Tag Archive for: #towntalk

TownTalk: Powerful Tools For Caregivers

Providing care to family members when they need it for a short-term recovery period is one thing, but being a caregiver for someone with a chronic health condition requires stamina and patience, with a generous done of humor thrown in for good measure.

And although caregivers can be really good at making sure they’re doing the very best for those in their care,  they may not be so great at taking care of their own needs. But a class offered through the Kerr-Tar Area Agency on Aging may be just the thing to help caregivers take those all-important steps to learn how to be good to themselves, too.

Powerful Tools for Caregivers is a six-week course offered via Zoom for caregivers to learn about self-care as they also learn about resources available in the community, said Susan Tucker, an administrative assistant at KTCOG who also has provided care to a family member. The class begins Tuesday, May 17 and continues on Tuesdays through June 21. The class is from 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.

Tucker told John C. Rose on Wednesday’s Town Talk that she was unprepared for her role as a caregiver to her mother back in 2016. When she took this course she said she learned how to “not just survive, but to thrive as a caregiver.”

So much so, in fact, that she became an instructor for the course.

Michael Patterson, KTCOG’s family caregiver specialist, also is a course instructor. “It’s a six-week opportunity to learn not only about caregiving but to learn about themselves,” Patterson said. The course is designed for those who are actively caring for an aging adult. Each session builds on the previous session, so it’s important to try to carve out that 90 minutes each week to log in and participate, Tucker said.

In fact, that’s an important point for caregivers to remember, Tucker and Patterson said – making time to do things just for yourself. It’s not selfish; rather, it’s necessary to maintain a semblance of balance between daily life and being a caregiver.

Burnout is a real issue among caregivers, Patterson said. “It’s impossible to pour from an empty cup,” he said.

The class will help caregivers learn how to manage emotions, reduce stress and cope with the issues and demands that go along with providing care to someone with a chronic condition.

John and Linda Sigmon took the class and they said it helped them with feelings of being overwhelmed and frustrated while caring for a loved one.

“You’re fighting not only the disease but your inability to deal with it,” John said, adding that the course increased his understanding and helped him manage his emotions so he didn’t “get totally wiped out.”

Linda said she looked forward to the 90-minute sessions as “a little oasis of time” in her week, during which she learned things that she could adapt and apply to her own situation.

John said he found the instructors to be humorous and witty, but also compassionate. “They’ve been there, too,” he said; the class instructors also have been caregivers themselves, he said.

Patterson said the class teaches breathing techniques and meditation, as well as understanding emotional triggers.

“They learn what ways they can make a difference in their daily living to improve themselves – which will improve them as caregivers,” he added.

To register for the class, contact Tucker at 252.436.2040. Visit https://www.kerrtarcog.org/ to find more information.

 

 

TownTalk: Zeta Phi Beta Plans Charter Celebration

The local chapter of an international sorority is living up to its founding principles with a flurry of activities this weekend to which the public is invited.

The guiding principles of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc. are scholarship, service, sisterhood and finer womanhood, and the local chapter is checking all the boxes to fulfill those principles.

Nikeena Boyd-Kearsey represents the Phi Zeta chapter of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc. and she spoke with John C. Rose about an event taking place on Friday, May 6 to celebrate the 72nd anniversary of the local charter. Phi Zeta covers Vance, Granville, Warren and Franklin counties.

The celebration will be held from 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. at Tiffany’s of Henderson, located at 110 S. Garnett St. Tickets are $25 and attendees will enjoy heavy hors d’oeuvres and the music of DJ MIC DUB.

“We are so looking forward to celebrating 72 years of being a chapter of Zeta Phi Beta,” Boyd-Kearsey said. The sorority was founded at Howard University in 1920; the local chapter received its charter on May 5, 1960.

The event is a time for dancing, fellowship and just being together, she said, as well as a time to remember the sorority’s founders and members. “We’re looking to have a good time with our community,” Boyd-Kearsey said. The event is sure to check the boxes of sisterhood and finer womanhood – the attire for the event is “dress to impress.”

This particular type of celebration is a first for the local chapter, which is active in volunteer efforts across the counties it serves. The women have participated in the March of Dimes, donated to Warren County Middle School to promote autism awareness and donated items to the Cancer Center at Maria Parham Health, among others, she said. The principle of service – check!

And on Saturday, May 7, the local chapter will join forces with the Fayetteville State University National Alumni Society to host a candidates’ forum for Vance County residents.

