Newspaper Page Text
SEE PAGE IB
SEE PAGE 7 A
Dragons
Sweep Tigers
In Basketball
Officers Treated
For Smoke
Inhalation At Fire
Vol. 132
No. 49
24 Pages
3 Sections
Wednesday
JANUARY 16, 2008
mainstreet news. com
50 Cents COVERING THE COMMERCE AREA SINCE 1875
ML King
Celebration
Is Sunday
The 24th annual Martin
Luther King Jr. Birthday
Celebration in Jackson County
will be held Sunday Jan. 20, at
St. Paul First Baptist Church,
located at 573 Gordon Street
in Jefferson.
The celebration will begin at
3:30 p.m. with a gospel music
concert presented by “One
Accord" of Commerce. The
ecumenical service will begin
at 4 p.m.
The featured speaker will be
Steve Jones, Superior Court
judge of the Western Judicial
Circuit, which includes Oconee
and Athens-Clarke. He was
appointed judge in November
1995 by Gov. Zell Miller. Prior
to this, he served as municipal
court judge for Athens-Clarke
County from 1992 to 1995 and
as assistant district attorney
for the Western Judicial Circuit
from 1987 to 1992. He served
as director of the child sup
port recovery unit from 1978
to 1985.
A native of Athens-Clarke
County, Jones is married to the
former Lillian Kincey.
AWARDS
Several awards in different
categories will be presented
to citizens from throughout
Northeast Georgia. Among
those to be recognized are
Jefferson Motors, Entrepreneur
of the Year; and Mrs. Brenda
Duncan, retired Jefferson city
clerk.
INDEX
Births 10A
Church News 6B
Classified Ads 1-4C
Calendar 3A
Crime News 7-8A
News Roundup 2A
Obituaries 9A
Opinions 4-5A
School News 7-8B
Sports 1-3B
Social News .... 101 1A
WEATHER OUTLOOK
THURSDAY FRIDAY
Light rain/ice: Partly cloudy:
Low, 32; high, 41; Low, 33; high, 52;
60% chance rain 10% chance rain
SATURDAY SUNDAY
Partly cloudy: Sunny:
Low, 19; high, 43; Low, 24; high, 43;
10% chance rain 10% chance rain
Reservoir Levels
Commerce: 698 (.4 feet above full)
Bear Creek: 694.5 (.5 feet below full)
Rainfall this month
1.25 inches
CONTACT US
Phone: 706-335-2927
FAX: 706-387-5435
E-mail:
news@ma i n streetnews. com
mark@mainstreetnews.com
brandon@mainstreetnews.com
teresa@ma i n streetnews. com
Mail: P.O. Box 459,
Commerce, GA 30529
'Cold Sassy Tree' — The Opera
Ben Perkins, Amy Kier, Adam Cannedy and Amy Little, mem
bers of the Atlanta Opera, performed parts of the opera “Cold
Sassy Tree” last Tuesday night, Jan. 8, at the Commerce Cultural
Center. Approximately 100 people turned out for the perfor
mance. Photo by Hasco Craver
Dr. Paul Sergent Is New
School Board Chairman
By Ben
Munro
Dr. Paul
Sergent has
moved over
to the school
board chair
man’s seat for
2008 following
the departure
of former chair
man Steve Perry whose term
expired in December 2007.
The move became official fol
lowing a unanimous vote by
Sergent’s fellow Commerce
Board of Education (BOE) mem
bers Monday night at the school
board’s first regular meeting of
2008.
Sergent, who represents District
5, had previously served as vice
chairman and has held office
since 2002 when he took over
for former board member Lanny
Pope.
Longtime Commerce BOE
member Mary Seabolt now
moves over to Sergent’s vice
chair spot, after being appointed
Monday night, while the law firm
of Harbin and Hartley has been
retained as the school system’s
legal counsel.
This was also the first regular
meeting for new board member
Rodney Gary, who represents
District 4, which Perry had served
since 1996.
CHS Receives
Anonymous $3,000
Commerce High School has
received $3,000 from an anony
mous donor that will be used to
provide scholarship money for
one or more CHS seniors, which
ever the school chooses.
The money came to Commerce
through the North Georgia
Community Foundation. This
one-time scholarship will be
known as the Northeast Georgia
Please Turn to Page 3A
County Starting Process Of
Updating Comprehensive Plan
The Jackson County government will gear up this year for the massive
undertaking of upgrading its comprehensive plan.
The comprehensive plan, which is scheduled to be done by March
20, 2010, will develop “a vision for the quality of life we desire for all
stakeholders," according to Commissioner Bruce Yates.
