Board of Education nixes energy proposal – Lincoln Times

ADAM LAWSON
Staff Writer

The Lincoln County Board of Education voted not to adapt a private company’s energy proposal Tuesday, citing a lengthy contract, unreasonable baselines and unsure results as reasons against partnering with Texas-based Cenergistic, Inc.

The decision was unanimous at a school board committee meeting. The deal is expected to officially die following a vote at next week’s monthly board meeting.

A sales representative for Cenergistic first pitched his company at a June committee hearing, boasting of at least $300,000 in potential annual savings toward the district’s $3 million energy bill. The company pledged a full-time energy savings manager, as well, and $6,650 in yearly EnergyCAP software charges.

But the deal also would’ve required the school board to pay half of savings realized from initial baseline energy costs and would’ve locked the county into a five-year agreement. When the topic was addressed at a July meeting, board members asked Cenergistic to come back with a short-term contract, preferably a year-to-year commitment.

But the contract presented to the board on Tuesday would’ve included substantial early exit fees and wouldn’t alter the original energy baseline for five years.

“I had said, from their initial presentation, that I would vote against them no matter what,” board member Ed Hatley said. “I had a problem if we had a substantial savings the first year, then they don’t change the baseline for five years. You’re still paying for the amount they saved you over the course of five years. Every year you pay the same amount back to them. It could be that the eventual payback to them was more than what they saved you.”

Board member Todd Wulfhorst referenced a previous energy agreement in defending his vote. That deal, he said, cost the district more than it saved because equipment was turned off and eventually broke down.

“It’s the proverbial ‘it sounds too good to be true,’” Wulfhorst said. “It sounds great. I would love to see those types of savings. It’s sort of a challenge to turn that down. But you can’t enter into anything where you’re worse off than when you did it.”

Driver’s ed currently in park

It’s been more than two months since the fiscal year began and the state’s General Assembly has yet to agree on a budget.

Original state Senate proposals called for significant cuts to teacher assistants and the elimination altogether of driver’s education programs at public high schools. And while negotiations seem to point to restoring both, solutions in the meantime won’t be all that great for Lincoln County students.

Students can pay privately for driver’s education classes but won’t be able to take the normal, $50 class NC Driving School provides until a solution is agreed upon in Raleigh, school board members said.

“We’ve stopped all classes,” Hatley confirmed.

If the Senate reverts to its original plan to scrap driver’s education and eventually cut teaching assistants by 8,500 statewide, it could cause all sorts of headaches for administrators trying to coordinate transportation.

Moving driver’s education programs to the community colleges would increase costs for students. If more children opt to wait until they turn 18 to try for their license, school bus drivers figure to be more important.

But many teacher assistants serve dual employment roles that require them to drive buses. A slash in TA’s could lead to resignations from the driving jobs and, board members fear, a snafu in the entire transportation process.

“Who is going to drive the kids to school?” Hatley said. “They’re the ones who get them home.”

Hatley said the board has not yet formulated a solution to the potential program.

Schedule challenges

School began Aug. 26 for Lincoln County students. The late-season start means the fall semester won’t conclude until Jan. 15, putting student and teachers in a bind to prepare quickly for the exams that come almost immediately after winter break.

It’s not a new dilemma for the school system. State regulations have dictated when it can begin and end since 2004. House Bill 9 would’ve given districts flexibility to start a week early, but the legislation was referred to a House committee and hasn’t had any new action since January.

Currently, schools aren’t allowed to open earlier than the Monday closest to Aug. 26 and can’t end later than the Friday closest to June 11. It’s a requirement that pits educators against the tourism industry, which enjoys the boon a later start provides to the state’s coastal region.

Board member Cathy Davis said she would like to see an end to these regulations and has taken family vacations out of state in protest. But a change to the system, she acknowledged, won’t come easily.

“It’s going to take an uprising of everybody in the state to make that happen,” Davis said. “From what I understand, it’s the tourism department that is taking us hostage, the people who have ownership or interest in rental property, hotels, motels and things of that nature.”

Davis believes an earlier start would allow the district to finish its fall semester before winter break, in the process benefiting county students. She added that the tourism industry’s fear of starting early is probably misguided anyway.

“I think whenever they’re out of school, whether it be a long summer or a week here or there, I think people are going to go on vacation when their kids are out of school,” Davis said.

 

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LandTrust announces preservation of Fort York site

The LandTrust for Central North Carolina has announced the preservation of one of North Carolina’s most significant historic sites at Fort York on the Davidson/Rowan County border at the Yadkin River.