The forum will begin at 3 p.m. in the auditorium of E.M. Rollins Elementary on Rollins Ave.

Candidates will discuss important local issues like gun violence, crime and economic development and will have a chance to inform citizens of their platforms, Boyd-Kearsey said.

Organizers request that campaign materials – signs, brochures, shirts and the like –  be left outside the auditorium during the non-partisan forum. There will be a table for campaign materials located outside the auditorium for anyone interested in learning more about the candidates.

As for the principle of scholarship, the Phi Zeta chapter encourages any female who is graduating from a high school in the four-county area to apply for a $150 scholarship from the sorority. The deadline to apply is Friday, May 13. Boyd-Kearsey said winners would be notified by the end of May.

Tickets to the Friday celebration are available from any Phi Zeta member or through Paypal. Contact phizetapay@gmail.com to learn more.

Questions about any of the chapter’s events can be sent to phizetazpb@gmail.com.

 

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Judge Deems Swain Drive Property Eligible For “Nuisance Abatement”

A superior court judge has signed a consent judgment for a Chapter 19 nuisance abatement for a property on Swain Drive.

After a long history of disturbances, drug violations and numerous calls to the Vance County Sheriff’s Office, Judge John Dunlow’s judgment was the final step in a civil nuisance abatement case brought by the County of Vance on behalf of the State of North Carolina, according to a press statement late last week from the Department of Public Safety. “Chapter 19 of the North Carolina General Statutes defines ‘nuisance’ activities and provides for a civil remedy to abate such criminal acts and their detrimental impacts on the community,” the statement read.

The property, located at 398 Swain Drive, has been a problem for years, “causing the community to live in fear and constantly draining emergency services and law enforcement resources,” according to Vance County Sheriff Curtis Brame.

“This remedy is a result of an outstanding investigation between Vance County officials, members of the ALE Nuisance Abatement Team and cooperation from the family members who owned this property,” Brame stated in the press release.

The property has been tied up in an estate with multiple heirs. The terms of the consent judgment relinquished the property deed to a family member, who in turn would remove all structures except the brick house.  All trash and debris would be removed from the property, and it may never be used for illegal activity again. The judgment ordered the property be vacated by April 1, and anyone on the property would be charged with trespassing.

Sheriff Brame expressed gratitude for the effort and outcome. “I appreciate the cooperation from the property owner as we worked to solve this problem and hope this successful resolution will ensure the community returns to a more peaceful life.”

“The nuisance abatement law provides a solution for citizens living in fear and for problem locations that strain law enforcement resources. These properties reduce the quality of life for community members.” said Scottie Shoaf, Assistant Special Agent in Charge of the Nuisance Abatement Team. “It was a pleasure to work with the Vance County Sheriff’s Office and members from this community to bring a permanent resolution to this problem and I look forward to the positive changes this judgment will facilitate.”

TownTalk: Early Voting

More than 300 Vance County residents have cast their ballots in the first two days of early voting in advance of the May 17 primary.

Early voting continues this week and next, with the final day being Saturday, May 14, according to information from the Vance County Board of Elections office.

A total of 195 votes were cast on Thursday, Apr. 28 – the first day of early voting. A total of 139 voters turned out Friday to the city’s Dr. Andrea L. Harris operations center, located at 900 Beckford Dr., Henderson.

There are about 17,000 registered voters in the county.

Not registered to vote yet? No problem. Bring appropriate documentation and a photo ID to the operations center during the voting hours for same-day registration.

Except for the last day of early voting, which is Saturday, May 14, the voting hours are Monday-Friday, 8 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.

The Saturday voting hours are 8 a.m to 3 p.m.

 

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TownTalk: Pop Up Medical Clinic Coming To Henderson May 14 & 15

The campus of Vance Charter School will be a beehive of activity in a couple of weekends when it hosts a pop-up clinic to provide free medical care to anyone in the community.

Yep, that’s right. Free medical care, ranging from general physical exams to dental and vision care. The clinic will see patients beginning at 6 a.m. on Saturday, May 14 and again at 6 a.m. on Sunday, May 15 at VCS, located at 2090 Ross Mill Rd.

Did we mention that it’s free? Patients who wish to get a tooth filled or get new glasses need only show up. Services are first come, first served, and two of the clinic organizers spoke with John C. Rose on Thursday’s Town Talk to provide details.

The pop-up clinics help people from falling through the cracks in the medical system. No id? No problem. No insurance? No worries. The parking lot will open at midnight on Friday, May 13. The process is as simple as showing up and waiting in line.

