay for having a bird done in 40 minutes,” England said. Page 14 - The Smithfield Times-Wed., Nov. 27, 2013 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: [email protected] 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 Robert C. Claud Sr. Board of Supervisors room, Isle of Wight County Courthouse. Wednesday, Dec. 11 [email protected] ACRYLICS CLASS—Students practice textures, effects or 880-7191. and preparation of the CHRISTMAS BAZAAR— painting surface. Class is Whitehead’s Grove Baptist from 1 – 4 p.m. Instructor Church Christmas bazaar is Pricilla Barbour. Bring you Saturday Dec. 7, 9 a.m. – 1 own photos. $55 members/ p.m. Bazaar includes yard $75 non-members. Materials sale, Brunswick stew, ham fee: $35 new students/ $10 biscuits, chili and bake sale. returning students. Info: Vendors spaces $20. Call 357-7707 or visit 255-4227 www.SmithfieldArts.org. HOLIDAY PARTY—Isle of Wight Museum Foundation will host a holiday party Dec. 7, 2:30 – 5 p.m. in the upstairs of the museum. The public is invited. PUPPET SHOW—The Victorian Shadowlight Theatre’s “Magic of the Holidays,” a puppet show play, will perform in the downstairs of the Isle of Wight Museum at 2:30 p.m. and 4 p.m. The event is free and the museum will also offer shadow puppet crafts. Sunday, Dec. 8 HEALTH FAIR—Mt. Nebo Baptist Church health fair will be Sunday, Dec. 8, 1 – 3 p.m. Will offer free health screenings, flu vaccinations, blood pressure and blood glucose readings, information and materials. Light refreshments will be served. Monday, Dec. 9 STORY TIME—Children ages 3–5 and their families are invited to the Isle of Wight County Museum for Tell Me a Story, Monday, Dec. 9, 10 – 10:30 a.m. Victorian Christmas. Info: 356-1223 or www.historicisleofwight.com. CITIZENS MEETING—The Isle of Wight Citizens Association will meet in the conference room of St. Lukes Sentara, Dec. 9, 7.p.m. Guests include Supervisors Dee Dee Darden and Buzz Bailey, and Lisa Perry, Director of Economic Development. The proposed Benns Church intersection overhaul will be discussed. The public is invited to attend. Info: 357-5352. Tuesday, Dec. 10 IDA MEETING—The Isle of Wight County Industrial Development Authority meets Dec. 10, 4 p.m. in the Upcoming CHRISTMAS SHOW—The Smithfield Little Theatre presents “A Christmas Carol” by Charles Dickens and directed by Julian Bouchard. Dec. 12-15 and Dec. 19-21. Tickets available at the Isle of Wight Visitor’s Center or the box office 3577338. $10 adults / $5 children 13 and under. TOYS FOR TOTS—Isle of Wight and Surry Toys for Tots are accepting donations and requests for toys at toysfortots.org. Local businesses accepting toys include Farmers Bank, State Farm, All State Insurance, Smithfield Skate, SHS, Knox Auto, AJ Gators, Barlow’s Store, Surry Equipment, Foot Notes and Ultimate Tan. Volunteers needed. Contact [email protected]. SCHOLARSHIP— Applications are now being accepted for the Ian Burgett Memorial Scholarship. The $2,000 scholarship will be awarded to a local graduating senior. Applications are due March 15 and are available at www.IanBurgett.org. COUNSELORS NEEDED—Isle of Wight and Southampton Junior 4-H Camp will be at the Airfield 4-H Educational Center in Wakefield, June 2327. Applications for counselor-in-training or teen counselor will be taken Dec. 1-Jan. 3. Applicants must be between 14 - 18 years old on June 27. Applications: http://offices.ext.vt.edu/ isle-of-wight. Info: 365-6262 or [email protected] Smithfield KNITTING—Ongoing knitting and crocheting group, Knit at Night, meets the second Monday and fourth Wednesday each month at 7 p.m. STORY TIME—Ages 2-3 on Wednesdays, 10:30 a.m.; ages 4-5 on Thursdays, 10:30 a.m. PAJAMA RAMA—The Smithfield Library’s annual Christmas Pajama Rama is Friday, Dec. 6, 6:30 – 7:30 p.m. Wear your pajamas and enjoy stories, songs, a craft, refreshments and Santa and Mrs. Claus. Info: 357-2264. CHRISTMAS CRAFTERNOON—Make a Christmas ornament, hear a story, play games, and enjoy refreshments. Wednesday Dec.18, 3 – 4 p.m., Grades PK-5. Info: 357-2264. 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, 357-4856 Surry Public Library 11640 Rolfe Highway Phone: 294-3949 Windsor Public Library 18 Duke Street Phone: 242-3046 On the Internet: www.blackwaterlib.org KNITTING—Knitting for beginners is every Wednesday, 6–8 p.m. Registration required. Info: 238-2641. Carrollton TUTORING—One-hour computer tutoring offered the first and third Tuesday or Wednesday afternoons by appointment. Info: 2382641. GINGERBREAD— Gingerbread house construction contest, Saturday, Dec.14, 11 a.m. 12:30 p.m. All materials provided. Ages 12 and under, registration required. Call or inquire at the front desk. STORY TIME—Story time will break from Dec. 23 Jan. 30. Story time resumes with the winter reading program on Monday, Feb. 3. Ages 2-3, Mondays, 10 a.m.; ages 35, Thursdays, 10 a.m. Call for information. SILVER YOGA—Jeannine Carroll from the Smithfield YMCA hosts a chair yoga class geared toward the 50-plus crowd. Classes are Fridays Dec. 6, 20, Jan. 3, 17, and 31 from 10-11 a.m. First come, first served. Windsor STORY TIME—Ages 2-5, Tuesdays, 10:45 a.m. FRIENDS—Friends of the Library meet the second Monday of each month at 6 p.m. Bible • Continued from p. 13 in itself since, back in those days, some Lawn rooms were occupied by different generations of the same family. According to “Smithfield: A Pictorial History,” by Segar Cofer Dashiell, William L. Folk was one of four children of William D. and Martha Nock Barradall Folk. The elder Folk was once the mayor of Smithfield, and the family’s house was located on the other side of the street from the house that Wyatt remembers finding the Bible. Today the former Folk family home, built in 1876, is owned and occupied by retired Judge William and his wife, Florine Moore — the first woman mayor of S m i t h f i e l d . According to Dashiell’s book, William L. never married, and he isn’t mentioned again, so it’s unknown how his Bible made it across the street. Another house attributed to the Folk family is the Wills Folk house on South Mason Street. It was built around the time the town was founded, in 1752, and had several owners before Folk purchased it in 1836. The family continued to own the house for the next 110 years. Folk family members can call Fenton Wyatt at 357-2205. ANGEL TREES—Christian Outreach angel trees are at the Luter YMCA, RingO’s Donuts and Bojangles. Gifts go to low-income seniors and special needs persons at Christmas. Please bring wrapped gifts to any location by Dec. 14. Birthday for homeless Rachel Sawyer of Carrollton recently celebrated her 10th birthday party at Yo Mix in Carrollton. In lieu of birthday gifts, Sawyer asked her friends to bring toiletry items to donate to Mission of Hope, an organization with whom her family volunteers. She collected more than 350 items. Mission of Hope is a collection of churches that provide shelter to the homeless. Going for the record Hardy Elementary Principal Tawana Ford and third grade teacher Tonya Wilson and her class brought food items to help “stack our school” with donated food items for Christian Outreach and needy families this Thanksgiving. On Nov. 14, students around the world, including those at Hardy, attempted to break the Guinness Book of World Records speed-stacking record. It is not known if they succeeded. “I am very happy to see that this year’s food drive was so successful, but most importantly the students learned a life long lesson of helping others in need,” said Dexter Warren, Hardy’s physical education teacher. Governmental meetings •Dendron Town Council, Monday, Dec. 2, 7:30 p.m., town municipal building, 2855 Rolfe Highway. 