This project is one that has been in the making for 20 years – since the first months of the founding of the organization, according to a press release. “The Fort York site was identified in 1995 as one of the most important historic sites in our region and has remained at the top of our list of highest priority potential acquisition tracts,” said executive director Crystal Cockman. Thanks to private funding and a grant from the NC Clean Water Management Trust Fund, The LandTrust was able to purchase the site in July.

Fort York was the site of one of the last Confederate victories of the Civil War. Although the war had technically ended three days prior, the Confederate troops guarding the rail bridge over the Yadkin River had not received word of the surrender. General Stoneman of the Union, in his well-documented raid across western North Carolina at the end of the war, came to Salisbury to free captured Union soldiers held in the Confederate prison. After torching many buildings in Salisbury for more than a day, he marched westward to take the rail bridge over the Yadkin River. Confederate soldiers, under the leadership of Zebulan York, fought valiantly on the afternoon of April 12, 1865, to prevent the destruction of this bridge – an economic lifeline to the western and southern part of the state and all points in the Southeast.

The fort consisted of a system of small artillery batteries connected by rifle-trenches for infantry. What remains of the site today is probably half of the original fort, the remainder having been destroyed by three generations of road-building on three sides of the property. Today an “inner line” includes about 720 feet of infantry trenches and three artillery batteries. An “outer line” includes about 1,155 feet of trenches and four batteries. These earthworks are in remarkable shape after being left in a natural state by previous owners who valued history. “There is arguably no more important Civil War landmark left unprotected in the western part of North Carolina,” Cockman said.

The LandTrust has secured the funding needed to purchase the approximately 12.5 acres of property along the banks of the Yadkin River and Interstate 85 in Davidson County that houses approximately half of the historic Civil War fort used to protect the Yadkin River Rail Bridge. This funding includes a short-term loan while LandTrust officials work out the details with the N.C. Clean Water Management Trust Fund to obtain the grant funds dedicated to the project.

The LandTrust is working with a consortium of interested parties (Davidson County, Davidson Historical Society, Historic Trading Ford Association, Davidson County Tourism and Recreation Investment Partnership, the Town of Spencer, NCDOT, N.C. Department of Cultural Resources and others) to secure, interpret and conserve the historic site in perpetuity. Ultimately, the site will be opened to the public for educational purposes and, along with other significant historic sites in the region, will be promoted as a historic and recreational tourist destination. Donations can still be made toward this project to The LandTrust for Central N.C. at P.O. Box 4284, Salisbury, NC 28145.

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Jeb Bush to visit Garner business to discuss tax plan

GARNER, N.C. (AP) — Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush is going to detail his tax plans if elected during a North Carolina address next week.

Bush’s campaign said Thursday the former Florida governor will speak Wednesday at a company south of Raleigh that makes industrial ice equipment and chilling systems for the poultry industry. The economic policy address is at Morris Associates in Garner.

Bush announced his top campaign supporters in North Carolina politics last week, including U.S. Rep. Patrick McHenry, state Sen. Tom Apodaca and state Rep. Charles Jeter.

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Labor Day Travels? Don’t Buy Gas in Boone

files/farm-bureau-jan-2015.gif

Today:
74°F | 61°F | 40%Tomorrow:
74°F | 60°F | 30%

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Visitor spending in Cabarrus takes quite a leap

Is it all about Concord Mills?  Charlotte Motor Speedway?  Or what about hidden gems like the Reed Gold Mine?  Whatever it is, whether one thing or a combination, visitors are coming to Cabarrus County in record numbers.

Recent released numbers show that visitors to and within Cabarrus County spent a record $400.3 million in 2014.  Cabarrus County saw the second highest percent increase in visitor spending, trailing only Orange County, NC.

“Cabarrus County actually saw a huge jump in visitor spending in 2014, an increase of 7.6% from last year,” said Julie Hinson of the Cabarrus County Convention and Visitors Bureau “Visitors from outside of our area came to Cabarrus and impacted our local economy with that money that they spent here.”

What’s responsible for the big jump?

“We thought about the same question and what it comes down to is we just have a really great dynamic tourism product here in Cabarrus County,” HInson added. “We’re very accessible from Interstate 85, we’re close to Charlotte Douglas International Airport, we’ve got Concord Regional right down the street. We have a lot of hidden gems in Cabarrus County including Reed Gold Mine, a very unique experience that’s unique to North Carolina.”

One new draw during 2014 was the Sea Life Aquarium inside Concord Mills.  The Great Wolf Lodge, North Carolina Music Hall of Fame in Kannapolis, and visits to race teams shops also draw large numbers of visitors.

In terms of sheer numbers, Charlotte Motor Speedway and its adjacent attractions are the big draws.

