Sallie Clark: El Paso County commissioner makes the big time

El Paso County Commissioner Sallie Clark this month became president of the National Association of Counties, the first Colorado commissioner to ever hold the post. (Provided by NACo/Sallie Clark)

El Paso County Commissioner Sallie Clark this month became president of the National Association of Counties. Clark, of Colorado Springs, is the first Colorado commissioner to ever hold the post. (Provided by NACo/Sallie Clark)

As the daughter of a mayor, Sallie Clark answered plenty of calls at home from people wanting to talk to her dad about barking dogs and garbage pickup and potholes, but she never thought she’d go into politics.

“I was really shy growing up and I didn’t like to talk to people,” she said. “Obviously, I’ve gotten over that.”

Obviously.

Clark, an El Paso County commissioner, this month became president of the National Association of Counties — the first Colorado commissioner ever elected to the post. For the next year, she’ll do a lot of talking as she travels the country.

“It’s so important to have a strong voice for counties on issues that impact our citizens and local government,” she said. “NACo is focused on pushing back against unfunded federal mandates and over-regulation.”

Seal Beach Mayor Thomas Blackman and his daughter, Sallie, in the 1970s. (Provided by Sallie Clark)

Seal Beach Mayor Thomas Blackman and his daughter, Sallie, in the 1970s. (Provided by Sallie Clark)

Clark was born in Long Beach, Calif., in 1959 to Thomas and Barbara Blackman. Her dad taught in the Long Beach public school district for 40 years and served as mayor of Seal Beach in the 1970s.

During his tenure, the city built a fire station and a police station, put bike trails on the highway and oversaw a downtown renovation project. She noted that those issues still resonate today. Her father, she said, “really believed in the vision of communities and how government could help build communities.”

Thomas Blackman grew up in Pueblo and Clark spent summers on her grandmother’s chicken farm outside the city. When she and Welling Clark married in 1980, they spent a part of their honeymoon in Colorado.

“I’ve always loved Colorado,” she said.

After her husband left the Navy, the couple moved to Colorado Springs in 1985 and opened up the Holden House 1902 Bed and Breakfast. Clark sat on the Colorado Travel and Tourism Authority Board, and helped start a statewide bed-and-breakfast association.

She became a neighborhood activist when the city manager and the fire chief proposed closing Fire Station No. 3 on West Colorado Avenue. She became president of the Organization of Westside Neighbors, which was successful in keeping the station open.

El Paso County Commissioner Sallie Clark and her husband, Welling, at the National Association of Counties  meeting in July in Charlotte, N.C. (Provided by NACo and Clark)

El Paso County Commissioner Sallie Clark takes the oath of office as president of the National Association of Counties at its annual meeting in Charlotte, N.C., in July. Her husband, Welling Clark, is behind her. (Provided by NACo and Clark)

Clark ran for mayor of Colorado Springs in 1999 and lost, then successfully ran for the City Council. She again tried for mayor, in 2003, and lost, and then was elected county commissioner in 2004.

“I love this job — although maybe not every day,” Clark said, with a laugh. “You have to make decisions and somebody is going to be unhappy. Sometimes both sides are unhappy. But the job has allowed me to do all kinds of things, especially on issues relating to preventing child abuse and neglect, public health and public safety issues.”

Among those who praise Clark’s efforts is state Rep. Pete Lee, a Colorado Springs Democrat. Clark is a Republican.

“Sallie Clark is clearly one of the hardest working public servants in El Paso County,” he said. “She digs in. She is completely energized and that’s important.”

On the gubernatorial campaign trail in 2010, Clark frequently was mentioned as a likely running mate for Republican Scott McInnis, but he lost the primary. If at one time she didn’t like talking to people, it didn’t come across when she stumped for McInnis.

“I’ve talked to a lot of women in government and many say they were shy growing up,” Clark said. “But then something enthusiastically gets us, we’re on a mission and we forget all that shyness, leave it behind and move forward with whatever we have to do.”

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Putting her print on the industry | The Sun News – MyrtleBeachOnline.com

Growing up in a fishing village in Peterhead, Scotland, Trish Sports could not have envisioned she would one day become the first female in the 84-year history of the Printing Industry of the Carolinas, Inc. (PICA) to chair its board of directors.

Sports, who has served as general manager of Sheriar Press in Myrtle Beach since Sept. 11, 2002, appears unintimidated stepping into a role dominated by men since establishment of the trade association in 1931. PICA, headquartered in Charlotte, N.C., provides both educational seminars and services to 232 members in the printing and graphic arts industry. As board chairwoman for the next year, Sports said she plans to focus on maintaining membership to keep the organization strong.

“PICA is very important to our industry because it provides a platform to go to for questions about our industry,” Sports said. “It helps us to stay aware of trends, network with vendors and even provides discounts with vendors and insurance suppliers.”

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Members of the Printing Industry of the Carolinas

The strongest aspect of PICA, Sports said, is the educational component it offers with access to webinars and white papers and because of its ties with the Printing Industry of America, an organization that recently awarded Sheriar Press three certificates of merit out of a national field of 2,400 entries.

Sports said as chairwoman of the 20-member PICA board, she will run the quarterly board meetings and help pull together the organization’s 50th anniversary awards event in April, while focusing all year on membership development.

“Last year the board adopted a three-year strategy to keep membership growing. Our goal is to show them [members] a return on their dues and try to get them more engaged,” she said.

Sports came to America in 1986 after marrying an American who was working in the oil industry in Scotland following an oil boom that overshadowed the area’s fishing industry. She worked in the travel department of an oil company, arranging travel for Spanish and American pipeline workers and later sold tools to companies for use on the oilrigs.

She moved to Myrtle Beach in 1987 with her husband, Philip Sports of Florence, who died eight years ago from lung cancer. Initially employed with a printing company in Florence, Trish Sports found work in 1988 with Sheriar Press in customer service by “sheer accident,” she said.

“This country has given me a lot of opportunity. This is home.” Trish Sports, general manager of Sheriar Press and chairwoman of the Printing Industry of the Carolinas

Her work ethic allowed her to rise through the ranks at the printing business moving into scheduling and later accepting her current role as general manager, although she said she still wears many hats.

“It’s a team effort here. We all do a little bit of everything,” she said of the company’s 20 employees, several who have been with the company for 30 and even 40 years.

