Cooperative Extension with Paul McKenzie 11/27/19
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Vance County Sheriff Curtis Brame’s Shopping Safety Tips
Open Enrollment Medicare / Affordable Care Act Deadlines
Travel Safety
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-Information courtesy Granville County Government
The Granville County Sheriff’s Office is seeking information about the identity of a subject who entered the parking lot of Bridgestone/Bandag in Oxford on Saturday, November 23, 2019, around 9:38 p.m.
The subject, who was driving a silver 2007 Chevrolet Impala, parked by the Smoke Shack (break-room) and exited the vehicle with an assault rifle, wearing a camouflage face mask with round eyelets that draped past the shoulders. It is believed that the suspect is a male.
As of yet, there is no information available that the subject made verbal contact with any employees or entered the plant. The vehicle was last seen making a left turn onto West Industry Drive.
Detective Keith Campbell of the Sheriff’s Office requests that anyone with information, or anyone traveling on West Industry Drive near Bandag around the time of the incident, please call Granville County Crime Stoppers at 919-693-3100.
A reward of up to $1,000 is available for information leading to an arrest.
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-Information courtesy Fred Robertson
Individuals and local businesses have teamed up for the Fourth Annual Henderson-Vance Community Day Thanksgiving Dinner on Thursday, November 28, 2019. Meals are available free of charge to the public from 11 a.m. until 2 p.m.
The event is hosted by Fred and Jennifer Robertson, and Williams and Tracey Jones, and will be held at the Elk’s Lodge located at 326 W. Rockspring Street in Henderson.
With questions, please contact Fred at (252) 432-8804 or Tracey at (252) 213-8350.
Event Sponsors: Chris & Shannon Bullock, H & H Rental Brokers, Dr. Bridget Busby Waters, Bail Bonds by Kendra Henderson, Attorneys Joyce Fischer & Chrystal Satterwhite, Jones Trucking by Earlie Jones, Geter Barber College, Divine Styles by Barbara Bobbitt and St. Beulah Holiness Church.
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Grace Ministries in Henderson served approximately 5,000 Thanksgiving meals to local residents at 11 a.m. on Saturday, November 23.
The “Meal and a Prayer” event was the third annual for founder Jamie Elliott, who began the ministry as a way to reach those in Vance, Granville, Franklin and Warren counties who struggle with addiction.
In addition to the annual Thanksgiving event, the ministry has ongoing activities including twice-weekly addiction recovery meetings.
Those struggling with addiction, or those who wish to help loved ones struggling, are encouraged to attend Grace Ministries’ 12-Step meetings on Tuesday and Friday evenings at 7 p.m. at 961 Burr Street in Henderson.
All are welcome to attend this addiction recovery process based on biblical passages.
For more information on Grace Ministries, visit their website at www.graceofhenderson.org.
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-Press Release, Duke University Communications
A new analysis of North Carolina Medicaid data finds that, while important progress is being made in combatting the state’s opioid epidemic, more work is needed to increase the rate at which Medicaid enrollees diagnosed with Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) receive effective medications to treat it.
The research is summarized in a Health Affairs blog published today.
The study was conducted by researchers at Duke University and the University of North Carolina (UNC) at Chapel Hill with support from Arnold Ventures.
The resulting white paper and data supplement, which presents information at the county level, identified some encouraging trends in the North Carolina Medicaid population. For example, fewer Medicaid enrollees are using prescription opioids overall. Fewer enrollees are receiving prescription opioids in combination with other medications that are known to increase the risk of adverse health outcomes. Importantly, the rate of opioid overdoses also has declined.
However, according to the researchers, the number of Medicaid enrollees with a reported diagnosis of opioid use disorder went from just over 27,000 in 2013-2014 (representing around one percent of the study population) to more than 45,000 by 2017-2018 (or nearly two percent of the study population). This growth is cause for concern, but it may be a reflection of clinicians increasingly identifying and addressing opioid use disorder, the authors conclude.
Fortunately, the number of Medicaid enrollees receiving medications used to treat opioid addiction increased significantly during this same period. But the treatment rate has not kept up with the rising number of people with opioid use problems. Despite absolute gains in the number of people receiving treatment from 2014 to 2017, the treatment rate has actually declined slightly.
