Vance County Community Foundation Grant Apps by 5-1-18

For Immediate Release

The board of advisers of the Vance County Community Foundation is currently accepting grant applications for projects funded from its community grantmaking fund, according to Fagan Goodwin, board president.

Funds are available for nonprofit organizations that serve general charitable needs in Vance County. Applications are available online beginning March 30. Visit nccommunityfoundation.org for information about applying. The deadline for submitting applications is noon May 1.

About the Vance County Community Foundation

The Vance County Community Foundation was founded in 1997 and is a local affiliate foundation of the North Carolina Community Foundation. VCCF is led by a local volunteer advisory board that helps build community assets through the creation of permanent endowments, makes grants and leverages leadership – all for the benefit of Vance County. In addition to Goodwin, board members include: Anthony Adams (secretary), Sara Wester (grants chair), Sarah Baskerville, Kay Curin, Wendy Meyer-Goodwin, Terri Hedrick and Amy Russell.

Tax-deductible contributions, made payable to the Vance County Community Foundation, can be mailed to the North Carolina Community Foundation, 3737 Glenwood Ave. Suite 460, Raleigh, NC 27612. Contributions can also be made online at nccommunityfoundation.org. For further information, contact NCCF Regional Director Quinn Novels at 919-256-6914 or
qnovels@nccommunityfoundation.org or visit the NCCF website at nccommunityfoundation.org.

About the North Carolina Community Foundation

The NCCF is the single statewide community foundation serving North Carolina and has administered more than $130 million in grants since its inception in 1988. With nearly $247 million in assets, NCCF sustains 1,200 endowments established to provide long-term support of a broad range of community needs, nonprofit organizations, institutions and scholarships. The NCCF partners with a network of affiliate foundations to provide local resource allocation and community assistance across the state. An important component of NCCF’s mission is to ensure that rural philanthropy has a voice at local, regional and national levels.

For more information, visit nccommunityfoundation.org, like us on Facebook  and follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter @NCCF.

United Way of Vance County Yard Sale 4-14-18

— submitted by Terri Hedrick, president of the United Way of Vance County

The United Way of Vance County will host a yard sale to raise funds for the local organization to support the needs of citizens in our community on Saturday, April 14, from 7 a.m. to 12 p.m. in the parking lot of the United Way office at 715 South Garnett Street in Henderson.

Our United Way is currently accepting items for donation from local citizens to be sold in the yard sale. Proceeds from the donated items will go to our United Way to support its efforts. Anyone interested in donating items for the yard sale may contact Terri Hedrick at 252-915-9420 or Jane Haithcock at 252-432-3778.

The yard sale is open to the public. Please plan to attend and find some great deals!

VGCC to hold event aimed at homeschoolers

— courtesy VGCC

VGCC to hold event aimed at homeschoolers

Vance-Granville Community College, in partnership with The College at Southeastern, will soon hold an information session specifically designed for high school-aged homeschoolers and homeschooling parents. The event, called “Generation Connect,” is scheduled for Tuesday, April 3, 2018, from 1-3:30 p.m., in the Civic Center on VGCC’s Main Campus in Vance County.

Attendees will learn about the educational opportunities available at both institutions, and the unique partnership that VGCC and The College at Southeastern have recently formed. The colleges will be helping students (at any age) who want to enroll at both institutions at the same time, in order to maximize their career options.

Vance-Granville offers more than 40 degree, diploma, and certificate programs to prepare students for further education or to enter a career directly after graduation. Students will find opportunities through programs in business, computer science, construction, education, engineering, health sciences, human services, industrial technologies, law and public safety, public services and transportation technologies. The college operates four campuses, one each in Vance, Granville, Franklin and Warren counties, while also providing unique online opportunities, with six degrees available totally online.