“The NASCAR events the speedway has been hosting for more than fifty years are obviously big contributors to the tourism in Cabarrus County and really the entire Charlotte region,” said Scott Cooper, Vice President of Communications at Charlotte Motor Speedway. “With the expansion of the complex with the Dirt Track and zMAX Dragway and the events that we host now year round, even including Speedway Christmas, we’ve got more than 100 or so days and nights of events every year on our calendar.”

Travel and tourism is a big part of Cabarrus County in many ways.  The industry is responsible for 4190 jobs, according to the CCCVB.  The payroll generated by the tourism industry in Cabarrus County in 2014 was $87.06 million.

In terms of local taxes, state revenues totaled $22.03 million and local tax revenues generated $6.92 million.

You can visit www.CabCoCVB.com to learn more about the CVB and how tourism positively impacts the community. It’s a resource for locals to discover more about the organization and tourism industry.

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Seven-time GRAMMY® Winner Carrie Underwood to Perform at 2015 Belk Bowl








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Carrie Underwood to perform at 2015 Belk Bowl FanFest on Dec. 31.
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    Belk, Inc. is a Charlotte, N.C.-based department store company.















CHARLOTTE, N.C., Sept. 3, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — The Belk Bowl is thrilled to announce that superstar and seven-time GRAMMY® winner Carrie Underwood will be the headline act at the 2015 Belk Bowl this December. The 14th annual Belk Bowl will kick off at 3:30 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 30 at the Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, N.C. and will feature a matchup of the Southeastern Conference and the Atlantic Coast Conference.

Carrie Underwood is a tremendous addition to this year’s Belk Bowl,” says Jon Pollack, Belk’s executive vice president of sales promotion, marketing and eCommerce. “We look forward to a dynamic and high energy performance that will be the perfect launch to our game day.”

This year’s FanFest event is free to the public and will begin at 10:00 a.m. with Carrie’s performance scheduled to begin at 1:30 p.m.

Individual tickets for the 2015 Belk Bowl will go on sale in early October and will be available through TicketMaster and the participating schools.

For more information or to reserve your tickets today, contact Tickets@CharlotteSports.org.  Fans can visit the official website, www.BelkBowl.com, for more information about the game and surrounding events.

About Carrie Underwood

Carrie Underwood emerged from the promise of her 2005 American Idol win to become a true multi-format, multi-media superstar, spanning achievements in music, television, and film.  A seven-time GRAMMY® Award winner, she has amassed nearly 100 major honors, sold more than 56 million records worldwide, and recorded 21 #1 singles, 11 of which she co-wrote.  The first female artist to be twice named the Academy of Country Music’s Entertainer of the Year, Underwood was recognized as Pollstar‘s top female country touring artist for her headlining tours in 2008, 2010, and 2012.  Her four studio albums, Some HeartsCarnival RidePlay On, and Blown Away – each certified multi-Platinum or Platinum, and each an American Music Awards winner as Country Album of the Year – tallied 38 weeks at #1 on Billboard‘s Top Country Albums chart with songs that have been streamed more than 1.4 billion times worldwide.  In 2013, she starred as Maria von Trapp in NBC’s three-hour holiday blockbuster, the Emmy®-winning The Sound of Music Live!, whose airings attracted 44 million viewers.  In late 2014, the Grand Ole Opry member released her first hits collection, Greatest Hits: Decade #1.  Celebrating her first 10 years of music, the 25 songs included two new hits co-written by Underwood: the Platinum-certified, GRAMMY-winning “Something in the Water,” as well as the #1 smash “Little Toy Guns.”  In September of 2015, she begins her third season as the voice of primetime television’s #1 program, Sunday Night Football, and on November 4, she’ll return for an eighth consecutive year as co-host of the CMA Awards.  Underwood is at radio now with her record-breaking single “Smoke Break,” the first single released from her fifth studio album, Storyteller, out worldwide on October 23, 2015. For more information and tour dates, please visit: www.carrieunderwoodofficial.com

About Belk, Inc.
Charlotte, N.C.-based Belk, Inc. (www.belk.com) is the nation’s largest family owned and operated department store company with 297 Belk stores located in 16 Southern states and a growing digital presence.  Its belk.com website offers a wide assortment of national brands and private label fashion apparel, shoes and accessories for the entire family along with top name cosmetics, a wedding registry and a large selection of quality merchandise for the home. Founded in 1888 by William Henry Belk in Monroe, N.C., the company is in the third generation of Belk family leadership and has been committed to community involvement since its inception. In the fiscal year ended January 31, 2015, the company and its associates, customers and vendors donated more than $21.5 million to communities within Belk market areas.