Sports said working in printing is not boring because there are different jobs to complete daily. She added that changes in technology and even the affects of humidity on the printing process are challenges that keep the work interesting.

Founded in 1971, Sheriar Press offers full-service commercial printing with both offset and digital capabilities. The privately owned company that opened in 1971 provides services to Grand Strand clients and to clients as far away as Wilmington, Charlotte and even New York.

“Our clients include Coastal Carolina University, the hospitality industry in Myrtle Beach, and even the Pelicans,” Sports said. “We have quite a varied customer list that also includes McLeod Hospital in Florence.”

Sheriar Press President and owner Andy Lesnik, who formerly chaired the PICA board, said Sports is a “great asset” to both his company and the PICA board.

“It’s truly gratifying to see her reach this milestone in her career,” Lesnik said. “As the first woman chair of our board, Trish will bring a different leadership style and a new way of looking at issues.”

Sports joined the PICA board after Lesnik cycled off as board chairman, she said. “It is interesting to be part of a group of owners and builders of companies. Hearing their stories has been a great plus for me. It’s a network of people who don’t mind sharing. It’s not like you are in competition with each other.”

With a busy work schedule, taking trips to visit family in Scotland are limited but Sports remains in touch with her parents and siblings and stays busy outside of work with her boyfriend and her two Boykin Spaniels. The daughter of a commercial fisherman, she loves spending time on the water at Lake Moultrie.

Having given up her British citizenship in 1998 to become an American citizen, Sports said she is glad she did it. She plans to remain in the U.S. and will continue her efforts to keep Sheriar Press running strong with a leadership style she said her boss has called “fearless.”

“This country has given me a lot of opportunity,” she said. “This is home.”

Contact Angela Nicholas at aknicholas@sc.rr.com.

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Boots to Business waiver for veterans starting new businesses in WV takes …

Beginning July 1, veterans wanting to start a new business in West Virginia will get a break in up-front, administrative costs. 

The new “Boots to Business” waiver, an initiative that passed the House and Senate unanimously during the 2015 legislative session, will exempt a new business and the annual report filing fee for the first four years that equals a potential savings of up to $200. The Secretary of State’s Office is absorbing the cost of waiving the fees.

The initiative was endorsed by the West Virginia Veterans Coalition.

According to the Small Business Administration, veterans are 45 percent more likely to be self-employed than those with no military experience.

“The military has consistently created leaders throughout the history of this country,” Secretary of State Natalie Tennant said in a news release. “These highly-skilled individuals are already leaders in their communities and I am confident will also become leaders in the business industry. I believe wholeheartedly that investing in our veterans and their dreams through the Boots to Business waiver is a worthwhile investment.”

James McCormick, a representative of the Veterans Coalition, started a business after completing military service, and said the measure will encourage other veteran-owned businesses to come to West Virginia.

“It will carry the most weight outside the state,” McCormick said.

Sen. Daniel Hall, R-Wyoming, was the bill’s lead sponsor in the Senate.

“By eliminating these fees for a short period of time, we can give the people who have served our country a chance for, hopefully, a new beginning and assist them in being able to grow their businesses to a productive entity for the betterment of West Virginia,” he said.

Delegate Joshua Nelson, R-Boone, also spoke in support of the initiative.

“Allowing veterans a few years of relief of business fees will not only stimulate the economy by providing an incentive for new job creation, but also help combat the veteran suicide rate by encouraging those that have served us the possibility and the dignity of creating jobs,” he said.

Veterans can begin filing and taking advantage of the new Boots to Business waiver beginning July 1.

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Agri-tourism can boost bottom line for West Virginia farmers – Business …

Corn mazes and pumpkin patches provide additional revenue and interest on farms across West Virginia when harvest time has long past.

But other agri-tourism opportunities exist, as a group of West Virginia producers found out during a four month class that culminated on a two-day bus tour to Virginia and North Carolina this spring.

The trip was made possible in part by a grant through West Virginia University. It was a culmination of classes that were available at WVU’s campus in Morgantown, the Erma Byrd Higher Education Center in Beaver and an online course.

“We covered everything about agri-tourism (in the classes),” said Cindy Martel, marketing specialist for the West Virginia Department of Agriculture. “They did a lot before they ever got on a bus.” 

“It became a classroom on wheels.”

Other partners were utilized in the training as well, including the West Virginia Division of Tourism, the WVU College of Agriculture, independent farmers and agri-tourism experts outside the state.

Tour participants were interested in implementing agri-tourism on their own farms.

“Farms can provide an experience that travelers are looking for,” Martel said. “It’s ripe for tourism. People want to learn about where their food comes from.”

There was one stop in Virginia and stops in the Triangle area of northeast North Carolina — Raleigh, Chapel Hill and Durham.

A research farm in Raleigh that doubles as festival grounds was one of the stops, along with a corn maze, a large produce wholesaler and a farmer’s market that hosts an onsite kitchen. Another stop included Celebrity Dairy, an agri-tourism operation in Silver City, North Carolina, that has an inn with bed and breakfast-style lodging, a goat farm and customized catering.

Brit and Fleming Pfann own Celebrity Dairy and were more than willing to share tips with the folks from the Mountain State.

“They told us that we were one of their favorite stops on the tour,” said Brit Pfann, who has been in business with his wife at the dairy turned tourist stop for 28 years. “We were their last stop, and hosted a lunch for them. 

“There’s a lot available in our area, and we’re one of the old-timers. People love to bring their children up and see the goats. We’ve been a very public place all along.”

Question-and-answer sessions at each stop provided opportunities for gleaning information that could be brought back to the Mountain State. 

“Our folks got to make valuable contacts there,” Martel said. “They were set up with a meeting with the North Carolina agri-tourism contact persons.”

The response was positive, with many participants incorporating ideas in their businesses already, Martel said.

“It was a great partnership and really fits (Agriculture) Commissioner Walt Helmick’s vision, who sees agri-tourism as a real valuable enterprise,” Martel said. 

Doolarie Singh-Knights, a WVU Extension Specialist, was a leader in the classes and also participated in the trip.

“It was one of the highlights of my career thus far,” Singh-Knights said. “We saw the lights come on for a lot of people, in terms of how to work together. There was four months of training and this was sort of a capstone tour.” 

