Home Blog Page 105

N.C. 12 Task Force reviews detailed plans for Hatteras and Ocracoke Island’s seven vulnerable hotspots

1
N.C. 12 at the northern end of Ocracoke after Hurricane Dorian in September 2019. NCDOT photo

Reposted courtesy of Island Free Press, Feb. 8, 2023
By Joy Crist

The N.C. 12 Task Force on Tuesday at their meeting in Manteo reviewed reports on proposed solutions and priorities for seven vulnerable stretches of N.C. Highway 12 on Hatteras and Ocracoke Islands.

The Task Force was formed in 2021 to address the routine flooding of the 67-mile stretch of N.C. Highway 12 that extends from Oregon Inlet to Ocracoke, and to find viable solutions that could be implemented to keep the highway open for the short term and the long term.

Composed of representatives from Dare County, Hyde County, the National Park Service, the North Carolina Department of Transportation (NCDOT), the Southern Environmental Law Center, the NC Division of Marine Fisheries, the US Fish and Wildlife Service, and additional state and federal agencies, the goal was to have all stakeholders at the table to form a long-range plan.

The N.C. 12 Task Force’s subcommittee, (with representatives from the above organizations), met in a series of meetings over a six-month period from June to December of 2021 to review each of the “hotspots” – or areas of the highway that were most susceptible to ocean and soundside flooding – and to identify the best location-specific ways forward.

At Tuesday’s meeting Dare County Manager and Subcommittee Chairman Bobby Outten walked through each of the seven identified hotspots, and their individual solutions, in the subcommittee’s final report, which was released at the end of last year.

Short-Term and Long-Term Solutions

Northern Pea Island, (aka the Canal Zone), and Pea Island Visitor Center

Summary: The northern portion of Hatteras Island includes a hotspot near the Basnight Bridge referred to as the “Canal Zone,” as well as a hotspot next to the Pea Island Visitor Center. NCDOT makes significant road and dune maintenance investments to maintain transportation, but despite these efforts, these areas overwash several times a year causing unsafe road conditions, transportation delays, and road closures.

Pea Island Visitors Center in Oct. 2022. NCDOT image.

Short-term: The consensus of the subcommittee was to continue the current approach of reinforcing dunes, build temporary bridges when necessary, and to consider beach nourishment as an emergency, stop-gap measure.

Long-term: For the long term, the subcommittee looked at the following alternatives: status quo maintenance, a bridge in place, a long bridge around all areas connecting Basnight Bridge to the Jug Handle Bridge, and/or a series of smaller bridges around the various hotspots in the area.

NCDOT advised that the status quo was not sustainable, and a long bridge – while preferable – was not cost-effective with an estimated price tag of roughly $1 billion dollars. As a result, the subcommittee determined that smaller bridges around the Canal Zone and Visitor Center could work, but an approximately seven-mile-long bridge starting around the southern terminus of the Basnight Bridge and continuing around the Visitor Center, (an idea that was previously proposed in an NCDOT report), might be the most feasible solution considering highway vulnerability and cost.

Rodanthe S-Curves

Summary: This hotspot north of Rodanthe, referred to as the S-Curves, is routinely exposed to regular ocean overwash, resulting in multiple closures of N.C. Highway 12 in the past.

Long-term: Though the S-Curves was a noted hotspot when the N.C. 12 Task Force was formed, a long-term solution has already been implemented with the construction of the Jug Handle Bridge, which opened to traffic in the summer of 2022, and effectively bypasses the S-Curves hotspot.

Avon

N.C. Highway 12 in Avon during a nor’easter on November 17, 2019 Photo by Don Bowers

Summary: The Avon hotspot begins around the Avon Pier and continues south to the end of Ocean View Drive. Recent rapid erosion, loss of dunes, and frequent ocean overwash, (sometimes combined with soundside flooding and rainfall), can result in deep flooding of N.C. Highway 12.

Short-term: For the short term, beach nourishment was seen as the only practical solution. During the summer of 2022, Dare County implemented a beach nourishment project in this area, and a maintenance beach nourishment project is expected in roughly five years.