That’s the message from Duke seniors Rishabh Jain and Rishi Dasgupta, who have worked for months with a team of dozens of other volunteers to bring the Remote Area Medical (RAM) to the Vance County area.

“It’s been absolutely incredible to get the level of support in the community,” Jain said. Capt. Derrick Smith with the local Salvation Army was instrumental in connecting the clinic organizers with Dr. Brian Mathis at VCS, who offered the campus as the site for the clinic.

RAM, a major nonprofit provider based in Tennessee, has been hosting pop-up medical clinics across the Southeast for four decades; this clinic marks the seventh clinic that the Duke organizers will have visited since they first got involved with RAM.

Originally planned to be held in Durham, the organizers switched gears when they realized that there were underserved areas – especially in the area of vision and dental care – so close to Durham.

That’s when plans to host a clinic outside the Durham area took shape.

There will be numerous community organizations at the 2-day clinic to share resources and information. Patients may combine medical services with either vision or dental on one day, but they are not able to combine vision and dental, because of the high volume expected. Patients who need vision and dental care can return on the second day of the clinic.

Patients also will get an information sheet to help them access follow-up care if necessary and both organizers said they have identified health care professionals in the area who have agreed to do the follow-up care at a reduced fee or at no cost.

The clinic is completely staffed with highly qualified professionals who volunteer their services. The providers at the Henderson clinic are coming from across the country to participate.

Jain and Dasgupta expect to see hundreds of patients during the clinic, and Dasgupta said ithe stories of the patients that stick with him – people’s faces who are relieved of pain from an infected tooth or the delight of seeing clearly after being fitted with eyeglasses, Dasgupta said

his experiences have been rewarding and fulfilling.

Learn more about volunteering and sponsoring the clinic at www.ramusa.org or phone 865.579.1530.

Details on the Pop Up Medical Clinic coming to Henderson on May 14th and 15th.

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TownTalk: Northeast Piedmont Chorale Presents Free Concerts

The Northeast Piedmont Chorale is scheduled to perform two free concerts this weekend; the first one is in Raleigh and the second will take place Sunday afternoon right here at McGregor Hall in downtown Henderson.

A number of chorale members call Henderson home, including the group’s director, Cindy Edwards. Edwards, along with fellow Henderson resident and chorale baritone Tom Burleson joined chorale president Judy Miller on Wednesday’s Town Talk.

They talked with John C. Rose and Bill Harris about the upcoming performances, as well as what goes on behind the scenes to make their concerts special. The local performance is Sunday, May 1 at 3 p.m.; the first concert will be on Friday, Apr. 29 at 7:30 p.m. at New Hope Baptist Church in Raleigh.

The theme of these concerts is “Home Is Where the Heart Is,” and it celebrates our nation’s history through a selection of musical renditions that highlight the arrival of the first European settlers to Lincoln’s Gettsyburg Address, as well as some familiar folk tunes – all sandwiched in between two iconic songs to begin and end the concert: “America the Beautiful” and Irving Berlin’s “God Bless America.”

Edwards said the seeds for this theme were planted back in the fall of 2019, with plans for a May 2020 performance. Since it was an election year, the planners had settled on a patriotic theme. “But we know the rest of that story,” Edwards recalled, when the COVID-19 pandemic shuttered theaters and cancelled performances across the globe.

Edwards said it was the opening song, “America the Beautiful,” that served as a catalyst for her and others to create the complete list of songs to include.

The particular arrangement that the chorale will perform includes narration, full orchestral accompaniment and a cappella, “which really shows off the voices” of the chorale members.

The order of the songs is intentional, she said, to tell the story of what Americans have experienced, from early settlers crossing the ocean with “Song of the Tall Ship” to Neil Diamond’s “America.” The concert uses music to portray moments in this country’s history.

The “America” piece is arranged almost exactly as Diamond performed it, she explained, but this rendition will be done with a choir, an electric bass, synthesizer and electric guitar.

The chorale members are a dedicated group of individuals that take seriously practice and rehearsals as they prepare for performances. But Miller, the chorale’s president, said the group is lucky to have Edwards as its director, citing her talent, commitment and drive which serve to make the chorale even better. “As Cindy tells us, preparation doesn’t start and stop at rehearsal,” Miller said.

As Burleson pointed out, a performance takes a lot of preparation and he said his mind has to be engaged from the beginning to the end. “The last two (songs) are as important as the first two,” he said, which requires a performer’s full attention throughout the concert. He is a relative newcomer to the chorale and said he has been impressed with the high level of professionalism among the chorale members.