Participants learned to think in terms of “clustering” themselves together when possible, with several attractions in one area being more likely to draw tourists than a singular one.

“As a business, you usually want to stand out,” Singh-Knights explained. “But you also want to harness that power of working in cooperation with similar businesses.

“We want people that are within close proximity to come together and form clusters. If you have people from the same area offering an agri-tourism product on different farms, you will be able to attract more visitors in that area because there are a lot more offerings in that area.” 

More opportunities will be presented in the future for more interested participants, with a November target date to have cluster-type trainings in Greenbrier Valley area and one in the New River Gorge area, according to Singh-Knights. 

Lisa Sickler, owner of Sickler Farm in Barbour County, was one of the participants in the classes who also took the trip south. Her farm regularly hosts hay rides and a pumpkin patch for families, scouts or school field trips each October.

But she is willing to look for even more opportunities year-round, and she said the class encouraged participants to continue opening their farms to the public.

Sickler Farm uses about 10-12 acres of its 140 acres for vegetable production and small fruits such as strawberries, raspberries and blueberries. It also grows flowers, with about 10,000 mums planted.

Building relationships with other farmers was another benefit of the trip for participants.

“It was very neat to listen to other people’s ideas, and what their plans are for agri-tourism,” Sickler said. “We need to work together. We’re not competitors, we’re cooperating. We need to help each other out. 

“I’m not going to take business away from a dairy farm, because we don’t offer that. But people may want to come here and pick pumpkins and mums and go visit their farm. It was great to connect to the others.”

The concept of clustering was definitely one that Sickler caught hold of, she said.

“The tour inspired me to look for other attractions in our area where we could draw people into Barbour County to see all that we have to offer,” Sickler said. “We have some bed and breakfasts in Arden, by the river. Down the road from us, we have a community center that has hostel-type lodging. There is a deer farm in Arden and we have a friend that has a 1,000-acre cattle farm close by. 

“We want to host a farm-to-table dinner in our greenhouse so we can get people to experience what it’s like to have a dinner that is all locally sourced.”

That tourists would be interested in coming to a working farm still seems far-fetched, Sickler said, but it’s something she is growing to accept, she said with a laugh.

“It’s amazing that people want to come to your farm, spend money at your farm and work on it — it just blows your mind,” said Sickler. “They’re willing to spend a weekend on a farm vacation, working for a weekend or during harvest time.”

Food awareness is a growing trend, with consumers wanting to eat local and support local farmers.   

“People like to know where their food is coming from,” Sickler said. “They like that it isn’t traveling 1,500 miles to get to their plate. 

“Local foods are becoming very important to people in our area. When we go to farmer’s market, people are very concerned about what is being sprayed on their produce. They want to make sure it’s organic. And they want to support the local economy and the local farmers. That’s very encouraging, because we are trying to make our living by farming.”

West Virginia is poised to take advantage of a growing trend, Singh-Knights emphasized.

“Agri-tourism is an important value-added agricultural product across the country,” Singh-Knights said. “It is growing faster than any other. With that kind of momentum, we are really poised in West Virginia to take agri-tourism to the next level, where it could be. 

“When one hears the word ‘agri-tourism,’ he thinks of entertainment on the farm, like coming to a barn dance or a corn maze,” she added. “But we are taking it to another level that involves agriculture, tourism, education and economics.  

“We want people to understand the full potential of agri-tourism in West Virginia.” 

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Finalists Selected to Receive Grant Money in Buncombe County

c 2014, WLOS ABC 13 | Portions are Copyright 2014 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or distributed.

WLOS News 13 provides local news, weather forecasts, traffic updates, notices of events and items of interest in the community, sports and entertainment programming for Asheville, NC and nearby towns and communities in Western North Carolina and the Upstate of South Carolina, including the counties of Buncombe, Henderson, Rutherford, Haywood, Polk, Transylvania, McDowell, Mitchell, Madison, Yancey, Jackson, Swain, Macon, Graham, Spartanburg, Greenville, Anderson, Union, Pickens, Oconee, Laurens, Greenwood, Abbeville and also Biltmore Forest, Woodfin, Leicester, Black Mountain, Montreat, Arden, Weaverville, Hendersonville, Etowah, Flat Rock, Mills River, Waynesville, Maggie Valley, Canton, Clyde, Franklin, Cullowhee, Sylva, Cherokee, Marion, Old Fort, Forest City, Lake Lure, Bat Cave, Spindale, Spruce Pine, Bakersville, Burnsville, Tryon, Columbus, Marshall, Mars Hill, Brevard, Bryson City, Cashiers, Greer, Landrum, Clemson, Gaffney, and Easley.

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Mayor remembered for reshaping Maggie’s future

DeSimone has had a list of goals to accomplish in Maggie Valley since being elected in 2011, and he was just beginning to see the fruits of his labor before his life was cut short by a tragic accident last Friday. The community is still reeling from the sudden loss of its leader.

“To try to convey the shock, disbelief and raw pain that his town is experiencing currently is impossible,” said Town Manager Nathan Clark. “Mayor DeSimone was a tireless public servant that worked to make Maggie Valley the best possible place to live, work and visit — for that we will be eternally grateful.”

 

A new kind of mayor

When running for mayor, DeSimone knew he had a long and difficult road ahead of him. As a Brooklyn native who spent most of his life in Florida, he had the disadvantage of being an “outsider” in Maggie Valley. Candidates running for local office who don’t have deep roots in the area often have a hard time getting elected, but DeSimone beat the odds. He wasn’t from here, but he was a local businessman who had been heavily involved in the community since relocating to Maggie in 1999. 

Maggie Valley Alderwoman Saralyn Price, who has deep family roots in Haywood County, said DeSimone was just as passionate and committed to the community as those who go back generations.

“He did so much for the town and he loved Maggie Valley so much,” she said. “He really had dreams for all of Haywood County.”

Clark agreed DeSimone didn’t overlook the community’s past when looking to improve its future. 

“He appreciated the roots of our community, how those roots were being cultivated in the present and how they would blossom in the future,” he said. 

June Johnson, an active community member in Maggie, pointed out that DeSimone was also the first mayor in at least two decades — if not the first since the town was created in the mid-1970s — who wasn’t in the tourism business. He realized that Maggie would continue to decline if it hitched its star solely to tourism, Johnson said.