267-2508. •Smithfield Town Council, 7:30 p.m., Tuesday, Dec. 3, The Smithfield Center, 220 N. Church St., 365-4200. •Claremont Town Council, 7:30 p.m., Wednesday, Dec. 4, town center, 4115 Spring Grove Ave., 866-4827. Thirty-five distinguished dealers featuring furniture and decorative accessories from the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries including silver, antique jewelry, fine glass, ceramics, hooked rugs, oriental carpets, antique quilts, clocks, paintings & prints. Appraisal Clinic by Gordon Converse, Gordon F. Converse & Co. Auctions www.auctionsatconverse.com Saturday & Sunday of the show, appointment available Appraisal fees donated to charitable origanizations Friday Nov. 29 6pm-9pm, Saturday Nov. 30 10am-5pm Sunday Dec. 01 11am-4pm (757) 220-1299 www.holidayantiqueshow.com 50 Kingsmill Road The President’s Ballroom Doubletree by Hilton Williamsburg, Virginia Admission: $7, With this ad: $6 “Make This An Antique Christmas” THE SMITHFIELD TIMES SPORTS Nov. 27, 2013 Place Your Ad Now! Call 357-3288 Page 15 SHS athletes sign with colleges By Abby Proch Staff writer Three Smithfield High School seniors have committed to colleges to play their respective sports. Senior Alexandria “Allie” Nowak became the Packers’ first softball player to sign a national letter of intent. Nowak has committed to Davis & Elkins College in Elkins, West Virginia. “It was honestly tailormade for me, I can’t imagine going anywhere else,” said Nowak, who liked the close-knit feel of a campus that hosts just 750 students. “I’m a name, not a number,” she said. Nowak’s mother, Julie, said Coach Cathy Riddick “pulled the most out of her” and played large part in Nowak’s success. Nowak is still undecided on her major. She is the daughter of Frank and Julie Nowak. Jordon Garlow also looked for a small-town feel when he selected South Carolina’s Coker College, a Division II school with 1,200 students. The college recruited Garlow for his wrestling skills. At the high school level, Garlow has earned 100-plus wins. Garlow placed eighth in his weight class (170 lbs.) in state last season. This year, he’s shooting for second. Garlow attributes his selection to a persistent coach at Coker and the fact that it’s a new program, meaning he’ll likely see starting time as a freshman. Garlow plans to study marketing. He is the son of George and Barbara Garlow. Senior Michael Morehead has committed to Maryland’s Mount Saint Mary’s University, the nation’s second-oldest Catholic university. Morehead was recruited as a catcher and first baseman. Morehead said he most known for his batting abilities, racking up a .440 batting average in his junior year. Morehead, the son of Bill and Paul Morehead, said he chose Mount St. Mary’s because they made the best scholarship offer and had a nice campus. Morehead plans to study sports management. SHS runners compete at state Two members of the Smithfield Packers cross country team finished their season by competing in the VHSL 4A state championship race Nov. 15 in Warrenton. Smithfield High School junior Chris Ivy placed 49th (17.22) on the hilly state meet 5K course at the Plains Plantation after earning a spot on the AllConference team (6th overall) and All-Region team (9th overall). In doing so, he became the first male Packer runner in more than 15 years to qualify for state. Sophomore Jamilla Jordan placed 84th (22.11) at state after earning All-Conference honors (10th overall) and placing in the top 10 individuals at regionals. Jordan became the fourth girl in Smithfield’s recent history to qualify for state following Rebecca Babski (2009), Savannah Miller (2009) and current assistant cross country coach Karen Terry (2004 and 2005). Next year, Ivy and Jordan will be looking to help their teams advance to state with several young talented runners retur ning on both squads. Staff Photo by Abby Proch From left, seniors Michael Morehead, baseball; Alexandria Nowak, softball; and Jordon Garlow, wrestling, recently committed to their respective colleges on athletic scholarships. Junior Cougars win district The L.P Jackson Middle School junior Lady Cougars downed previously undefeated Carter Woodson Middle School to win the Fall Line District Tournament by just one point. The Lady Cougars beat Woodson 38-37 — a team that has so far this season The Fall Line District beat its opponents by an champion junior Lady Cougars are, front from average 30-point margin. The Cougars had lost to left, manager Joshua Woodson twice this season, Pierce, JerRhonda King, by 30-26 at home in Surry Alaysia Claiborne, Amanda Jones, Jasmyn and 51-19 at Woodson. In the semi-final game, Pierce, Bre’cha Byrd; the Junior Lady Cougars second row, from left, defeated Peabody Middle of Molly Seals, Chainti Petersburg in 52-24, after Bailey, JaKyra Jefferson, having lost to Peabody 32- Tatianna Stewart, AnJanette Byrd, Daijah 30 the week before. During the champion- Wooden, Makya ship game against Claiborne; back row Woodson, seventh grader Pierce received the Fall Jasmyn Pierce led the team Line District MVP Award. with a game high 15 points, The Junior Lady Couscoring 12 of those points in a decisive third quarter. gars finished the season Pierce also scored a game with an 11-3 record. high 26 points against Peabody in the semi-final game. Anjanette Byrd made the game winning free throw with eight seconds remaining, along with JerRhonda “Wink” King, a sixth grader, making a game-saving block as time expired. Spectator please bring toys or donation Contact Elizabeth Moose 880-7191 Join us for Monday Night Karaoke! 