Vance County Special Olympics NC Plunge in Place

Special Olympics North Carolina Plunge in Place is a fundraiser that allows participants to donate to Vance County Special Olympics.  During Plunge Week (Sunday, February 21-Friday, February 26, 2021), you can plunge into a pool, ice bath or the ocean, run through sprinklers, play with super soakers or dump a frigid bottle of water over your head.  Share your Plunge on social media with #findyourfreeze or send to plunge@sonc.net.  Tune in to the Live Plunge Celebration on Saturday, February 27, 2021.   Participants can register at https://give.classy.org/SOVance.  For more information, please contact Crystal Allen at 252.431.6091 (callen@ci.henderson.nc.us).

(Info courtesy of Henderson-Vance Recreation and Parks Department)

Warren County Coop Extension has PPE for Farmers and Agriculture

The Warren County Center of North Carolina Cooperative Extension has PPE supplies available for farmers and agricultural workers.

According to an email received by WIZS News, “Face mask and other PPE, such as hand sanitizer, are available through the Warren County Cooperative Extension for farmers and those in agricultural related fields.

“If you would like to be able to have some of these products, please contact the Warren County Center at (252) 257-3640.”

Triangle North Healthcare Foundation Launches Community Response Fund

Triangle North Healthcare Foundation has announced the launch of a Community Response Grant Fund, available to nonprofit, local government, and educational organizations, serving the counties of Franklin, Granville, Vance and Warren.

The grants will fund relief and response programs related to the COVID-19 Pandemic.  “With the continuing stress on our communities from the Pandemic, our local safety net organizations are struggling to make ends meet and respond to their clients’ needs.  We are pleased to announce the Foundation Board’s commitment to provide grants for community relief,” said Val Short, Executive Director.

Applications for grants up to $20,000 each will be accepted, beginning February 1, 2021. Applications will be reviewed quarterly and grants will be awarded in March, June, September, and December.  Through this Community Response program, recipients can receive up to four grants throughout the year.

The Community Response Grant application is now available at the Foundation’s online grant portal. A link to the grant portal is available at the website:   http://www.tnhfoundation.org   Applications will be accepted continuously now through September 1, 2021.

Virtual meetings with Foundation staff will be required prior to submitting an application.  To schedule a meeting, please call 252-430-8532.

Triangle North Healthcare Foundation is a regional healthcare grantmaking organization based in Henderson, established in November 2011, after the merge of Maria Parham Medical Center with the for-profit Duke LifePoint.  Funded by an endowment created from the assets of the former nonprofit hospital, Triangle North Healthcare Foundation has invested over $2 million in over 80 programs in the region since beginning grantmaking in 2013.

(Press Release provided by Triangle North Healthcare Foundation)

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TownTalk 1-26-21 Shooting Incident Results In Death Of Horse

Host John C. Rose discusses a shooting incident that occurred in Henderson resulting in the death of a horse.

For complete details and audio click play.

 

Granville Vance Public Health Logo

Granville Vance COVID-19 Update as of January 25, 2021

Granville Vance District Health Director Lisa Harrison provides information routinely by email and other means, and Monday she wrote, “Since our last update on Jan. 19th, there have been 171 new cases of COVID-19 in Granville and 172 in Vance.

“Unfortunately, there have been 2 additional deaths reported this week. A 58-year-old male from Granville County passed away on Jan. 19th, and a 64-year-old male from Vance County passed away on Jan. 16th.

“The GVPH data dashboard is currently under construction. As we shift our priority to COVID-19 vaccines, we are reevaluating what data we are able to share and how we share it. We appreciate your patience during this time. In the meantime, we encourage you to visit the NCDHHS COVID-19 Dashboard. Relevant graphs from these dashboards are available on our website at https://gvph.org/covid-19_dashboard/.”

According to Harrison, vaccine providers needed to administer all of the initial doses of vaccine received since December 22nd by January 25th.

Hospitals and health departments receive vaccine shipments weekly.  Amounts received vary greatly, however, from provider to provider and county to county.

Harrison reported in her Monday email that she sees the frustration as vaccine supply is not matching the demand.  She said it does not come close.  She wrote, “With the imposed deadline to finish out first doses, we are all running critically low on vaccine. However, I’m confident things will catch up. We all have sufficient second dose supply to match our first doses – we want to assure everyone that second doses of vaccines will be provided to those who received their first dose. Due to the limited supply, first doses are still limited to those in Group 1 and Group 2 – health care workers and those 65 years and older.”

At least 9,000 people have been vaccinated in Vance and Granville Counties, of about 100,000 in the district.  Harrison wrote, “We have vaccinated more than 3,000 people at GVPH and Maria Parham Hospital and Granville Health Systems have each vaccinated as much.”