Long-term: For the longer term, raising the road in place was considered as an option, however, this solution could create other problems with drainage and flooding of adjacent and highly-populated areas. A bridge around Avon was also not ideal, as access to the community would be affected. The consensus of the subcommittee was to consider the implementation of beach nourishment until other ideas were developed.

Buxton

Summary: The Buxton hotspot starts on the south end of Avon village and continues to the northern portion of Buxton village. The most vulnerable area is an approximately one-mile-long section in northern Buxton between the village boundary and the jetties near the original site of the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse. The highway frequently overwashes in an area around several motels and adjacent side streets located on the northern end of the village.

Northern Buxton in Nov. 2021. Photo by Orville Scarborough

Short-term: A beach nourishment project was completed in 2018 and again in 2022. Both projects met the immediate goal of protecting N.C. Highway 12 and minimizing impacts to transportation.

Long-term: For the southern end of Avon to Buxton, several long-term alternatives were considered from NCDOT’s report entitled “NC 12 Improvements from Buxton to Avon,” dated October 2015. From that report, the subcommittee favored Alternative 2, a bridge from the Haulover Beach Parking Area to the northern entrance of Buxton, and Alternative 3, a bridge from the southern boundary of Avon to Buxton’s Rocky Rollinson Road. The consensus of the subcommittee for the long term was to consider a combination of Alternatives 2 and 3; ultimately, a bridge that starts from southern Avon and ends in the center of Buxton village.

Frisco/Hatteras Village

Summary: The highway between Frisco and Hatteras village is vulnerable, and particularly at a mile-long stretch just north of Hatteras village, which is routinely exposed to ocean and soundside flooding. This section of roadway was previously breached by Hurricane Isabel in 2003, when a 2,000-foot-wide and 15-foot-deep inlet temporarily formed in the area.

Short-term: With limited options, the consensus of the group was to utilize the short-term solution of beach nourishment to preserve the road. Where seepage continued to flood the road along northern Hatteras village, the group considered raising the road elevation.

North of Hatteras village in Sept. 2022. NCDOT image.

Long-term: For the long haul, the subcommittee considered four alternatives.

  • Alternative 1 was a road relocation to the north.
  • Alternative 2 was a combination of road relocation and a 200-foot-long bridge.
  • Alternative 3 was beach nourishment.
  • Alternative 4 was road relocation and a beach nourishment project.

Alternative 1 was eliminated because there was insufficient land area. Alternative 3 was eliminated because it cost more than other alternatives and was less sustainable. The consensus of the subcommittee was a longer bridge hybrid of NCDOT alternatives 2 and 4, which would extend the bridge from the Frisco Bathhouse to Hatteras village, to try to avoid the hotspot area in its entirety.

Ocracoke

Summary: There are several ongoing issues in northern Ocracoke Island. The Hatteras-Ocracoke ferry channel has been challenging to maintain, resulting in delays and longer ferry trips. The South Dock ferry terminal on Ocracoke Island has also been difficult to maintain due to erosion, which caused a realignment of the terminal’s stacking lanes. Finally, the northernmost two-mile stretch of Ocracoke Island is rapidly eroding, resulting in regular flooding and closures of N.C. Highway 12 next to the ferry docks.

Short-term: Unfortunately, there are very few short-term solutions available for northern Ocracoke Island. For now, the consensus was to continue using the current method to hold the dock and roadway in place until a more permanent solution could be implemented.

Erosion has destroyed the ferry stacking lanes at the northern tip of Ocracoke, known as South Dock. Photo: C. Leinbach

Long-Term: The consensus of the subcommittee was to move the Hatteras-Ocracoke ferry’s South Dock to an undetermined location closer to Ocracoke village to avoid the cost of having to build a long causeway-type entrance to the ferry terminal, and to avoid having the ferry terminal located in an area that would likely be cut off from Ocracoke village. Passenger ferries were also seen as a possible way to mitigate impacts to tourism caused by longer run times and the inability to meet demand. An additional study of a landing site in the location of Ocracoke village near Silver Lake and other areas was recommended to facilitate decision-making.

Identifying Priorities

Once solutions were identified for the seven hotspots, the next step was to identify priorities.