1st & 3rd Monday of every month during Happy Hour 4:30-7:30pm 112 Main Street in Smithfield • 757-357-1752 Page 16 - The Smithfield Times-Wed., Nov. 27, 2013 Santa Says... It’s as easy as... �� � is for... nne of Smithfield is for... Boots Boots for men Boots for women Boots for kids too! Santa delivered sacks full of new boot styles to 15111 Carrollton Blvd., Hwy. 17 Carrollton, VA Sharon Young • 3 Sisters Sizes 1x, 2x & 3x available 124 Main St. • 757-357-4422 Mon.-Sat. 10-6; Sun. 12-5 is for... xquiset Jewelery The Fine Arts Shop Open Monday through Saturday in December til Christmas Eve. (757)630-8664 [email protected] Shop now for the best selection! is for... Farmers Service Company Full Line of STIHL Saws Just Right for Christmas! 10178 Warwick Blvd. Newport News ...near Hilton Village! 757-595-7754 is for... 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True Value Hardware Also, mail your Now located at True Value. gifts while Smithfield Hrs. of Postal Service: your here M-F 9-6; Sat 9-4 228 Main St. Smithfield 357-3288 Garage Doors, Entry Doors, Patio Doors, Windows, Garage Door Openers & MORE... 9 Years Straight Everything You Need In One Stop! is for... Unique Shopping Experience ocal News ALL AGES WELCOME FIRST LESSON FRE E! Morning & Evening Hours Available Courses from Beginner to Advanced Including Music Theory & Lessons for All String Instruments MANY YEARS EXPERIENCE! is for... 13412 Benns Church Blvd 365-9400 2815 Godwin Blvd. 934-0004 14216 Benns Church Blvd. Smithfield, VA 23430 757-508-2812 is for... arious Items from A-Z at Plantiques The Smithfield Times-Wed., Nov. 27, 2013 - Page 17 is for... is for... Trust Quality Integrity BLACK FRIDAY EVENT: Up to 25% OFF Selected Items Owners Susan Hutson & Liz Fulcher anny Hughes & We have Santa’s Gift Suggestions from � �� � 1702-A South Church St. (757) 356-1200 Appraisals, Repairs, Custom Jewelry & We Take Gold For Trade! 595-6196 17 Hidenwood Shopping Center Newport News,VA HealthInsurance-VA.com is for... is for... is for The Most Original GIFT BASKETS t Our personalized and affordable services are available 7 days a week and range from a few hours a day to 24-hour care. No Minimums. Peninsula Foot & Ankle Specialists Dr. A. Beresh, DPM Dr. Jeremiah Bushmaker, DPM www.footfacts.net Come to us for... 10% Shipping Discount to Military 527 Oyster Point Rd., 2202 Executive Dr., Suite 3, Newport News, VA Suite A, Hampton, VA (757)249-0450 (757)827-7111 Mailing • Shipping • NOTARY • Copying • Color & Black & White • Faxing • Office Supplies • Stamps • Mailbox Rentals • Business Cards is for... 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Church St. Smithfield • 365-0932 is for... is for... is for... Your Place for Holiday Sweets! * Quality Furniture at Affordable Prices! 357-7070 OPEN AT 6 AM! Mon. - Sat. *see store for details is for... is for... is for... Xtraordinary Boarding at Zuni Tree & Alpaca Farm Fresh Cut Fraser Firs and the “Walls of Security” that our clients have with their policies. 1018 South Church St. Smithfield, VA 23430 757-357-4456 wallsinsurance.biz White Pines & other varieties 5-6’ $30, 7-8’ $35 Call now to reserve your pet’s vacation Day Care • Boarding • Training • Grooming • Self-Serve Dog Wash 12647 Courthouse Hwy www.dogsdaycareandspa.com G1120308 Call for a great price on our “Auto-Home” packages! (Individually Priced) Open Weekends 9am-5pm, Weekdays 12pm-5pm 19362 Tomlin Hill Drive, Zuni, VA 757-242-4780 Page 18 - The Smithfield Times-Wed., Nov. 27, 2013 SHS debate The Smithfield High School debate team took home two first place trophies and one third place trophy in November. The Packers claimed titles at the Peninsula Debate League Tournament and the William & Mary Winter Classic. This past weekend, the Packers took third overall at the Tidewater Debate League Tournament. Leading the team was sophomore Grace Reon, who took first at all three tournaments in the Lincoln Douglas division. Also placing in the top three in their divisions were seniors Shelby Gandee, Kelly Stronach, Meghan Grumbling and Everett Fortner; juniors Xavier Sivels, Joseph McNure and Sabrina McAllister; and sophomore Kim Marchant. Knockout winners Smithfield High School JROTC Cadets PFC John Fitzgerald and Maj. Brandon Halsey placed third and first, respectively, in the Armed Knockout competition recently at Fort Lee. Knockout is an event where cadets compete on an individual basis: with (armed) and without (unarmed) rifles. Cadets are removed for making mistakes to commands given by a drill sergeant. Other drill sergeants tap cadets making a mistake and have them leave the drill area. Historic homes tour View some of Suffolk’s most historic and picturesque homes during its 37th annual “Between the River and the Creek” candlelight tour. The tour of the historic Bennett’s Creeek area is Saturday, Dec. 7 and Sunday, Dec. 8 and is sponsored by the Suffolk-Nansemond Historical Society. Featured homes this year include the Cornell Home (Eagle Point Farm), the Willis Home (Town Point Far m) and the Northey Home, which will be open from 1-5 p.m. The Obici House will also be on display from 1-4 p.m. The Nansemond River, like the James, was a superhighway for the early English settlers. The land near the mouth of the river was the first of present day Suffolk seen by John Smith in 1608 as he explored the island and looked for signs of the lost Roanoke Island colonists. Bennett’s Creek and Bennett’s Pasture Road are named for Richard Bennett who came to the area in the 1620s. He was elected to the House of Burgesses in 1629 and was appointed to the Governor’s Council (some claimed he was governor) in 1642. He received, over time, a large land grant from the king. All of the homes on this year’s tour stand on what was once Richard Bennett’s land. The Willis Home, also known as Eagle Point Farm, is featured in the “Between the River and the Creek” candlelight homes tour. Some of the homes include: • The Cornell Home, also known as Eagle Point Farm, is located at 5301 Bennett’s Pasture Road and is owned by Dr. and Mrs. George Cornell. The current owners’ parents bought the property in 1946. The original farmhouse with grand views of the river was built in 1908. • The Willis Home, also known as Town Point Far m, is owned by the Leonard Willis family and located at 2527 Bridge Road. Town Point was the name given to the land early in the written history of the area. It was farmland for centuries but came into its own in the late 19th century under the hand of Confed- erate veteran Willis John Lee. In 1895, Lee and his wife Jennie built the large Victorian house that stands near the Nansemond River Bridge today. They built a schoolhouse on the property and provided the teacher as well. The schoolhouse has now other uses but will also be open for the tour. Tickets can be purchased at the Suffolk Visitor’s Center, the Suffolk Seaboard Station Railroad Museum, A. Dodson’s, 18th Century Merchant and Bennett’s Creek Pharmacy and are $20 in advance, $25 the day of the tour. For more information, call 5392781, like on Facebook or visit online at suffolkhistory.org. BUILDING or REMODELING? WE CAN HELP! G2-021511 •Windows & Doors •High Grade Lumber •Architectural Features •Engineered Floors •Custom Millwork •Quality Prehung Doors Replacement Specialist In-House Design We appreciate your business and look forward to serving your heating and air conditioning needs for many years to come. G2-111412 895 Main Street, Smithfield, Phone 357-4131 Horse Farm in Smithfield $950,000 Historic, refurbished, and beautifully enlarged for 21st Century living. The original 18th Century “Washington House” offers 1st level master suite, 5 fenced pastures, 2 horse runs, 6 stall stable, 5 car garage. Approx. 