Also, Harrison wrote, “I have received so many notes from happy vaccinated individuals who stopped and took the time to say they had a wonderful experience in the highly efficient Granville Health System weekend clinic last weekend. I receive calls and notes regularly about our clinics in each of our health department locations and our collaboration with the Senior Center in Granville County at the Granville Expo Center. And this past weekend, after a Friday clinic in Granville’s health department location and a Saturday vaccine clinic in our Vance health department location, we partnered with Maria Parham Health, Vance County Schools, as well as local law enforcement, Vance County Emergency Management, and Vance County EMS to host a joint vaccine clinic at the Vance County High School. We are working together to ensure that we safely and efficiently administer vaccines to everyone who wants one across our rural and historically marginalized populations.”

ACTS of Henderson Fish Fry Fundraiser February 1st

When was the last chance you got to help a local food pantry by, well, eating?

Area residents will get that exact opportunity at the Feb. 1 fundraiser at 220 Restaurant to benefit Area Christians Together in Service (ACTS).

Lee Anne Peoples, executive director of ACTS, said tickets are $8 each and are available now. Advance sales are preferred, Peoples said, but not required. The fundraiser plates include trout, French fries and cole slaw. “We’d love for people to come and join us,” she said. The fundraiser is from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m.

ACTS, located at 201 S. William St., has been a beehive of activity, she told host John C. Rose during Monday’s Town Talk.  “We’ve seen about double the amount of people in the last few months than we saw prior to COVID.” The fundraiser will help the organization continue to provide hot lunches on weekdays as well as hep to keep the pantry stocked.

Click play to listen to TownTalk…

“We’ve been serving between 120 and 160 or 170 (people) Monday through Friday,” Peoples said of the hot lunch program. She and cook Thomas Blackwell are the only paid staff, she added. “We’re almost completely volunteer-driven,” Peoples said. “We would not be able to do what we do without volunteers.”

More lunches are headed out the door each day because people are taking food to family, friends and neighbors who need the assistance. “COVID  has increased the numbers of people we’ve been serviing, but it has decreased the number of volunteers,” she said.

Peoples said tickets are available at ACTS from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. – and ACTS will happily take donations to help fill the pantry, too. In short supply are items like canned fruits and vegetables, 1-pound or 2-pound bags of rice or beans, boxes of crackers packaged in plastic sleeves such as saltines. Also needed are gallon-size cans of food that can be used for lunches, she said.

Of course, monetary donations are always acceptable, Peoples said. Mail checks to ACTS, P.O. Box 25, Henderson, NC 27536.

The last 220 fundraiser to benefit ACTS sold between 800 and 1,000 tickets, People said. ACTS board members have tickets for sale. Board members, in addition to Peoples, are: Hope Breedlove, Gwenn Bridges, Ulice Hill Evans, Pam Jackson, Candy Moore, Connie L. Markham, Jack Richardson, Abidan Paul Shah, CeCe Tucker, Linda Weaver, Argatha White-Vass and Rev. Johnny Yount.

ACTS is very fortunate to have such a dedicated board, she said. “They really care about their community,” said Peoples. “It’s so important to have people like that in a leadership role,” she added.

To learn more, call ACTS at 252.492.8231 or email Peoples lapeoples@actsofhenderson.org.

Cooperative Extension with Wayne Rowland 01-25-21 – Seed Germination

Listen live at 100.1 FM / 1450 AM / or on the live stream at WIZS.com at 2 PM Monday – Thursday.

Henderson Police Department

Argument, Shots Fired, In Darkness 300 Yards Away, Unrelated, A Horse Died

Over the weekend a disagreement led to shots being fired, and a stray bullet killed a horse in its nearby pasture.

Henderson Police Chief Marcus Barrow explained to WIZS News Monday that officers were dispatched for a shots fired call on Southern Avenue around 5 a.m, Saturday, Jan 23. He said there was a disturbance at 116 Southern Avenue and apparently an argument resulted in someone leaving the scene in a vehicle. That’s when an unknown suspect is believed to have fired at the departing vehicle as it headed up the street.

A stray bullet hit the horse in the temple and killed it nearly instantly. The ground around where the horse was discovered later, after daylight, was barely disturbed.

The horse was upwards of 300-plus yards, if not further, away. No intended malice towards the animal has been discovered.

Chief Barrow said the police are working backwards on this and trying to find out who pulled the trigger. It was dark at 5 a.m., and not only was the horse not discovered until later in the morning, but it was not immediately known where the shots were fired.

Since then, police have spoken to the renters at 116 Southern Avenue, and they have been helpful. Shell casings were recovered from the road in front of that address. Barrow said the incident is related to a feud that has been going on for a while.

Barrow said police are working diligently as the investigation continues to try to figure out who pulled the trigger.

Many in the community are heartbroken.

If anyone has more information about this incident, please contact Henderson Police through Henderson-Vance Crime Stoppers at (252-492-1925 or P3 app), call 252-438-4141, or make contact through Facebook or Instagram.

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