Newspaper Page Text
SEE PAGE 11A
Snakes Alive
This Saturday
At The Library
SEE PAGE 6A
'Christians' Turn To Hooters Girls For Help
SEE PAGE 6A
Is Commerce Council Cause Of Drought?
Vol. 133
No. 17
26 Pages
3 Sections
Wednesday
JUNE 11, 2008
mainstreetnews.com
50 Cents COVERING THE COMMERCE AREA SINCE 1875
Bear Creek
Capacity
Is Suspect
Water Restrictions Eased In City
Yard Watering, Washing Of Cars OK On Odd-Even Schedule Three Days A Week
Can the Bear CreekReservoir
really produce 58 million gal
lons of water per day?
Jackson County officials
appear increasingly convinced
that estimates of the regional
reservoir’s capacity are wrong.
That concern is driving the
county’s push to develop its
own reservoir to meet future
needs.
But, while everyone agrees
that Jackson County needs
more water sources, but con
cern over spending $300,000
in a weak economy may keep
Jackson County from tapping
into $40 million in state grant
funds.
The Jackson County Water
and Sewerage Authority will
discuss with the county com
missioners a proposed engi
neering “scope of work’’ for
selecting a reservoir site in the
hope of getting the county to
pick up most or all of the esti
mated $294,400 cost.
Prime Engineering’s Rob
MacPherson presented the
scope of work and a timeline
by which the authority could
meet an Aug. 29 deadline for
applying for the state funds.
The board of commission-
PleaseTurn to Page 5A
W
THURSDAY FRIDAY
W' f,t K
Isolated T-storms: Isolated T-storms:
Low, 69; high, 88; Low, 71; high, 93;
30% chance rain 30% chance rain
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
Scattered T-storms: Scattered T-storms:
Low, 68; high, 91; Low, 67; high, 85;
40% chance rain 40% chance rain
Reservoir Levels
Commerce: 697.6 (full)
Bear Creek: 695 (full)
Rainfall this month
0 inches
Rainfall This Year
21.75 Inches
Births
. . . 1OA
Church News . .
. . . . 6B
Classified Ads . .
. . 1-4C
Calendar
. . . 3A
Crime News . . .
. . 7-8A
News Roundup .
. . . 2A
Obituaries
. . . 9A
Opinions
. . 4-5A
School News. . .
. 7-1 OB
Sports
. . 1-2B
Social News . . .
. 8-12A
CONTACT US
Phone: 706-335-2927
FAX: 706387-5435
E-mail:
news@mainstreetnews.com
ma rk@ma i n streetnews. com
brandon@mainstreetnews.com
teresa@mainstreetnews.com
Mail: P.O. Box 459,
Commerce, GA, 30529
Gentlemen, start your sprinklers. From
midnight to 10 a.m. on an odd-even sched
ule, of course.
City Manager Clarence Bryant announced
Monday night that Commerce residents
will be able to use water outdoors on an
odd-even schedule by the end of the week.
“You can wash your car, water your lawn,
whatever you want to do,’’ Bryant advised.
Like many other water providers in North
Georgia, Commerce has been working with
the EPD for months to try to get the water
use restrictions reduced. At Monday night’s
council meeting, Bryant announced that
a letter from the EPD granting that relief
was expected “tomorrow or the next day’’
(Tuesday or Wednesday) following “10 or
12 conversations with the EPD over the last
three days.’’
The watering of yards and landscapes
will follow a schedule in which residents
with odd-numbered street addresses can
water from midnight to 10 a.m. Tuesdays,
Thursdays and Sundays, while those with
even-numbered addresses can water during
the same hours Mondays, Wednesdays and
Saturdays.
“You can wash your car, you can pressure
wash your house,’’ said Bryan Harbin, the
city’s director of water and sewer opera
tions. “Basically, you can use outdoor water
on the odd-even schedule.’’
The odd-even schedule applies to those
other functions, but not the midnight to 10
a.m. restriction, Harbin said.
Last summer, the EPD and Gov. Sonny
Perdue placed severe restrictions on 61
North Georgia counties in reaction to the
Please Turn to Page 3A
Easy Way To Beat The Heat
Anna Williamson and Erica Zelada, both of Jefferson, found at Hurricane Shoals County Park. Hundreds of other area
an easy way to beat the 96-degree heat Sunday afternoon, residents did the same thing, packing the park during the
They relaxed in the cool waters of the North Oconee River near-record heat wave. Photo by Mark Beardsley
School Board Seeks Clarification On
Ownership, Usage Of 'City lights' Funds
By Brandon Reed
The Commerce Board of
Education is trying to figure out
how to handle the money raised
by the City Lights Festival.
