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Hyde No. 3 in state for COVID-19; state suggests Hyde boost the fight

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Hyde County’s COVID-19 cases as of 3 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 27.

By Connie Leinbach

Although Hyde County has only one active COVID-19 case out of 176 total cases since the end of April, that apparently makes Hyde the third highest coronavirus hotspot in the state.

That’s according to a letter Hyde County received last week from the N.C. Department of Health and Human Services suggesting Hyde, and 35 other counties who received the same letter, do more to stop the spread of the novel coronavirus.

As of Monday, Hyde’s total case count was 176, with 170 recovered, five deaths and one active case, Hyde County Health Director Luana Gibbs noted in a press release, but as of Tuesday afternoon, that count had risen by one more case to 177 total cases with two active.

“The secretaries are suggesting that counties with rates higher than 50 cases per 10,000 (people) implement stronger mitigation strategies to reduce the spread of COVID-10,” she wrote.

Gibbs said Hyde is No. 3 because of the math.

When you do the math—take 176 cases; divide it by Hyde’s population of 5,198 people; then multiply by 10,000–you get Hyde’s rate of 334.74, which is higher than 50, Gibbs said.

Hyde got a bump in its cases because of outbreaks at two mainland congregate living facilities– the Cross Creek nursing home and the Hyde Correctional Institute.

“Everyone at Cross Creek and the prison has recovered,” Gibbs said in an interview on Tuesday morning. “I’m just thrilled that these two places have recovered.”

The letter, from Dr. Mandy Cohen, secretary of the N.C. Department of Health & Human Services, and Erik A. Hooks, secretary of Public Safety, in addition to asking for more promotion of the “three Ws,” suggested that counties could enact ordinances with supporting fines and penalties.

Cohen and Hooks also suggested counties could impose civil penalties or fines for businesses that do not enforce the mask requirements; establish lower mass gathering limits; curtail the sale of alcohol earlier than 11 pm;  close high risk venues such as bars and night spots; and limit restaurant service.

Health directors can also issue Imminent Hazard Abatement orders, which would send violators to court.

Gibbs is continuing to stress that citizens and visitors follow the “three Ws”: Wear a face covering; wait at least six feet apart and wash your hands frequently. She also added to avoid large crowds.

Despite the letter from the state, Gibbs said the Health Department will not do anything more than it’s already doing—educating, case investigation, contact tracing and issuing isolation orders.

It’s up to the county commissioners to further tighten the screws with ordinances, she said.

“If the public wants more, the public needs to go to the commissioners and ask for it,” she said.

The virus is in the community, she said, but mass congregate living settings have housed a large portion of the county’s cases. 

“This can change,” she said. “Colder weather will force more people inside and once school re-opens, this increases congregate settings (though science shows that elementary age children do not transmit the virus as easily as adults and adolescents).

“People may be lowering their guard simply because they are tired of dealing with COVID, and some do not believe it is real.  Regardless of public perception, the potential exists for our cases to rise in the community setting.”

The Hyde County Health Department remains available to the public to answer questions and provide education. 

They can be reached at 252-926-4399 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.  For 24/7 on-call services, call the Coronavirus Hotline at 1-866-462-3821.

A call for leadership: Why I’m voting for Tess Judge

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Editor’s note: Tess Judge (D-Kitty Hawk) is challenging incumbent Bob Steinburg (R-Edenton) in the general election Nov. 3 for the N.C. state Senate District 1, which includes Ocracoke.

By Jane Webster 

Theodore Roosevelt once famously said, “the credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena.” If you win, after all, you have to show up and be vulnerable. In politics, you also have to have thick skin and sometimes take a hard beating. 

In just over a week, remaining voters will go to the polls and decide who we want as our elected leaders. Some will vote straight ticket. Others will vote based on how closely the candidate aligns with their values and ideology. 

A race many are focused on here in northeastern North Carolina is that between Bob Steinburg and Tess Judge. 

By now, you’d be hard-pressed to find anyone in the 11 counties that make up this district who hasn’t received numerous flyers and seen multiple television and social media ads from each of these candidates. 

The stakes have never been higher, and each candidate is in the arena fighting for your vote. 

I’ve watched Tess run a small business successfully, serve the people of this district through her many boards, and often when no one was watching. Not to mention serving her church on a regional and national level and fellow churches. 

And I’ve seen her demonstrate grace under fire throughout this campaign. 

When I think Tess, I don’t see a politician. I see a leader. 

I see a leader who will do the right thing for all the citizens in northeastern North Carolina, whether you’re a farmer, fisherman, police officer, schoolteacher, business owner, waiter or retail store worker. I also see her as a leader for counties beyond her district. 

I see a leader who will think about every voter when she’s making a decision on their behalf.

I see a leader who has the experience and insight to chart a course towards greater access to healthcare, a more vibrant economy, better schools for our students, and better pay for our teachers. Not to mention improving support for our first responders, our policemen and our volunteer firefighters. 

A leader who will roll up her sleeves every day and work tirelessly to champion solutions that can make the American Dream a reality for every man, woman, and child in northeastern North Carolina and throughout our beloved state of the Long Leaf Pine. 

