Mold Issues Prompt Granville School Board Vote to Shutter Mary Potter Campus

The Granville County Board of Education voted Wednesday to close the Mary Potter Center for Education, moving Granville Academy, Phoenix Academy and Central Office personnel housed there to the former Hawley Middle School in Creedmoor.

The reason: a four-letter word. Mold.

Superintendent Dr. Stan Winborne said the annual air quality testing turned up no unusual results back in May, but subsequent testing conducted earlier this month – prompted by a complaint from an employee who works on the campus – showed that 24 of 30 air samples taken and 10 of 16 surface samples revealed the presence of mold spores.

Winborne offered two options to the school board but requested that it take action at the special called meeting held Wednesday afternoon.

One option called for relocating students and staff to the Creedmoor campus, which had previously been Hawley Middle School and before that Creedmoor Elementary, for the time it takes to get rid of the mold and fix the problem before returning to the historic Oxford campus. This option, he estimated, could take up to 18 months and cost north of $6 million.

The second option called for closing the campus and relocating students and staff to Creedmoor permanently, at an estimated cost of closer to $220,000.

Granville Academy students have already switched to modified remote learning; the Phoenix Academy, housed in a relatively newer one-story metal building on the school’s campus, doesn’t have the same issues as the other brick structures where some central office staff and Granville Academy are housed.

Board Member Gwen Russell made the motion to select the second option, which was seconded by Board Member Vicki Baker and passed 5-0. Board Member Ethel Anderson was not present, and Board Member Amanda LeBrecque attended virtually.

The county office staff and Granville Academy will move first, then the rest will relocate in phases.

“We won’t waste any time,” Winborne said.

Strong Arm Baking Co. rents out the kitchen at the school, and Winborne said he’d spoken with the owner, who has expressed interest in using the kitchen in Creedmoor.

The gym on the Mary Potter campus has been a polling place, and it’s set to be put to use in the upcoming municipal elections. Winborne said he’d spoken with Granville Board of Elections Tonya Burnette. The gym was included in the annual air quality testing conducted in May, but it was not part of the re-testing. It does not have air conditioning but does have two big exhaust fans that provide adequate air circulation.

The future of the campus is uncertain, but it’s possible that the school board would declare it surplus property and sell it.

“This is a historic place, and it deserves to be honored in some way,” he said.

School board member Katrina Waters said, “It hurts that this has happened to this historical facility. But I do understand that dollars talk…I hope this is a lesson that we need to be more proactive when it comes to our facilities.”

TownTalk: Kernel Craze Sponsoring Holiday Art Challenge

Budding artists in Vance County have a unique opportunity to have their artwork appear on Kernel Craze holiday popcorn tins and spread some pride and passion for their community in the process.

Stephen Wolf, Kernel Craze founder, said the Holiday Art Challenge is open to K-12 students who live or go to school in Vance County. Participants must register by Oct. 1 and submit artwork no later than Oct. 16. Visit www.kernelcraze.com to register.

The artwork should include a few specific aspects, Wolf explained. It should have a winter theme and incorporate the  city of Henderson and Kernel Craze in some way. In addition, the artwork must fit within an 11 x 17 inch document, using the landscape orientation.

The top winner will get $100 and the top two winners’ creations will appear on the 2025 holiday tins that hold the different popped corn creations.

All the entries will be featured in a Showcase on Thursday, Oct. 23. Most likely the showcase and judging will take place at McGregor Hall, but Wolf said details haven’t been finalized.

This is the first year for the contest, and Wolf said he hopes it will spark some interest among young people in the area.

“Henderson is my home, it’s where I grew up,” he said. “I think that our youth here need more opportunities to do something positive…do something that encourages the pride and passion of the community.”

And there’s a little bit of pride that goes along with having original artwork featured on the tins, too. “When one of our popcorn tins is purchased, your art is also coming with it,” he said.

Find all the details for the Holiday Art Challenge at www.kernelcraze.com.

Contact Wolf at stephen@kernelcraze.com to learn more.

CLICK PLAY!

The Local Skinny! A Pawsitive Impact in Vance County

A Henderson teen is focused on reducing the pet surrender rate in Vance County as she works toward her Girl Scout Gold Award achievement to make a “Pawsitive Impact.”

Sophomore Neleh-Kate Sandlin said she is partnering with Ruin Creek Animal Protection Society and Vance Cares Community Center to increase awareness to young people about being a responsible pet owner and to offer current pet owners with options other than surrendering a pet in challenging situations.

“I’ve always been an animal lover,” Sandlin said on Thursday’s segment of The Local Skinny!, so she knew she wanted to incorporate that passion into her Gold Award project. “Knowing I can help that cause warms my heart.”

RCAPS has helped Sandlin make connections with other community partners to help spread the word.

