Newspaper Page Text
SEE PAGE 1B
SEE PAGE 3A
Tigers Preparing
To Face Gordon
Lee's Trojans
Open House Sat. At Rehabbed Building
SEE PAGE 6A
Talk Of A County Reservoir Continues
Vol. 132
No. 40
28 Pages
3 Sections
Commerce News
Wednesday
NOVEMBER 14, 2007
mainstreetnews.com
50 Cents COVERING THE COMMERCE AREA SINCE 1875
Roper Pump Company employees, retirees and guests watch a slide show of the 150-year-old
company’s history and accomplishments Friday at the Commerce Civic Center.
Roper Pump Company
Celebrates Its 150th Birthday
More than 300 employees,
retired employees and guests
capped Roper Pump Company’s
150-year anniversary Friday over
New York strip steaks at the
Commerce Civic Center.
The company which got its
start as Trahern Pump Company
in Rockford, IL, had three of its
former presidents on hand to
celebrate not just a century and
a half of business, but also the
company’s near half century in
Commerce.
“You have certainly been an
asset to the city of Commerce for
many years,” commented mayor
Charles L. Hardy Jr. “We appreci-
Former Roper president
Don O’Steen speaks as cur
rent president Walt Stadnisky
looks on.
ate all you do for the city.”
In addition to providing jobs for
more than 200, Roper is among
the top taxpayers for Commerce
and its school system.
Roper came to Commerce
in 1959, buying out the O.Z.
Szekley Co. known as Roper
Hydraulics at the time, it became
Roper Pump Company in 1965.
Additions were erected in 1975,
1989 and 1991 to the Mt. Olive
Road facility, which now covers
195,000 square feet, pointed out
president Walt Stadnisky.
Today, Roper Pump Co. is part
of a $2 billion corporation, Roper
Industries, that has “grown both
organically and through acquisi
tions” over the past 17 years,
Please Turn to Page 12A
Holidays Make For
Busy Days Downtown
Events Saturday And Sunday, Dec. 1-2
To Open Holiday Season In Commerce
I N D E X
Births 11A
Church News 7B
Classified Ads 1-6C
Calendar 3A
Crime News 7-8A
News Roundup 2A
Obituaries 9A
Opinions 4-5A
School News 8-10B
Sports 1-4B
Social News . . . . 10-11A
WEATHER OUTLOOK
THURSDAY FRIDAY
Mostly sunny: Sunny:
Low, 31; high, 59; Low, 35; high, 66;
20% chance rain 10% chance rain
SATURDAY SUNDAY
Partly cloudy: Few showers: Low,
Low, 44; high, 62; 44; high, 62;
10% rain chance 30% chance rain
CONTACT US
Phone: 706-335-2927
FAX: 706-387-5435
E-mail:
news@mainstreetnews. com
mark@mainstreetnews.com
brandon@mainstreetnews.com
teresa@mainstreetnews.com
Mail: P.O. Box 459,
Commerce, GA 30529
The Christmas season is shap
ing up to be busy in downtown
Commerce, highlighted with what
could be the biggest Christmas
parade yet. The season kicks off
Saturday, Dec. 1, and the parade
is Sunday, Dec. 2.
“We could have four march
ing bands,” noted Hasco Craver,
who is executive director of
the Downtown Development
Authority.
The Commerce and East
Jackson high school bands have
committed to perform, the Banks
County High School band has
expressed interest, and the DDA
has contracted with the Seed
and Feed Abominable Band, an
Atlanta-based volunteer band that
provides music and street theater
(www.seedandfeed.org) through
out the southeast. The band will
also put on a free holiday concert
after the parade in Spencer Park.
“They are professional musi
cians, very colorful and definitely
entertaining,” said Craver. “They
get the crowd involved.”
The parade will be held at 3:00
Sunday, Dec. 2, and Craver said
four units have already signed
up.
“I’m getting a lot of inquiries
as a result of handing out flyers
during trick-or-treat,” Craver said.
“I’ve had numerous people call
and ask questions. If we get a
similar turnout to last year, with
the increase and bands as well as
the free concert afterward, this
year’s event will usher in the holi
day season in style.”
The theme for the parade is
“Rockin’ Around the Christmas
Tree.”
Saturday, Dec. 1
Actually, the holiday events start
the day before. They include:
•Breakfast with Santa: 9:00
to 11:00 Saturday, Dec. 1, at the
Opera House Dance Academy,
1650 South Broad Street.
Sponsored by the DDA and the
Four Seasons Garden Club, the
event will offer breakfast items
and the opportunity to get kids’
pictures taken with Santa.