A leader who won’t play partisan politics, who will unite rather than divide and will have influence on both sides of the aisle. 

Like you, I’m tired of the fearmongering, name-calling, and overall ugliness we’ve seen in this and recent elections. 

It’s time to bring civility back to politics and elect trustworthy leaders who have the character to do just that. 

I know firsthand that Tess Judge supports the Second Amendment–is NOT going to take your guns away–but she believes in safe and responsible gun owner rights. She will not defund the police, and she is far from a New York liberal. 

She is Tess Judge, and it is the Tess Judge voice you’ll get in Raleigh.

Faith is at the core of everything Tess Judge does and every decision she makes, and if a woman of faith is known by her fruit, then I’ve never met a better woman of faith.

Tess has been in the arena many times before in her life. So being on the receiving end of her opponent’s falsehoods and attacks is something she can handle. As she likes to say, “When you see these ads, remember, my opponent isn’t just attacking me, he’s attacking you and the values you stand for.” 

Leadership is earned, not given, and Tess Judge has undoubtedly earned and demonstrated throughout her life that she’s the type of leader all of us in this district need right now. 

So I encourage you, as you look at the list of candidates in front of you, Tess Judge or otherwise, ask with your vote, “is this a true leader or simply another politician?” 

Jane Webster of Kitty Hawk, Dare County, is a local philanthropist and civic leader active on numerous nonprofit boards.

The campaign end approaches: Ocracoke concludes early/one stop voting

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N.C. General Assembly candidates Tess Judge for Senate District 1 and Tommy Fulcher for House District 6 visit Ocracoke’s polling place on Oct. 22. Judge, center, talks to islander Woody Billings, left. Photo: C. Leinbach

To catch up on Ocracoke news and much more, click here

By Peter Vankevich

Clarification (Oct. 29, 2020): The number reported for early voting for Ocracoke was off by 10 votes. The numbers updated in this story are in red. Also, updated information on the NC Board of Elections website on Oct. 29 indicates that a total of 1,037 ballots have been cast in Hyde County, which is 32.8% of the total voters. Statewide, a total of 3,867,846 ballots have already been cast which is 52.7% of the registered voters.

The two-day early voting period on Ocracoke before the General Election ended Friday with a total of 356 voters, Viola Williams, Hyde County elections director said today.

Voting took place last Thursday and Friday (Oct. 22 and 23) in the Ocracoke Volunteer Fire Department, the same place for the voting in the General Election on Tuesday, Nov. 3.

Unlike the rest of the state, Ocracoke has only two days of early/one stop voting.

The first day, 220 showed up to vote and another 136 voted on Friday, casting a total 346 ballots. Eight people made use of “one stop” to register and vote. 

Breaking down affiliations: Democrats led with 177 votes followed by unaffiliated with 132; Republicans 37 and Libertarians three.

Two of the candidates for the General Assembly, Tess Judge for Senate District 1 and Tommy Fulcher for House District 6, showed up to meet the voters and answer questions. Both are Democrats.

On the mainland, all Hyde County registered voters can cast their early votes up to 3 p.m. Saturday, Oct.31, at the Board of Elections office at 1223 Main St., Swan Quarter.

The early voting schedule at the Elections Office is from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Oct. 27, 28, 29, 30, and from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 31.

Poll worker Gary Davis and Hyde County Elections Director Viola Williams prepare for early voting on Ocracoke. Photo: C. Leinbach

The first day of early voting on the mainland (which began Oct. 15) drew 82, and as of Friday, a total of 358 votes cast.

That makes more than 720 the combined number of early votes cast thus far. The total of votes cast in Hyde County is only slightly more than 20% which is among the lowest of North Carolina’s 100 counties.

As of this morning, there are a total of 3,160 registered Hyde County voters, including 827 on Ocracoke.

Record early voting turnouts are occurring throughout the country.

As of this morning, of the 7.32 million North Carolina registered voters, 2.623,503 have already early voted, and an additional 805,956 absentee votes have been cast making it a total of 3,411,850 which brings it to 46.57% of the total already voted. 

Requests for absentee ballots ends at 5 p.m. today (Oct. 27) and voters are encouraged to vote early and mail their absentee ballots as soon as possible.

With the “same-day, one-stop” voting option, Hyde County voters may travel to the Elections Office in Swan Quarter.

Questions regarding voting can be answered by calling the Hyde County Board of Elections office at 252-926-4194 and checking the North Carolina Board of Elections website at www.ncsbe.gov.

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The polling place for this election, both early and on Nov. 3, is inside the Ocracoke Volunteer Fire Department. Photo: C. Leinbach

Drive-through flu shot clinic scheduled for Ocracoke

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To catch up on Ocracoke news and much more, click here

Dr. Erin Baker is steeling herself for winter as the flu season approaches on top of the COVID-19 pandemic.

That’s why the Hyde County Health Department is having a drive-through flu shot clinic from 9 a.m. to noon on Friday, Nov. 6, and Baker urges everyone to get a flu shot.

Ocracoke’s physician Dr. Erin Baker. Photo: P. Vankevich

“Do not get complacent,” Baker, who is Ocracoke’s physician at the Ocracoke Health Center, said in a recent interview. “Do not let your guard down.”