“I just want to lower the surrenders,” she said, referring to animals brought by owners to the animal shelter. She created a short video to share local resources with pet owners and prospective pet owners about how to prepare for pet adoption and how to access resources to avoid pet surrender.

She has placed basic pet supplies at the Vance Cares Community Centers at Vance County Middle School and Clarke Elementary to help pet owners when they find themselves in a pinch. And she’s aiming to add the Vance County High School location next.

Find the video and resource list at https://bit.ly/goldpets

CLICK PLAY!

TownTalk: Around Old Granville – Ridgeway

Visitors to New York City back in the late 1800’s may have seen advertisements from Ridgeway

Estates Co., a group of local men who had big plans for enticing Northerners to move South, to the tiny little community that sits today between Middleburg and Norlina, just over the Warren County line.

This corporation had big plans – the Raleigh to Gaston railroad had a stop in Ridgeway, and there was even a fancy new 3-story brick hotel right across from the depot with a h 27-stall barn, carriage houses and all the finest amenities a traveler could want.

Yep, thing were looking up in Ridgeway. The group of men created a vision of a town with streets laid out and 1,800 building lots on about 350 acres of property. All they needed were the buyers.

“It didn’t take off like they anticipated,” said local historian Mark Pace on Thursday’s Around Old Granville segment of TownTalk.

Pace and WIZS’s Bill Harris talked about the community known for its German settlers and super-sweet cantaloupes. In 1869, Ridgeway became an incorporated township in anticipation of the influx of Northerners, Pace said. There’s a stone marker near what would have been the center of town, which lost its charter about 10 years later.

In 1901, a man by the name of Ed Petar happened to plant a few cantaloupe seeds in the Ridgeway area and, it turns out, the ripe melons were really sweet and delicious. From that modest beginning grew a craze for the super-sweet produce that lasts to this day. By 1932, with the help of the railroad, thousands of crates of cantaloupes were shipped from Ridgeway. The peak year was 1956, Pace said, when 30,000 crates of the smallish melon with the light orange flesh and ropy exterior found their way all across the country via refrigerated trucks and boxcars.

Pace said that 75 percent of the cantaloupes grown in Ridgeway at the time were cultivated by farmers of German descent. Families with surnames like Kilian, Holtzmann, Bender and Daeke – just to name a few – began to settle in little ol’ Ridgeway.

But how’d they know to come? It seems a traveling preacher with ties to the German community and the Lutheran Church in Germany started spreading the word about the area. He was a German-born missionary and when he came upon the advertisements in New York City, he translated them and sent them to friends in Germany.

CLICK PLAY!

TownTalk: Sisters Speak Life Pink Out Campaign

We’re officially into the first few days into autumn, when thoughts turn to football, pumpkin spice everything, and fall colors like orange, yellow and…PINK!

October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month and Freddie Harris and her nonprofit organization Sisters Speak Life want to turn Henderson and Vance County pink to bring awareness to the importance of annual mammograms and early detection.

“Pink Out Vance County” kicks off at 12 noon on Wednesday, Oct. 1 at McGregor Hall. The event will begin with a “countywide pause and a Pink Bow moment,” Harris said on Wednesday’s TownTalk. Participants will tie dozens of pink bows on trees along Breckenridge Street outside McGregor Hall. The bows serve as visual reminders and symbols of hope for all who have been touched in one way or another by breast cancer.

“I really want the community to know that we need you,” said Harris, herself a two-time cancer survivor. “We want you to come and join us as we tie the pink bows around trees downtown. That’s a community effort and we want you to be a part of that,” she said.

Pink bows and Pink Out t-shirts can be purchased online at www.sistersspeaklife.org to show support for the cause. The event continues later that afternoon at 5:30 p.m. with a Community Gathering in the Gallery Area between McGregor Hall and Perry Memorial Library.

“Our goal is to inspire women to get their mammograms, to provide educational information and support for survivors,” said Harris. “It’s like a passion for me. I want women to know the importance of getting a mammogram. I hope to inspire others as well…My hope is that in Vance County we can come together to do awareness, which is so important.”

Dr. Gary Smith, a local physician and a member of the nonprofit’s board emphasized the importance of early detection.

“Early detection is an important event,” Smith said, “that starts with awareness.” Annual mammograms, especially for women between 45 and 75 years of age.

Early detection means earlier interventions, he said, which can lead to better outcomes. A mammogram is an important tool in early detection. Another important tool, Smith said, is having a support team to help a patient in the healing process, which begins the moment a patient receives a cancer diagnosis. “That’s a time they need their community the most,” he said.

Invision Diagnostics is bringing its Mammogram Bus to Aycock Rec Center on Saturday, Nov. 1 and now is the time to schedule a free mammogram. Phone 877.318.1349 to schedule an appointment. Last year, 19 women took advantage of the mobile service, and Harris would love to see a good turnout this year, too.