In the past, it was a reality everyone refused to acknowledge, but DeSimone publicly raised the glaring reality: the town’s over-reliance on tourism would be its downfall, particularly considering how dated its tourism enterprises were.

“Maggie can no longer survive on its summer influx of money. It is not possible in today’s world,” Johnson said. “Our little community has been struggling for years, and Ron inserted a treasure trove of fresh ideas and initiatives. He was tireless. I often marveled at his ability to maintain a construction business, to organize, learn, plan for community growth and improvement.”

 

Moving Maggie forward

It was DeSimone’s tireless passion that led him to be elected in what could be considered a landslide victory in Maggie Valley — 215 votes. 

He didn’t waste any time trying to get his plan to chart a new and improved course for the town started.

“Mayor DeSimone was a man of action. Even before he was elected as mayor he already had a plan in his mind of how he could make Maggie Valley a better place to live, work and play,” said Teresa Smith, executive director of the Maggie Valley Chamber of Commerce. “He spent countless hours talking with local businesses about his vision. Once he was elected to the office, he began putting that plan into motion.”

DeSimone did have a plan to get local businesses and residents involved in the process of improving the town. He wanted everyone to have a voice and work in unison to execute the plan. Smith remembers DeSimone coming to a chamber board meeting not long after he was elected to present his vision to improve the valley. It didn’t take long for the chamber to get behind the plan. 

As a tribute to the mayor and his profession as a general contractor, the chamber created a logo for the project that had a picture of a dump truck pulling a banner that said, “Moving Maggie Forward.” Smith said the tables were adorned with miniature trucks, loaders, backhoes and other construction vehicles. 

“The biggest smile came over his face when he saw that,” Smith recalled. “I don’t know how he found so many hours in his day to do all he did. And the more he talked about the good things going on, the more excited he got. He was much more to me than the mayor of our little valley. He was my friend.”

Though he had many ambitions, the first two years of his tenure were tumultuous. The board was so divided that an alderman resigned, and the remaining members couldn’t even agree on whom to appoint to the vacant seat. The seat remained empty until the next election and in the meantime, important town decisions were caught up in 2-2 stalemate votes.   

DeSimone also was criticized for supporting a proposed increase to the tourism tax. Maggie Valley was the lone holdout keeping the tourism tax increase from going through. DeSimone desperately tried to deliver Maggie, but the holdouts had clouded the issue enough that it died.

Everything came to a head in the last part of 2013 as the former town manager resigned and the town’s festival director was fired over improperly loaning town money to a festival promoter, which ended up costing the town more than $10,000 that will probably never be recouped. 

The November election resulted in a full board with two new members — Janet Banks and Mike Eveland — and decisions started to be made. Town planner Nathan Clark was promoted to town manager and the board decided to overhaul how it managed events at the festival grounds. Board members still disagreed on issues, but DeSimone showed the town that disagreements over policy didn’t have to end ugly. 

“We learned to agree to disagree and still be friends and we really were friends,” Price said, who remembers when things weren’t always like that. “That says a whole lot. We can work together and don’t have to hate each other if we have different opinions.”

Eveland and Banks said DeSimone was a mentor to them when they decided to run for the board and really took the time to educate them about all the challenges the town was facing. 

“He was very helpful to me when I campaigned two years ago for the board of aldermen — he gave me ideas and guidance and I really appreciated that,” Banks said. “It’s a real shock. With Ron we turned the town around after not being able to seat a full board two and a half years ago. Now we’re able to function and compromise and move forward.”

Eveland doesn’t see that momentum slowing down, because the board shared the same vision as the mayor. 

“A lot of Ron’s initiatives we’ve been able to accomplish will continue because those goals are our goals,” he said. “We believe in the things we’re doing to improve the festival grounds and the downtown master plan — those are direct links to show the town is taking responsibility for the economy and shaping the town in the future.”

One of DeSimone’s initiatives was creating the first winter festival — known as “WinterFest Smoky Style” — to provide a shot in the arm during the winter months. The first event was held in February and was a success, and DeSimone wanted to double the impact at next year’s event. 

In lieu of flowers at his service, family asks that memorials be made to WinterFest Smoky Style, c/o Haywood County Chamber of Commerce, 39 Walnut Street, Waynesville, NC 28786.

 

Making Maggie a team player

Maggie has historically acted like an island, not bothering to engage and connect with the rest of the county or region. It wasn’t totally Maggie’s fault. Decades ago, Maggie was ostracized as a hokey tourist town in a blue-collar factory world. But Maggie was also a victim of self-isolation.

DeSimone tried to raise Maggie’s profile in the region. For the first time, Maggie’s mayor actually showed up to regional council of government meetings — a gathering of mayors and county commissioner chairmen from the seven western counties.

“Ron knew no boundaries. No geographic boundaries, no political boundaries, and no party boundaries,” said Jim Blyth, one of DeSimone’s closest friends. “He was in it for the long haul. As long as it was good for North Carolina, the region and Maggie Valley, he was all in. He worked tirelessly with people on both sides of the aisle and he listened to everyone’s concerns.”

Waynesville Mayor Gavin Brown has been a passive observer of Maggie politics from afar. It was obvious DeSimone was able to change the tone of Maggie politics.

“He wanted to have Maggie working together with the rest of the region on issues that might pertain across the board,” Brown said.

DeSimone wanted Maggie Valley on the radar, and took it upon himself to network — whether it was attending functions or serving on the county’s economic development council.

DeSimone helped Maggie overcome stereotypes of being self-absorbed and unengaged from the rest of the county. He also tried to get past the tug-of-war mentality that sometimes defined Maggie Valley’s past relationships.

“He didn’t just look at what was best for Maggie Valley,” Commissioner Kevin Ensley said. “A lot of times people have turf battles over who gets what. But it was refreshing to hear him say ‘I want to do what is best for Haywood County because what’s best for Haywood County is best for Maggie Valley and vice versa.’ He wanted to be a partner and build partnerships to make the county a better place to live.”

Eveland said most mayors delegate board appointments to members of the board, but DeSimone took on a majority of the responsibilities to create a unified voice for the town. He served on the Haywood County Economic Development Commission and a subcommittee to improve broadband services in the county. 

