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Local Restaurant Salutes First Responders With Breakfast ‘On The House’

September 13, 2021/by Laura Gabel

The law enforcement presence around JR’s Restaurant 39 this morning shouldn’t have alarmed passers-by – J.R. Stainback and his staff WANTED those firefighters and all other first responders to come by for a free breakfast to say “thank you” for their service.

In addition to all those uniformed first responders in attendance were other city and county officials who were providing well-wishes to Stainback during a ribbon-cutting to recognize the restaurant as a new member of the Henderson-Vance Chamber of Commerce.

Stainback spoke with WIZS News Monday morning and told Trey Snide that this is the second annual Community Servant Breakfast to honor all first responders, from volunteer firefighters to 911 operators and everyone in between who serves as a first responder in Vance County.

“This year is extra special,” Stainback said, given that the country has just marked the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks.

“We’re remembering all the people from 9/11” as well,” he said. But Stainback said he is so appreciative of the community support that he and his restaurant staff have received over the past couple of years during the uncertainty of the pandemic.

“For us to be able to do this, is a testament to this community…2020 was horrible, but the community stuck by us,” he said. When dine-in wasn’t an option, people ordered take-out plates. “The community has really rallied around us,” he said. This breakfast is a result of all that support. “We wouldn’t have been able to do it without all the wonderful support of the customers.”

During the ribbon-cutting, Stainback reiterated the importance of that customer support. “From all of us, from all the customers who support us every day…(this breakfast) is an offering of thanks for everything y’all do,” he told those first responders.

Michele Burgess, Chamber president, and Dr. Levy Brown, chairman of the Chamber board, thanked Stainback for participating in the Chamber

“We want you to know you will continuously have the Chamber’s support,” Brown said, wishing Stainback continued success.

Local city and county officials also were on hand for the event, including Board of Commissioners Chairman Dan Brummitt, Henderson Mayor Eddie Ellington, Police Chief Marcus Barrow and Sheriff Curtis Brame.

“Where would we be without our first responders?” Brame wondered aloud after the ceremony.  “I’m just grateful to be a part of such an awesome team here in Vance County,” he added.

He said it’s not often that all the staffs in the various law enforcement agencies get to spend time in fellowship with one another and the community service breakfast provides that opportunity. “We’re so busy…doing our own jobs – we only see each other at crime scenes, accident scenes – to be able to sit down and break bread together is awesome. I’m overwhelmed with the amount of people that showed up,” he said.

WIZS Radio · TownTalk: Restaurant 39 Honors Local First Responders, Law Enforcement and Fire Depts.
https://wizs.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/JRrest39appreciation091321.jpg 265 504 Laura Gabel https://wizs.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/wizswebsitelogoimage.png Laura Gabel2021-09-13 15:50:592021-09-13 15:50:59Local Restaurant Salutes First Responders With Breakfast ‘On The House’

Town Talk: Kerr-Tar Loan Programs Help Homeowners With Repairs

September 9, 2021/by Laura Gabel

Homeowners in the five-county area that the Kerr-Tar Regional Council of Governments serves can apply for a couple of loan programs for repairs or improvements to their residences.

The deadline to submit applications is early November, and Kerr-Tar finance assistant Katie Connor said the loans are completely forgivable, provided the home remains the property of the homeowner for the life of the loan.

That’s free money, folks.

Kerr-Tar serves Vance, Granville, Warren, Franklin and Person counties and the Urgent Repair Loan Program that it is offering provides up to $10,000 over five years – $2,000 a year, Connor told John C. Rose on Thursday’s Town Talk. Applications are due in the Kerr-Tar office by 5 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 5.

As the name indicates, the repairs do need to be of an urgent nature – a leaky roof,  unsafe floors, ramp installation for the disabled, and HVAC repairs are just a few of the examples of acceptable repairs.

“There’s definitely some flexibility in the (type of) repair that can be done,” Connor said, “but they must be urgent.” The main goal of this loan program is to keep people in their homes, she added.

Visit kerrtarcog.org to see program criteria. There’s money for up to 20 houses in the five-county area, Connor said. This loan is considered an unsecured loan.

In general, homeowners need to be older than 62, and the home must be a stick-built structure – mobile homes and manufactured homes do not qualify. Veterans, disabled persons and families of five or more also would qualify, Connor said. Household income must be less than 50 percent of the median income in North Carolina, she added.