Being a member of the chorale, in whatever capacity, requires dedication and commitment. And money. Members pay a small tuition to be a part of the group. But Edwards said that shows “that they love music and they want to perform it, and they are willing to commit to rehearsals and practice.”

And when that effort is combined with the talent that the chorale members possess, “it is a beautiful process,” Edwards said.

Miller said the group’s camaraderie only complements the talents of the individuals. “We sing together and perform together,” she said, “and the love of music comes through.”

Miller said Edwards reminds the group that if they really feel the music as they are singing, that feeling is conveyed to the listening audience.

It’s not just the voices of the singers that are needed for a performance – the musicians that provide accompaniment are an important part for a successful concert. Kristen Allred accompanies the chorale on piano.

“She’s been a real asset to the chorale,” Edwards said. “She does a beautiful job playing – her role is to know every note, to be able to follow the director…play the parts and to provide that support, that foundation.”

Other orchestra members also are band directors at area schools and some play at DPAC – indicating the high level of professionalism in the orchestra. “It is an inspiration to play with them because they have done their preparation,” Edwards said.

This performance will include an unusual instrument for several selections – banjo and guitar will be played by local musician Wayne Kinton.

Concertgoers are sure to recognize those songs as they are performed, including “Shady Grove,” “Shenandoah” and “Get Along Home Little Cindy,” all representative of a time when settlers were moving farther and farther West and exploring the new land that would become known as the United States of America.

One selection from Gustav Holst’s ‘Jupiter’ from The Planet Suite will be dedicated to the people of Ukraine, she said.

“This is a song that a lot of people will recognize.”

Learn more about the Northeast Piedmont Chorale, including how to make a tax-deductible donation, at https://www.npchorale.org/

 

TownTalk: Sara Coffey Discusses Her Ward 1 At Large City Council Candidacy

Incumbent Sara Coffey wants another term on the Henderson City Council. Coffey holds the Ward 1 at large seat and faces challenger Clementine Hunter in the May 17 primary.

Coffey spoke with John C. Rose as part of WIZS’s election coverage; the recorded and unedited interview aired during Tuesday’s Town Talk segment.

She draws upon her experiences in law enforcement – both as a law enforcement officer and in her business as a bail bondsman –  to help guide her work on the city’s public safety committee.

“I can spot safety issues,” Coffey said. “I have been trained to be aware of problems in the criminal element and the justice system,” she said.

And she said she has the knowledge to deal with issues that Henderson faces when it comes to public safety as well as other challenges.

She said she fully backs construction of a third fire station. “If all for it,” she said. “We have a dire need for it” somewhere in the Dabney area. “Our firemen are cramped in the quarters they’re in now.”

She said she and her fellow Council members have become a cohesive group, collaborating to address challenges in the city. And she said she’d like the opportunity to continue to build on the progress that the council has made in areas like beautification and affordable housing.

“We don’t have enough housing – affordable housing,” Coffey noted. “I mean decent, affordable housing,” she added, not substandard units.

A second issue – trash – she said is probably linked to the low home ownership rates in the area.

She said the city’s trash problem is one of the worst trash issues she’s seen in the various places she has lived over the years.

Renters in substandard housing to begin with, she said, may be less motivated to keep their place tidy. “You’re renting…your house is halfway torn up to start with – it kind of spirals from that and we end up with a big trash problem,” she said.

She would like the council to work with landlords on a continuing basis to offer better homes to rent to city residents. Having some restrictions and standards in place would make things better for residents and for the city overall. “We need to find a happy medium,” she added.

Coffey is a native of Vance County. She moved back to the area and opened her business in 1998. Just like with her clients, she said she has an open door policy when it comes to hearing from her constituents. As an at large member, she represents all city residents, not just those in a particular ward.

“I was brought up to be honest,” she said. “There’s really no hidden agenda for me – what you see is what you get.”

One tradition she enjoys is feeding city employees as a show of appreciation. She recently fed who she calls her “city guys” at the operations center. She brings in food as a show of thanks for their hard work and dedication to the city and its residents. She said she tries to do that a couple of times a year, as well employees of the fire department, jail, 911 call center and animal control.

“That’s my way of saying thank you,” she said, “and you mean a lot to me and your service means a lot to me. I’m very proud to be a part of that.”

 

Note: WIZS contacted challenger Clementine Hunter, who kindly declined the opportunity to be interviewed.

