Pickens County progress. (Jasper, Ga.) 1899-current, March 31, 2005, Image 1
Front - March 31 3/29/05 4:52 PM Page 1 Pinwheels for Prevention Kickoff Set For This Friday Prevent Child Abuse Pickens Encourages Residents To Attend Activities, Purchase Pinwheels / Page 9A MARCH 31, 2005 VOLUME 117 NUMBER 47 JASPER, GEORGIA 30143 USPS 431-830 THREE SECTIONS 53 PAGES PLUS SUPPLEMENTS If You Can Yell “Yerrrrr Out!” You Ye In The Pickens County Umpire Association needs more umpires for the upcoming youth baseball and softball season. Experience beyond a good basic knowledge of baseball/softball is not neces sary as all needed training will be provided by experienced umpires. P age 10A Learn to Climb Your Family Tree A new genealogy workshop is now underway at the Pick ens County Library. The first session was held last week with participants ranging from start-up genealogists seeking information on their grandpar ents to seasoned researchers who can trace their family trees back to ancestors in Europe. Don Thompson, class leader, plans for the ongoing forum to be a genealogy roundtable where participants help each other get past their research snags. The library’s collection of family history research materials is also available. The programs will continue on the last Saturday of each month. Page 2B Great American Clean-up Month Observed Here Commissioner Jones and Mayor Weaver have pro claimed April as clean-up month in Jasper and Pickens County. A number of activities will be held during the month under the coordination of Keep Pickens Beautiful. Honorary Chair for Great American Clean-up Month activities here is Kathryn Downes, a charter member of KPB. Page 6B Deaths Jane Farrow James Duckett Edward Torrington Mary McTaggart Donald Holcomb Mellene McDaniel Martha Griffeth Barbara Pihl Jennie Cheek Nancy Bridgeman Arthur Cronan Ed Powell 111 Lois Bagwell OBITUARIES ... .See Page 3A Weather By WILLIAM DILBECK HI LOW RAIN Tuesday 56 49 1.87 Wednesday 62 44 .00 Thursday 64 44 .00 Friday 75 48 .00 Saturday 77 51 .66 Sunday 62 43 2.38 Monday 47 41 .00 Visit Us On The Web www.pickensprogress .com The Progress is printed in part on recycled newsprint and is recyclable Harmony School bid $ 1 million less than officials expected Lower steel, concrete prices contribute to lower price By Christie Pool School officials got a nice sur prise when they opened bid pack ages for the planned Harmony School Road elementary school earlier this month - the guaranteed maximum price for the project was $1 million less than they budgeted. According to the school sys tem’s project manager, Mike Ballew, the maximum cost to build the school will be $7.5 million. The 82,000 square foot school will be the county’s largest elementary school and could house 800 stu dents. Ballew said the 55-classroom facility is designed so it could be easily added onto later. The school board voted unani mously to approve the bids. The $7.5 million will cover con structing the school. Ballew said furnishings could run anywhere between $250,000 and $400,000, depending on computer and tech nology labs. Property for the school was pur chased in 2002 for $750,000. Funds collected from the Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax (SPLOST) paid over $300,000 of the land acquisition costs. The approximate ly 40 acres of property along Har mony School Road also houses the recently-completed bus garage. Ballew said bulldozers will like ly be at work the first week in April and the contract calls for comple tion in 15 months. The school, for grades kindergarten through fifth, is scheduled to open in the fall of 2006. Before voting on the measure, board members asked Ballew for reassurance that the project was bid correctly because of the huge dif ference in the estimated and actual cost of construction. “This $7.5 million is the guaran teed maximum price. It won’t be above that,” Ballew said. “This contract with Charles Black Con struction includes contingencies. They always put money like that in, so it will be there in case you run into rock or something. If we don’t wind up with any contingencies then we don’t spend that money. One of the biggest differences is the price of steel. Steel has come down a good bit — also concrete.” Funding for the school will come from a SPLOST that was approved by voters in March of 2001. The board has been collect ing money since January of 2002 for the project, according to Assis tant Superintendent Amy Burgess. Board Member Ervin Easter- wood said Ballew should be com mended for all the work he has done on behalf of the board. Superintendent Lee Shiver said Ballew does a great job talking with builders and contractors. “We do our research,” Shiver said. “A lot of times those things pay off — knowing how much other schools cost and what to expect. I think this is a really good price.” Commissioner holds March meeting Health Dept., Emergency Services report increased use By Dan Pool Both the health department and the emergency services director reported increasing call volumes during the March sole commission er’s meeting Friday. County EMA Director Layne Arnold said the number of 911 calls has seen an unusual surge since the beginning of the year. “Other than an increase in the number of people coming through the county, we don’t see any reason for the increase,” he said. “But this is not a slow surge, it’s a pretty hefty rise.” Arnold said the increase was spread across all call types involv ing law enforcement, fire and med ical emergency. Thus far this year, the county EMS has run 740 calls, the Fire departments 650 calls, and there have been 6,702 calls involv ing law enforcement agencies. Arnold cited two types of calls in particular which have dramatic increases — family violence and unattended deaths. “There has been an increase in all types of crimes, but particularly with family violence there has been a significant increase,” he said. Arnold said in the past two weeks, EMS crews have responded to five deaths. The emergency med ical crews respond anytime a body is found and five in the past two weeks is “very unusual for this county.” Major Allen Wigington with the sheriff’s department said none of the deaths are under criminal inves tigation. One was determined to be a suicide by the sheriff and GBI; the others were from natural causes. Lois Bryant, the manager of the county health department, said the department is