“Overall, we are seeing important improvements in the number of Medicaid enrollees with opioid use disorder who receive treatment, reflecting significant federal and state investments in this area. However, the rate of growth of OUD in the population is outpacing the treatment rate,” said Principal Investigator Aaron McKethan, PhD., a core faculty member at Duke-Margolis Center for Health Policy and Adjunct Professor of Population Health Sciences at Duke University School of Medicine.
The scientific literature indicates that people with opioid use disorder have better outcomes if medication therapy is ongoing and long-term. However, “roughly half of NC Medicaid enrollees who initiate buprenorphine therapy for OUD remain on therapy for at least six months, suggesting that even patients who get treatment face challenges staying on it,” according to Marisa Elena Domino, PhD, a research fellow and Principal Investigator with UNC’s Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research and a professor of health policy and management at UNC’s Gillings School of Global Public Health.
Nationally, retention rates among those receiving medications to treat opioid addiction are generally quite low, and relapse is a recognized part of the disease and recovery process. The fact that half of NC Medicaid enrollees with OUD who initiate medication treatment remain on the medication for at least six months can be viewed as positive compared to national benchmarks. However, it likely means that less than half of treated enrollees with OUD receive continuous treatment long enough to produce the best outcomes. Clearly, more work is needed to close these gaps.
This study focused only on the state’s Medicaid program, which covers health care for more than 2 million low-income adults, children, pregnant women, elderly adults and people with disabilities throughout North Carolina.
According to McKethan, “To put these Medicaid findings in context, in North Carolina, about half of people coming to the emergency department for opioid-related overdoses are uninsured. Only 20 percent of uninsured/self-pay people with OUD have received outpatient treatment for their addiction in the past year, roughly half the Medicaid rate. To be sure, Medicaid is an important medical safety net that is also crucial in the ongoing fight against the opioid epidemic throughout North Carolina.”
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-Press Release, Oxford Preparatory School
Open Enrollment for Oxford Preparatory School’s (OPS) 2020 – 2021 school year begins on Monday, December 2, 2019. Applications for new Kindergarten – 12th-grade students will be available at oxfordprep.org at that time.
OPS is an independent and tuition-free public charter school that is designed to mold students into future leaders through the completion of a rigorous curriculum while focusing on community service and developing an appreciation of the arts. OPS offers a college preparatory curriculum, a variety of competitive middle school and varsity athletic teams, and has a main campus located at 6041 Landis Rd. in Oxford.
OPS invites families of prospective students to learn more about the unique offerings of the school. All prospective families are invited to the school’s first Winter Wonderland on Saturday, December 7 from 11 a.m. – 1 p.m. at 6041 Landis Rd. in Oxford. The event will provide interested families a glimpse into the curriculum and vision of the Lower School while offering children a variety of fun activities coordinated by the school’s Interact Club.
The first information session for families of rising K – 6th-grade students will be held on Tuesday, December 10 at 6 p.m. Afterwards, tours will be conducted that will allow the opportunity to meet faculty.
In addition, prospective students are invited to spend time visiting the school on three Shadow Days so they can experience our unique school program firsthand. Visiting students accompany OPS student guides through their classes during a four-hour visit. It’s a chance to meet the staff and the students and to get a snapshot view of our engaging college preparatory classes. Information about all of these events is posted on the school’s website (OxfordPrep.org).
The school currently operates in a permanent Upper School Building (Grades 7 – 12) and a temporary Lower School Building (Grades 5 & 6) on the main campus. The school is in the final stages of USDA loan approval for a new permanent lower school facility (K – 6th-grade) that will be constructed on the main campus on Landis Rd.
In the interim, Oxford Preparatory School has submitted a request to Granville County Public Schools to operate K – 4th-grade at the former Joe-Toler Oak Hill Elementary School site (8176 NC-96, Oxford, NC 27565), to which shuttle busing will be provided from the main campus on Landis Rd.
This potential agreement, governed by NC law (§ 115C-218.35. ) would benefit GCPS by reducing their operating costs for a closed school building and provide OPS the additional space for the increased enrollment that was approved by the NC State Board of Education in February.
To be considered for a potential lottery, all applications must be submitted online by Friday, February 28, 2020. If more applications are received than available seats in any grade, a blind public lottery will be held on Saturday, March 14, 2020. All students choosing to attend OPS will need to confirm enrollment by completing and sending in an enrollment packet by Wednesday, April 1, 2020.