120 acres. Call for details. Treated & Decking Columns - Mantels - Mouldings Colonial Reproductions Any Size or Style CUSTOM BUILDER SUPPLY COMPANY Exclusively for the Quality Conscious OFFICE • 757-229-5150 Williamsburg www.custombuildersupply.com ������������������� ��������������� ��������� ������������ ����������������� ������������� ������������������ ������������������ ���������� ���������� ������������ ������� �������������������� ������� ������������� Colonial Funeral Home View More Photos at www.fitzhughwilson.com Gina Fitzhugh Wilson, CRS Broker/Owner 1515 S. Church St., Smithfield 757-357-2979 Carey E. Whitley Manager/Funeral Director Nancy Lynn Delk President The Smithfield Times-Wed., Nov. 27, 2013 - Page 19 Isle of Wight County to hold stormwater session By Diana McFarland News editor Isle of Wight residents confused about the new stormwater fee and regulations are urged to attend a work session, Thursday, Dec. 5, 5 p.m. at the courthouse complex. County officials will also distribute a brochure that explains the program. The stor mwater fee, which is $72 for residential property and is calculated individually for commercial property, stems from a mandate from the federal gover nment that was passed to the state government, which in turn left it to localities to administer. It’s part of the federal effort to clean up the Chesapeake Bay and counties, cities and towns lying within the watershed are affected. The fees are being used to administer the county’s program and associated capital projects, such as building “best management practices” (BMPs)* on county-owned property to assist with future development. The $72 stormwater fee is based on the average residential impervious surface, and in Isle of Wight County, that was determined to be 2,050 square feet. The 2,050 square feet represents one equivalent residential unit, or ERU and is $72. All residential properties are given the same amount — one ERU. For commercial property, the total amount of impervious surface is assessed individually, calculated as multiple ERUs, or $72 per unit, to determine its stor mwater management fee. Winning scarecrows Staff Photo by Diana McFarland Two rows of scarecrows stood “muster” recently in front of Boykin’s Tavern, as part of the Isle of Wight Museum’s first “Scarecrow Muster.” The Isle of Wight Academy 9th grade English class swept the awards, winning first for “Fortunato” (pictured above), third place for “Edgar Allan Poe,” most original for “The Raven” and the people’s choice award — with nearly 400 votes — for “Annabel Lee.” Winning second place was “Ted O’Lantern,” fashioned by Mrs. Morris’ pre-school class at Smithfield Baptist Church. “Patch and Pappy” by Brent and Patricia Ward won honorable mention. Judging the contest were Judson Little, Bernie Bishop, Mary Kayaselcuk and Connie Chapman. VISITwww.smithfieldtimes.com US ONLINE AT: A commercial property containing 20,500 square feet of impervious surface would be the equivalent of 10 ERU, or $720. The fees are expected to generate $609,503 in revenue for fiscal 2014. Also changing next year Photo contest Attention amateur photographers — Take a shot of the people of Isle of Wight County and enter it into The Smithfield Times weekly photo contest. Weekly winners will be printed in The Smithfield Times. Photos are judged by The Smithfield Times staff. One submission per person per week and photos must have been taken within the past year. To enter, send your JPEG digital image by 4 p.m. Friday to [email protected]. Include name, address, phone number, type of camera, settings and any additional infor mation about the photograph. is the percentage of impervious surface allowed on individual lots in the county. Currently, lots are allowed to have up to 16 percent of the square footage be an impervious surface, such as a house, shed or concrete driveway. That changes to 12 percent July 1 of next year. In order to exceed the 12 percent threshold, property owners will be required to build an individual BMP to address the pollution runoff associated with impervious surfaces. Page 20 - The Smithfield Times-Wed., Nov. 27, 2013 SMS announces honor roll The following students received honor roll for the first nine weeks at Smithfield Middle School: •Grade 7 All A’s — Justin Allen, John Altizer, John Barb, Jaylin Barrett, Natalie Benham, Marlese Boyer, Zachary Brich, Spencer Buehlman, Melissa Faulkwell, Kamryn Godsey, Curtis Hall, Emma Harris, Justin Harris, Joshua Hassell, Ellie Hinkle, Megan Johnson, Matthew Lemon, Grace Lewis, Joshua Lewis, Samantha Lundberg, Capri Manfred, Brianna Marshall, Deanna Meade, Emilee Meadors, Shyla Millikin, Charissa Morris, Nicholas O’Reilly, Glenn Petty, Tiyauna Richardson, John Sharps, Zachary Slone, Patricia Smith, Emily Smithson, Samantha Stein, Emily Tenney, Kyle Wheeler, Jessica Wolford A-B honor roll — Dylan Allen, Macey Anderson, Taylor Anderson, Emily Babyak,Ethan Bell, Garrett Blatt, Alexis Boley, Grayson Bondurant, Christopher Bradby, Ethan Braswell, Kaitlynn Brock, Macy Camper, Jaden Cash, Peyton Chapman, Charles Chislum, Paul Chism, Jonathon Clark, Courtney Collins, Montgomery Cook, Brooke Copeland, James Counts, Theodore Davis, Robert Delk, Andrew Elliott, Joshua Far mer, Amya Fields, Noelle Finley, Alan Fletcher, David Fletcher, Tevy Green, Ariana Grimm, Jade Grooms, Solen Grossman, Jonah Guill, Noah Gurganus, Kaitlyn Hall, Richard Hancock, Shelby Hare, Zaniah Harris, Raina Hempley, Tyler Hicks, Joshua Higgins, Tyrik Highsmith, Brianna Hill, Tyla Hill, Dallas Holloway, Skylar Horton, Derrick Jackson, Mackenzie Jackson, Daria Jetton, Marcus Jones, Natalie Jones, Michael Keeylan, Aaron Lane, Zachary Little, Sydnee Loftin, Shanyia Massenburg, Summer