The other loan program is currently available for homeowners in Warren County. The Essential Single-Family Rehabilitation program offers $30,000 for repairs. This is a secured loan, Connor said, which means that qualified applicants would have a deed of trust placed on their property for the duration of the six-year loan. This also is a forgivable loan, which means that no money has to be repaid, provided the homeowner doesn’t sell the property during the life of the loan.

The criteria for both loan programs are very similar, but Connor said household income for ESFR program applicants must be 80 percent of the median income for the state.

Because of the larger amount of the loan, Connor said projects would have to be substantial enough to bring a home up to acceptable standards. “We can’t just do one thing for this house.” There is money for five houses, she said.

The deadline to submit applications for the ESFR program is Monday, Nov. 1 at 5 p.m. All applications should be submitted to the Kerr-Tar office, located at 1724 Graham Ave., Henderson.

The applications and related information are available at kerrtarcog.org. Connor said applications also can be mailed to interested applicants. Simply call 252.436.2040 ext. 6071 and leave your name and mailing address and Connor said she will put the paperwork in the mail. They also are available at area Senior Centers as well as county government offices.

As is often the case, demand usually exceeds the amount of money available, Connor said. And the Kerr-Tar COG must apply each year to receive the funds.

Click Play for complete details and audio.

WIZS Radio · TownTalk: Kerr Tar COG Can Assist With Emergency Home Repairs

 

https://wizs.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Kerr-Tar-COG.png 160 288 Laura Gabel https://wizs.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/wizswebsitelogoimage.png Laura Gabel2021-09-09 16:49:432021-09-09 16:49:43Town Talk: Kerr-Tar Loan Programs Help Homeowners With Repairs
Clay Faulkner

Remembering Clay Faulkner: Ballgames Saturday At Aycock Rec Complex

September 8, 2021/by Laura Gabel

Clay Faulkner loved baseball. He played in high school and on several travel teams, and this Saturday, friends and family will take to the fields at Aycock Recreation Complex to remember the young man with the infectious smile who touched so many lives.

Susan Patterson, Clay’s mother, said it was actually one of her son’s friends who first had the idea of playing a baseball game in memory of Clay.

“It started out to be just a little baseball game,” Patterson told John C. Rose on Town Talk Wednesday. “We ended up with six teams.” She said she’s expecting about 70 players for Saturday’s games.

“I’m blown away by that number,” she said, adding that the interest in participating has been a humbling experience.

Anyone who wants to come to watch the games on Saturday, which are scheduled to begin around 9:30 a.m., will see Clay’s friends round the bases where Clay spent a lot of time in the years that he played ball. Patterson said she just hopes everybody has a good time, in memory of Clay.

His friends, she said, are the reason she and other family members “are still ok.” They showed up for us, she said, after Clay’s death, and she said she hopes that folks do the same on Saturday – just show up at Aycock Rec Complex and enjoy some baseball. “I don’t think I could ever give back what they have given us,” she added. Stories that Clay’s friends have shared with her are precious gifts, she said.

Clay, who died just more than a year ago, really didn’t like being the center of attention, his mother said, adding that he was more interested in doing for others. “He loved everybody and he loved his sport,” she said. He was good at it and he really applied himself to being the best he could be.

He also was a valuable team member at the local Chick-fil-a, and customers remember a polite young man with that incredible smile.
That smile he flashed sometimes meant he’d been up to something, Patterson said.

His smile sometimes got him into trouble, and a lot of times it got him out of trouble. “He was always up to some mischief,” she said.
Patterson said the games Saturday will be one more way for friends and family to remember her son. “I’ve heard several of his friends say that they are very excited to be a part of this,” she said.

“One of the things since he’s been gone that I’ve been afraid of is that people will forget,” Patterson acknowledged. “Just knowing that people haven’t forgotten – knowing that people are still treasuring the memories they have of him – is so special.”

Players should arrive at 9 a.m. at Aycock Recreation Complex. Games will start about 9:30 a.m.

TownTalk Audio. Click Play.