“The committee had the task of trying to prioritize [the hotspots],” said Outten. “If we had some amount of money that would allow us to do one thing tomorrow, what would we do?”

Overwash on NC 12 at the north end of Ocracoke. NCDOT photo

The consensus was that the Pea Island area should be addressed first, as it was the area that connected to all other regions of Hatteras and Ocracoke Islands. If a long road closure occurs in the Pea Island area, (like during Hurricane Irene in 2011), the only way on and off the island for all residents is via an emergency ferry from Rodanthe to Stumpy Point.

After that, the second priority was Hatteras/Frisco, (again, to maintain access to Hatteras village), followed by Ocracoke, although it was noted that there was not an easy or immediate solution available for northern Ocracoke’s challenges. Avon and Buxton, which currently have beach nourishment projects in place, were lower in priority as there were already temporary solutions that would be implemented, (in the form of maintenance beach nourishment projects), over the next few years.

Next Steps

Now that an outline has been created of preferred solutions and priorities, the next step for these projects is to facilitate funding, and there was some good news in this vein at Tuesday’s meeting.

Thanks to federal infrastructure bills and a number of available grants, finding the funds for the transportation projects will not be as difficult as it was when the N.C. 12 Task Force was formed roughly two years ago.

“We were in dire straits two years ago, thinking ‘Where will we find the money to do bridges?’ So maybe it’s a godsend that we had to go through this process,” said N.C. 12 Task Force Chairman Bob Woodard. “I wanted this Task Force to try to address this so we can come to some agreement about what kind of actions that we can take from the subcommittee’s report, and try to [identify] and fund the long-term goals of N.C. Highway 12.

“Now it’s time for us to go to work and try to find ways to find money to make these long-term solutions come together.”

The N.C. 12 Task Force arguably has a head start on obtaining funds from various channels, because of the committee’s make-up of varied stakeholders.

From the National Park Service, to the NCDOT, to roughly a dozen other federal, state, and local organizations with an interest in keeping N.C. Highway 12 open, the wide representation of members means a wider network of funding opportunities.

Woodard noted that county representatives were meeting with the N.C. Legislature to start the conversation on Wednesday, and other N.C. 12 Task Force Members– such as David Hallac National Parks of Eastern North Carolina Superintendent – said they had started to investigate funding opportunities as well.

One specific source of funding that was discussed at Tuesday’s meeting was the FHWA PROTECT Program. The recently passed Bipartisan Infrastructure Law established a new Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) program to help address the ability of transportation systems to respond to current and future weather events and natural disasters.

North Carolina can expect to receive an estimated $194,421,690 over the course of five years as a result of the PROTECT Program, but the challenge for the N.C. 12 Task Force is ensuring that these funds are directed to N.C. Highway 12. There are concerns that rather than using the money for resilience projects, like those needed on the Outer Banks, the money may be used instead to widen existing evacuation routes, or address other projects in the state.

“The Park Service, in collaboration with the Fish and Wildlife Service… has identified this PROTECT funding as potential funding that could fund all three priority transportation solutions,” Hallac said. “And we’re going to work as hard as we can with all the partners at the table here to see if we can bring some of that money to [fix] these problems.”

Obtaining funds for any of the projects is not guaranteed, but the group was optimistic at the end of Tuesday’s meeting, having a strategy in place, and many more funding options available than when the Task Force was formed.

No future meetings of the N.C. 12 Task Force are currently scheduled, however, the Task Force has not disbanded, and will be in contact in the months to come as funding avenues are explored.

For More Information

For more information on the N.C. 12 Task Force, including details on the seven individual hotspots, visit the Dare County Website.

Ocracoke Islanders ask for better emergency services

0
This ambulance on Ocracoke is fully functional. Photo: C. Leinbach

By Connie Leinbach

Ocracoke Island is a resort community and needs good EMT service.

That was the message at the Hyde County Board of Commissioners Monday night by islanders Scott Bradley and Ronny Vann O’Neal, the latter of whom related a concerning situation that happened over the weekend.

O’Neal explained that an island woman was in pain and needed ambulance service Friday night, but when the two EMTs showed up at her door, they said there was no working ambulance available.

“I said, ‘What are we going to do?’”

