H-V Chamber Logo

Tickets On Sale NOW for Chamber’s Third Annual Reverse Raffle

-Information courtesy the Henderson-Vance County Chamber of Commerce’s “Focus” Newsletter – July/August 2018

The Henderson-Vance County Chamber of Commerce along with the Henderson Police Department (HPD) and the Vance County Sheriff ’s Department are partnering again to host the third annual reverse raffle.

This annual event benefits a program serving local underprivileged children called “Shop With a Cop” along with the Chamber of Commerce and its efforts to help local business. The event is scheduled for Saturday, November 10, 2018, and will be held at Henderson Country Club beginning at 6 p.m. Tickets are on sale now and include dinner for two, a chance at the $5,000 grand prize and a dance at the completion of the raffle. Throughout the evening, guests will be given opportunities to bid on various silent auction items as well as two reserved tickets which will be auctioned toward the end of the ticket drawing. Three reserved tickets will also be raffled during the course of the evening.

The “Shop With a Cop” activity will take place in December at which time members of the HPD and Sheriff ’s Department will take local underprivileged children shopping with local retailers for Christmas. A certain dollar amount of the proceeds raised will be set aside for each participating child. There has been a great turnout for the past two years and we are expecting no less this year. “This fundraiser allows us to do a lot of good for the local community with the proceeds and the HPD and Sheriff ’s office are always anxious to do what we can to help local children”, said Police Chief Marcus Barrow.

There are opportunities for local businesses to donate silent auction items, sponsor the event or help in other ways. Members of the HPD, Vance County Sheriff ’s Department and Chamber staff and board of directors will be making community contacts in the very near future.

If you or your business would like to purchase tickets, donate items or get more information, contact the HPD, Vance County Sheriff ’s Department or the Chamber office at 252-438-8414.

Registration Underway for Henderson-Vance Rec. & Parks’ Youth Cheerleading

-Information and flyer courtesy Tara Goolsby, Henderson-Vance Recreation and Parks Facilities Supervisor, Aycock Recreation Center

Henderson-Vance Recreation & Parks announces that youth cheerleading registration is ongoing now through Friday, September 7, 2018. Register at Aycock Recreation Center, 307 Carey Chapel Road, Henderson. Registration fee is $40; $30 for those that played softball in 2018.

This program is designed for youth ages 6 – 14. The participants will learn the basic skills and fundamentals of cheering. They will be assigned coaches through the Henderson-Vance Recreation & Parks Department. Participants will practice cheering two to three times a week at the Old Aycock Park.

Cheerleaders will have the opportunity to cheer at youth football games for the Henderson-Vance Recreation & Parks’ youth football programs. Home games will be played at Vance County High School.

For additional information, please contact either:

Steve Osborne – sosborne@ci.henderson.nc.us or (252) 438-2670

Victor Hunt – vhunt@ci.henderson.nc.us or (252) 438-3408

 

 

News 08/29/18

NC Coop Extension

Vance Co. 4-H Working on New Ideas, Trying to Keep Livestock Program Alive

Lina Lue, the new cooperative extension agent with 4-H Youth Development in Vance County, was on Tuesday’s edition of WIZS’ Town Talk program to provide listeners with a better understanding of the mission of “the nation’s largest youth group.”

Lue, an Oxford native, was a member of 4-H and Future Farmers of America (FFA) while in high school. Her love of these programs led her to the decision to major in extension education while attending NC State University. “I became a leader in 4-H when I was a youth member,” said Lue. “I realized I loved agriculture and had a passion for educating youth, so I went to school for extension education so I could work directly in cooperative extension.”

According to Lue, 4-H teaches youth ages 5-18 its motto of “learn by doing and how to make the best better.” Children must be five years of age by January 1 of the current year to participate.

Based on the four “H’s” of head, heart, hands and health, 4-H activities range from showing livestock to sewing classes and public speaking. “Hands stands for service to others, so we do service projects such as food drives; something that helps other people. Head refers to the knowledge you gain from participating in hands-on activities. Health demonstrates the 4-H focus on healthy living, healthy cooking and exercising. Heart is the passion you have for what you are learning,” Lue said.

While certainly not the only aspect of 4-H, agriculture makes up a larger portion of the focus. As youth have aged out of the program over the last few years, the participation in the livestock program has diminished. “We currently do not have any kids showing livestock right now,” said Lue. “I’m working on that.”

To participate in livestock shows, interested youth are paired with local farmers who volunteer their sheep, goats and cattle. “Kids work with the farmer and the animals typically once a week and then they get to show the animal and keep any prize money or awards given. The farmers are happy to do it,” Lue said.