WIZS Radio · TownTalk 9-8-21 Clay Faulkner Baseball

 

https://wizs.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Clay-Faulkner-1.jpg 265 504 Laura Gabel https://wizs.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/wizswebsitelogoimage.png Laura Gabel2021-09-08 16:51:362021-09-08 16:51:36Remembering Clay Faulkner: Ballgames Saturday At Aycock Rec Complex

Town Talk: Hot Sauce Contest And Other Events Provide Entertainment For All

September 7, 2021/by Bill Harris

Fall is still a few weeks away, but this weekend kicks off a bevy of events in Granville County designed to bring guests from near and far to enjoy everything from classic cars to beautiful glass pumpkins.

It all starts with Saturday’s Hot Sauce Contest, and Granville Tourism Director Angela Allen said the 15th annual event is sure to please. She listed numerous events that will be going on throughout September and October on Tuesday’s TownTalk program with host John C. Rose.

Visit https://visitgranvillenc.com/ to find out about events in the county.

Several bands are scheduled to perform throughout the daylong event, and there will be plenty of food and beverage vendors sprinkled along the streets of downtown Oxford, she said.

Of course, one of the main events is the pepper-eating contest, which will take place from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. Winners of the hot sauce contest will be announced at 11:30 a.m. at the Overton Main Stage. Then, Allen said, there will be a special memorial to mark the 20th anniversary of 9/11. American flags are posted along the streets in Oxford already, she said, and after a moment of silence is observed to remember all those whose lives were lost in the terror attacks, local singer Jonathan Abbott will sing The Star-Spangled Banner.

“The cool part about the hot sauce festival,” Allen said, “is that there’s something for everyone.”

The classic car show will be on Little John Street between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m., featuring vintage vehicles and souped-up, tricked out cars and trucks, she said. Children’s games and activities can be found along Williamsboro Street between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m.

Vendors also will be selling their own hot sauces, and Allen said that she considers that to be one of the event’s biggest draws. “It’s just a really good foodie event,” she said. “People love that hot sauce.”

Check out all the details at nchotsaucecontest.com.

But Granville County events don’t stop with the Hot Sauce Contest, Allen said.

The Cedar Creek Gallery in Creedmoor has opened its pumpkin patch, she said. But these pumpkins aren’t grown on vines – they are made of glass and there are hundreds of them ready for purchase at the local art and pottery gallery.

Allen said there’s something for everyone, from traditional orange to beautiful blues and reds – a kaleidoscope of colors. Beginning on Oct. 1, about 100 limited-edition pumpkins will be available for purchase at the gallery or online. Glass blower Lisa Oakley, owner of the gallery, will sign, date and number each work.

Cedar Creek is open every day from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. The pumpkin patch will be open through Nov. 7. And the gallery’s fall festival returns this year for the first two weekends in October, featuring live glass blowing and pottery demonstrations.

Events are planned for outside, she said, adding that face coverings and social distancing protocols will be observed inside the gallery.

“This is a really neat time to be surrounded by art and see how it’s made,” Allen said.

Visit cedarcreekgallery.com to learn more.

A short distance from Creedmoor is Butner and the annual Harvest Show, hosted by the Lord Granville Agricultural Harvest Association, will take place on Oct. 1 and 2 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. This event will be held at the corner of 12th and G streets in Butner and will feature displays of antique farm equipment, a working blacksmith and farm shop, and something Allen called “tractor games.”

Daily admission is $5 or $8 for a two day pass.

Back in the northern part of the county, the 6th annual military history show at the Henderson-Oxford Airport will be held on Saturday, Oct. 23. Proceeds go to the local Veterans Affairs committee, which provides advocacy, resources and services to local military veterans.

In addition to various military displays of uniforms, equipment and vehicles, Allen said there will be helicopter rides and reenactors, in period gear representing soldiers from various wars that the U.S. has been involved in.

And if you’re not too tuckered out from all the activity, this year’s edition of the Granville Haunt Farm is a destination that is a must-see – or a must drive-through.

Grey Blackwell said this year’s theme conjures up images from horror movies. “You’ll get to drive through their version of a gigantic movie screen,” Allen said, “as it comes to life on the other side.”

It’s a total drive-through event again this year, and there will be timed ticketing as well, eliminating long lines and traffic jams during the times that the haunt farm is in operation.

Beginning Friday, Oct. 1, the haunt farm will be open each Friday and Saturday in October.

Visit Granvillehauntfarm.com to learn more.