• Hometown Holidays: 9:00 a.m.
to 6:00 p.m. at varying locations
downtown. The event is a holiday
sale.
• Secret Santa Workshop: noon
to 3:00 p.m. at the Commerce
School of Dance, 1736 North
Broad Street. This children’s
shopping event features gift items
prices under $10, and is spon-
Please Turn to Page 3A
Searching For 10%
Commerce Eliminates Most
Outdoor Water Use Exemptions
Responding to both the current
drought and the state’s increased
involvement in water manage
ment, the city
of Commerce
amended its
drought con
tingency plan
Monday night.
The changes
eliminate 10 of
13 exemptions
to the use of
outdoor water
during the city’s
most severe
level of restrictions and they
boost the fines that violators
would pay.
The city’s new plan has two
levels of restrictions. Its level
one corresponds to the state’s
level two, which restricts outdoor
water usage to an odd-even sched
ule. Its level two corresponds to
the state’s level four — which
Jackson and 60 other counties
are now under — but eliminates
most of the exemptions.
Bryan Harbin, director of the
city’s water and sewer oper
ations, pointed out that the
city’s reservoir level at present
is stable.
“If there were not an emergency
in 61 counties, we would not be
under any water
restrictions,” he
said. The city’s
drought plan
calls for action
only when the
reservoir has
been a foot
below full pool
for 72 hours.
The lake has
not reached that
level, and is cur
rently only four-tenths of a foot
below full.
The elimination of most exemp
tions for outdoor water use is
more of a response to the gov
ernor’s mandate that all water
permit holders reduce withdraw
als by 10 percent than by a local
need to conserve water.
“We’re going to have to take
some measures to meet that
reduction,” Harbin pointed out.
Perdue declared that starting
Nov. 1, water providers must
reduce their usage by 10 percent
below the average daily use from
last December through March
or face “substantial” (but still
unknown) penalties.
Harbin said the city is still
awaiting a ruling from the
Environmental Protection
Division as to whether
Commerce will be penalized
for increasing its withdrawals to
help neighboring jurisdictions
get through the drought.
Currently, the only exemp
tions to the water restrictions
still allowed are the use by retail
garden centers, for the produc
tion of food and fiber (including
vegetable gardens) and commer
cial car washes.
City Manager Clarence Bryant
pointed out that meeting the
reductions will be difficult
because 85 percent of the city’s
customers are necessary. He said
the city will “need the coopera
tion of all of our water custom
ers,” but even with that help, “we
won’t have the 10 percent by the
end of November, and I doubt
by the end of December.”
“The flip side (of reduced water
usage) is we all have water and
sewer bonds to pay,” Bryant
added. “We’ll all have to get in
there and deal with it.”
'If there were not
an emergency in 61
counties, we would
not be under any
water restrictions.'
-Bryan Harbin,
Commerce Water
& Sewer Director
Audit: Another Good
Fiscal Year For Commerce
All Deadlines
Moved Up For
Nov. 21 Paper
The next issue of The
Commerce News will be pub
lished a day early due to the
Thanksgiving holiday. That
means all production deadlines
will move forward.
The deadline for news items
will be 4:00 Friday afternoon.
The deadline for classified and
display advertising will be at
noon Friday, Nov. 16.
The Commerce News will be
printed Tuesday, Nov. 20, and
will be available at area busi
nesses that night. It will arrive
in local subscribers’ mailboxes
Wednesday, Nov. 21.
According to the just-released
audit, Commerce ended the
2006-07 fiscal year $2.29 million
in the black and improved its cash
position by about $400,000.
Stephan Wilcox of Wilcox and
Bivings PC presented the audit
at Monday night’s council meet
ing. He noted that the audit was
“unqualified,” meaning all data
is covered, and declared that the
city remains in a strong financial
position.
The document reports that the
net assets of the city increased
by almost $2.3 million during the
year, its General Fund balance
increased by $53,000, and the
city’s proprietary funds had an
increase in net assets of $2.7 mil
lion. Its long-term debt increased
by $600,000, which Wilcox
attributed to the $1 million gas
line relocation project.
“Overall, the city had another
excellent year as it generated a
total increase in net assets of
$2.3 million,” Wilcox told the city
council.
The audit covers the fiscal year
that ended June 30.
For the current fiscal year,
Please Turn to Page 3A
New Ingles Store Taking Shape
To Open
Next Spring
The new Ingles
store, located at the
corner of Hwy. 334
and U.S. 441 just
south of the present
location, is taking
shape. The 83,000-
square-foot-store is
expected to open in
March or April. It is
a $3.5 million proj
ect that will include
a deli, bakery, phar
macy, gas station
and video store.