O’Neal said one of them said he would have to drive the woman himself. “I’m 80 and I don’t see too good in the dark. I kind of flipped my lid and called 911 again but no one would talk to me.”

So, O’Neal drove the woman in pain to the north end ferry. When he arrived on Hatteras, he called a friend, who sent an ambulance for O’Neal’s charge. If he would have waited for a working ambulance, O’Neal said, it would have been the next day.

“It’s gonna be too late if somebody dies,” O’Neal said. “These young people in construction work, if they fall off a house, what are they gonna do? Everybody just can’t take off and carry somebody (to the hospital.)”

The importance of health care and emergency services on Ocracoke is crucial, said islander Scott Bradley, who related a story about a visiting couple last summer in their 70s, the husband of whom needed emergency care.

He said the EMTs did not follow up with the wife after evacuating the husband, so Bradley and Kelley Shinn ended up helping the woman.

“We got her on the ferry, got her some food, tried to help her the best we could,” Bradley said, noting that she eventually reached the hospital in Greenville and, fortunately, her husband was back on the island two days later.

“I only share this because after hearing the story of Mr. O’Neal it just makes me wonder what’s going on,” he said. “This is a resort community, and it needs top notch EMT service.”

Hyde County Manager Kris Noble said in an interview Tuesday morning that the faulty ambulance had been fully charged after about 45 minutes of the Friday night call from O’Neal, who, with his party, had already headed to the hospital.

“So if we had had another call that evening that would have been okay,” she said. Ocracoke was covered.

She said the two EMTS who responded Friday night arrived in a pickup truck the EMS also has on the island.

By Saturday evening, and after several conversations with the EMS and county managers, the best ambulance Hyde County has was on the island, County Commissioner Randal Mathews had said in an earlier interview on Monday. Hyde County only has four ambulances.

Mathews explained that these ambulances have two batteries, and the vehicles must stay charged while parked. In the prior ambulance, a master switch had not been thrown because an EMS employee from the mainland unfamiliar with the Ocracoke ambulance had missed the switch. So the truck wouldn’t start for O’Neal’s situation.

Mathews said this ambulance had been serviced before this latest event for “several thousand dollars.”

Noble said she will ask the county commissioners, probably at the March meeting, for approval to divert some money from the $1.1 million the N.C. Legislature appropriated to build a $2.2 million EMS building on Ocracoke, toward the purchase of another ambulance.

Noble, at Monday night’s meeting, apologized saying the situation has been addressed.

“You all have full emergency transport capability and will continue to have it,” she said. “This was an isolated incident.”

Noting that she, too, has loved ones on the island, she said she will work toward the purchase of a new ambulance.

“We’re dedicated and will put every measure in place to make sure this never happens again,” she said.

Ocracoke events Feb. 6 to 12–Updated

0
February beach Ocracoke. Photo: C. Leinbach

Monday, Feb. 6
Hyde County Commissioners, 6 pm. Hyde County government services building (Swan Quarter) and Ocracoke Community Center. See agenda below. Livestreamed on Hyde County Public Information Facebook page. You can submit public comments for the next meeting by leaving a voicemail at 252-926-5288 or by going to https://forms.gle/qWzxU8EXfaQDahWp6 and filling out the form.

Thursday, Feb. 9
Ocracoke Lighthouse 200th anniversary event committee meeting, 1 pm. Ocracoke Community Center

Ocracoke Decoy Carvers Guild monthly meeting. All welcome Community Center, 7 pm

Friday, Feb. 10
Ocracoke School varsity home basketball games against the Hobgood Charter Raiders: Lady Dolphins tip off at 4 pm followed by the boys team. Games will be broadcast on WOVV. 1

Saturday, Feb. 11
The Breeze: Valentine’s Day Dance with the Ocracoke Rockers.

Doors open at 6 pm, The Ocracoke Rockers at 8pm. $20 per person includes all you can eat, live music and all non alcoholic drinks.

Ocracoke School recognizes student achievements

0
Honor Roll third grader Dafne Mendez Amador receives her award from Principal Leslie Cole. Dean of Students Jeanie Owens in background. Photo P. Vankevich

By Peter Vankevich

Ocracoke School students were honored Monday in the school gym for academic achievement in attaining the honor roll and principal’s list for the second nine-week session.