 

WIZS Radio · Town Talk: Hot Sauce Contest And Other Events Provide Entertainment For All

 

https://wizs.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Granville-County-Tourism-Logo.png 265 504 Bill Harris https://wizs.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/wizswebsitelogoimage.png Bill Harris2021-09-07 17:04:272021-09-07 17:04:27Town Talk: Hot Sauce Contest And Other Events Provide Entertainment For All

TownTalk: History of Kerr Lake

September 2, 2021/by Laura Gabel

(Photo courtesy R.F. Timberlake – Kerr Lake Park Watch on Facebook and Shutter Art Gallery)

It was the flood of 1940 that finally set in motion the creation of the reservoir and dam that we here in North Carolina call Kerr Lake, but our neighbors to the north in Virginia insist on calling Buggs Island Lake.

The Roanoke River has had 17 major floods since Europeans first arrived in this part of the world, said Mark Pace, local historian and North Carolina Room specialist at the Richard Thornton Library in Oxford. The 1940 flood put the Roanoke River a full 42 feet above its regular level, Pace said. If that type of flooding had occurred in downtown Henderson, for example, the only building that would not have been completely and utterly inundated would be the Vance Furniture Company building.

There had been a lot of talk about establishing some sort of flood control along the Roanoke River system for many years leading up to that devastating flood eight decades ago, but the talk turned to action after that event.

Pace and Bill Harris discussed the story behind the lake with two names, its economic impact and its future on the tri-weekly history segment of Town Talk Thursday.

Money to create the reservoir and dam was appropriated in the 1944 Federal Flood Act. Pace said the period between 1935 and 1975 saw the construction of many massive dams in the U.S. During that time, there was “a certain mentality that humans could control nature and use it to our own benefit,” Pace said.

Construction of the lake and dam began in 1947. Albert S. Bugg sold the land where the dam was to be built, a strategic location where the Roanoke River was quite narrow. It took 2,100 workers four and a half years of around-the-clock work to complete the project, Pace noted. That’s three shifts, day and night, 365 days of the year. The $5 million price tag then would be about $975 million in today’s dollars.

Workers excavated all the way to bedrock, placed concrete pillars and created what amounts to an earthen dam. There’s very little concrete in the dam, save the area around the hydroelectric plant, he added.

Longtime U.S. Congressman John H. Kerr from Warren County flipped the switch on Oct. 3, 1952 to officially open the dam and reservoir.

In an upset, Kerr lost his seat to newcomer politician L.H. Fountain in 1952. In a nod to his tireless efforts on the dam and reservoir project, Congress decided to name the reservoir and dam after Kerr.

Folks in Virginia had no problem naming the dam for the North Carolina politician, but they did have a problem naming the reservoir for him, considering three-quarters of the lake lies in the Commonwealth of Virginia. In fact, Pace said, 95 percent of the water in the lake comes from Virginia. “It’s their water,” he said.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers claims the land under the water, the land around the lake shoreline and the flood plain, which totals about 110,000 acres. The Corps owns to the 320 mark – that’s 320 feet above sea level – all around the lake, and lake property owners must refrain from disturbing any Corps-owned property.

“It’s one of the truly significant things that’s happened in our area – the creation of the lake,” Pace said. The lake and dam provide flood control, its original purpose, as well as hydroelectric power. Dominion Energy buys about 58 percent of the electricity the dam generates for its Virginia customers; Progress Energy gets the balance for its North Carolina customers.

And recreation is what Pace called an unintended consequence of the lake. Boating, fishing and camping are popular activities all around Kerr Lake, which boosts the local economy.

But not everyone was initially in favor of building the lake, Pace said. Henderson officials originally were on record in opposition of the lake. Agriculture was king in Vance County back in those days and it was not appealing to think that 10,000 acres of good farmland would become a lake bottom.

“People did not envision what the lake could be,” Pace said. “They didn’t want to lose their homes and their land.”

Almost 400 families lost their homes to the lake. And more than 1,000 graves had to be removed and re-interred in nearby cemeteries.

The lake also took Occoneechee Island, which was located near Clarksville, Va. Pace said the Smithsonian Institution conducted an archaeological survey there before the land was swallowed up by the lake. “That island was probably the most significant Native American archaeological site from Richmond to Raleigh,” he said. In addition to a Native American fort that figured prominently in Bacon’s Rebellion, the trading path passed through that area, too.