According to finance director
Ann Stokey, proceeds from the
City Lights Festival were given
to the school system in the past
for safe keeping, with the inten
tion being to use the funds to
help build a fine arts facility.
The problem, she says, is
there are no documents that
can be found that indicate what
the money is for, or who the
money belongs to.
The money actually came from
two sources. Proceeds from the
City Lights Festival — up until
last year when it became the
City Lights Downtown Festival
— went toward the construc
tion of a Bill Anderson Center
for the Performing Arts, named
after the country music legend
whose star-studded concerts
were the centerpiece of the
festival. The organizing group
was an unofficial entity, and
Anderson and the committee
are not connected to the cur
rent City Lights Downtown
Festival. But the Commerce
City Council also voted to give
to the fund the (approximately)
$215,000 insurance repayment
of money stolen by former
(and late) police chief George
Grimes. At the end of May,
the account held just under
$470,000.
The board directed
Superintendent Dr. James E.
“Mac’’ McCoy to contact the
city of Commerce, asking for
a letter stating what the funds
were for and how they can be
used.
Stokey said another possibil
ity is that the school system
could return the money to the
city, and let the city decide
what to do with the funds. The
options would include return
ing the money to the school
system to assist in the planned
high school auditorium, or pos
sibly the city building a stand
alone facility.
Stokey said the state’s audi
tors have questioned why
the money is on the board’s
books.
Update On
‘Practice Gym’
Also on Monday night,
McCoy updated the board on
the construction of the “prac
tice gym’’ for the high school.
The facility is planned for con
struction next to the football
field, and will be utilized for
a concession stand, restroom
and locker room facilities. It
would also serve as the interim
gym during the construction of
the new high school.
“We’ve met with band boost
ers, athletic directors and
administrators, and everyone
is in agreement that if we can
get it as close to the field as
possible, that would be the best
thing to do,’’ McCoy said.
McCoy said he would
meet with the engineers with
Robertson Loia Roof to discuss
the site plan.
In other business:
•The board approved a
spending resolution to allow
the system to move into the
next fiscal year. A line item
budget has been prepared, but
McCoy said the system is wait
ing on the tax digest from the
county.
•McCoy told the board that
the SPLOST deposits for May
totaled $118,068, with an over
all total of $1.5 million.
“We have enough in our
SPLOST account to pay for the
first five payments of our bond
referendum,’’ McCoy said.
“That takes care of almost two
and a half years, so far.’’
• The board went into a
closed meeting for just over
one hour. After coming out of
the closed meeting, the board
voted to approve several new
hires, including Trudy Smith
Please Turn to Page 3A
Budget Means
A ,44-MiII
Tax Increase
Commerce taxpayers can expect a
slight increase in their city taxes this
year.
The city council unanimously
approved a $32.4 million tentative bud
get Monday night that will require a
.44-mill tax increase. For the owner of
property assessed at $100,000, that’s a
$44 increase.
‘This is an increase over last year, but
we’re still under what it was two years
ago and three years ago,’’ said Finance
Director Steve McKown.
The budget includes funding for
SPLOST projects — revenue already
on hand, notes McKown.
“If you back that out, it’s at $29.9
million, compared to $29.1 million last
year,’’ he said.
About half of that increase came
in the General Fund, which provides
revenue for most city departments and
services. It’s projected at $5.8 million
this year, up from $5,483 million last
year.
McKown said fuel costs are up 10.6
percent, and natural gas purchases are
going up about $800,000 for the same
number of units as last year.
The budget provides one new employ
ee, an additional school resource offi
cer whose salary will be paid half by
the city and half by the school system.
Employees will get two-percent cost-of-
Please Turn to Page 3A
EJMS To Get
New Principal
For Next Year
By Kerri Testement
East Jackson Middle School will start
the next school year with a new prin
cipal.
Frank Sarratt, who has been the
principal at the school for three years,
submitted a resignation letter June
2 to the Jackson County Board of
Education. The board accepted his res
ignation during a brief called meeting
Thursday.
Sarratt’s last day at EJMS will be June
30. He cited family health and medical
issues in his resignation letter.
“East Jackson Middle School will
always hold a special place in my
heart,’’ he wrote.
“Perhaps it is because of the signifi
cant challenge it presented in 2005,’’
he continued. “Perhaps it is because of
the tremendous success we enjoyed in
each of the following years. In either
case, I am delighted to report that East
Jackson Middle School is presently on
a solid foundation.’’