“Mayor DeSimone was actively engaged at the regional and state level. We discussed on many occasions strategies to encourage cooperation in Maggie Valley,” said Ryan Sherby, executive director of the Southwest Commission Region A. “I don’t recall talking too much politics, as the conversation always seemed focused on how to improve WNC communities. He brought that collaborative spirit and dedication to board meetings most often joined by his Haywood County mayoral peers.”  

DeSimone could always be counted on to be in Raleigh at key times, not only representing the interest of the Valley but also of the greater region, Sherby said. 

During the 2012 legislative session, Blyth said, he and DeSimone authored six different bills dealing with prescription drugs abuses, synthetic drugs, prescription drug registry and adding a common sense component for toxicology testing to the DWI laws in North Carolina. 

“With Sen. (Jim) Davis’s help, all six bills were passed and the governor signed each bill and they are N.C. law today,” Blyth said. 

Blyth said DeSimone’s last fight in the General Assembly was stopping a local bill that would de-annex an entire subdivision from the Town of Maggie Valley. The bill was stopped cold last Wednesday and DeSimone received the good news directly from Sen. Davis on Wednesday while on the construction site where he died two days later.   

“Most people didn’t even know that Ron and I were working on issues that impacted the entire state,” Blyth said. “Ron and I were selfless about who received credit and we didn’t care who got credit. We did it because we were passionate about the issues and it needed to be done, so we did it.” 

Clark said it was safe to say that DeSimone accomplished his goal of ending Maggie Valley’s isolation through building cooperation in Haywood County and throughout the region. 

“Since word of his passing became public, it is safe to say that he no longer lived on an island but in the center of it all,” Clark said. “I have received an overwhelming amount of heartfelt condolences from all over the county.”

 

Carrying on his legacy

With his service on many countywide and regional boards, DeSimone’s impact is much wider than Maggie Valley’s borders. 

Canton Alderman Zeb Smathers worked alongside DeSimone on the Economic Development Commission and considers him a great mentor for other leaders in the county.

“Politics can be petty and arduous, but every so often a person comes along who truly leads and inspires us to believe in the ‘big idea.’ Maggie Valley Mayor Ron DeSimone was that man,” Smathers said. “It now falls on us who love and care for our county to carry on his passions with the same grace and tenacity that he did.”

DeSimone was also a past president and an active member of the Smoky Mountain Homeowners Association — formerly known as the Haywood County Home Builders Association. Former HBA President Dawson Spano said DeSimone was just as passionate about the construction industry as he was local politics. He worked diligently with county officials to craft a steep slope ordinance and worked with state officials to pass legislation to make contracting the most professional licensed industry in the state. 

“There is only a short period of time that we have to make a difference in the world that we live in — to make the extra effort with a vision of what can become of the future,” Spano said. “Ron DeSimone took the abilities granted to him to improve what he could and set in place a framework for others to follow.”

Haywood County commissioners held a moment of silence at their board meeting Monday in honor of DeSimone. 

“Ron will be sorely missed. He was an inspiration to a lot of people,” Commission Chairman Mark Swanger said. Swanger cited DeSimone as a champion of the high-speed Internet conundrum in the mountains. Once you get off the beaten path, people are stuck in the dark ages when it comes to modern Internet speeds. It’s been bemoaned for years, but DeSimone refused to give up on finding a solution.

Commissioner Kirk Kirkpatrick got emotional reflecting on DeSimone’s contribution to the community and the sudden tragedy that claimed his life.

“When Ron woke up Friday morning he didn’t know. He had no idea what was going to happen that day, and I think we should all think about that in how we live our lives every day and what we do for others and what we will be remembered by. Ron will be remembered well,” Kirkpatrick said.

— Staff writer Becky Johnson contributed to this article.

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Duke Energy hammered on transmission line proposal – The Greenville News

When Bob Kestler opened his mailbox to find a foreboding letter from Duke Energy that his home in Landrum was among those on a possible route for a giant transmission line project, he went into attack mode.

The retired Marine pilot and Vietnam veteran mapped out the line’s possible route and drove stakes into his horse pasture to show how the lines would transect his land.

He trudged through his woods, where dozens of old-growth beech, poplar and oak trees that line an 11-acre pond would be destroyed. He imagined the sight of 140-foot tall transmission towers that would eclipse the unobstructed views of pastures and the Blue Ridge Mountains.

Kestler spoke to neighbors and they have quickly organized to fight Duke to the end on a plan they say will destroy their land, uproot their lives and threaten their livlihoods in the equestrian-based tourism economy in northern Spartanburg County and Polk County, North Carolina.

The stress has driven Kestler’s wife, Kitty, to tears at night when she’s grinding her teeth from worry that the home they’d built as their forever retirement home might not be theirs happily ever after.

When Bob retired from Northwest Airlines as an pilot 14 years ago, they looked for a place to settle. They’d seen the world – Bob flew to Amsterdam, Paris and Rome – but Kitty convinced Bob to build a horse farm in the South Carolina mountains.

They built barns for their horses Bree, Scottie and quarter-horse Tina Turner, whose black mane with shocks of white highlights reminded her of the singer. The proposed lines would slice through their corral. Lines may run over the top of their barn.

They’ve already decided they couldn’t live with that. They’d have to move, but their farm would be worthless to anyone looking for a place to raise horses, Bob said.

“I know we won’t stay here,” he said. “If they take my farm, I’m not staying here.”

Duke Energy has announced that it will construct a new substation in Campobello and a 230-kilovolt transmission line that will deliver power to a planned natural gas-fired plant near Asheville, N.C. The site is the existing home of a coal-fired plant, scheduled for demolition in about 2020. The 40- to 45-mile line will import power from a substation located near the Oconee nuclear plant.

The proposal drew immediate and adament opposition from residents, conservationists and business owners, who have questioned both the need for the project and its impact on the rural communities.

Route questioned

Glenn English, who just retired as CEO of the National Rural Electric Cooperatives Association after 19 years at its helm, said the question Duke needs to answer first is whether it can use its existing right of way for a 100-kilovolt transmission line that already runs from Campobello to Asheville for the new lines.

English lives at the Cliffs at Glassy and said he’s spoken to electrical engineers who universally said Duke should be able to build its new lines onto its existing right of way.