 

 

TownTalk: Burnette And Gupton Discuss Clerk Of Court Candidacy

Candidates running for the office of Clerk of Superior Court in Vance County spoke on Monday’s Town Talk.

Amanda Burnette is challenging incumbent Henry L. Gupton in the May 17 primary and each discussed how their experiences will help them fulfill their duties if elected.

Amanda Burnette

Burnette began her career as a deputy clerk in Vance County in 2001, and then was promoted to assistant deputy in 2013. Since 2017, she has been working in the Franklin County Clerk of Court’s office since 2017. Burnette lives in the Cokesbury community, where she was born and raised, and said she wants to come back to serve her fellow county residents.

“It is my goal, my dream, to come back home to all citizens of Vance County,” Burnette told John C. Rose in an interview that aired Monday.

Burnette said she has the experience necessary with the inner workings of the clerk of courts office, coupled with the compassion necessary to treat people with respect and fairness.

She has worked with bookkeeping and record keeping, she said, but “without a doubt,” I love working in the special proceedings division,” Burnette said.

This division processes, among other things, adoptions. “When I see a child smile and hug me after signing an adoption decree,” she said, “it makes my heart sing.”

Other issues have the potential to be a bit more contentious, she said, noting that land issues and guardian issues sometimes bring out difficult and complicated family dynamics.

“It’s always my goal to listen to both sides equally and fairly before making a decision,” Burnette said.

She said she  spends a lot of time researching the North Carolina General Statutes to conduct the business of the court. “We have to know it,” she said of state law, “but we can’t practice it.” Local clerks of court depend on the state’s Administrative Office of the Courts legal team to assist in providing legal interpretations.

“I will be ready to work for you on Day One,” Burnette said, adding that she would have an open-door policy to listen to citizens and their needs.

She said she would make sure the clerk of court staff is courteous to the public and assist them to the best of their abilities.

Effective communication is key to maintaining an efficient courthouse, she said, adding that she enjoys working with the district attorney’s office, judges and the public to provide the best services possible.

Henry Gupton

Gupton, first appointed to the job of clerk of superior court in 2017, iwas first elected to the office in 2018. He said his 30-plus years as a Vance County deputy and magistrate provide him with the experience necessary to oversee the work that goes on in the clerk’s office.

His previous experience with those facets of the law help especially with the criminal and civil law matters that come through the clerk’s office.

That’s the majority of the work of the clerk’s office, he said, but he said the citizens of Vance County also come to the courthouse when they’re handling estates, adoptions and name changes, too.

“I just enjoy helping people,” Gupton said in an interview with John C. Rose, adding that he is available to talk with citizens whenever and wherever needed. “I’m not an individual behind closed doors,” he said.

Gupton said in 2018-19 the office handled more than $6 million through payments of such things as fines, fees and cash bonds. In the course of a routine state audit, no deficiencies were found, he said. “That much money comes through the clerk of court’s office and we don’t have any problems,” Gupton said.

He said he’s proud of his staff, which includes 12 deputy clerks and five assistant clerks, who work hard every day to serve the people of Vance County.

“I really care about my staff,” Gupton said. “They do a wonderful job for me and for the citizens – we all work for the citizens…I can’t thank my staff enough for what they do.”

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Gupton said he worked closely with Granville-Vance Public Health director Lisa Harrison to ensure that safety protocols were in place to protect both courthouse personnel as well as the public who had business with the court.

He said he and Harrison had several meetings, created a plan, and were able to keep the courthouse up and running.

The courthouse breezeway even became a spot where folks could get their shot; Gupton said it seemed like a central location to provide citizens another opportunity to be vaccinated while doing their business in the courthouse.

As a way to reduce courtroom backlogs, Gupton said he and Judge John Dunlow are working together to try and to come up with ways to help. He said he would like to get his staff some help from temporary workers to help staff and whittle down the backlog.

 

 

TownTalk: Care For Historic Cemeteries

The area is full of family cemeteries, many of which are lovingly maintained and easily identified with signs and decorative fences around their perimeters. But there are probably many small, family plots that have long been forgotten and now lie under weeds and thick forest growth. If you think you’ve stumbled upon such a spot, Melissa Timo at the state archaeology office wants to know about it.

Timo is a historic cemetery specialist and works with individuals across the state to confirm the sites of cemeteries. Timo and her team are constantly adding sites to their list, thanks to the help of ordinary citizens who make reports to her office.