Lue is currently trying to stir up enough interest in the community to start both an equine and a livestock club for local youth. “We need an adult leader who would commit to having nine meetings a year and then we need at least five members from three different families to be considered a club.”

Lue is also working on a parliamentary procedure and leadership program to help youth learn how to conduct a meeting, how to work together in a group setting and how to best prepare for public speaking engagements. Her goal is to begin the program in spring 2019.

In her short tenure with the Vance County Cooperative Extension Office, Lue has been busy working on new ideas for 4-H while trying to maintain established programs such as livestock. “What we really need right now are members and club leaders. The more clubs we have, the more youth we serve and the more we expand 4-H’s outreach.”

If interested in signing your child up for 4-H, to become a volunteer or if you have general questions, please contact Lue at (252) 438-8188 or lelue@ncsu.edu. The enrollment form and additional 4-H information may be found by clicking here.

Democratic Party

Vance Co. Democratic Party Looking for Volunteers

-Information courtesy M. Lynnette Allen, Vance County Democratic Party

The Vance County Democratic Party is looking for persons to serve on Precinct Committees. If you desire to make a difference in the community, please volunteer to serve on a Precinct Committee. You must be a registered Democrat voter to serve on the committee.

We invite everyone to get involved so that we can make a difference. We have various openings for everyone. Please email: mlallen65@hotmail.com or call 252-767-5195 for further details. Change cannot be made without YOU, the voter.

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U.S. Department of Justice

Opinion: Prosecutors Need the Tools to Protect Americans From Violent Offenders

Opinion piece by Robert J. Higdon, Jr., United States Attorney, Eastern District of North Carolina

Nothing federal prosecutors do is more important than protecting our fellow Americans from violence. In recent years, however, we have lost one of the most important tools we use to protect our communities: the Armed Career Criminal Act (ACCA). Only Congress can restore the ACCA to help us keep our neighborhoods safe.

The ACCA operated on a simple premise: when a felon is convicted of illegally possessing a firearm, he receives a mandatory fifteen-year sentence if his prior convictions include three or more “violent felonies” or “serious drug offenses.” These “armed career criminals” are not low-level offenders but rather criminals who have already been convicted of multiple serious offenses and then were caught with a firearm. In contrast to those included under the ACCA, lower sentences are given to felons who illegally possess firearms but lack that violent history. Common sense tells us that when a felon with a violent past illegally possesses a firearm, he is extremely dangerous and must be incarcerated. The ACCA was intended to bring that common-sense idea to the law.

For a long time, the ACCA really worked. After a period of increasing violent crime in America, President Reagan signed the ACCA into law in 1984. From 1964 to 1980, the overall violent crime rate tripled in the United States. Robbery crimes and rapes tripled, and murders doubled. Then came the ACCA and other major criminal reforms; the elimination of parole, reform of the bail system, the sentencing guidelines, and better funding for law enforcement. The goal of these reforms was to reduce violent crime, and from 1991 to 2014, violent crime dropped by half. Murders and aggravated assaults dropped by half, while robberies dropped by nearly two-thirds. The ACCA, along with these other reforms, was a resounding success that made our neighborhoods safer.

So what happened to the ACCA? The answer is a 2015 Supreme Court decision called Johnson v. United States. There, the Supreme Court considered whether Samuel Johnson, a white supremacist who admitted to planning acts of domestic terrorism, was properly deemed an armed career criminal after he was found guilty of illegally possessing an AK-47, several other firearms, and 1,000 rounds of ammunition. The Supreme Court concluded that Johnson was not an armed career criminal because his prior conviction for illegally possessing a sawed-off shotgun was not a “violent felony.” Most importantly, in reaching that conclusion the Supreme Court held that part of the definition of “violent felony” in the ACCA was too vague to understand and thus violated the Constitution’s guarantee of due process. As a result, the Court struck that part of the definition from the statute, and now, after Johnson, many of the crimes that once were considered “violent felonies” under the ACCA no longer qualify.

It is no exaggeration to say that Johnson destroyed the common-sense nature of the ACCA. Courts across the country have ruled that many plainly violent crimes are no longer “violent felonies.” Even murder is being challenged in some jurisdictions. Here in North Carolina, our common law robbery crime—taking property from someone by means of violence or fear—is no longer a “violent felony,” nor (believe it or not) is shooting into an occupied building. It just doesn’t make any sense, and clearly, no one intended the ACCA to lead to these absurd results.

