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Bo Carson Named Airport Manager of Triangle North Executive Airport

100.1 FM / 1450 AM WIZS; Local News broadcasts M-F 8am, 12pm, 5pm

-Press Release, Franklin County Government

After serving as Interim Airport Manager for nearly two years, Bo Carson has accepted the position as Airport Manager of Triangle North Executive Airport.

“Mr. Carson’s vision for the airport coupled with his demonstrated track record in economic development position him well for leading Triangle North Executive Airport” commented Angela L. Harris, Franklin County Manager.

Mr. Carson first came to Franklin County in July 2016 serving as Existing Industry Coordinator with the Economic Development Office. He continued his economic development work and stepped in as Interim Airport Manager of Triangle North Executive Airport in January 2018 after the untimely passing of Stephen Merritt.

Mr. Carson has over 20 years of experience and expertise in economic development and was selected as Airport Manager from a pool of 21 applicants. Prior to his work in Franklin, he served in several capacities within the Research Triangle Regional Partnership in Raleigh including Vice President of Business Development, Vice President of Information Services and Director of Research.

Mr. Carson received a Bachelor’s Degree in Geography from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1997, is a graduate of North Pitt High School, and currently resides in Wake Forest with his wife Lori and three children.

Cardinal Innovations Healthcare

Cardinal Innovations to Host Discussion on Guardianship, Alternatives for IDD

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Join Cardinal Innovations Healthcare on Tuesday, November 19, 2019, for a discussion on guardianship, including alternatives for individuals with intellectual or developmental disabilities.

The session will be held at Baskerville Funeral Home, 104 S. Chestnut St. in Henderson, from 6 – 7 p.m.

Participants will learn about guardianship, when it is appropriate, how to start the process, the guardian’s rights and responsibilities, available alternatives and strategies to help individuals who do not meet the criteria for incompetency but need assistance to live safely in their communities.

For more information, please contact:

Baskerville Funeral Home, LLC – (252) 430-6824 or cbaskervillefuneralhome@gmail.com

Monae Davis, Member Engagement Specialist, Cardinal Innovations Healthcare – Monae.Davis@cardinalinnovations.org.

West End Baptist

West End Community Watch to Meet Nov. 19

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-Information courtesy Claire Catherwood, West End Community Watch

West End Community Watch will meet on Tuesday, November 19, 2019, at 6:30 p.m., in the Fellowship Hall of West End Baptist Church on Dabney Drive. The speaker will be Shauna Gentry, Director of the Vance County Health Department.

Police will be present to give reports and hear concerns.

Please plan to attend. All are welcome!

Granville County Public Schools

GCPS Aims to Increase Number of Students Receiving School Breakfast

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-Information courtesy Dr. Stan Winborne, Public Information Officer, Granville County Public Schools

Did You Know?

1 in 5 kids in North Carolina grows up in a family that struggles with hunger.

  • Here’s what that means: In some families, the pantry is completely empty. In others, mom skips dinner a few nights a week so the kids can have something to eat in the evening. In others, families are making impossible decisions between paying the rent and buying groceries.
  • In Granville County, we fed 647,358 lunches but only 300,670 breakfasts for the 2018-2019 school year.
  • When kids aren’t getting the consistent nutrition they need, it’s harder to focus in class. Test scores drop, and students are more likely to miss class time because they’re in the nurse’s office with headaches or stomach aches. Discipline problems rise and attendance levels fall.

The Solution: School Meals

  • One of the most effective ways to make sure hungry kids are getting the nutrition they need is through school meal programs like school breakfast and lunch.
  • When kids eat school breakfast, it means calmer classrooms, better attendance rates and ultimately more time for learning.
  • Yet in North Carolina, school breakfast only reaches 58% of the kids who may need it.
  • One way to make sure more kids are starting their day with breakfast is by serving breakfast after the bell, making it more easily accessible to any child that needs it by overcoming common barriers like late buses, busy morning schedules and stigma.
  • The Granville County Public Schools Child Nutrition Department is working hard to implement alternative ways to get students to eat breakfast.
NC Coop Extension

Cooperative Extension with Paul McKenzie 11/06/19

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Home and Garden 11/05/19

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News 11/06/19

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Downtown Henderson

Town Talk 11/05/19: Downtown Henderson Continues on Path to Main Street Status

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Kathy Walters, director of the Henderson-Vance Downtown Development Commission (DDC), was on Tuesday’s edition of WIZS’ Town Talk program to discuss the progress being made on reestablishing Henderson and the downtown area to North Carolina Main Street status.