Mathes, Alexander Maury, Carolina Mayorga, Aiden McCall, Bryanna Meade, Breeauna Meadors, Elizabeth Miles, Tyler Mullen, Jenna Murray, Aaron Nau, Jordan Neblett, Morgan Nelms, Linda Ni, Erin ODonnell, Stor m Ogle, Meredith Oliver, Colby O’Reilly, Pace Palmer, Logan Patron, Emily Ployd, Caitlin Powell, Emma Putt, Matthew Richter, Tory Robertson, Jada Robinson, Haley Ross, Kayla Ruffin, Alyssa Scovillle, Gabriel Serrano, Reyannah Shaw, Jada Smith, K’yaira Smith, Andrew Snyder, Brooke Spradin, Andrew Stephenson, Sydney Swan, Izaiah Terrell, Mallory Todd, Teron Turner, Alyssa Waite, De’Ja Warren, Colton Welsh, Ethan Wendt, Dylan Westphal, Grace Wichman, Darius Williams, Taylor Williams, Morgan Wood,Delaney Wright. •Grade 8 All A’s — Trevor Addison, Madelyn Bauman, Brayden Bird, Loganbay Campbell, Daemon Carroll, Noelani Christy, Abagail Conyers, Savannah Cook, Gabriel Culver, Elizabeth Darden, Howard Dunleavy, Sophia Erickson, Skylar Hedgepeth, Karra Johnson, Hailey Joyce, Katelyn Kelly, Erin Lee, Brooke Locascio, David Logan, Padraig McGowan, Erik McNally, Mateo Mejia, Dylan Miller, Kelly Moore, Jessica Morris, Connor Rosenberry, Harrison Senter, Mackenzie Sherwood, Kevin Siu, Kendall Stalls, Zachary Thomas, Riley Tucker, Samuel Wiggs A-B honor roll — Madelyn Allen, Elizabeth Altizer, Cody Armstrong, Lauren Barrett, Rafe Bene, Olivia Blatt, Morgan Bond, Kathryn Britt, Dionte Brown, Brooke Burnette, Parker Caterbone, Madison Cavallo, Daniel Correia, Heather Coultas, Heather Cowan, Jordyn Cowen, Ciara Cross, Marcus Custis, Joshua Davis, Smithfield Strings to perform Smithfield Strings is performing during the community holiday concert at Smithfield High School, Thursday, Dec. 19. Pictured front row, left to right: pianist Katelyn Kelly, Andrew Ballard, Joseph Brown, Nick Nemec, Lisa Meunier, Dru and Karen Stowe; middle row, left to right: Karen Waters, Brandon Babbs, Meredith Babski, Joshua Bateman, Gerald Gwaltney, Barbara MacLaren, Sean Putnam, Katie Nemec; back row, left to right: Aresman MacLaren, Hannah Shoemaker and Graham MacLaren. The Smithfield Strings ensemble is open to all local string players from student to adult. The group rehearses weekly at Trinity United Methodist Church on Sunday from 1:30 3 p.m. For more information, call Karen Stowe at 356-9010. To Sell or Buy, look to the Classifieds Karlene Diggs, Colton Ferguson, Elizabeth Ferguson, Gabrielle Fiebelkorn, Ethan Frantz, Julie Gates, Katherine Gibson, Benjamin Gittleman, Thomas Gover, Connor Green, William Gulyas, Kirsten Hall, Brianna Hamilton, Kristina Harvey, Joshua Hedgepeth, Katherine Henk, Za’Coria Hill, Tristin Hogge, Jasmine Holloway, Amayaflor Hughes, Laniya Humphrey, Lucas Hyatt, Hailey Ilog, Preston Jeffrey, David Johnson, Jameek Jordan, Willie Jordan, Heather Kennedy, James Kenny, Rebecca Kiser, Ryan Klein, Kenzie Kohrs, Lauren Lanzalotto, Lea Lanzalotto, Seth League, Benjamin Lockwood, Kaylynn Maestas, William Malley, Matthew Malsbury, Kylie McCor mick, Seamus McGowan, Paige Miller, Marnie Mitchell, Desiree Pierce, Joshua Pierce, Ethan Price, Kiarra Price, Nicholas Rhodes, Courtney Rogers, Sydney Roots, Christopher Rosenbalm, Sarah Rossiter, Briana Thompson, Gabriel Torrey, Logan Turpin, Carson Wallner, Noah Wellington, Matthew Wer ner, Emily Wilda, Randall Willis, Ryan Wright, Madison Yates, Hannah Zengel Call 357-3288 STALLINGS & ASSOCIATES, P.C. Specializing in SMALL BUSINESS & INDIVIDUAL TAXATION T. Craig Stallings, CPA 210 Main St., Smithfield, VA 23430 (757) 365-0200 phone (757) 365-0111 fax [email protected] PUBLIC NOTICE HOLIDAY RECYCLING COLLECTION SCHEDULE There will be no recycling collection in the Town of Smithfield on Thursday, November 28th 2013 or Friday, November 29th, 2013 in observance of the Thanksgiving Holiday. There will be no makeup days during this holiday week. Peter M. Stephenson, AICP Town Manager MAKE IT COUNT L13-188D 11-20/2t Your Advertising Budget needs to be more effective than ever. We can help. People rely heavily on their local, community paper for news, information and purchasing decisions. In fact, in communities served by community papers.... • • • • • 73% of those surveyed read their local paper each week. Those readers, on average, shared their paper with 3.34 persons. 78% read most or all of their community newspaper. 41% keep their community newspaper 6 or more days (shelf life). 62% read local news very often in their community newspapers. Data from 2010 NNA Community Newspaper Readership Survey Report THE LOCAL COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER is the PRIMARY SOURCE of information about the local community for about half the respondents, far above other sources. Contact one of our advertising representatives today to find out how to take advantage of the strong readership of THE SMITHFIELD TIMES (757) 357-3288 advertising@smithfieldtimes.com Wednesday, November 27, 2013 The Smithfield Times-Wed., Nov. 27, 2013 Page - Page21 21 During this Thanksgiving Holiday, I want to take this opportunity to say how thankful I am to the World’s greatest husband, Ralph Williams Sr;� no doubt, the world’s greatest sons, Ralph Williams Jr., bka RJ, & Terrance Williams; and, for sure, the world’s greatest daughter, Tiffany Jones; and of course, for right now, the world’s greatest grandson, Darius Ricks. I love you guys! Happy Thanksgiving. Love, Boo/Ma, “Amanda” Jones Williams G2-102004 C ommonwealth Insurance Loving Thoughts For All Your Insurance Needs 1702 South Church St. 357-4900 $6.70 $12.90 $18.00 $23.00 Email [email protected] or call 357-3288 Rims. Free Removal! 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C a l l 757- 483 -9588 Nov20/2tp/15041 ———— OFFICE/RETAIL/ Institutional For Rent in Historic Downtown Smithfield- Up t o 2 ,7 0 0 s f a v a i l able br357-3113 or [email protected] Aug8/tfc/1028 ———— SMALL COTTAGE/ Art Studio-in forest/ garden in Surry on a woodsy farm near ferry. 1BA, Kitchenette, Terrace, Fenced yard for pets. $500/month. D e p o sit Re q u i r e d . 757-323-8929 Nov13/4tp/14980 ———— SMITHFIELD-2 bedrooms 1 bath newer home located on farm at 16220 Griffin Lane within minutes of town- Ver y private- $900.00 + deposit- Available Dec. 1st @ 757-357-5325 Oct9/tfc/2152 ———— WRENN'S Mill Estates in Smithfield, 4 Bedroom, 2 Bath rancher, no smoking, $1,225, includes water. Call 757-635-2733 Nov27/1tp/15116 ———— ScrapRemoval G E T H O L I DAY CASH by Recycling! Cash for Junk Vehicles, Equipment, Bat ter ies, Alloy Sale A L L N E W MATTRESS SETS! 