It may require some expansion of right of way and construction of new lattice towers to hold the lines, “but basically they could run this line with the existing power lines that they have,” English said.

English said he was puzzled why Duke would seek all of this new right of way and questioned how hard Duke was pursuing what he views as the simplest and cheapest option.

South Carolina Electic and Gas already has shown that kind of duplication project is doable because it ran new lines along with older ones to its Jenkinsville nuclear plant within the last 18 months, English said.

“There should be no new route selected,” English said. “They should use the existing routes that they have…I think that would certainly satisfy far more people and raise less issues.”

That’s an option Duke is considering, said Tom Williams, director of external relations for the company.

“We have looked at where we can bundle existing wires together on existing lines and we are considering that seriously,” Williams said. “We would much rather add capacity to an existing 230-line than build a whole new right-of-way. We do that whenever we can. It’s significantly less expensive and less intrusive.”

Differing kilovolt lines do require different amounts of right of way, and some of the routes Duke is considering do include portions of existing paths, Williams said.

It would also requre new towers.

“You can’t run a 230-kilovolt line on a 100-kilovolt tower. The towers are specifically designed to serve the weight of the wire, the ice load on the wire, the topography based on the turns on the wire,” he said.

Duke’s proposal

Duke, using subsidiary TBP Properties that was established in 2006 in South Carolina, already has purchased 199 acres near Campobello in March for $4.96 million from Frank Nutt, according to the property title. Nutt is a developer and former Spartanburg County Councilman.

Then, one month ago, Duke mailed letters to 3,700 homeowners in the Carolinas whose properties fall along the paths of the potential transmission line route.

Duke this week finished a series of three meetings – two in Western North Carolina and one in South Carolina – where the company revealed a web of possible transmission line routes that would send energy from the Duke Energy Carolinas system northward into Duke Energy Progress.

The meetings drew hundreds of Carolina property owners, many irritated; others irate, who could be affected by the overhead transmission lines, depending on which route the company chooses.

Duke officials say the power is needed to supplement the ever-rising power needs of homes, businesses and industry in the mountains of Western North Carolina.

“There comes a time when we need to add additional infrastructure and it’s overdue,” Williams said. “A key point is when we build these transmission lines, they are built to serve long-term need. Power demand has doubled since the 1970s in the Asheville area, in the western region for Duke Energy Progress, and we expect it to go up another 15 percent for the next decade.”

The meetings were held in an open-house style, where landowners could visit several stations with electronic or paper maps, many of them crowded, and ask Duke representatives about their property or the project.

The possible routes are divided into more than three dozen segments. Some portions follow existing power line routes; most would require the acquisition of new rights of way near forested areas or homes.

Depending on the selected route, the lines may draw near the Scenic Cherokee Foothills Byway, an area conservationists have worked to protect for decades, or cross though Polk County, emerging as a destination for all things equestrian. Other segments of the route cut across farmland, upscale housing developments, long-standing mountain communities or rivers fly fishermen ply for trout.

Duke will take comments from stakeholders through mid-August and plans to select a route before the end of the year that has the least impact and still makes the project feasible, said Ryan Mozier, a Duke spokesman.

The project is destined to start a series of not-in-my-backyard fights, but before that, it’s already drawn the ire of land conservationists who say they’ve protected these mountain vistas only to have Duke potentially destroy the unbroken landscape.

“All of the proposed routes would have devastating impacts on our extraordinary Blue Ridge Mountains,” said Brad Wyche, executive director of Upstate Forever, which has protected more than 18,000 acres in the Blue Ridge Escarpment.

But it’s too early to even be talking about which route Duke should take because Duke hasn’t given enough detail to know why the project is even needed, Wyche said.

“They need to explain why there aren’t alternatives to this huge plant and these massive transmission lines, such as renewables and energy efficiency,” Wyche said. “And the South Carolina Public Service Commission needs to approve the project. And only if it is approved will it be necessary to consider the routes. Duke has put the cart way in front of the horse.”

Duke’s plans already have sparked legal action. Spartanburg attorney Patrick Knie filed a legal petition in Spartanburg County Circuit Court this week in an attempt to force Duke to release more information about the plans.

Judge Mark Hayes granted a temporary restraining order, good for 10 days, blocking Duke from doing anything that would prevent a representative of Knie’s wife, a landowner, from examining, testing or analyzing the acreage where the substation is planned.

Knie said he expects landowners to file eminent domain lawsuits against Duke once the Charlotte-based power company discloses which of various possible routes it would use for the transmission lines.

Equine impact

The announcement threw the quiet communities of Landrum and Campobello in South Carolina and Tryon and Fletcher in North Carolina into a frenzy.

The local economies are built around the equine business. Tack shops. Horse-trailer repair businesses. Veterinarians. Fence-builders. Hay farms.

“These power lines that are proposed hit every major organized trail system,” said Sally Rock of Landrum, who would be able to see the lines rising above the trees from her front porch.

And the equine economy has been booming of late, ever since investors Mark Bellissimo and Roger Smith opened the $100 million-plus Tryon International Equestrian Center in 2014.

Linda Tinkler, a Keller-Williams real estate agent, said she’d sold more than $4 million in property in the first six months of the year – all purchased in cash by out-of-state buyers moving to the Carolinas.

Once Duke’s plans went public, Tinkler said two buyers have backed out.

What’s hard to stomach for Kestler’s neighbor, Scott Homstead, is that the project whose lines could bisect his 12-acre farm isn’t designed to benefit the Upstate, but Asheville. Homstead doesn’t even use Duke. He gets his power from a co-op.

Neighborhood covenants restrict utilities to be buried in his Golden Hills neighborhood, which would become meaningless if Duke is allowed to choose that route, Homstead said.

“Everybody is grasping, trying to cling on and trying to make sense of everything,” Homstead said. “It’s very emotional. I haven’t slept more than three hours until last night. I’ve been sick about it.”

Once Duke does choose a route, it would file paperwork needed for permits, which would trigger formalized public forums.

Duke would need approval from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission first for the transmission lines, Mosier said. Then it would need permission from both North and South Carolina’s utility commissions.

Kestler and Rock drove through the countryside this week pointing out potential routes and the various impacts. Lines could run through corn fields, past farms, alongside the Jackson Grove United Methodist Church built in 1830 and its cemetery.