on pace to exceed the number of people treated last year with 6,441 clients seen this year. She said the department had per formed nearly 9,000 treatments of these users, including 3,300 flu shots. She said this was a record number of flu shots. “Many of these people are first time users and we hope they will continue to come to us,” she said. Bryant said the state legislature continues to work on the budget for health departments and there will be cuts in several programs, but she didn’t anticipate it affecting the staffing of the local department. Under his consent agenda, the commissioner handled several rou tine pieces of business including adopting a new pay scale for employees and transferring some of the payroll accounting functions for employees of the District Attor ney’s office to a state agency. No public comments were given. The commissioner holds a public meeting on the fourth Friday of every month at 9 a.m. in the court house annex. Running at the same time as the commissioner’s meeting Friday, the land development office held a pub lic hearing over a proposed devel opment in a state designated groundwater recharge area on Talc Mine Road. Director of Planning Norman Pope reported afterwards that no members of the public were pres ent. He said the county was required to hold a public hearing because the development is pro posed in the only groundwater recharge area identified by the state in Pickens County. Pope said a groundwater recharge area is a place recognized by the state where a significant amount of water enters a groundwa ter aquifer. Rodney Buckingham of the land development office said there are numerous recharge areas west of Pickens County, with the number increasing as you get closer to Rome and the state line. He said the county development standards, specifically the one acre minimum lot size, already exceeds state requirements for development in recharge areas. Buckingham said the develop ers, Steve Folsom and Dwayne Eckert, are aware of the designation and their plans exceed all state requirements. The development, which has not been given a name yet, is proposed as 89 lots on 116 acres. Buckingham said some of the lots directly in the recharge area will have lots even larger than the one acre minimum which will more than satisfy the requirements. Damon Howell / Photo Mike Ballew, Director of Special Projects, looks over the blue prints for the new elementary school on Harmony School Road west of the current bus garage. Internet Ghost disappears in light of investigation By Jeff Warren It was another middling March work day, drizzling rain in a county seat that likes to sit on its secrets. I was making the rounds, checking the usual suspects. I needed a story, so I stopped at the library. As I came through the door, the reference librarian caught my eye. She looked tall, tough and together behind her stockbroker glasses. She was busy about something with an authoritative air. I knew I couldn't pass her desk without speaking. "You again," she looked up. "What do you want?" I tried to be casual, but I wasn't. I aimed to pick her brain for any germ of a story. She got me first. "Know anything about a ghost at Scarecorn Creek?" she quizzed. I admitted I knew nothing. Her look could have swatted a fly. She said a dad and son out of Gainesville had been asking a lot of questions. Seems the shaver found a local ghost story over the Internet — a haint reported at the Carver Mill Road Bridge over Scarecorn Creek north of Hinton. The librari an told me the website. I thanked her for the tip and swore I'd look into it. The whole thing sounded dubi ous, but I meant to check it out. At the newspaper office, I keyed in the web address: theshadow- lands.net. A tragic tale appeared before my eyes. A half century ago, ran the account, Carver Mill Road crossed a high wooden bridge over Scarecorn Creek. When the old structure collapsed, it took two lives with it. A woman and a man were driving across when it fell. After dark, the website contin ued, you can park near the bridge rail, douse every light and wait for the ghost man to return. He walks Continued on page 5A Damon Howell / Photo ENJOYING THE OPENING DAY OF TROUT SEASON - The Kendricks family enjoyed spending some of their Saturday fishing off the bank of Cove Creek. Several others came and went throughout the day to relax along the creek with fishing pole in hand while taking advan tage of the great weather and the opening day of Georgia’s trout season on seasonal streams. The Workshop searching for peace in the mountains Residential recovery facility asks for community support Visitors to Pickens County often come for the peace and quiet of the mountains. A Pickens man believes that the peace and serenity here will add a valuable component for drug addicts and alcoholics who have completed a primary recovery pro gram and now need to return to the rigors and pressure of modern life. Bob Hayles, a former alcoholic himself, said the benefits of locat ing a “three-quarters” recovery cen ter in the mountains, as opposed to a bustling metro area, are obvious. “When you walk out the front door of a recovery center on Roswell Road, there are three liquor stores and two bars you pass on your way to work,” he said. Hayles said in addition to the availability of alcohol in the urban areas, the pressures a recovering alcoholic has there are greater. “I want to establish a recovery center up in the mountains — not even in Jasper,” he said. “It needs to be a peaceful, simple setting, so that your whole job is to learn to stay sober.” At this point Hayles wants noth ing more than the community’s support for the “The Workshop” — his name for the proposed recovery center. Hayles said he envisions a setting with 10-15 acres and several two to three bedroom cabins for those in the program to live during the six month to 12 month pro gram, plus some additional meeting space. “Initially, I’m not looking for funds,” he said. “I want to see let ters, letters to the local government, the commissioner, letters to the edi tor expressing support,” he said. “I want people to talk about this at churches, in civic groups, anywhere people get together.” Hayles said there are two rea sons the community should support recovery programs: it’s ethically the right thing to do and treatment is cheaper than the expense of sup porting alcoholics and drug addicts Continued on page 5A