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Fill out an application online www. homesweethomecareinc.com or at Home Sweet Home Care, 346 Main St.,Smithf ield or Call Mary 757-3560342. Starting pay is highly competitive after a 90 day probationary period. Opportunities for merit raises, paid vacation, educational opportunities. Nov20/2tc/724 ———— PM T E AC H ER S Assistant needed. 2p.m.-5:30p.m. M-F, Must be at least 18 years old, have high school diploma or GED and minimu m of 6 months experience in child care setting. Call Kim at 757-238-8278 bet ween 11:00a.m.3:00p.m. For more info. Nov21/tfc/49 ———— RN NEEDED, Exp. In home health visits, PRN. Apply online www. homesweethomecarei nc.com or call Mary at 757-356-0342 Nov20/2tc/724 ———— TAXI DRIVER-If you like Driving, Helping People and Working for good People. Please Call 757-3425905, Val's Medical Transportation. Nov27/1tp/15096 ———— WA N T E D F U L L Time Church Organist. ASAP Beginning Nov. 25, 2013. Call 757-3572378 or 757-583-5582. New Bethany U.C.C. Nov13/4tp/14937 ———— WA N T E D R E A L Estate Agent. Experienced or will t rai n. Call Fred at Olde Towne Realt y I n c . 757-357- 415 6 Nov20/10tc/301 ———— Pets PET VISITS in your home, du r i ng you r workday, or vacation time. Affordable rates. Call for availability. 7 days a week. Insured. Pet Set 757-357-1777 Nov20/2tp/15043 ———— Home Improvement ROOFING: A-RUSSELL’S ROOFING: New roofs, t e a r of f s , r e p a i r s , metal roofs, painting & more! Call 757630-4875 Go Green! www.roofmanrob.com Nov6/4tc/783 ———— BUILDI NG CONTRACTORS: D AV I D B O Y D RESIDENTIAL BUILDER – Lifetime resident serving Smithfield area with q u a l it y r e sid e nt i a l building needs since 198 4! Sp e cia l i z i ng in additions, renovations, remodels and repairs. Class A licensed & insured. Visa,MC,Discover & A MEX. Call David @ 75 7 -3 5 7 -7 110 Feb16/tfc/251 ———— H A N DY M A N & REPAIR Work, years experience with Period homes! Please call Bob Lewis at 757-681-1798 Nov27/4tp/15141 ———— H A N DY MAN SE RV IC ES , I n c. Electrical/plumbing repairs, installations. D o o r k n o b s , lo c k s , fence, gate repairs, roof leaks, window glass and screens. Licensed and Insured. Free estimates. Call Lar r y Williams 757-357-7408. Oct2/13tp/14334 ———— H O M E R E PA I R S , Improvements, Painting & Lawn care at Affordable pricing. We do jobs no one else ADVERTISE AND THEY WILL COME WE SELL YARD SALE KITS! ONLY 00 16 will! Also do Tile Work & House Washing! C a l l 757- 651-5570 Nov13/4tp/14234 ———— JC'S HOME IMPROVEMENTS. Don't have time to complete you r fall “Honey Do's”? Give us a call! We do it all, no job is too big or to small. 757-8465916 or 757-356-0331 Nov13/3tp/14934 ———— T.H.G. CONSTRUCTION Handyman services, A f ford able pr ic e s , we do it all, 33 years of service. Give us a call. 757-897-1637 Oct2/8tp/14337 ———— CONCRETE CONCRETE WOR K, Driveways, Sidewalk, Slabs. New or Replacements. Tr a c t o r & D u m p Tr u ck S e r v ic e s. D a n 757-371-32 0 4 Nov20/4tp/15034 ———— Lawn Care HARGRAVES LAWN CARE LLCAll you r law n and la nd scapi ng ne e d s handled Commercial/ Residential, Reasonable pr ices, Licensed/Insured, Free estimates! C a l l 757-289 - 0237 o r 7 5 7 - 2 7 9 - 0 111 Nov13/4tp/14935 ———— H AV E YOU C L E A N E D YOU R GUTTERS? Offering l e a f r e m ov a l a n d var ious law n careAffordable pricing, 33years experience! C a l l 757- 651-5570 Oct30/4tp/14754 ———— JJ & L LAWN CARE SE RV IC E , L L C Lawn mowing, edgi n g , we e d - e a t i n g , hedge trimming and any other yard work. Commercial and residential. Reasonable prices. Licensed and i n s u r e d . Fr e e e s timates. Your lawn is my lawn!!! Call James Young 757-3575569 or 757-334-0615. Aug7/16tp/13521 ———— L U K E ' S L AW N CARE- leaf removal, mulching, pr uning, fertilization. Call 757332-0358 or visit lawncareofsmithfield.com Nov27/5tp/15125 ———— SNYDER EXCAVATION A N D H AU L I N G Bulkheads, Lot Clearing & Grading, Firewood, Demolition, Pond s, D r iveways, Tree Removal, Mulch, t op soi l , Fi l l D i r t , Cr ush & r un. Call B . J. 757- 617-5335 Oct23/12tp/14664 ———— Cleaning WONDERFULLY MAID Cleaning services. Tailored to your need s! Rea sonable rates. Free Estimates! Cal l 757-284 - 6929 Licensed and Insured. FALL SPECIAL 10% off any new service Nov27/12tp/13907 ———— Services GLENN’S TRENCHING SERV ICE and water line installation. No job too small. 757-2 42 - 62 45 o r 757-812-1816 (cell). Oct2/8tp/14288 ———— COMPUTER R E PA I R S : S e n i o r Geek. Fast affordable, Cer tif ied. 25 years Exp. YOU CAN TRUST! Direct to your door.757-638-9898 Nov20/4tp/15045 ———— KIT INCLUDES • Four Eye-Catching Signs • Three Stakes with Fasteners • Marker • Sales Record Form • Garage Sale Checklist • Successful Yard Sale Tips Sheet Page 22 Page 22 - The Smithfield Times-Wed., Nov. 27, 2013 Wednesday, November 27, 2013 Classifieds Deadlines are normally Monday 5p.m. Holiday schedules may alter this. Just Hanging Around With Nothing to Do? SUBSCRIBE TODAY AND BE THE FIRST TO KNOW WHAT’S GOING ON IN THE COMMUNITY!! Name ____________________________________________________ Address __________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ City _____________________________________________________ State _________________________Zip_________________________ Yearly Subscription ONLY $ 25.00 2 years for $40 In-county ($40.00 out of area) The Smitheld Times , P. O. Box 366, Smitheld, VA 23431 • 757-357-3288 ��������������������������� ���������������������������� ���������������������������� There’s a better way to get the word out about your business Ads in The Smithfield Times GET NOTICED! call 757.357.3288 to be noticed right away! AD NETWORK CLASSIFIEDS November 24, 2013 This is our 2293rd 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 to anyone. All ads are screened by the newspaper selling them and then screened by VPS. AUCTIONS AUCTION – NOTTOWAY CO., VA. 361± AC • RIVERFRONT FARM • 2 TRACTS Timber • Tobacco • Hunting. ON-SITE SALE: Stingy Lane Road, B l a c k s t o n e , VA 23824 & Online THURS, 12/5 @ 3 PM www.motleys.com • services for persons 877-668-5397 VA16 who require special asEHO c sistance to participate. Contact the Title VI ABSOLUTE LIQUI- Compliance Officer, DATION AUCTION 804-786-4440 or TDD Timber Truss, Housing 711. Comments acSystems, Inc. cepted until December December 13 at 10 am at 31, 2013. www.Su525 McClelland Street, perNoVaTransitVision. Salem, Virginia. Trucks, com Tractors, Forklifts, CATTLE/LIVETrailers, Woodworking STOCK/FARM Equipment, Shop Tools and more BCIA CULPEPER SEWalker Commercial NIOR BULL SALE, Services, Inc. (540) 344- Saturday, December 6160 www.walker-inc. 14, Noon, Culpeper Agcom ricultural Enterprise, VAAF# 549 Culpeper, VA. Selling 55 Angus and SimAnBULLETIN BOARD / gus bulls plus select NOTICES group of Bred Heifers. DRPT Presents Super Catalog 540-231-2257. NoVa Transit/TDM Action Plan – Join Virginia PERFORMANCE Department of Rail and BULL SALE – 153 Public Transportation Service-Age Bulls. An(DRPT) December 11 or gus, Polled Herefords, 17 for a public meeting Balancers, Gelbviehs, to discuss and provide Black Baldies. Friday, input on the Super NoVa December 6 @ Noon. Transit/TDM Draft Ac- Knoll Crest Farm, Red tion Plan. DRPT strives House, VA. 434-376to provide reasonable 3567. www.knollcrestaccommodations and farm.com benefits! 