SistersspeakLife is creating a video to help promote that Nov. 1 event. If you’re a breast cancer survivor, please send a headshot photo, along with the year you were diagnosed and a one-word description of yourself to be included in the video. In addition to the mammogram bus, there will be health-related resources for participants to learn about available services in the area.

When Harris was diagnosed, she said she found inspiration from people – family, friends and even strangers – who surrounded her with love and support.

She encourages people to come together, reach out and help each other. “It made a difference for me and I think it can make a difference for someone else.”

Learn more at https://www.facebook.com/sistersspeaklife or https://sistersspeaklife.org/

CLICK PLAY!

Vance County Logo

Commissioners Approve 5% Match For School Grant Funding Request

It didn’t take long for the Vance County Board of Commissioners to approve making a 5 percent match to Vance County Schools so that the school district can move forward with making application for more than $47 million in grant funding for capital improvements to school buildings.

It was the first item on the agenda for Monday’s special called meeting, and commissioners wasted no time in giving the school district the green light.

VCS Superintendent Dr. Cindy Bennett and Chief Finance Officer John Suther made the request at the commissioners’ September meeting, and told the board at the time that the grant application was due to the N.C. Department of Public Instruction by Oct. 3 – next Friday.

The state-administered grant is for capital improvements and Vance County could stand to get more than $47 million to make necessary repairs and renovations to up to 14 of its school campuses.

If the school district were to be approved to receive the maximum amount, the 5 percent match would amount to about $2.5 million.

The matching funds wouldn’t have to be paid all at once; rather, the money could come in over the course of the projects, which could take several years.

Bennett and Vance County Manager C. Renee Perry agree that Vance County is poised to receive the funding because of its Tier 1 designation and because it hasn’t applied previously to get the funding.

Parker’s Peace Pool Annual Oyster Roast October 18, 2025

Who: Parker’s Peace Pool

What: 5th Annual Oyster Roast

When: Saturday, October 18, 2025

Where: The Sidney at 184 Henry Ayscue Road, Henderson

Why: Fundraiser for the 65-year-old community pool

Additional Details: $50. Gates Open at 4pm. Dinner from 5pm to 7pm. Raffle at 6:30pm. For tickets go to www.parkerpeacepool.com or email parkerpeacepool@gmail.com. Menu includes: Steamed Oysters, Pork BBQ, Fried Catfish, Steamed Shrimp (shell on), Baked Beans, Slaw, Hush Puppies, Tea/Water

(not a paid ad)

TownTalk: Commissioners Approve Revised Emergency Pay Policy For Jail Staffing

During a special called meeting Monday, the Vance County Commissioners approved a revised emergency pay policy that has been in effect since April to staff the county detention center.

Since the policy was put in place – which allows for employees of the Vance County Sheriff’s Office to fill in at the jail because of staffing shortages – the county has paid more than $483,000 to keep adequate staff at the jail. The funds have come from lapsed salaries.

County Manager C. Renee Perry recommended some changes to the policy to commissioners, which includes removing exempt staff from substituting at the jail, using individual employees’ overtime pay rate and allowing no more than 60 hours overtime per pay period.

The revised policy states that exempt employees and non-exempt staff at a pay grade of 72 or above be excluded from the emergency pay policy.

Sheriff Curtis Brame responded to commissioners’ concerns and said he opposed some of what the manager included in the revised policy. He requested that a cap not be placed on the number of hours an individual can work, and he balked at having on-duty patrol deputies be responsible for transporting detainees.

Brame said that he is down 12 staff at the sheriff’s office, and having patrol deputies transporting detainees would mean they’re not patrolling the county.

“We’re talking about safety, we’re definitely talking about safety,” Brame said. As of Monday, the county has 171 detainees, 63 of which are housed at the county jail. That means that the other 108 are in other detention facilities spread across the state of North Carolina from the coast to the Tennessee border.

In response to questions earlier Tuesday from WIZS, Perry said the sheriff “must reach out for approval in advance, just to ensure that the funds are available, not necessarily if the employees can work – just that funds are available,” she reiterated.

With regard to transport of detainees, Perry said that historically, deputies were able to transport. “My preference is to have his deputies do the actual transport without additional pay on their regular shift,” she said, but added that if that causes an undue hardship she would entertain conversations with the sheriff about that. “He just needs to let me know,” she said.

The policy that Perry proposes states that when the lapses salary well goes dry, the emergency pay policy will end.

Brame said county money needs to be made available to keep the staffing at the jail. He called the fund balance a rainy-day fund, used when emergencies arise. “It’s raining like hell in Vance County,” Brame said, “and I’m getting wet.”

After close to a half hour discussion, Commissioner Tommy Hester made a motion to approve the policy Perry recommended. The motion was seconded and was approved, with a lone “no “vote cast by Commissioner Valencia Perry.

Click Play!