To attend, the families and friends had to navigate big puddles in pouring rain.

Ocracoke School Principal Leslie Cole said there were 32 students from grades three to 12 on the Honor Roll, which measures grading scores of 85 to 92, and 26 students on the Principal’s List, which is 93 to 100.

“So excellent job,” she said. “That’s 58 students.”

Following the academic awards were the Dolphin Awards. Recipients of Dolphin Awards are chosen by their teachers for their enthusiasm, special interests and contributions to their classes.

Principal’s List recipients. Photo: P. Vankevich
Honor roll members. Photo: P. Vankevich
Dolphin Award recipients. Photo: P. Vankevich

Dolphin Awardees:

PreK
Emerson King

Kindergarten
Mariluna Gyger
Amaya Strissel
Nicolas Neal

First Grade
Allison Lopez-Trejo
Xander Palacios
Yossbany Ibarra
Eivan Morales Huerta
Luke Gallaher

Second Grade
Gael Guerrero
Perez Evelyn Contreras

Third Grade
Emmett Gallaher
Dafne Mendez Amador
Natalia Trejo
Armando Perez-Leyva

Fourth Grade
Riely Brown
Kyler Luna

Fifth Grade
Daira Mendez Amador
Lizbeth Perez
Jordan Suazo-Dominguez

Middle School
Angel Garcia
Tyler Carbis
Jamileht Martinez
Angel Hernandez-Ortiz

High School  Math
Alexis Villanueva

High School History
Noah O’Neal

High School Science
Phawan Udomsrisamran

High School English
Nicholas Cole

High School CTE
Elvis Morales Monter

Art
Melissa Suazo Lopez – K-2nd
Jordan Suazo Dominguez – 3rd-5th
Mau Guerrero Perez – Middle School
Mira Barnes – High School

Physical Education
Amaya Luna – K-2nd
Pierce Bryan – 3rd-5th Bailey Bryan – Middle School
Angela Flores – High School

Miss Katie arrives in Hatteras for her first Hatteras Inlet dredging

0
Photo of the Miss Katie by EJE Dredging Service.

 January 27, 2023

Reposted courtesy of Island Free Press

By Joy Crist

Dare County’s own dredge, the Miss Katie, arrived in Hatteras village on Thursday, Jan. 26, to conduct a maintenance dredging event in Hatteras Inlet’s Connector Channel over the next few days.

“The dredge is there, and it’s supposed to start working this morning,” said Dare County Waterways Commission Chairman Steve “Creature” Coulter. “We asked for seven to 10 days, but we’re not sure how long it will dredge. It looks like they will have good wind and weather for five to six days, though.”

The Connector Channel is currently navigable for mariners, with depths in the seven- to eight-foot range, and it’s hopeful that this dredging event will keep it that way in the months to come.

“We’re not having any problem with the Connector Channel. We just need to widen it, deepen, it, and get it ready for the summer so we don’t have a problem,” Coulter said. “Hopefully, we’ll see really good results, and will move some material out of the area instead of just moving it around, which can happen with the [US Army Corps of Engineers’] sidecaster dredge.”

This graphic of the Hatteras Inlet shows the Connector Channel near Ocracoke.

“The Miss Katie is a hopper dredge,” Coulter added. “She has the capability to do sidecasting, but that’s not what she’ll be doing this time. She’ll be picking up the sand and dumping it in the ocean.”

The construction and acquisition of the Miss Katie was a county-launched project that took years to come to fruition.

In the mid-2010s, an idea started to float that the county should buy its own dredge to target areas as needed, without relying on the Corps’ schedule and availability.

Miss Katie’s dredging console. Photo by Don Bowers.

In 2019, the Dare County Board of Commissioners unanimously approved a contract for the construction and operation of a new shallow-draft hopper dredge for use in the various channels and inlets throughout the county.

The 156-foot dredge, christened on Oct. 13 at a ceremony in Wanchese, is the result of a public-private partnership with Greenville, N.C.-based, EJE Dredging Service, and the Miss Katie was built with a $15 million allocation from the state Shallow Draft Navigation fund.