The United States doesn’t build dams any more – they’re too expensive. The $100 million price tag for Kerr Lake in the early ‘50s would easily be $1.2 billion today. The life span of a hydroelectric dam like the Kerr Dam is between 100 and 150 years, Pace said. After that, equipment fails, cracks form in the dam, and then it becomes a question of whether it’s cost-effective to repair and replace.

Kerr Dam will celebrate its 69th anniversary next month.

TownTalk: History of Kerr Lake – Click Play 

WIZS Radio · TownTalk: History of Kerr Lake with Historian Mark Pace
https://wizs.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/wizsresize_0000s_0046_Kerr-Lake-Park-Watch.jpg.png 265 504 Laura Gabel https://wizs.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/wizswebsitelogoimage.png Laura Gabel2021-09-02 14:33:002021-09-02 18:26:33TownTalk: History of Kerr Lake

TownTalk: Local Author Michael Elliott Has Faith In The Music Of John Hiatt

September 1, 2021/by Laura Gabel

His name may not be a household name, but John Hiatt is the force behind many popular singers and bands – and Mike Elliott has written a book of the singer-songwriter’s life.

For longtime WIZS listeners, the answer is yes, OUR Mike Elliott. The Oxford native and former program director and operations manager of the radio station, who spent more than a decade on the local airwaves, got caught up in a different medium – writing stories, reviews and now a book which chronicles the life of someone he has admired for many years.

The biography, Have a Little Faith: The John Hiatt Story, is set for release on Sept. 14, but pre-orders can be made now, Elliott told Bill Harris on Wednesday’s Town Talk.

“It’s great to be back on the radio,” Elliott said. He left in June 2001 to continue his career, which ultimately took a turn to print media on sort of a whim.

“I’ve always written for fun,” Elliott said. Then one night while writing, he decided to submit a story to Bitter Southerner, a nationally known online publication. A few months later, he got word that the story he’d written about growing up around music and loving music would be published as part of its folk life collection. That was a few years ago, and Elliott said he branched out from there to include album reviews, among other things.

The research for this biography was done by phone and Skype, Elliott said, thanks to COVID-19. Which turned out to be sort of a blessing in disguise – everyone he wanted to interview would normally have been on the road and hard to catch up with. But not during COVID-19.

“It made people slow down, take stock and reassess,” Elliott said of the pandemic. “And they were home – not touring.  So they said, yes, they’d talk to me.”

Elliott was a teenager when he first learned of Hiatt. He said he was probably watching the music video channel VH1 when he took note of Hiatt’s voice – it was an “amazing raspy, soulful voice,” Elliott recalled.

The more he listened and learned, the more he was enamored of this man called John Hiatt who was writing songs for the likes of Bonnie Raitt, Suzy Boggus and many others.

“The man is a powerhouse – he’s writing all this stuff,” Elliott said, adding that the song “Have a Little Faith in Me” has been recorded by many singers and is considered a current standard.

And it’s that song that Elliott said encapsulates Hiatt’s story of resilience, hitting rock bottom and coming back better and stronger.

His first two records weren’t great, Elliott said, and his record label dropped him. From there, he got gigs playing at colleges – even standing atop a table in a cafeteria singing for students eating all around him.

There were some other twists and turns that brought him to seek treatment for substance abuse and addiction – read the book to find out details – and that’s when he wrote “Have a Little Faith in Me.”

Hiatt, sober since 1984, was writing it about himself, Elliott said. “(That song) gave him the strength he needed to go forward.”
Big-time names like Bob Dylan, B.B. King, Eric Clapton, Buddy Guy all have recorded Hiatt’s songs. And although his name may not be a household name, Hiatt’s songs are probably familiar to many.

Hiatt’s story isn’t the typical rags-to-riches type story of a musician who hit it big, lost it all, then climbed back up the ladder of success. No, Elliott said, Hiatt’s story is about someone who was “kind of fair to middlin’, cleaned up and became artistically huge.”

Elliott said he was very pleased when Hiatt’s management team helped clear the way to talk to the artist himself. “I was planning to write the book without him…but I did want his personal take.” He said he was indebted to the 69-year-old for his contributions to the book

“When he started opening up about his life, he gave me stuff that he’d never given anyone before. He felt like it was time to just tell it,” Elliott recalled, for which he is grateful.

You can place pre-orders for Elliott’s book from online retailers or visit michael-elliott.com to find a link to purchase. The book also will be available on Audible. Listeners to the audio format may recognize a familiar voice  – Elliott will be reading the introduction.