Returning to the DDC in September after previously serving as director in the 90s, Walters said the most important thing downtown can do is to “strategically position ourselves for methodical, careful movement towards the revitalization of this area.”

For the past several years, the DDC director’s position has been funded on a part-time, contract-only basis, an arrangement that prevented Downtown Henderson, in part, from being reinstated in the Main Street Program.

“We are extremely delighted and fortunate to have Kathy on full-time with the DDC again,” said Board Chair Benny Finch in a prior interview with WIZS. “She’s had about 10 years of experience working with the City and she’s very familiar with Downtown Henderson and the Main Street Program.”

A part of the Main Street Program from the mid-1980s until approximately 2010, a lapse in the completion of requirements cost the downtown area the coveted distinction.

“It is requiring a great deal of work from the Board, myself and the City,” Walters said of the reinstatement process. “The main thing is that we are organized, dedicated and working on the Main Street approach.”

One of the more time-consuming tasks, according to Walters, is the Main Street requirement that the City submit an inventory of each building in downtown, including photographs from all sides and an account of the building’s history/purpose.

The benefits, including technical assistance with building restoration and access to grant money, are well worth all of the efforts and are a great starting point for revitalization, according to Walters.

While the assistance the Main Street Program can offer would go a long way to attracting new businesses to downtown and helping existing businesses renovate, Walters said the growth of the area ultimately comes down to the “sustainability of the business and support of the community.”

To hear Walters’ interview in its entirety, please click the play button below. Listen live to WIZS’ Town Talk Monday-Friday at 11 a.m. on 1450AM, 100.1 FM or online at www.wizs.com.

United Way of Vance Co. to Hold Quarter Auction, Dinner Event – Nov. 9

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-Information courtesy Terri Hedrick, United Way of Vance County Board Member

The United Way of Vance County will host a “Quarter Auction” event this Saturday, November 9, 2019, to raise funds for nonprofits and public service agencies serving disadvantaged families in our community.

The event will be held at Kerr Lake Country Club, 600 Hedrick Dr. in Henderson, and will include a soup and sandwich supper.

Doors open at 5:30 p.m. – Meal begins at 6 p.m. – Auction begins at 7 p.m.

Tickets are $10 and include meal and one paddle. Extra paddles will be sold for $5. Desserts and soft drinks will be sold for $1.

All bids are four quarters or less, so bring several rolls of quarters! This is a fun and inexpensive way to get great stuff!

Purchase your tickets today! Call the United Way at (252) 492-8392 or email unitedwayofvance@gmail.com.

You may also contact one of the following United Way Board Members for tickets and more information:

Jane Haithcock  – (252) 432-3778

Terri Hedrick – (919) 702-4329

Tommy Haithcock – (252) 432-3606

Heidi Owen – (252) 432-1813

Desiree Brooks – (252) 432-4847

 

KVA’s ‘Spartan Seafood Festival’ to be Held Sat.; Ticket Deadline is Wed.

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-Information courtesy Anne Marie White, KVA

Kerr Vance Academy will hold a “Spartan Seafood Festival” at Hillside Farms, located on Stagecoach Road in Vance County, on Saturday, November 9, 2019, beginning at 6 p.m.

Come out and enjoy all-you-can-eat steamed oysters, steamed shrimp, fried fish, BBQ, all the fixins’, beer, wine, tea and soft drinks for $55 per person.

Tickets must be purchased by 12 p.m. on Wednesday and are available in the KVA business office or by calling (252) 492-0018.

This event is fun-filled, delicious and open to the entire community, so bring your appetite and your oyster knives!

(This is not a paid advertisement)