EJE owns and operates the Miss Katie, and the Oregon Inlet Task Force has been charged by Dare County to manage the dredge, including its operation schedule and project monitoring.

The vessel is able to operate in both Oregon and Hatteras Inlets for up to 12 hours a day, and will be a county-managed resource to continually keep both inlets open in the years to come.

The Miss Katie has already been at work in Oregon Inlet since the fall, and this is the first time that she will tackle the channels of Hatteras Inlet.

“Hopefully, we’re going to use her for maintenance issues, [not emergencies],” said Coulter. “We mentioned that we may want to do one more dredging event at the end of March, too, right before the season starts.”

Brooke Burr and Jordan Hennessy christen the Miss Katie.

Dare County Commissioner and Waterways Commissioner Danny Couch said that the arrival of the Miss Katie in Hatteras was a good sign for the spring and summer fishing seasons to come.

“It’s a gift,” he said. “This is important, because we have four tournaments in Hatteras Inlet [in the summer], and these boats need to know now if they can get in and out. They want to make their plans, and do so confidently, and now they can.

“We’ve had a lame-duck status for the last couple of years due to the channel and COVID, but this is a new beginning,” added Couch. “It’s time we start making a name for ourselves as a destination, and as a player for these big [East Coast] tournaments, and that’s what this dredge is going to do for us. We’re seeing some of these dreams finally come true.”

Ocracoke Occupancy Tax Board seeks funding proposals for2023-2024

0

The Ocracoke Occupancy Tax Board is gearing up to award grants to Ocracoke nonprofits and has scheduled the 2023-2024 appropriations meeting at 6 p.m. Tuesday, March 28, in the Ocracoke Community Center. 

Request packets should be dropped off no later than Monday, March 1, at Ride the Wind Surf Shop, between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. daily. 

Packets also can be mailed to Bob Chestnut, PO Box 700, Ocracoke, NC. 27960.

Details as to submitting grants are as follows:

Ocracoke weathers tornado warnings

0
This graphic from the National Weather Service shows the tornado warning area at 8 p.m. Jan. 25

By Peter Vankevich

Ocracoke gets its share of weather alerts, but it is not often that one is an imminent tornado warning. Wednesday evening, Ocracoke had two within an hour.

Fortunately, they were just warnings — but disturbing nevertheless — although one islander said her radar tracker showed a tornado had moved along the eastern side of Jackson Circle and then swerved over to the Lifeguard Beach area.

Ocracoke stormy weather Jan. 25 2023. Photo: P. Vankevich

Erik Heden, the warning coordination meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Newport/Morehead City, said Thursday morning that the warnings likely were for waterspouts that may have come onshore.

He emphasized the importance of the warnings, especially in the darkness of night when people are unable to see the danger.

Officially tracking tornadoes requires damage surveys to establish a path, its length, width, start and end and to assess the top wind speed, he said.

The National Weather Service had issued a weather watch Monday morning to eastern North Carolina that a strong front would bring the threat of damaging wind gusts, severe thunder storms and isolated tornadoes on Wednesday into Thursday morning.

The winds picked up on Wednesday afternoon and as darkness settled in, heavy rains hit Ocracoke.

The NWS graphic for the 9 p.m. tornado warning Jan. 25.

When it seemed that the weather system would move on, many people received an audio warning on their phones issued 8:13 pm that a tornado was heading to Ocracoke. The system was moving rapidly, and the danger would last only until 8:30 p.m.

The audio message urged people to seek shelter in the middle inside buildings.

A second warning came on 9:01 p.m. with the threat lasting until 9:30 p.m. Local television stations broke into regularly scheduled programming to track a series of severe weather and possible tornados.

Islander Anne Becker said she has lived through hurricanes in the Caribbean and the South most of her life. “So, I just know like when the alarm goes off to take it seriously,” she said in an email.  She and her husband Andy did so.

“We had two humans, three cats, and three parrots crammed into a bathroom,” she said. “We have a tree down and a few inches [of rain] bobbing about under the house.”