At the end of the drive, as Kestler drove up the long gravel driveway toward his house, a herd of eight deer lifted their heads from the apples they’d been munching and darted into the woods – in the exact direction the proposed route shows would be clear-cut to make way for the transmission lines.

He just shook his head.

“No Duke representative has ever come out here and done what we’re doing, looked at the impact and where they propose to put this line in comparison to most of these homes,” Kestler said. “I don’t know that they’d change their mind. Probably not. But at least I want to look eyeball to eyeball at somebody who makes these decisions.”

Kestler offered an open invitation for a Duke representative to come see him — and his horses — at his home.

Staff writer Rudolph Bell contributed.

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Today’s Email Announcements | High Country Press

1) Go G.R.E.E.N. Day at Grandfather Mountain State Park, Aug. 22

Grandfather Mountain Reaching Environmental Education Now!

Saturday, August 22 | 11am to 4pm

Location:  Foscoe/Grandfather Community Park on Hwy. 105 South, 233 Park Rd, Banner Elk, NC 28604

 RAIN OR SHINE: There are indoor facilities!

FREE and open to the public – fun for adults and kids, families and friends!

Join us to celebrate the mountain, state parks, natural resources, local history, environmental education, the Year of the Amphibian, summer in the mountains and everything that is fun about being outside!

SCHEDULED EVENTS:

8am: Profile Trail Guided Hikes: call office for details/registration

9am: Profile Trail Guided Nature Hike: call office for details/registration

11:15 – 12:00: Mountain Stream Ecology

12:00 – 12:30: Storytelling by local Storyteller ReVonda Crow

12:30 – 1:15: Mountain Stream Ecology

1:30 – 2:15: Mountain Stream Ecology

1:30 – 2:00: Author Randy Johnson presents – “The Brief History of Grandfather Mountain: A Photo Tour”

1:15-2:30: Mountain Stream Ecology

2:30 – 3:00: Storytelling by local Storyteller ReVonda Crow

3:30 – 4:00pm: The famous State Park Ranger Skit

See the newest hiking gear from Footsloggers, play amphibian games, visit with native wildlife from Genesis Wildlife Sanctuary, learn to live safely with bears, learn about birds and bees; trout and amphibians, learn about your state park!   Plus many more activities, exhibits and demonstrations

To register for event hikes or for more information call the park office at 828.963.9522 or email grandfather.mountain@ncparks.gov — Grandfather Mountain State Park/North Carolina Division of Parks and Recreation

2) Buckeye Regatta and Street Dance, July 25

On July 25, 2015 Buckeye Recreation Center and the Town of Beech Mountain is having their 1st annual Regatta event.  It will be at Buckeye Recreation Center’s Pavillion on Buckeye Lake from 5:00 pm – 8:30 pm.  We will have canoe races, activities for kids, and a street dance.  Food will be served, we ask that you RSVP with a side dish.  Come join us with your family for this evening on the lake!

3) “Telling Stories” Writing Competition, Deadline for Entries: July 20

Ashe County’s On the Same Page Literary Festival’s annual writing competition deadline is July 20. In association with the 2015 Festival, which will take place September 15-19 in Ashe County, NC, the Page Crafter’s Prize recognizes writers of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry with cash awards. Winning writers will be recognized at the On the Same Page concluding luncheon September 19.

The Page Crafter’s competition is designed to encourage and acknowledge emerging writers and to reinforce the On the Same Page Literary Festival’s commitment to celebrating the creation of new literary work.

Page Crafter’s Prizes will be awarded for first and second places in fiction, non-fiction and poetry. Prize money totaling $900 will be presented: $200 for first place, $100 for second place, in each category.

Deadline for submissions is July 20, 2015, (postmarked snail mail or email submissions) and winners will be notified by August 31, 2015.  Prose entries are limited to 1,000-words; no more than 50 lines of poetry will be accepted. Entries should focus on the 2015 Festival theme “Telling Stories.” A non-refundable entry fee of $10 (U.S.) per submission is required. There is no limit to the number of entries per person.  Email submissions should be sent to:jane@ashecountyarts.org.

 The Festival’s website, www.onthesamepagefestival.org, provides further details, including format requirements for the blind-copy submission process. Only previously unpublished entries qualify. Authors retain all rights to submitted works. Winners need not be present to win.

 4) Fourth Annual Junaluska Jubilee Scheduled for Saturday, July 18

Junaluska, Boone’s historic black neighborhood, will hold its Fourth Annual Junaluska Jubilee on Saturday, July 18. Members of the public are invited to attend. This year the Jubilee honors the venerable Boone Mennonite Brethren Church at 161 Church Street, also the location of the Jubilee festivities.

Coffee and hospitality begin the event at 10 am in the church’s fellowship hall. The celebration service starts at 11 am and will be followed by lunch in the fellowship hall (monetary donations are welcomed.) Afternoon entertainment beginning at 2 pm will include a magician, the Junaluska Gospel Choir and a homemade cake raffle. Please call 828-773-2540 by July 14 if you plan to attend. Attendance is free.

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Governor, senators at odds over sales tax plan

— Senate Majority Leader Harry Brown crammed the small press conference room at the Legislative Building full of county commissioners, county managers, school board members and community college leaders on Tuesday to make a point: People from rural areas want his plan to shift how sales taxes are distributed.

Under current law, 75 cents of every dollar paid on the local 2 percent sales tax charged statewide stays in the county where it was collected. The rest is distributed statewide on a per-capita basis. This gives large, urban counties with lots of shopping, such as Wake County, a boost over rural areas, such as neighboring Franklin County.

The latest version of Brown’s bill, which was included in the state budget, would turn that formula on its head so that 80 percent of the local sales tax would be distributed based on population.

“I call this the Tax Reclamation Act,” said Sen. Tommy Tucker, R-Union, who said it would merely give rural governments access to revenue that’s being unfairly taken away from their areas.

Brown, Tucker and his allies face opposition on the sales tax shift from House members, the governor and groups such as the North Carolina League of Municipalities and North Carolina Association of County Commissioners. The shift would blow holes in bigger counties’ budgets, although the Senate budget would give those counties the chance to partially make up for the losses through added local sales taxes.