Belk offers many ways to connect via digital and social media, including Facebook, Pinterest, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube and Google Plus, and provides exclusive offers, fashion updates, sales notifications and coupons via email or mobile phone text messages. Customers can also download the latest Belk mobile apps for the iPad, iPhone or Android.

About The Charlotte Sports Foundation
The Charlotte Sports Foundation provides leadership for sports-based initiatives that create a positive economic impact and enhance quality of life in the Charlotte region. Established in 2013, we’re a nonprofit, 501(c)(3) organization that develops unique experiences, events and business opportunities around professional, collegiate and amateur sports. Our signature events include the annual Belk Bowl and the Dr. Pepper ACC Football Championship.

 

 

Related Links          
www.belk.com           
www.belkbowl.com

 

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SOURCE Belk, Inc.



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Land Trust buys historic site of Civil War battle

SALISBURY, NC (WBTV) –

“It is with the greatest pride that The Land Trust for Central North Carolina announces the preservation of one of North Carolina’s most significant historic sites,” began the press release announcing that the Land Trust has purchased the Fort York historic site.

This project is one that has been in the making for 20 years – since the first months of the founding of this organization, according to the release.

“The Fort York site was identified in 1995 as one of the most important historic sites in our region, and has remained at the top of our list of highest priority potential acquisition tracts,” explains Executive Director Crystal Cockman.

Thanks to private funding and a grant from the NC Clean Water Management Trust Fund, The LandTrust was able to purchase the site in July of 2015.

Fort York was the site of one of the last Confederate victories of the Civil War. Although the war had technically ended three days prior, the Confederate troops guarding the rail bridge over the Yadkin River had not received word of the surrender. General Stoneman of the Union, in his well-documented raid across western North Carolina at the end of the “War Between the States,” came to Salisbury to free captured Union soldiers held in the Confederate prison. After torching many buildings in Salisbury for more than a day, he marched  to take the rail bridge over the Yadkin River.

According to one account, Confederate soldiers, under the leadership of Zebulan York, fought valiantly on the afternoon of April 12, 1865 to prevent the destruction of this bridge – an economic lifeline to the western and southern part of the state, and all points in the Southeast. 

The fort consisted of a system of small artillery batteries connected by rifle-trenches for infantry. What remains of the site today is probably half of the original fort, the remainder having been destroyed by three generations of road-building on three sides of the property.

Today an “inner line” includes about 720 feet of infantry trenches and three artillery batteries. An “outer line” includes about 1155 feet of trenches and four batteries. These earthworks are in remarkable shape after being left in a natural state by previous owners who valued history. “There is arguably no more important Civil War landmark left unprotected in the western part of North Carolina,” Cockman states.

This site fits into a patchwork of other historic areas nearby. From Native American use of the Trading Ford just below the Fort, to the crossing of Nathaniel Greene’s troops about 1/2 mile south as they escaped the pursuit of Cornwallis’ men, to the exploits of Daniel Boone who hiked and canoed all around this site, to the Civil War skirmish outlined above, to the Industrial Revolution’s impact of roads and factories and power plants adjacent, truly the story of America can be told from the high bluff overlooking the Yadkin River at this site. 

The LandTrust has secured the funding needed to purchase the approximately 12.5 acres of property along the banks of the Yadkin River and Interstate 85 in Davidson County that houses approximately half of the historic Civil War fort used to protect the Yadkin River Rail Bridge. This funding includes a short-term loan while we work out the details with the NC Clean Water Management Trust Fund to obtain the grant funds dedicated to the project.

The LandTrust is working with a consortium of interested parties (Davidson County, Davidson Historical Society, Historic Trading Ford Association, Davidson County Tourism and Recreation Investment Partnership, the Town of Spencer, NC DOT, NC Department of Cultural Resources, and others) to secure, interpret, and conserve the historic site in perpetuity. Ultimately, the site will be opened to the public for educational purposes and, along with other significant historic sites in the region, will be promoted as a historic and recreational tourist destination.

Donations can still be made towards this project to The LandTrust for Central NC at 204 East Innes Street, Suite 280, Salisbury NC  28144.

An additional account of the battle can be found here: http://www.trading-ford.org/stoneman.html

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Arizona loves tourists, Phoenix not so much

Well, this is slightly embarrassing. Tourism plays a large part in Arizona’s economy and as such, visitors are generally welcomed with open arms around the state.

Except in the capital — Phoenix.

So said a survey that revealed Arizona was a super friendly state toward tourists but Phoenix was one of the top 10 tourist-hating cities in the country.