1-800-8747131 gional and Dedicated Opportunities • Great EDUCATION Career Path • ExcelREGIONAL DRIV- lent Benets Package Medical Billing Train- ERS! Averitt Offers Please Call: (602) 730ees Needed! Train to Excellent Benefits & 7628 become a Medical Weekly Hometime. CDL Drivers NeedOffice Assistant. No CDL-A req. 888-362- ed! Class-A drivers Experience Needed! 8608 Apply online at to work from Prince George location Training & Job Place- AverittCareers.com ment available at CTI! Equal Opportunity Em- All equipment provided Once a week, HS Diploma/GED & ployer. computer needed. 1Overnight trip required. 888-424-9419. Daily Express needs Good driving record Contractors to haul required. 2-years exHELP WANTED / S t e p d e c k & R G N perience. Salary/ComTRUCK DRIVERS loads! Welcome. $1000 mission (based on load) Sign-On Bonus. www. H e a l t h i n s u r a n c e . DRIVERS-CDL dailyrecruiting.com or Please call 804-451TRAINING now of- call 800-669-6414 to- 2241 Train to be a PROfered in Roanoke 540- day, don’t delay! 857-6188 or Spotsyl- N E E D C L A S S A FESSIONAL TRUCK vania 540-582-8200! C D L T R A I N I N G ? D R I V E R t h r o u g h Attend 4 Weeks or 10 S t a r t a C A R E E R Prime’s Student Driver Weekends. Guaran- in trucking today! Program. Obtain your teed Financing and Job Swift Academies offer Commercial Driver’s Placement Assistance PTDI certied cours- License, get paid while Available. 1-800-646- es and offer “Best- training! 1-800-2772374. In-Class” training. 0212 driveforprime. • New Academy Class- com 65 Driver Trainees es Weekly • No Money CDL-A Drivers: Lookneeded! No experience Down or Credit Check ing for Higher Pay? needed! Learn to drive • Certified Mentors New Century is Hiring a truck at Shippers Ready and Available • Exp. Company Drivers Choice! Job ready in Paid (While Training and Owner Operators. 4 weeks! Good pay & With Mentor) • Re- Both Solo and Teams. Competitive pay package. Sign-On Incentive. Also looking for experienced drivers willing to train. Call (888) 9038863 or apply online at: www.drivenctrans.com ADVERTISE YOUR TRUCK DRIVER JOBS in Virginia Newspapers for one low cost of $300. Your 25 word classified ad reaches almost ONE MILLION Virginians! Call this paper or Adriane Long at 804-521-7585 (Virginia Press Services). LOTS AND ACREAGE MULTI-FAMILY: 7 acres zoned for 80 units between Staunton and Waynesboro. Upscale neighborhood near award winning hospital. Perfect for ACTIVE ADULTS/SENIORS. All utilities. $995,000. 540-294-2007 ALBEMARLE COUN- TY – 21 wooded acres, 1-800-789-4093 stream at rear. $149,900 SERVICES and owner will finance. 434-444-5088 DIVORCE – Uncontested, $350 + $88 LAND/ CABIN PACK- court cost. No court AGE! 13+ ACRES appearance required. $57,900. Breathtaking Estimated completion 50-mile rolling moun- time twenty-one days. tain views. Near river All telephone inqui& town. Add cabin ries welcome with no package for $40,000 & obligation. Hilton Oliplace it on your parcel, ver, Attorney. 757-490your way! Perc ok, 0126. ready to use or build. Low down financing. DIVORCE WITH OR Call 800-888-1262. WITHOUT children $125.00. Includes name change and property MISCELLANEOUS settlement agreement. DirecTV – Over 140 SAVE hundred. Fast channels only $29.99 and easy. Call 1-888a month. $636.00 in 733-7165, 24/7. Savings. Free upgrade STEEL BUILDINGS to Genie & 2013 NFL STEEL BUILDINGS Sunday ticket for New for Garages, Shops, Customers. Call 1-800- Barns, Homes. SAVE THOUSANDS on 935-9519. DISH TV Retailer. Start- Clearance buildings. ing at $19.99/month 20x24, 25x32, 30x40, (for 12 mos.) & High 35x56, LOW monthly Speed Internet starting payments. Call Now 1at $14.95/month (where 757-301-8885 Ashley available.) SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now! The Smithfield Times-Wed., Nov. 27, 2013 -Page Page 23 23 Wednesday, November 27, 2013 Classifieds Deadlines are normally Monday 5p.m. Holiday schedules may alter this. Legal Notices P.O. Box 27491, Rich- sion of the Director mond, VA 23261 VIRGINIA: IN THE www.abc.virginia.gov CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE COUNTY RETAIL LICENSE APOF ISLE OF WIGHT PLICATION Full name of owners: In the matter of the AASHI INC adoption of a child to Be Trading as: Carrollton known as Victoria Jade Exxon Jarrell who is Currently 15135 Carrollton Blvd. known as Victoria Jade Carrollton, VA 23314 Quinn (Birth Certicate (County of Isle of Registration Number Wight) 145-02-046039 registered in Virginia on July The above establishment is applying to the 10, 2002) VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF ALCOCivil No CA 13-9 HOLIC BEVERAGE O R D E R O F P U B - CONTROL (ABC) for a BEER WINE OFF LICATION PREMISES license. The object of the above- to sell or manufacture styled suit is to permit alcoholic beverages. Timothy Dean Jarrell Bankim Patel President to adopt the child of NOTE: Objections to Carolyne Quinn Jarrell the issuance of this (f/k/a Carolyne Ann license must be submitQuinn) Victoria Jade ted to ABC no later Quinn. And it appear- than 30 days from the ing by affidavit filed publishing date of the according to law that first of two required the biological father of newspaper legal noticthe child is unknown, it es. Objections should is therefore ORDERED be registered at www. that unknown biologi- abc.virginia.gov or 800cal father appear on or 552-3200. before the 4th day of December 2013, at 9:00 L13-189 am in the Clerk's Ofce 11-20/2t of the Court and do what ———— is necessary to protect OF his interests and it is N O T I C E further ORDERED that P U B L I C S A L E this order be published once a week for four Auction! Please take successive weeks in notice of a public aucthe Smithfield Times, tion for the sale of a newspaper of gen- delingquent or abaneral circulation in the doned items in Sawco County of Isle of Wight; Self Storage Units 7, that a copy of this order 8, 54, 90, 208, 317, be posted at the front 398. Auction to be held door of the Courthouse December 14, 2013 wherein this court is 10:00 am, on site at 15111-D Carrollton held. I a s k f o r t h i s : Blvd., Carrollton VA T i m o t h y V. A n - 23314. TERMS CASH! derson, Esq. A n d e r s o n & A s - L13-190 