Follow ups in the mornings found there was no sign that a tornado had struck the village. Becker’s examination of the downed tree in daylight indicated that it fell from a combination of high wind and soaking soil. “It kind of just leaned but it didn’t snap,” she said.

Islander Mitzi Crall, who lives on the waterfront on the Ocracoke Inlet side, said the outside got deathly quiet for a moment and the dog got a little “wonky,” but there was no tornado.

“We were paying attention,” she said, noting that a friend of hers off island texted that the tornado was zeroing in on Ocracoke. “Quite a few water spots are seen from here, but it was dark. We didn’t see anything.” Crall said she grew up in tornado country and so takes warnings seriously.

“But this appeared to stay in the clouds,” she said. “A lot of them stay in the clouds.”

Wednesday evening evoked a song by Coyote, Lou Castro and Marcy Brenner.

Tideland seeks high school applicants for summer trip to D.C.

0

A week remains for local high school sophomores and juniors to apply for an all-expenses-paid trip to Washington, D.C., June 17 to 23 courtesy of Tideland Electric Cooperative, which serves Hyde County.

The application deadline is Jan. 31 and can be downloaded here.

One Tideland area high school student will have an opportunity to take part in this year’s Electric Cooperative Youth Tour to Washington, D.C.  The event, which has been going on for 50 years, involves more than 1,600 students representing electric cooperatives from across the nation.

The Youth Tour recruiting process is open to high school sophomores and juniors. Eligible students must reside in a home served by Tideland.
Among the activities, Tideland’s Youth Tourists will learn more about cooperative business principles, Visit Capitol Hill and meet with North Carolina’s Senators and Congressional representatives and have an opportunity to win a college scholarship.

Attendees who return their paperwork on time will be eligible to tour The White House if scheduling permits.

During the week, North Carolina students establish a “Soda Pop Co-op” to provide a supply of affordable drinks while in Washington, D.C.

Each student pays $1 to become a member of the cooperative. A board of directors is appointed, and they hire a manager and assistant manager. At the end of the trip, the cooperative is dissolved, and each student is refunded their membership fee and their capital credits.

Learn more about the event by visiting the National Electric Youth Tour website.

OCBA meeting among events this weekend

0
January beach day. Photo: C. Leinbach

Friday, Jan. 27

The North Carolina Center for the Advancement of Teaching (NCCAT) would like to renovate the Ocracoke campus and invites the Ocracoke Island community to view and give input on a preliminary draft from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the NCCAT Ocracoke building.

Ocracoke School Dolphins basketball continues at home against the Hatteras Hurricanes with the junior varsity at 4:30, followed by the varsity Lady Dolphins and the varsity boys team. Games will be broadcast by WOVV.

Saturday, Jan. 28

The Ocracoke Civic & Business Association will meet at 11 a.m. in the Deepwater Theater on School Road.
Agendas will be distributed at the meeting. Among the agenda items will be the following:

  • Elect new board members (officers will be elected by the new board)
  • Set dates for subsequent public meetings
  • Treasurer’s report

On the OCBA’s activity list this year include the following: New membership levels; Completion of the Occupancy Tax grant request; Public restroom at the Island Inn; Events (July 4 activities; Blackbeard’s Pirate Jamboree, Island-Wide Yard Sale; Holiday Market; Island Celebration holiday lights).

Also on Jan. 27 and 28 at 7 p.m. both nights will be a production of Shakespeare’s “Hamlet” by the Mended Wing Theatre Company in the Ocracoke Community Center. Tickets available at the door.

Invision Diagnostics will bring its portable 3-D mammogram van to the Ocracoke Volunteer Fire Department Friday, Jan. 27, and Saturday, Jan. 28. For appointments, call 877-318-1349, option 1.

Cold front with high winds heading to Outer Banks Wednesday

0

The National Weather Service today issued a warning that a strong cold front will impact Eastern NC tomorrow (Wednesday, Jan. 25) through Thursday morning and bring a period of intense gusty winds and the threat of severe weather in the form of damaging wind gusts and isolated tornadoes. 

The NWS issued a gale watch for the Pamlico Sound for Wednesday afternoon through late Wednesday night.

These high winds may cause temporary suspensions of ferry service.