 

WIZS Radio · TownTalk: Local Author Michael Elliott Has Faith In The Music Of John Hiatt

 

https://wizs.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Michael-Elliott_TownTalk_090121.jpg 265 504 Laura Gabel https://wizs.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/wizswebsitelogoimage.png Laura Gabel2021-09-01 16:55:452021-09-02 09:40:45TownTalk: Local Author Michael Elliott Has Faith In The Music Of John Hiatt

TownTalk: MerleFest Brings Music And Families Together

August 31, 2021/by Laura Gabel
It started as a simple attempt to raise money to build a unique garden on a community college campus in western North Carolina three decades ago, but it has evolved into a favorite event for music lovers all over the region.

Fans were bummed out last year when MerleFest, the annual Wilkes County music festival, was cancelled because of the COVID-19 pandemic. But plans are well under way for this year’s 33rd festival, and festival director Ted Hagaman spoke with Bill Harris on Town Talk Tuesday about the history and the significance of the event, which runs from Sept. 16-Sept. 19.

This year, attendees will have to show proof of full COVID-19 vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test within 72 hours of entering the venue, Hagaman said.

“This has been a challenge for sure,” he said, of establishing safety protocols for such a large event. “We’ve had some wonderful people to work with,” he said, praising state and local health authorities for their help in making sure everyone is safe.

Despite all the safety measures, he conceded they’re not foolproof. There are full details of the safety protocols on the merlefest.org website.

“We want to make sure we’re doing everything in a safe manner,” Hagaman said. Having a safe and family-friendly event has always been an important part of MerleFest. “We will go to the n-th degree to keep people safe.”

Hageman said it’s not too late to register to volunteer for the concert – signing up for just a four-hour shift gets you in to the whole concert. Hageman said the concert relies on volunteers for ushering, serving food or parking cars.

Visit merlefest.org to find out about ticket packages, logistics, lineups and more.

This year’s lineup includes LeAnn Rimes, Mavis Staples, Sam Bush, Melissa Etheridge, Sturgill Simpson, to name just a few. The variety of music styles reflects Watson’s vision of the festival being a “traditional plus” festival – the traditional music of the Appalachian region, “plus” any other music that Watson wanted to play or hear.

The seed for MerleFest was sown back in 1988 when a horticulture teacher at Wilkes Community College wanted to install a garden for the senses on campus. It was suggested to him that he call on legendary musician Doc Watson, who lived in nearby Deep Gap, for help. Watson agreed to help, with two conditions, Hagaman said.

The first condition was that the concert would be named in memory of his son and the second condition was that Watson would “bring some of his friends” to help him pull off the one-night, two-hour concert.

“The only problem was, Doc had so many friends that accepted the invitation, there wasn’t enough time to get them all on stage,” Hagaman said. So Watson’s wife, Rosa Lee, suggested a multi-day format. From its humble beginnings of having an audience of a couple of thousand, tens of thousands of music fans today flock to Wilkesboro to hear dozens of acts on 13 stages during four days of non-stop music.

“I was fortunate enough to work closely with Doc Watson before he passed away,” Hagaman said. He has been the festival director for 16 years and has overseen all aspects of the organization.

In addition to the live music, MerleFest sponsors the Chris Alston Song Writing Contest. This year marks the 29th year of the contest, which Hagaman said routinely receives close to 1,000 submissions. Judges create four categories of songs and then select a winner from each category.

The Little Pickers stage for children will be held again this year, but other activities for children are not scheduled, in keeping with COVID-19 safety protocols.

(This is not a paid ad. WIZS Radio does air MerleFest radio commercials as an affiliate of NCN News as the ads are part of their audio. For this, WIZS indirectly benefits as an affiliate.)

Click Play for TownTalk Audio

WIZS Radio · TownTalk: Merlefest Brings Music And Families Together
https://wizs.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/MF_DATES_MMM_WW_Hor_BK_new_504x265.png 265 504 Laura Gabel https://wizs.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/wizswebsitelogoimage.png Laura Gabel2021-08-31 16:47:412021-08-31 20:13:16TownTalk: MerleFest Brings Music And Families Together

TownTalk: Voluntary Ag Districts Benefit Local Farmers

August 30, 2021/by Laura Gabel

Statistics back up the anecdotal evidence – rural landscapes, once dotted with crops and livestock pastures, are changing. The seemingly endless rows of corn, cotton or tobacco have been replaced with homes and subdivisions right here in our own back yards.