The College at Southeastern began in 1994 as an undergraduate school of Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, located in Wake Forest. The Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Science degrees at Southeastern consist of a core curriculum which includes vital training in biblical studies, Christian worldview, world history, theology and English. In addition to their selected Bachelor of Arts major, all students complete a minor in Christian studies with the option of adding a second minor in their area of interest. For students on a Bachelor of Science track, all students have the option of transferring in credits from an Associate in Arts or Associate in Science degree, dual-enrolling in a vocational program at another institution like VGCC, or completing the business minor.

For more information and to RSVP for the information session, contact VGCC TechHire Project Manager Ken Wilson at wilsonk@vgcc.edu or 252-738-3259.

–VGCC–

(This is not a paid advertisement)

NC DIT Cybersecurity Pilot Program for Veterans a Success in First Run

— press release from NC DIT

Cybersecurity Pilot Program for Veterans a Success in First Run
Apprenticeships help connect disabled vets with a new career

Raleigh, N.C. – Disabled veterans are getting access to skills and experience in the growing field of cybersecurity thanks to a unique partnership between state government, the tech sector and community colleges.

The Disabled Veterans Cybersecurity Apprenticeship program is a collaboration between the Department of Information Technology (DIT) and other state agencies; ISG, a Raleigh-based IT firm specializing in cybersecurity; and educational organizations in the state, including Wake Technical Community College and other community colleges. Only disabled veterans who are honorably discharged from service qualify to participate.

More than 200,000 members of the US military return to civilian life each year with 20,000 of them in North Carolina alone. Getting used to civilian life after a career in the military can prove difficult, especially for those who sustained service-related disabilities. The pilot program gives soldiers a new way to serve their country.

Five apprentices work eight-hour days Monday through Thursday, guided by mentors in their work. On Friday, the apprentices meet for training at ISG in Raleigh. They receive regular salary and benefits, and by the time they graduate from the program in October, they will be eligible to take the examination for and obtain a CISSP – Certified Information System Security Professional Associate certification. The two-year, $500,000 pilot program is in its second year.

“When I was selected for this program, it said to me, ‘Thank you for your service’ on a whole different level. It didn’t just thank me for my service, it thanked my family for the sacrifice that they made…. I really feel like the state is giving back. This is the thanks for my service, and now I am able to take care of my family,” said Vicky Steward, a retired first sergeant in the U.S. Army. Steward was injured almost 22 years ago in the Khobar Towers bombing in Saudi Arabia.

ISG has a job placement program in place to ensure that all of the participants are employed after they complete their training, said Maria Thompson, DIT’s chief risk officer. Employers will gain well-trained, reliable, and dedicated workers in cybersecurity, a field that does not yet have enough qualified workers, and veterans receive training and expertise in a rising and lucrative IT field. Veterans are comfortable with changing environments and learning new things, Thompson said. They have been trained to protect, they have already proven themselves able to work hard with high integrity, and they are adept at working on teams.

“All of those things are things that you need in cybersecurity,” says Tony Marshall, ISG’s president and chief executive officer.

DIT Secretary and State Chief Information Officer Eric Boyette said he and the department will work to bring more veterans into the program. The department intends to ask the General Assembly in the coming legislative session for support to double the size of the next apprentice class.

“It’s great to be able to offer these positions to these individuals, and watch them grow, watch them succeed, watch them teach others, watch them learn, and just be able to be supportive,” Boyette said. “This initiative really needs to grow … and we are going to figure out ways to make it grow.”

For an inside look at the program and to hear from participants, visit: https://youtu.be/fmVfifI_JxQ

###

News 03/27/18

Local Community Holy Week Worship Services 2018

— information submitted by Dr. Ron Cava, Senior Minister of The First Baptist Church of Henderson, NC

Community Holy Week worship services will be hosted at the First Baptist Church, on the corner of Winder and Wyche Streets, April 26 – 30, 2018 at 12:00 noon. Services are sponsored by downtown congregations including Church of the Holy Innocents, Cotton Memorial Presbyterian, First Baptist, First Presbyterian, First United Methodist, and Shiloh Baptist churches. These congregations continue a decades long tradition of unity and partnership during this high and holy week of the Christian year.