She was back on the tri-weekly history segment of Town Talk Thursday with Bill Harris and Mark Pace and discussed how to report a long-lost cemetery and how to best care for stone grave markers to best protect and preserve them.

The reports seem to come in waves and, not coincidentally, she said usually happen in March and April, then again in October – those months when folks are likely to take leisurely hikes or are just spending more time outside.

It’s important to note that, according to North Carolina law, it’s illegal to disturb a cemetery, whether it’s on private or public land. And while there aren’t many requirements for a landowner to maintain a cemetery on his or her property, landowners cannot dump trash or pull up headstones or otherwise disturb the property.

Sometimes, Timo gets information about possible cemeteries gathered from oral histories or stories from individuals who have seen clusters of daffodils or stacks of fieldstone near a depression in the ground. Or there’s one really old cedar tree among a grove of much younger trees. It takes a little detective work and keen observation skills to identify cemeteries, especially when the “surface remains” – grave markers, headstones, etc – are not in view.

“I always say safer than sorry,” Timo said, “especially because we’re talking about the resting place of human beings.”

Contact Timo at 919.814.6265 or email her at Melissa.timo@ncdcr.gov to report a possible cemetery site or to learn more.

 

 

TownTalk: Alston And Wilder Discuss Candidacy For County Commissioner

Sean Alston is challenging incumbent Gordon Wilder in the race for Vance County Commissioner in District 3 and their conversations with John C. Rose aired on Wednesday’s Town Talk.

Early voting begins Apr. 28 for the May 17 primary election. Alston and Wilder talked about issues affecting the county, including community centers with after-school programs for young people and the continued need to bring jobs to the county.

Sean Alston
Alston, a Democrat, said he would expect the community to hold him accountable. “I want the people in my district…to know that they do, and will have, a voice” in county government.

He said he wants to offer the community as a whole, not just the district 3 that he would represent, that he will strive for more transparency in government. “The people just want to be heard, the people just want to be updated. I can’t guarantee or promise anything,” he said, “but I will be accountable and available.”

His platform focuses on civic participation, building up the community, transparency, accountability and community involvement.

“I feel like I can do what the people need and I feel like I can do what needs to be done,” Alston said. “At the end of the day, it comes down to accountability. I am not going to tell you one thing and do another – I will represent the voice for change.”

Alston is a local businessman and also offers his time as a coach at Vance County High School. Coaching, he said, allows him to interact with parents, youth and with teachers, and he said it’s helped him understand more about what the community needs in terms of support. Teachers need better pay, he said, and parents need a safe place for their children to be when they’re not at school.

“In order to help this county, this community, it has to start with the youth in some form or fashion,” Alston said. After-school programs located in the community that provide meals and homework help would be a good start. Teachers, he said, could get some extra pay to spend a couple of hours after school and children would have a safe place to be while parents are working second- or third-shift jobs.

People in the community, working on the same team as the school system and public safety, can help to support the youth and keep them off the streets and out of trouble, he said. “I just want to be on the team,” Alston said.

Gordon Wilder

Wilder, a Democrat, is seeking his fourth term as commissioner. “I decided to run again because I feel like we have a good board that works together. I feel we’re moving forward and I wanted to be a part of that progress.”

He said jobs is a key issue for Vance County – retaining employees and attracting new businesses and industry to the area are vital to the county’s economic health.

Companies looking to locate here may be attracted by the county-wide zoning plan or the improvements and extensions to the water system, he said. The industrial park shell building concept may also attract prospective employers.

“We need to get jobs to our county and retain those jobs and give our citizens a chance to work and improve themselves,” Wilder said. “Jobs are key,” he said. When people have opportunities for employment, they can improve their own situations as well as contribute to the county’s economic well-being. “We all win,” he said.

Local jobs means workers may be more likely to stay in the county, raise their families locally and spend money in the local economy – a real win-win situation, he said.

Wilder, a retired educator in Vance County Schools, has spent almost 50 years in Vance County serving in various capacities with the Vance County and Epsom fire departments and in his church.

“Those who have called me know that I listen and I want to help…I generally can meet their needs, answer their questions,” he said.

Wilder mentioned the recent renovations to the former Eaton Johnson campus, now home to the Department of Social Services and Senior Center, as an investment in the county’s infrastructure; improvements to the Dennis Building downtown, courthouse and county administrative offices also have come about as part of a capital improvement plan.

“I believe my experience sets me apart,” Wilder said. “All I want to do is seve the county and to move the county forward.”