Newspaper Page Text
SEE PAGE 12A
SEE PAGE 12A
Tournament
Proves Tough
For CHS Teams
Tigers Second
In Pared Down
Wrestling Meet
Vol. 132
No. 47
18 Pages
2 Sections
Wednesday
JANUARY 2, 2008
mainstreetnews.com
50 Cents COVERING THE COMMERCE AREA SINCE 1875
Where There's
Smoke There's
A Sewer Problem
Smoke Tests Next Week
Could Bring Smoke Into
Houses On South End
White smoke filling the house
is never a good sign, but for
people in the vicinity of the old
Harmony Grove Mill building,
smoke in the house next week
is more likely to indicate a
plumbing problem than a fire.
A company hired by
Commerce will conduct
“smoke tests" in sewer lines
in the areas of Stark Street,
Piedmont Street, Poplar Street
and Walnut Street searching
for points where stormwater
infiltrates into the city sanitary
sewer system. A side effect is
that some home sewer prob
lems will also be identified.
“If a homeowner has a prob
lem with vent stacks or P-traps,
the home is going to fill with
smoke," warned Bryan Harbin,
the city’s director of water and
sewer services.
The good news is that the
smoke is harmless and has no
odor. Harbin compares it to the
“smoke" from dry ice.
The city sent letters to all
addresses likely to be affected,
and it’s running a public notice
in this week’s newspapers. It has
also notified 911, since alarmed
homeowners are likely to sum
mon the fire department. But,
because of the age of both the
sewer system and the houses,
the city expects there to be
Please Turn to Page 3A
INDEX
Births 1OA
Church News 8A
Classified Ads 1-4B
Calendar 3A
Crime News 6A
Year In Review 2A
Obituaries 7A
Opinions 4A
School News 1 1A
Sports 1 2-14A
Social News 1 OA
WEATHER OUTLOOK
FRIDAY
Partly cloudy:
iw, 31; high, 48;
0% chance rain
SUNDAY
Partly cloudy:
iw, 43; high, 62;
0% chance rain
Reservoir Levels
Commerce: 698 (.4 feet above full)
Bear Creek: Not Available
Rainfall this month
6.17 inches
CONTACT US
Phone: 70G3 35-2927
FAX: 706-387-5435
E-mail:
news@mainstreetnews.com
ma rk@ma i n streetnews. com
brandon@mainstreetnews.com
teresa @ma i nstreetnews. com
Mail: P.O. Box 459,
Commerce, GA 30529
THURSDAY
Partly cloudy:
Low, 24; high, 44;
10% chance rain
SATURDAY
Mostly cloudy:
Low, 40; high, 54;
10% chance rain
2008 To See Start Of Building New CHS
The long-awaited construction of a new
high school in Commerce should begin
shortly after graduation in May — if not
sooner.
The architects of the new Commerce
High School have been talking with teach
ers to get the specifics of what they need in
their classrooms, says Superintendent Dr.
James E. “Mac" McCoy.
“I’m hoping when we get back they’ll be
ready to present something in two weeks,"
he said, “maybe by our board work session
or January meeting we’ll have a new set of
plans."
The architects have yet to discuss plans
with the technology and food service
groups, McCoy noted.
“Every time they upgrade and update
the plans, they talk with the construction
company, so they continue to get prices,"
he said. “Hopefully, when they’re ready to
go to bid, we’ll know pretty closely what
the price range will be."
The system hopes to build the school for
about $15 million. Funding will come from
special purpose local option sales taxes
approved by the voters and fronted with
a bond issue to be repaid with SPLOST
revenue.
McCoy said the schedule calls for bids to
be opened in mid-February. He anticipates
waiting until the end of the school year to
start construction but sees a possibility
that work could begin earlier “depending
on what the school board wants to do and
what the construction company says to do.
The board is as anxious to break ground as
anybody."
The school is to be built on the exist
ing high school site without interrupting
school. The first step will be to build a new
gym, a pit-style facility located near the
current practice field and tennis courts.
Once that is done, the old gym can be torn
down.
McCoy says the design will enable the
construction to take place without the
need for temporary classrooms.
“We shouldn’t have to bring in a trailer for
anybody," he says.
The new facility, which will utilize the
south and east wings of the current CHS,
will comprise 125,627 square feet — more
than double the current size. It will be built
to house 650 students, with common areas
to support 1,000. It will feature 46 class
rooms, including seven from the current
south wing. It will include a new pit-style
gym with a larger basketball court and
room to host wrestling and cheerleading
tournaments. The school will also have a
performing arts auditorium.
Originally, the board had hoped to begin
construction last summer. Oddly, the delay
could save the system money, since con
struction has dropped off due to the hous
ing slump and other economic uncertain
ties.
“Everybody around me has said the same
thing," McCoy notes. “The way construc
tion is going on right now, we may be fairly
lucky when we go out to bid
The Top
5 Stories
Of2007
Looking Back At
2007
Drought Trumps Them All
As Top Story Of The Year
Volunteers from Southeast Toyota Distributors turned
out in force to install landscape during the renovation of
Spencer Park, which helped keep the downtown in the news
during 2007. The vitality of the downtown is the No. 2 story.