The sales tax measure is one of a bundle of issues that has delayed passage of the state budget. North Carolina’s new fiscal year began July 1, but the state is running on a temporary spending measure through Aug. 14. Sales taxes are among a groups of issues, along with Medicaid reform and economic development spending, where Republican House and Senate leaders and Gov. Pat McCrory, also a Republican, find themselves at odds.


Berger and Brown
Senate budget has uneven impact on county revenue


The split over sales taxes emphasizes a rural-urban divide among lawmakers, with senators having the deepest sympathy for rural areas they see as losing out to bigger metropolitan counties.

For example, Franklin County Commissioner Don Lancaster told reporters that his county would gain $14 million under Brown’s bill, money that would be critical for a county that is growing quickly but sees 62 percent of its workforce head to Wake County and elsewhere during the day.

“They spend their money outside the county, which presents a major problem for infrastructure,” Lancaster said.

Brown, R-Onslow, and Tucker insist that more than 80 of North Carolina’s 100 counties would benefit, while larger counties and counties with lots of tourism revenue, including some in coastal areas and some in the mountains, would lose out.

House members have been slow to embrace the deal, and McCrory said Tuesday he would veto Senate Bill 369, Brown’s original bill. A McCrory spokesman said that veto threat applied only to that bill, but then later updated his statement saying it applies to any bill containing the sales tax language.

“This bill will result in a tax increase for millions of hardworking, middle-class families and small-business owners throughout North Carolina,” McCrory said in a statement. “Redistribution and hidden tax increases are liberal tax-and-spend principles of the past that simply don’t work. More importantly, this bill will cripple the economic and trade centers of our state that power our economy.”

McCrory called on lawmakers to help rural areas by passing his bond package for transportation and his proposed economic development bill.

“This legislation will decimate our travel and tourism sector – particularly in our mountain and beach communities – shop owners and their employees who depend on tourism for their livelihood,” McCrory said. “Instead of pursuing left-wing ideas that continually fail, it’s time for the General Assembly to get to work on job creation for all North Carolina.”

Brown responded to McCrory by suggesting the governor is too focused on urban areas such as Charlotte, where he was mayor before being elected governor.

“I can’t figure out if Pat thinks he is the Governor of Charlotte or the Mayor of North Carolina,” Brown said in a statement. “Today, over 100 local officials from across the state came out in support of sales tax fairness. Sadly, the governor’s tone-deaf response to their overwhelming support is doubling down on a 2007 sales tax policy change that kicked rural North Carolina in the teeth.”

He added that a transportation plan backed by McCrory has shifted road projects from rural to urban areas and that economic development incentives routinely go to metropolitan counties.

Local officials at Brown’s news conference insisted that they need a bigger share of sales tax proceeds to give relief to property taxpayers, who are tapped out.

Randolph Latimore, superintendent for Hyde County Schools, noted that his coastal system’s bus garage dates to 1939, when buses were much smaller.

“We cannot get our buses into the bus garage for their inspections,” Latimore said. “We get the hood part in, but the other part of the bus is outside, and our mechanics are down on their dollies to do what needs to be done.”

Changing the sales tax distribution, he said, would allow his system to update the building and help land teachers who won’t come to a district with relatively low pay.

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New Orangetheory Fitness Studio Coming to Charlotte — FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla …








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FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla., July 23, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Orangetheory® Fitness, the energizing and fast-growing fitness franchise, today announced that a new studio will be coming to Charlotte, N.C. The Charlotte studio will be located in the Arboretum at 8083 Providence Road, Suite 100. With four studios now open in the state and several in development, the innovative brand will continue to target North Carolina for expansion.

The new studio will be celebrating its grand opening with a VIP party on Tuesday, July 28 from 5:00 p.m.8:00 p.m. and will officially open to the public on July 29, with classes starting at 5:30 a.m.

“We can’t wait to continue to impact the lives of Charlotte residents in a healthy way,” said Jay Thomas, Orangetheory Fitness Charlotte franchisee. “Ever since my daughter, a UNC Chapel Hill graduate, introduced me to the Orangetheory workout in December 2011, I’ve been looking for opportunities to help bring this brand to more people. We truly believe Charlotte residents can benefit from this backed-by-science workout.”

Thomas’ daughter, Barbara Thomas, was hired in South Florida as a trainer initially and then as a manager in the Plantation, Florida studio. That studio’s owner, Doug Birer – also a UNC Chapel Hill graduate – was an area developer for the Orangetheory Fitness brand in several markets nationwide and has helped develop studios since the brand’s inception. Jay Thomas, Barbara Thomas and Doug Birer entered into a partnership to develop the Western North Carolina market, along with Doug’s long-time business partner Craig Kuperman and Barbara’s grandmother Cindy Thomas. The group also owns the Quail Corners studio in Charlotte.

Orangetheory Fitness has more than 250 studios in the U.S., Canada and U.K. Orangetheory Fitness launched its first studio in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. in March 2010, and has transformed into one of the world’s top fitness franchises. The 60-minute, five zone heart-rate monitored interval training concept has helped tens of thousands of members lose weight, get toned and meet their overall fitness goals in a short amount of time. The fitness franchise is on track to open 600 studios by 2017.

For more information on the Charlotte – Arboretum Orangetheory Fitness and membership packages, please call 704-612-2102. More information on Orangetheory Fitness is available on Orangetheory’s website. Follow Orangetheory Fitness on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram for the latest news and trends.

About Orangetheory® Fitness

Orangetheory® Fitness (www.orangetheoryfitness.com) is a one-of-a-kind, group personal training workout broken into intervals of cardiovascular and strength training. Backed by the science of excess post-exercise oxygen consumption (EPOC), Orangetheory’s heart-rate-monitored training is designed to maintain a target zone that stimulates metabolism and increases energy. Led by skilled personal trainers, participants use a variety of equipment including treadmills, rowing machines, TRX® suspension training and free weights, burning an average of 900 calories including after-burn. The result is the Orange Effect – more energy, visible toning and extra calorie burn for up to 36 hours post-workout. Orangetheory Fitness was recently ranked #399 in Inc. magazine’s Fastest Growing Private Companies List and #462 in Entrepreneur’s 2015 Franchise 500® list of the top franchises in the world. Visit www.otffranchise.com for area developer and franchise opportunities. 

Contact:
Erin Povlitz
Fish Consulting
954-893-9150
epovlitz@fish-consulting.com

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