North Carolina has a program that serves to protect and preserve existing farmland. Of the state’s 100 counties, 90 have established voluntary agricultural districts as a way to preserve farmland and to let prospective neighbors know what it means to live near a working farm.

Granville County is one of the newest participants in the VAD. Kim Woods spoke with John C. Rose on Monday’s Town Talk to share details about the program. Woods said that North Carolina ranks in the top five states in the nation in terms of loss of agricultural land in recent years.

Woods is the livestock agent for N.C. Cooperative Extension in Granville and Person counties. The Granville office is the lead agency for establishing the VAD, she said. The former unit director started the process, and after he retired, Woods said she continued to work with the local advisory board to finish the process.

Many North Carolina counties have a rich history of agriculture and farming, and VADs are a way “for counties in North Carolina to promote and enhance agriculture,” she said. There’s a pride factor involved, too, in promoting the importance of agriculture.

“Agricultural land provides our food and fiber that we need to survive,” Woods said. It also preserves desirable greenspace in the landscape, she noted.

In addition, the VAD offers some protection of farmland, ensuring that it will remain in use as productive farmland. But a VAD also serves to inform people who may be looking to purchase property in the county just where those farms are located.

Woods has lived on a farm her whole life and she and her husband currently live on that farm in nearby Orange County. And she well knows that farming is not an 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. proposition – the drone of irrigation pumps running late into the night to deliver crop-saving water, she said, is just one of the many sounds a farm may produce. The dust from tractors in the summertime, bawling calves at weaning and other sights, sounds and smells that emanate from a working farm are just part of the territory.

“I don’t see a negative to this program,” Woods said, adding that her Orange County farm is in the VAD. “I wouldn’t be promoting something I don’t agree with,” she said.

The enrollment process is simple. Landowners complete a basic application that is submitted to the local VAD advisory board. Upon approval, the application passes through a couple of other county groups – mostly a formality. There is no cost to enroll, but Woods said a VAD sign would be available for $25; additional signs to mark other tracts would cost $50 each.

Although the farmer agrees to keep his land in agricultural use for 10 years when he or she enrolls in the VAD, that decision can be reversed at any time, Woods said, without penalty.

Landowners also sign a conservation agreement that goes along with the application. Farmers enrolled in the VAD can get a higher reimbursement rate on cost-share programs to improve their land, such as fencing livestock out of ponds and creeks.

A VAD can reduce the possibility of new neighbors complaining about living too close to a farm – Woods said the county’s computerized GIS will let prospective buyers know if the land they’re interested in is within one mile of a VAD-enrolled farm.

According to its website, there are 12,000 farms currently enrolled in VADs across the state. Granville and Warren counties have “regular” VAD ordinances; Franklin County established an enhanced VAD, which means that landowners have the choice to upgrade their commitment to the VAD; they may not un-enroll within the 10-year period, but must wait until that time has elapsed.

Vance County does not have a VAD ordinance.

To learn more about the Granville VAD, contact Woods by phone 919.603.1350 or via email at Kim_woods@ncsu.edu. Visit http://www.ncagr.gov/Farmlandpreservation/VAD/ to learn more about the statewide program.

 

WIZS Radio · TownTalk: Voluntary Ag Districts Benefit Local Farmers

 

 

https://wizs.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/NC-Coop-Extension-Granville-County.png 265 504 Laura Gabel https://wizs.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/wizswebsitelogoimage.png Laura Gabel2021-08-30 12:42:002021-08-30 14:28:16TownTalk: Voluntary Ag Districts Benefit Local Farmers

TownTalk: Vance GOP Chair Barrier Planning 9/11 Memorial Event

August 26, 2021/by Laura Gabel

So many Americans can remember exactly where they were and what they were doing on that morning almost 20 years ago when the 9/11 attacks occurred.

When Jimmy Barrier realized that there were no local plans to commemorate the 20th anniversary of that fateful day, he wasn’t about to let the day go unnoticed.

Barrier, chairman of the Vance County GOP, has planned a public memorial event on Saturday, Sept. 11 in Henderson to honor those whose lives were lost in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania.