sociates, P C 11-27/1t 2492 North Land- ———— ing Rd., Ste 104 Vi r g i n i a B e a c h , PUBLIC NOTICE VA 2 3 4 5 6 Tel. (757) 301-3636 Fax. (757) 301-3640 VSB 4 3 8 0 3 Notice is hereby given pursuant to Chapter I, Section 106.1 of the Entered: 10/28/2013 Virginia Uniform StateLaura E. Smith, DC Sharon N. Jones, Clerk wide Building Code, 2009 Edition, the Isle of of Circuit Court Wight County Board of Building Code Appeals L13-183 will meet at 6:30 P.M., 11-6/4t Thursday, December 5, 2013, in the Robert C. ———— Claud, Sr. Board Room, Isle of Wight CourtVA ABC Virginia Department house, Isle of Wight, of Alcoholic Beverage Virginia to consider the following: Control 2901 Hermitage Road/ Appeal of the deci- The Smithfield Times of Inspections (Building Ofcial), Arthur E. Berkley, CBO, CZA by Jones & Jones, P.C. representing Mary Crocker, Owner to require corrections of exterior violations of the Virginia Maintenance Code existing at 502 Grace St, Smitheld, VA in accordance with Chapter 1, Section 108.1 of The Virginia Uniform Statewide Building Code, 2009 Edition. To subscribe now mail coupon with payment to: Smithfield Times, PO Box 366, Smithfield,VA 23430 Name___________________________ Address__________________________ _______________________________ email_________________________ phone____________________ Any Person desiring to be heard by said Board concerning said Appeal may appear at said time and place. Copies of the Appeal and the Virginia Uniform Statewide Building Code are available for public review in the ofce of the Isle of Wight County Director of Inspections. Local Rates: $25/yr print, $40/2yrs print $12/yr digital ISLE OF WIGHT COUNTY BOARD OF BUILDING CODE APPEALS Print or By: Christy R. Phillips, Secretary L13-191 11-27/2t ———— You can also subscribe online at smithfieldtimes.com/marketplace.html or by calling 757-357-3288 Digital IT’S YOUR COMMUNITY. Get the week in READ ALL ABOUT IT news, community events, YOUR WAY. human interest stories and shopping, the way you like it. Mail delivery or electronic subscriptions, we keep you in the know and on the go. 757-357-3288 • [email protected] www.smithfieldtimes.com/marketpkace.html 30 G2-061913 HOT Deals ON WHEELS List your cars or trucks until they FOR ONLY $15.00 SELL* Call 357-3288 for a LONG TERM LISTING *Maximum 8 weeks run per listing, maximum 22 words EMPLOYMENT ANNOUNCEMENT 05 Town of Smithfield - Smithfield Center Position Available: Facility Assistant (Part Time) 96 The Town of Smithfield is looking for a special individual to join our team at the Smithfield Center as a part time Facility Assistant. Starting pay equals $10.07 per hour. Individual must be available Monday through Sunday for a flexible schedule of early mornings, averaging 15-20 hours a week. Candidates for this position preferably have a background in custodial service. 04 This position works set changes, which prepares the building for each event. Set changes involve moving furniture and performing custodial work in a thorough and timely manner. Further, all Smithfield Center employees must be customer care specialists with the ability to communicate effectively with clients, vendors, contractors and the general public. The Town of Smithfield employment application is required and may be obtained at the Smithfield Center, 220 North Church Street or at Town Hall, 310 Institute Street, or may be downloaded from the town’s website www.smithfieldva.gov. The Town of Smithfield is an Equal Opportunity Employer. The position is open until filled. Questions regarding this employment opportunity should be directed to Ms. Amy Musick, Conference Center Director at #757-356-9939. Posted: November 13, 2013, to remain posted until filled. With solid information you can go anywhere The Smithfield Times subscribe online at smithfieldtimes.com or call 757-357-3288 04 86 06 05 02 05 04 05 03 96 07 13 99 86 93 87 Toyota Tundra SR5 Olds Delta BMW 325 CI Jeep Liberty Chevy El Camino Harley Davidson Dodge Dakota Ford F-150 Jeep Wrangler Gulfstream RV Dodge Ram 1500 Jeep Liberty Four Winns Yamaha Vstar Tao Tao Scooter Ford Explorer Oldsmobile Cutlass Ciera Oldsmobile Regency Honda Accord 4WD, V8, 4.7L, Auto, 135k miles, Tow pkg, sliding sunroof $12,900 757-357-0841 running boards, 6CD + AM/FM. Linex bedliner. Recent state inspection All options, leather interior, wonderfully kept & maintained 757-357-1777 65K miles, great gas mileage, call before 9pm $4,850 OBO Coupe, Excellent Conditon, 90K miles 757-615-5401 $11,750 4WD, V-6, Automatic, full-power, leather, 757-685-2889 sunroof, new inspection $8,100.00 136K Miles, Trophy Winner, Excellent Condition 757-397-4152 $9,750 Excellent condition, just been serviced, garage kept, 757-651-4070 black cherry paint color $6,500 Pick Up, 4 Wheel Drive, V-8 757-604-2202 105,000 miles, runs great, clean, call after 3:30pm $14,000 4 Wheel Drive 757-635-8513 F-150 Truck $5,000 Excellent Condition, Bikini Top, Smitty Built Bumpers, 757-542-3059 30,500 miles $16,500 33 foot Gulfstream RV, Two Slides, Fully Equipped, 46,000 Miles, 757-356-9211 Excellent Condition $49,900 4.7 liter, V8, Short Bed, Automatic, A/C, CD, Clean, excellent 757-356-0908 condition, red w/cloth seats. Call after 6pm. $11,000 4WD, Good Condition, 93,000 miles, Automatic, A/C, CD, cloth 757-356-0908 seats, maroon, cruise control. Call after 6pm. $4,500 Boat, 256 Vista Cruiser, new seats, cushions, under 200 hrs on Volvo Penta 5.8 Ltr 757-356-0908 I/O motor, fresh water cooling system since new. On EZ Haul Trailer. Call After 6pm $12,000 Classic Burgundy, 14K miles. Clean bike and new saddle bags 757-635-9172 less than a year old. Cash only. No Trades. Call please, no texts. $3,500 Brand New, 49 cc Scooter, No Drivers Liscense Needed 757-810-1932 Pay in Cash $750 Eddie Bauer 4x4, Runs Good, #7 Inspection 757-375-0347 $1,800 4 Door, Tech four fuel eject on engine, Factory A/C needs charging. $600 Needs state inspection, brand new battery, may need paint 757-334-7819 98, loaded, leather, August Inspection, runs great, 154,000 miles $1,200 703-595-9340 Hatchback parts or whole. 757-254-2947 Page 24 - The Smithfield Times-Wed., Nov. 27, 2013 Some things you just know you can count on... The best, most thorough, local news at a price you can’t beat. Printed every week, without missing a week, for 90 years. The SmithfieldTimes A TRADITION OF RELIABLE REPORTING Looking forward to serving our community in the years to come. $25/yr local print; $14/yr digital; $40/yr out of area. Subscribe online at smithfieldtimes.com or phone (757) 357-3288, by mail at The Smithfield Times, P.O. Box 366, Smithfield, VA 23430 or at our office at 228 Main St., in Historic Downtown Smithfield