The simple addition to the Commerce reservoir’s outlet
structure, above, of a 2 by 12 board in the bottom of the open
ing, had the effect of raising the level of the reservoir by four-
tenths of a foot. The city reservoir is now full.
The biggest story of the year
is one that, ironically, affected
Commerce less than the rest of
the area. It’s the story of the
worst drought in Georgia his
tory.
As of Dec. 31, Commerce’s
reservoir was full — over full,
actually. According to the city’s
drought management plan,
Commerce did not reach crisis
stage during the entire drought —
to date. Its reservoir, located on
the Grove River in Banks County,
never got so far as a foot below
full pool, the point in which the
city’s drought management plan
would kick in.
Nonetheless, Commerce resi
dents suffered the inconvenienc
es of every-other-day watering
during the early stages, then
once-a-week usage of outdoor
water to, now, a total ban on the
outside use of water.
Curtailment of water began in
May locally, when the Upper
Oconee Basin Water Authority
— owner of the Bear Creek
Reservoir from which more than
6,000 Jackson County custom
ers get their water — went into
the first level of its drought man
agement plan. The 2.5 percent
reduction was the result of sever-
No. 2 Story - Page 5A
No. 3 Story - Page 9A
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No. 5 Story - Page 9A
al indicators demonstrating that
a drought was under way, and the
step was taken in spite of the fact
that the Bear Creek Reservoir
was at full pool.
A couple of weeks later, the
Environmental Protection
Division mandated a level
two response, the every-other-
day use of water for washing
cars and irrigating landscapes.
Commerce complied, although
only on paper. Mayor Charles L.
Hardy Jr. told the directors of the
Jackson County Area Chamber
of Commerce that no one in
Commerce was going to be pros
ecuted for violating the water
Please Turn to Page 3A
There was no shortage of inter
esting or compelling news dur
ing the past year, but, drum roll
please, here are the Top 5 Stories
of 2007 from the pages of The
Commerce News.
No. 1: The drought. The sheer
volume of stories, the reactions of
every local government — and the
fact that the drought is still going
on in spite of nearly four inches of
rain in the last week of the year —
make this the top story for 2007.
No. 2: The resurgence of activ-
itiy in downtown Commerce.
Headlined by the renovation of
Spencer Park by the Downtown
Development Authority in a
public-private partnership, the
downtown had its most vitality
in decades. A festival, a major
building rehab, improvements to
the cultural center and a number
of other activities kept the down
town in the news.
No. 3: The opening of East
Jackson Comprehensive High
School. The new school raises
the bar for high school facilities in
Jackson County.
No. 4: The fund-raising effort
to expand the Commerce Public
Library.
No. 5: The Nov. 6 city elec
tions.
Jackson County Voters
To Be Busy this Year
The newspaper and magazine recycling site near Lanier Tech
on South Elm Street in Commerce is among the sites where
Christmas trees can be dropped for recycling.
Jackson County voters will be
busy this year, because 2008 is a
major election year. Georgians
will help choose the next presi
dent, and Jackson County vot
ers will select new county com
missioners and other constitu
tional officers.
But that’s not all that will hap
pen.
Here are the key dates on the
2008 election calendar.
Feb. 5: Jackson County voters
will consider whether to autho
rize the Sunday sale of liquor
by the drink, and will vote on a
$50 million bond issue for the
acquisition of land for future
parks, and Georgia voters will
participate in the presidential
preference primary. Advance
voting will be Jan. 28-Feb. 1, and
the last day to register for that
election is Jan. 7.
April 28-May 2: These are the
qualifying dates for local offices,
and candidates can be expected
to begin announcing their inten
tions to run at almost any time.
July 15: Both parties will hold
their primaries to determine who
will represent their parties in the
General Election in November.
In Jackson County, most of the
candidates will qualify in the
Republican primary. Advance
voting will be available for the
primaries July 7-11, and the last
day to register for the election
will be June 16.
Aug 5: If no one receives 50
percent of the vote in any race
Please Turn to Page 3A
County Seeks
To Recycle
Christmas Trees
Now that Christmas is over, Keep
Jackson County Beautiful says it’s
time to recycle your Christmas
tree.
The organization will hold its
Bring One for the Chipper recy
cling event Saturday, Jan. 5, from
9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Trees will be
recycled into mulch or used as
wildlife habitat.
Drop-off sites include the Lanier
Technical College parking lot on
South Elm Street in Commerce,
the Jefferson Civic Center, the
Jackson County Transfer Station,
and the First Baptist Church of
Hoschton.
Those participating will receive a
free dogwood seedling while sup
plies last.
The free seedling offer is for
Saturday, but people have already
started discarding their Christmas
trees at the sites.
For information, call Susan
Trepagnier, executive director of
Keep Jackson County Beautiful,
at 706-708-7198 or online at www.
keepjacksoncountybeautiful.com.