“It was almost like war,” Barrier told John C. Rose on Thursday’s Town Talk, as he recalled the events of that day in 2001. “It was unfathomable to people – people were horrified by it and didn’t know what was going on.”

Anyone old enough to remember may have similar feelings as Barrier, but for those who may be too young to remember, Barrier said he wants to hear about what they think about the events of 9/11.

The public is invited to attend the event, which will begin at 10 a.m. and should run until about noon. It will be held outside the American Legion hut on Garnett Street and will include music and several different speakers, from local youth to state-level politicians.

Barrier said it’s actually an event for military veterans, firefighters, law enforcement officers and other front-line workers – people in these fields “who right now are the backbone and strength of America.”

— TownTalk Audio, Click Play —

WIZS Radio · TownTalk 08-26-21 Jimmy Barrier Local 911 Remembrance

One of the speakers is Will White, a 15-year-old from Henderson. Barrier said it’s important to hear the perspective of someone who wasn’t even alive in 2001.

Although Barrier said he is still working out details of the morning’s agenda, he said local pastor Bruce LeGates will offer an opening prayer, and Stephanie Cole is scheduled to sing the National Anthem. Steve Wilson is set to sing the Lee Greenwood hit “God Bless the U.S.A.” and Ronnie Lassiter, a retired firefighter and Navy veteran also is scheduled to speak.

If his schedule permits, Trey Allen, a UNC law professor and a candidate for the N.C. Supreme Court, will pay a visit to the event, Barrier noted.

And he’s invited Police Chief Marcus Barrow and Vance Sheriff Curtis Brame, as well as members of all the volunteer fire departments to come and have a presence at the event.

WIZS will broadcast the event live.

https://wizs.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/911-Memorial.png 265 504 Laura Gabel https://wizs.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/wizswebsitelogoimage.png Laura Gabel2021-08-26 17:57:282021-08-26 18:25:46TownTalk: Vance GOP Chair Barrier Planning 9/11 Memorial Event
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TownTalk: Parolees and those on Probation Can Register to Vote in NC

August 25, 2021/by WIZS Staff

DEVELOPING…

State and local boards of elections are bound to comply with a court order issued Monday that restores voting privileges to convicted felons who are no longer incarcerated but are still on parole or probation.

Patrick Gannon, public information director for the N.C. Board of Elections told WIZS News Wednesday, “We are required to comply with court orders, so those who are (on) probation, parole, or post-release supervision are able to re-register to vote at this time.”

If the ruling stands, more than 55,000 people in North Carolina would be allowed to re-register to vote, Gannon noted. A three-judge panel of Wake County Superior Court entered a preliminary injunction Monday to restore voting rights to all North Carolinians on felony probation, parole or post-release supervision.

The ruling stems from a lawsuit Community Success Initiative v. Moore, which claimed that convicted felons who were no longer incarcerated but still on parole or probation, were unfairly denied restoration of their right to vote. Previously, convicted felons no longer in jail or prison were not allowed to register to vote if they were still on parole or probation.

Gannon said state elections board attorneys are reviewing the decision.

“If a court were to reverse the preliminary injunction, we would need to work with the department of public safety to update the felon data that we receive,” Gannon said.

It would fall to county boards of elections to perform regular list maintenance to remove ineligible voters.

Boards of elections and the department of public safety have regular voter roll list maintenance and automated checks of new registrants, Gannon said.

He said elections officials do not keep numbers of felon voters by county, so it is unclear just how many potential felon voters reside in the four-county area.

Melody Vaughan, deputy director of the Vance County Board of Elections, told WIZS News Tuesday that, as far as the upcoming municipal elections in Middleburg and Kittrell are concerned, only residents who live inside the towns’ city limits may cast ballots.

Local boards, including Vance, are waiting for guidance from the state board to allow this disenfranchised population to regain voter privileges. If and when that happens, Vaughan said individuals have until Oct. 8 to register. There is no same-day registration for the Nov. 2 elections, Vaughan said.

TOWNTALK AUDIO HERE

WIZS Radio · TownTalk 08-25-21 Felons Voting in NC
https://wizs.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/towntalk.png 265 504 WIZS Staff https://wizs.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/wizswebsitelogoimage.png WIZS Staff2021-08-25 16:27:512021-08-25 17:23:42TownTalk: Parolees and those on Probation Can Register to Vote in NC
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