After February 28, applications received will be placed at the end of the waiting list as determined by the lottery.
For additional comments, please contact Andrew Swanner – Oxford Preparatory School – Executive Director – (swannerab@oxfordprep.org) (919) 690-0360.
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-Press Release, Granville County Government
The month of November marks an observance of Native American Indian Heritage Month, and the Richard H. Thornton Library is helping showcase this observance with a display of arrowheads and other artifacts from the private collection of North Carolina Room Specialist and historian Mark Pace.
The collection includes pottery shards, spear points, arrowheads and primitive tools that Pace has collected for more than 50 years.
Pace says he found his first arrowhead when he was eight years old on his grandfather’s farm in Johnston County. That find – with a fluted point – got him hooked, and led him to continue his quest to uncover more. In all, he has more than 25,000 pieces in his collection, some of which have been verified as being thousands of years old.
“Looking for artifacts is therapeutic to me,” Pace says of this passion he has followed for most of his life. “I’m not a golfer, but I compare this to making a hole in one. When I find one, it’s a great win.”
Pace’s collection includes artifacts from many areas of the state. The most he has found in one day, he recollects, were 60 pieces uncovered near Williamsboro. Those finds, as well as many others, he keeps in boxes in his home, with a few choice pieces displayed in a handcrafted case in his living room.
“I often wonder about the people who made and used these,” he says. “If whole civilizations were here so many years before us, how permanent are we?”
Ironically, the first piece Pace found in Johnston County, back when he was an eight-year-old, has since been dated to be 10,000 years old. This fluted point arrowhead, one of the oldest in his collection, is a rare find that has since been documented in archeology journals and is part of the display at the Thornton Library through the end of this month.
“Everyone knows how much I love history and genealogy,” Pace adds. “We all have to remember that history goes back way before 1746, when Granville County was formed. Years from now, there will be those who will be learning about us. I wonder what they will find?”
(A display for Native American Indian Heritage Month is also featured at the South Branch Library in Creedmoor, as well as books available for checkout at the Stovall and Berea branches.)
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THIS STORY IS PRESENTED IN PART BY DRAKE DENTISTRY
Bill Harris, co-owner of Nits Nats Music in Henderson, has announced that the business that celebrated its 50th anniversary earlier this year will be closing its doors at the end of December.
Originally opened in downtown Oxford in 1969 by Phillip and Cheryl Hawkins, the business has called several locations in Oxford, Henderson and Louisburg home. For the past several years, Nits Nats has been located at 1680 Parham St. in Henderson, a part of the shopping center known as “Corbittville.” The people in the area, to this day, attribute the music centre for making them understand all about turntables and other musical instruments used in old school music.
Harris took to Nits Nats Music’s Facebook page on Sunday to offer the following statement:
It is with regret that I am announcing the closing of Nits Nats Music effective December 27. It’s a decision that has been difficult to come to but other opportunities have presented themselves and I feel that it is best for me and my family to pursue those opportunities.
It’s sad for us to close after 14 years as owners. It is also sad to see one of Henderson’s oldest businesses no longer be a part of the community. Fifty years is an amazing achievement for any business.
Cheryl and Phillip Hawkins were great owners until we purchased the store in 2005, and I and my family have kept it going since then. I would love for someone to come forward with a vision to carry Nits Nats Music into the future. Nothing would make me happier than to know that it continues. If anyone is interested in doing so, please contact me at (252) 430-8010, email me at nitsnatsmusic@gmail.com or stop by the store at 1680 Parham Street. If not, then December 27 will be our last day of operation.
Our customers have been terrific and without them, we would not have stayed in business. We will continue to take orders through December 18 for your Christmas gift-giving needs.
After November 30, I will not be at the store as much as I usually would as I prepare for my next chapter, but I will be there some. My son Alex Harris and wife Aileen will operate the store with our usual hours through Dec. 27 – 10 a.m. until 7 p.m. Monday through Saturday. We will have a closing sale beginning on Nov. 29 and continuing through our closing date.
Once again, Nits Nats Music thanks all of our customers, former employees and everyone involved in our 50 years of business.
-Bill Harris
(This is not a paid advertisement)