Based on #tourist tweets, the Grand Canyon State was No. 8 for most welcoming. Flipping the coin, though, Phoenix came in No. 8 on Stratos Jet Charters’ gloomy-about-tourists list.

The private jet company had crunchers pull together numbers based on tweets about tourists from every state, then break down the data even further into cities’ positive and negative feelings.

On the positive side, Arizona came in behind Illinois; Montana; New Hampshire; North Dakota; Nebraska; Alaska; and Idaho. Tennessee and Washington rounded out the top 10 most welcoming.

At the top of the grumblers were: Arlington, Texas; New York City; Las Vegas; Boston; New Orleans; Orlando; Greensboro, North Carolina. Los Angeles came in at No. 9 and San Francisco was No. 10.

In defense of Valley residents, you have to figure a lot of the tweets went out during spring training, when visitors crowd regulars out of their favorite places. Or shortly after the arrival of snowbirds, who drive large vehicles very slowly.

Really, it’s the traffic that gets Phoenicians all riled up.

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Answer Man: Help for Sardis/Sand Hill roads traffic snarl? – Asheville Citizen

Today’s batch of burning questions, my smart-aleck answers and the real deal:

Question: Ever since school opened, there are significant backups in both directions, every morning and afternoon, due to turning cars entering and leaving the Franklin School of Innovation. It seems that every car has only a single passenger — I don’t see any evidence of carpooling nor are they any buses, which would mean fewer cars. This situation on Sardis is likely to become worse when the new Buncombe County school, Enka Intermediate, opens. On some mornings there are one or two Asheville police cars parked in a driveway, but they are not doing anything to alleviate the situation. Is the city or county planning on doing anything about this problem? I have called the city but do not get any answers.

My answer: I’m thinking the new tourism logo for Asheville should involve snarled traffic.

Real Answers: First up, Asheville Police Department spokeswoman Christina Hallingse.

“Franklin School of Innovation currently does not have any buses, as it is a charter School,” Hallingse said. “A number of parents do choose to carpool, and there is an incentive for doing this, as carpools have the ability to utilize a faster drop-off/pickup line. Asheville police have been working to alleviate a lot of traffic by requiring parents to make a right turn only as they are returning to Sardis after picking up/dropping off their children. APD assisted with traffic for the first two weeks of school.”

Now, as far as Enka Intermediate, scheduled to open in 2016, I turned that question over to Tim Fierle, director of facilities and planning for Buncombe County Schools.

“We did a traffic study of the area and looked at turn lanes and waiting lanes on Sardis Road,” Fierle said. “We have submitted the design to DOT and are awaiting approval. A new bridge connecting Smoky Park (Highway) with Jacob Holm Way is planned and will offer another option for drivers to access Enka Intermediate School.”

Which led me to Anna Henderson, division traffic engineer for the Asheville office of the North Carolina Department of Transportation. She said the Franklin School, like any school at the beginning of the year, has been working through traffic challenges.

“N.C. DOT, as well as city staff and Asheville police have observed traffic flow at school pickup and drop-off times to assist the school and offer suggestions for traffic flow improvements,” Henderson said. “Additionally, the school is required to install a right turn and left turn lane at the school entrance, and (we) expect the work to be completed later this fall. The school has also implemented a separate faster carpooling drop-off/pickup area as an incentive to encourage parents to carpool. The internal traffic flow improvements and carpooling incentives coupled with the turn lane additions should greatly improve traffic flow on Sardis Road near the school.”

Question: I recently moved to a town home in an apartment complex within the city limits of Asheville. The management is saying the fire marshal will not allow grills on the patio. I did not have this issue at other apartments in Buncombe County. Is this just a city of Asheville regulation, or were the other apartments just lax? Not being able to grill seems un-American.

My answer: It’s a dad-jim outrage! I’m grilling burgers beneath my desk as I write this. My cubicle mates love it.

Real answer: Asheville Fire Department Chief Scott Burnette said the ban on balcony grilling at apartments or condos is a statewide law that is in effect in the city and county. Balconies are covered by ceilings, and they can be easily combustible, potentially leading to quick-spreading fires.

In the city, Burnette’s department enforces the law.

“As much as I love to grill, that is a very sound requirement that is in our statewide fire code,” Burnette said. ” When people live in multi-family homes, there is a combination of risks there that requires a little additional protection. One risk is when you have more people in a dense area, the chance of fire increases, because you not only have to worry about the fire safety of your own occupancy, you have to worry about those beside, above and below you. The other risk is that the exit areas are limited.”

This is the opinion of John Boyle. To submit a question, contact him at 828-232-5847 or jboyle@citizen-times.com

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