Because of Johnson, more than 1,400 violent career criminals have been released early, and 600 of those have already been arrested again just three years later. On average, these 600 offenders have been arrested or reoffended three times. As the Attorney General recently stated, “Releasing repeat offenders has consequences.” Those awful consequences have been felt in our communities, such as in Utah, where a career criminal released because of Johnson tortured and murdered two teenagers, and in California, where a career criminal released after Johnson allegedly murdered his father, carjacked a vehicle, and killed the vehicle’s driver.

Just last month in the Eastern District of North Carolina, Charlie O’Bryant Terry was sentenced to twenty years in federal prison for obstruction of justice and illegal possession of a firearm (https://www.justice.gov/usao-ednc/pr/henderson-man-sentenced-20-years-federalprison-obstructing-justice-and-illegal). This was not Terry’s first federal sentence. In fact, in 2008, Terry had been sentenced under the ACCA to fifteen years in federal prison after pleading guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm after three prior violent felonies, including two common law robberies. Because of Johnson, in August 2016, Terry’s fifteen-year sentence under the ACCA was vacated when his previous convictions for common law robbery no longer qualified as violent felonies. As a result, Terry was released early and placed on federal supervised release.

In January 2017, a mere five months after his release from custody, Terry struck again, assaulting and robbing a couple at gunpoint. During the assault, Terry placed a pistol in the mouth of one of the victims, and he cut the other victim’s head by repeatedly hitting the victim with the firearm, requiring staples to close the wound. After Terry was arrested in April 2017 for violating his federal supervision, federal agents executed a search warrant for Terry’s cellular telephone and found that Terry had taken several “selfies,” or photographs of himself, with an AR-15 semiautomatic firearm the day prior to his arrest. While in jail, Terry also threatened one of the victims in an effort to change his testimony. Terry received a twenty-year sentence for his postrelease conduct, but if his sentence under the ACCA had not been cut short due to Johnson, Terry’s victims would have been safe from his violent criminal behavior in the first place.

Johnson caused these violent offenders to be released early, and going forward federal prosecutors will no longer be able to ensure sufficient sentences for many repeat violent offenders caught illegally possessing firearms. Innocent people will face the tragic consequences that will follow these offenders back to our streets, and the law enforcement officers who protect us will face the danger of confronting and arresting again the same violent felons they already removed from our streets years ago.

But amidst all this bad news, there is still room for something positive: Congress can fix the ACCA. The Supreme Court in Johnson found part of the ACCA’s definition unconstitutionally vague, but the Court left it open to Congress to craft a new definition that avoids these problems. The Attorney General and the Department of Justice have been working with members of Congress to create awareness about this urgent problem. The ACCA focuses on the most dangerous career felons—the kind we can and must take off the streets to protect our communities.

Congress made our nation so much safer in 1984 by passing the Armed Career Criminal Act. Now we need Congress to keep us safe in 2018 by fixing it.

News releases are available on the U.S. Attorney’s webpage at www.usdoj.gov/usao/nce. Follow us on twitter @USAO_EDNC.

News 08/28/18

Simmons to Hold Additional ‘Coffee With a Candidate’ Events in Sept.

-Information courtesy Tiarra L. Mosley, Campaign Manager, the Committee for Allen Simmons for Vance County Sheriff

The community is invited to meet Allen Simmons, candidate for Vance County Sheriff, at a series of Wednesday “Coffee With a Candidate” events being held in September.

These events will allow citizens of Vance County to come and have time to meet with Allen Simmons and discuss some of their concerns and/or wishes.

September 5, 2018: 7 – 9 a.m. at Hardee’s
September 12, 2018: 8 – 10 a.m. at Bojangles on E. Andrews Ave.
September 19, 2018: 8 – 10 a.m. at Bojangles on Dabney Dr.
September 26, 2018: 7 – 9 a.m. at Hardees’s

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Henderson Vance Recreation & Parks

Space Limited in Aycock Rec. Center’s Free Arthritis Fitness Program

-Information courtesy Tara Goolsby, Henderson-Vance Recreation and Parks Facilities Supervisor, Aycock Recreation Center

The Aycock Recreation Center will be the site of an exercise program geared to those suffering from arthritis pain and stiffness. Courtesy of the Arthritis Foundation, this free 8-week program will be held on Mondays and Tuesdays from 2 – 3 p.m. beginning October 1 and ending December 3, 2018. Classes will not be held on October 18, November 12 or November 22, 2018.

This program is low-impact and joint-safe and has been proven to decrease pain and stiffness while increasing flexibility and range of motion; suitable for every fitness level.

Space in the class is on a first come, first served basis with a limit of 15 people.

For more information, please contact Crystal Allen at (252) 431-8091 or callen@ci.henderson.nc.us

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News 08/27/18