WIZS Radio Local News Audio 9-10-21 Noon
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WIZS Radio ~ 100.1FM/1450AM
Click Play to Listen. On Air at 8am, 12pm, 5pm M-F
WIZS Radio ~ 100.1FM/1450AM
Vance-Granville Community College cleared unpaid balances for 261 of its students who attended between Spring 2020 and Summer 2021, to the tune of $153,332.14.
VGCC, like other colleges across the state, applied money from the Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund to provide financial relief to students affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.
“It is important for us to help our students remove barriers that keep them from getting the skills they need to better their work or life situations,” said VGCC President Dr. Rachel Desmarais. “Leveraging HEERF funds to help students affected by the pandemic to continue their education is just one of those ways. Our students and our communities matter to us!”
Dr. Levy Brown, VGCC’s vice president of learning, student engagement & success, said the college’s business office and financial aid personnel were key players in making this debt forgiveness a reality. “This move speaks to the college’s true commitment to helping students succeed,” Brown said. “We are glad that our students were able to directly benefit from the HEERF funds and are able to continue their educational and training journey.”
The VGCC admissions and advising teams will work directly with former students affected by this change to help them get re-enrolled at the college and continue pursuing their programs of study. For more information about enrolling or re-enrolling at Vance-Granville, visit www.vgcc.edu.
The Granville County Board of Education will meet for a regular board meeting on Monday, Sept. 13, 2021 at 6 p.m. at the Mary Potter Center of Education, 200 Taylor Street, Oxford. The The livestream link is https://live.myvrspot.com/st?cid=MDhkZj.
The Board also will meet in closed session in accordance with N.C. General Statute 143.318.11 (a)(6), 143-318.11 (a)(3), 143.318.11 (a)(5) and Section 115C-321 for Personnel, and Attorney/Client Privilege.
Public comments for this meeting can be made in one of three ways:
A copy will be distributed to the board of education members. A maximum of 30 minutes in total will be allotted for public comment.
Members of the public wishing to attend the meeting will be required to wear face coverings and cooperate with social distancing requirements. There will be limited seating available.
This information comes from Dr. Stan Winborne, associate superintendent of curriculum & instruction and public information officer for the school district.
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Vance County tobacco growers can cast their vote at the local cooperative extension office on the Tobacco Research Referendum, which will be held on Nov. 18, 2021.
Paul McKenzie, agriculture extension agent for Vance and Warren counties, explained the referendum in a written statement to WIZS News.
McKenzie said the referendum is being held to let tobacco growers decide if they wish to continue a self-assessment program that funds tobacco research. This program, in place since 1991, was established by state law and the law requires that a new referendum be held every six years.
A two-thirds favorable vote will mean that growers will continue to assess themselves to support tobacco research and education. The assessment is 10 cents per 100 pounds of tobacco produced in North Carolina. The funds, about $250,000 annually, are collected at buying stations by the North Carolina Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, and then allocated by the Tobacco Research Commission for research and extension projects for tobacco at NC State University.
To learn more, call the Vance County Extension office at 252.438.8188.
Warren County residents who want help getting rid of abandoned manufactured homes have some extra time to do so – the deadline to participate in the grant program has been extended until Feb. 25, 2022.
The current grant cycle opened on March 1, 2020. Cost to eligible property owners is $305.00 for a singlewide unit ($35.00 demolition permit and $270.00 landfill tipping fees) or $575.00 for a doublewide unit ($35.00 demolition permit and $540.00 landfill tipping fees). County-approved contractors will be reimbursed through the state grant program, which is administered by the county.
The NC Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ), through the State Solid Waste Trust Fund, previously awarded Warren County a $10,000 grant to assist in the deconstruction of abandoned manufactured homes as part of the enforcement of the County’s abandoned manufactured home ordinance.
The county commissioners adopted the original ordinance in May 2008 and then adopted an amendment in September 2009. From 2010 to 2017, Warren County was awarded three grants in three separate cycles through this program to aid eligible property owners in the legal deconstruction and disposal of abandoned singlewide or doublewide units. These grants totaled $89,500 over the seven-year period and resulted in the removal of approximately 50 units from the county.
For more information or to apply to the County program please contact Planning and Zoning Administrator Ken Krulik at 252.257.7027 or KenKrulik@warrencountync.gov. Forms also are available at the Planning/Zoning and Code Enforcement Department, 542 West Ridgeway Street Warrenton, NC 27589.
While Kerr Vance Academy has suffered few disruptions due to Covid, Vance County High School is not as fortunate. According to the school’s athletic director, Joe Sharrow, this Thursday night’s scheduled JV Football game and Friday night’s varsity game and next week’s JV and varsity football games have all been cancelled due to a Covid exposure. The school hopes to be able to make up the games at some point in the near future.
If you are a local business owner employing fewer than 100 workers, there’s a no-interest loan available to you through the regional Kerr-Tar Council of Governments.
The “Open for Business” loans can provide up to $100,000 for qualified businesses who are in the process of getting back up and running after COVID-19 lockdowns and restrictions.
KTCOG Director Diane Cox stated the funds “are intended for use as working capital (rent, payroll, utilities), inventory, and/or equipment during shutdown and reopening.”
Cox notes one major change in qualifying for a loan is that business owners are not required to demonstrate a loss of revenue as a result of the pandemic.
Applicants must provide the following:
“Our goal is to help get local businesses back up and running,” Cox said. Applications and additional materials can be found HERE (https://www.kerrtarcog.org/revolving-loan-program/). Contact Cox at 252.436.2040 or visit https://www.kerrtarcog.org
Thank you for listening to WIZS Radio. Your Community Voice!!
Information included in today’s show audio. Click play below.
Lunchtime Garden Tips – Proper Plant Selection and Proper Planting 9/15 at noon via Zoom
Native Tribes Corn Plot Tour 9/29 – 10:00 am – 12:00 pm
Getting to Know Your Land, starting 10/21
Plan for planting strawberries.
Be on the lookout for fall armyworms.
Pull microstegium before it sets seed.
Do research for fall planting of trees and shrubs.
Hosted by Paul McKenzie with special guest Johnny Coley (Granville/Person Extension Agent)
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