Yates presented a slide show to members of the Jackson County
Area Chamber of Commerce last Wednesday morning in which he
attempted to demonstrate the need for and drum up enthusiasm for a
project required by the state government.
The plan’s purpose is to guide development in terms of zoning, land
use, transportation and infrastructure development. The goal, said
Yates, is to get a huge cross section of the county’s populace involved
in the process.
“Jackson County needs your help," he pleaded. “We hope we will have
your involvement and your commitment to involvement."
This year will be spent gathering the data, what Yates termed a “com
munity assessment." Future tasks will include seeking that community
participation and coming up with a “community agenda."
The assessment, said Yates, will include potential issues and oppor
tunities, an analysis of existing development patterns, consideration of
the current land use map, identification of areas needing special atten-
PleaseTurn to Page 5A
Bear Creek Reservoir To
Be Full By End Of Week
Water Restrictions To Continue Indefinitely
The Bear Creek Reservoir is
expected to be full again later
this week for the first time since
early June.
Kevin Williams, who man
ages the regional reservoir and
treatment plant for JJ&G and
the Upper Oconee Basin Water
Authority, reported Monday that
the 505-acre lake has recovered
to the 694.5-foot level — just a
foot below full pool.
“Hopefully, it will be at full
pool by the end of the week,"
said Williams, who also reported
that the authority’s pump station
on the Middle Oconee River is
running full bore 24 hours a
day. At that rate, they add 60
million gallons per day to the
reservoir, which is located off
Georgia Highway 330 in south
west Jackson County.
The lake was last full in the
first week of June, according to
Williams. In mid-October, it was
more than 14 feet low, and offi
cials were worried that it would
run dry before Christmas.
Meanwhile, consumption of
water by Athens-Clarke, Barrow,
Jackson and Oconee counties
remains “down pretty significant
ly" due to conservation measures
implemented to combat what is
being called a record drought.
Water Restrictions
To Continue
The filling of the reservoir by
no means signals the end of
the drought. State climatologist
David Stooksbury has all along
predicted that Bear Creek might
recover, but he also forecasts a
“strong likelihood" of a warm,
dry winter and spring that
would preclude the recovery
of streams and rivers from the
drought. The pinch, he said, will
be next summer if the drought
continues.
And while local reservoirs
may be full, lakes Lanier and
Allatoona, which provide water
to Metro Atlanta, remain dan
gerously low and are driving
state water policy — including
severe restrictions on the out
door use of water throughout
most of North Georgia.
Commerce Enters New
Year $ 1 Million In The Black
The city of Commerce starts
2008 $1 million in the black,
thanks to strong sales of electric
ity and substantial income from
the special purpose local option
sales tax.
While the calendar year has
ended, Commerce is six months
into its fiscal year, which start
ed July 1. According to City
Manager Clarence Bryant, the
utility funds are in the black by
about $500,000 and the SPLOST
account by the same amount.
Bryant and Finance Director
Steve McKown briefed the city
council on financial matters at
Monday night’s council meeting.
The city sold 39 million more
gallons of water this fiscal year
than at the same point last year,
thanks to purchases by Jackson
County, much of which went to
Jefferson. Electricity sales were
also up — as was the cost of pur
chasing electricity, also because
of the drought.
The only utility fund that was
down, Bryant said, was the Gas
Fund, which as of Dec. 31 was off
$481,000 from last year, where a
cold December spurred sales.
“Most of that is from our two
biggest customers, Louisiana
Pacific and Huber," Bryant said.
“They aren’t running much."
Both plants make oriented
strand board, for which the mar
ket is depressed due to the hous
ing slump.
Please Turn to Page 3A
Superior Court Judge Joe Booth installs Massey, Ward 5; and Bob Sosebee, Ward 4, at
recently re-elected Commerce councilmen Monday night’s city council meeting.
(from left) Mark Fitzpatrick, Ward 3; Richard
Relief Coming To Cooper Farm Road
$1.3 Million Project To Bring County Water To Area Of Dry Wells
By spring, residents of Cooper
Farm Road between Nicholson
and Center will have access to
county water.
The Jackson County Water and
Sewerage Authority voted last
Thursday to approve a $1.37 mil
lion contract for what it calls its
“East Priority 2" water project.
Residents of the road appeared
before the authority last year
complaining that their wells were
dry, unproductive and in some
cases yielded water with high
levels of minerals.
The low bidder is Dale
Construction Company, which
has done a number of water proj
ects for the authority.
“He’s a very good contractor,
very easy to work with. He’s jam-
up," advised manager Eric Klerk.
In addition to the bid, the
authority approved a $25,000
contingency fund for rock.
The bid includes labor and
materials and came in almost
$300,000 less than had been pro-
PleaseTurn to Page 5A