Ministers and musicians from these congregations will lead a 30-minute worship each day, followed by a light lunch in the FBC Fellowship Hall. There is no cost and the public is welcomed and encouraged to attend. An offering will be received each day, with all proceeds going to support Community Partners of Hope and Lifeline Ministries. Please call First Baptist Church at (252)438-3172 for further information.

Registration opens for Tour de Vance cycling event

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – courtesy VGCC

 

Registration opens for Tour de Vance cycling event

Registration is now underway for the Sixth Annual Tour de Vance Bike Ride scheduled for Saturday, April 28. The ride has been growing steadily since its inception, drawing families and first-timers in addition to the most seasoned of cyclists for four separate cycling events.

For the first time, proceeds from the ride will benefit the Endowment Fund at Vance-Granville Community College, with donations supporting scholarships for students enrolled in Health Sciences programs at the college.

Several different options are available for cyclists. The 10-mile route is ideal for youth, families and beginners. A 20-mile course suits riders ready for a bit more distance. Experienced cyclists can choose a 31-mile “Forest and Farmland” circle route through the country or a 62-mile “Kerr Lake Look” that adds to that 31-mile circle route an out-and-back spur to the lake past the Nutbush Creek State Recreation Area.

The rides will start and finish at VGCC’s Main Campus, located off Interstate 85 and Poplar Creek Road at 200 Community College Road in Henderson.

“This event has become a hit not just with locals but also with cyclists from the surrounding area who enjoy an organized event that is challenging but also takes them on a view of the beautiful countryside in our area,” said Wendy Meyer-Goodwin, who has been working as event organizer since the Tour de Vance began. “Last year, we had our largest number of participants ever.”

All riders can register through the Vance-Granville Community College website at vgcc.edu/tourdevance. Online registration will end at 5 p.m. on Friday, April 27. On-site registration will be an option at 7:30 a.m. on the day of the event.

The 10-mile ride will cost $10 for each rider. The 20-mile ride will cost $20 for those who register by Feb. 28, increasing to $25 thereafter. The 31-mile and 62-mile (or “metric century”) rides will cost $30 for those who register by Feb. 28, increasing to $40 thereafter.

“Vance-Granville’s Endowment Fund is honored to be associated with an event that has become such a success,” said Eddie Ferguson, director of the VGCC Endowment Fund. “This bike ride promotes the importance of exercise and good health. We are pleased to use these proceeds to help our students enrolled in the many Health Sciences programs at VGCC.”

VGCC offers curriculum programs including Associate Degree Nursing, Radiography, Practical Nursing, Histotechnology, Medical Assisting and Pharmacy Technology.

Check-in begins at 7:30 a.m. on April 28. The 62-mile ride starts at 8:30 a.m., the 31-mile ride at 9:30, the 20-mile ride at 10 a.m., and the 10-mile ride at 10:30 a.m. Law enforcement will accompany riders on the 10-mile route.

“This year, we are making changes to create a more fun and festive finish line,” Meyer-Goodwin added. “Instead of riders beginning at approximately the same time, we are staggering the start times to have more riders ending near the same time, in a congratulatory party of smiles, relief and story-swapping.”

Lunch will be provided.

Participating sponsors include Maria Parham Health, Carolina GI Associates PC, OmniPoint General Surgery, Nunnery-Freeman Barbecue, Spoke Cycles and Henderson Fruit & Produce.

For more information, contact Wendy Meyer-Goodwin at tourdevance@gmail.com.

–VGCC–

News 03/26/18

Bob Harrison’s Apprentice


Kaine Riggan is the Executive Director of the Downtown Development Commission in Henderson.  Riggan writes a regular column in The Daily Dispatch newspaper which appears on Wednesday.  WIZS.com is re-publishing this article courtesy of The Daily Dispatch and Kaine Riggan.  The photo was taken in 1988 by Ricky Stilley, and it is used with his permission and the permission of The Daily Dispatch.


I had some great teachers throughout my time in the Vance County School system. Robert Pirie from Zeb Vance and John Sadler from Henderson Junior High particularly took an interest in my writing and encouraged me to do more of it.

But some of the best tips I received on the craft came from a job at WHNC where I found myself under the tutelage of a slightly-built and mildly-ornery newsman named Bob Harrison.

“A very pleasant good afternoon everyone” is how he started the scripts from his antique typewriter with a worn-off E. His hand-written notes on half-sized manila paper were scattered across the desk as he translated them into his 5:00 broadcast script in order of their newsworthiness.

The station’s director, Peg Turner, had hired me as a weekend DJ when I was 16 and by the end of the Summer, it had expanded into filling in on Mondays for this regionally iconic newsman who had been writing and reading the 5:00 news in Henderson since 1955.

As I write this article today from the Downtown Development Commission office, I am only steps away from the doors of the municipal building where he first showed me how to sort through the police reports to scope out the headlines and remove the domestic stories for discretion and respect.

A moment of silence in loving memory of that discretion and respect.

Harrison was a chemistry, physics and math teacher at Henderson High School and had reached national recognition for his new coverage of the Harriett & Henderson Cotton Mill strike in 1959, for which he won several awards.

On many Mondays directly after the broadcast, I recall watching the clear, acrylic “line 1” button on the phone to see if Mr. Harrison had any notes for his understudy. Even after what I might have considered a smooth on-air performance, that unmistakable voice would have a stern tone as he told me to “slow down, and don’t be so damn dramatic about it.”

Wise advice for so many of life’s adventures.

What he didn’t know was that while the records were spinning for my on-air shift, I’d study those retired scripts from his army-green file cabinets and read them out loud in my best Bob Harrison impression, getting the feel for the rise and fall of the sentences. It was not only his delivery, but the writing itself that held a cadence, a meter – a rhythm that was friendly to the reader.

In fact, if you have a moment, listen to a three-minute snippet of Bob Harrison’s 5:00 newscast that I’ve placed on my website at www.KaineRiggan.com. Click on the antique radio on the homepage and it will be sure to make you smile.

It’s also worth mentioning that while collecting the juicy bits from police reports, I often ran into John Rose, who was always gracious and helpful to me. It’s particularly telling of his character that he chose to be kind given that my boss at WHNC had worked for him at WIZS and had recently become competition by moving across town along with the majority of his on-air staff.

Rose would slide me his stack of goodies after he had already sorted through the duds, saving me a lot of time. A lesser-gentleman might have just told me where to stick my asterisks.

I’ll end my Wednesday article in the words of my teacher, Bob Harrison.

“It’s 45 degrees in the Gateway City and the Kerr Lake level is at 299 feet. Today’s news is brought to you by Larry’s Service Company and Ralph’s Supply Line Country Market.”

Henderson Police Department

HPD Statement on Facebook (3-22-18)

The following was published on the afternoon of March 22, 2018 on the Henderson Police Department – NC Facebook page, which is available by clicking here.

As most of you are aware, our community has been struck in the past few weeks with several violent acts. Your officers, along with a multiple SBI agencies, have been working furiously around the clock to solve these heinous acts. We have reached out to other state and federal agencies requesting more assistance than they are currently providing, and have made internal adjustments through overtime expenditures.

We have always utilized external resources to assist and develop cases within our community that fit various criteria. With the assistance of ATF and the U.S. Attorney’s Office, we have federally indicted over 110 individuals in the past six years, there (are) several set to be indicted in the near future, and more to come after that.

For the immediate time, we met again this past week with the U.S. Attorney’s Office to garner further assistance in the prosecution of violent and narcotic offenders within our community and we have also gathered further support and resources from state and federal law enforcement.

Our greatest request is to our community. The families that are suffering need your assistance. We have two unsolved cases, and we need our community to take a stand, and provide information to help solve them. You information can remain anonymous if you wish, by calling Crime Stoppers at (252) 492-1925 or by downloading the P3 app on your smart phone or tablet device. If you wish to speak with someone directly, you can call our main number at (252) 438-4141. There is a cash reward of up to $2,000 for information that leads to the arrest of the people responsible for these crimes.