Baker is concerned about the upcoming holiday season as a potential spreader of the virus for which there’s no cure or vaccine.

“The risk is small indoor gatherings,” she said. “There’s risk involved when you bring people in from other households.

Baker and the Hyde County Health Department urge all to continue to follow the “three Ws” as the novel coronavirus continues its sweep across the country. That means continuing with the mantra that the country has been hearing since March: “wear” a face covering, “wait” at least six feet away and “wash” your hands frequently.

Oh, and consider getting a flu shot. Information on the Ocracoke event is below.

Ocracoke meetings this week

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October on Ocracoke is still nice for swimming and especially for fishing. Photo: C. Leinbach

To catch up on Ocracoke news and much more, click here

Tuesday, Oct. 17:
The Hyde County Board of Education will hold a special meeting at 5 p.m. to review the latest updates and their decision to remain in Plan C. Anyone interested in participating in the public comment segment should email Basnight at sbasnight@hyde.k12.nc.us to be added to the agenda.

Members of the public will be able to view a simulcast of the meeting on the Hyde County Schools Facebook page.

The Ocracoke Waterways Commission will meet via the Hyde County Public Information Facebook page via live feed at 6 p.m.
Agenda:

  1. Public Comment
  2. Aids to Navigation Update – USCG
  3. Status of Big Foot Dredging and Outcome thereof – ACOE/NC Ferry
  4. Status of Ferry Operations – NC Ferry
  5. Long-term South Dock Scenarios/Solutions including Relocation – NC Ferry & Commission
  6. Silver Lake Harbor DRAFT Ordinance review and potential approval for submission to Hyde County Commissioners
  7. Other Business
  8. Public Comment
  9. Adjourn

Free remote learning conference slated for teachers, parents

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From our news services

Raleigh— All North Carolina teachers and parents are invited to attend a free virtual conference on Wednesday, Oct. 28, to help them navigate technology and remote learning.

The REAL 2.0 (Remote Education & Learning) Conference will include sessions by experts in fields including education, mental health and technology.

The from 11:45 to 7:15 p.m. conference is hosted by the North Carolina Business Committee for Education (NCBCE), a business-led, education nonprofit housed in the Governor’s Office. It will build upon the initial REAL Conference attended by more than 1,300 educators in August to learn about best practices for remote learning during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Teachers, parents and students have adapted to new ways of learning throughout the pandemic, and I admire your resilience, creativity and dedication,” Gov. Roy Cooper said about the conference. “Even as we work to get children back into the classroom safely our schools and families need support for remote learning and this conference is one way we’re providing that help.”

Educators from across the state are serving as content advisers for REAL 2.0. Sessions for parents will be available in both English and Spanish, and all sessions will include closed captioning.

For educators, topics covered will include navigating asynchronous learning; how to teach students effective study habits, time management and daily routines for virtual learning; tips and timesavers in Canvas; ideas for getting students motivated during virtual learning; Google Classroom and Google Meets tips and tricks; resources for struggling students; addressing the needs of exceptional learners in the regular classroom; video creating and editing tips; and much more. Exceptional student needs will be addressed throughout the sessions.

For parents, sessions will include: digital literacy; understanding Canvas and Google Classroom; how to support children with autism during remote learning; the college application and FAFSA process; fostering good mental health for parents and their children; and much more.

To attend the REAL 2.0 Conference, register at ncstudentconnect.com up until Oct. 28. Recordings of the REAL 2.0 Conference will be available at the same link following the conference and educators can also view the recordings from the first REAL Conference at the same link.

REAL 2.0 is the second in a series of four virtual remote learning conferences that will be held through Cooper’s NC Student Connect initiative.

The STEM Connect Conference will be held on Nov. 17, for STEM educators to learn best practices for incorporating STEM into the virtual classroom, and the Cultural Arts LIVE Conference will be held Dec. 15 and 16 for arts and humanities educators and their classes.

Ocracoke students navigate culture, academics online

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Silas Trethewey practices his basketball shots every opportunity he can between studies. Photo: C. Leinbach

By Connie Leinbach

Silas Trethewey is too young to know whether he’ll go into the family business, but he got a taste of it during a recent Zoom workshop with several poet laureates.

Silas, 14, and a ninth-grade student at Ocracoke School, is the son of the late poet and professor Eric Trethewey and Kelley Shinn, an Ocracoke-based writer.

Silas also is the half-brother of Pulitzer Prize winning poet Natasha Trethewey, who was named United States Poet Laureate in 2012 and in 2013, and she is a former Poet Laureate of Mississippi.

Silas participated in the 2020 Literary ChangeMakers Virtual Summit in September, featuring North Carolina Poet Laureate Jaki Shelton Green, a frequent Ocracoke visitor, and Chapel Hill Poet Laureate C.J. Suitt.

Also participating via a pre-recorded video was Joy Harjo, the first Native American Poet Laureate of the United States.

Silas didn’t feel intimidated about being in the presence of poetry luminaries as much as the exercise of sharing his innermost thoughts, a hallmark of poetry.

“I kind of went in there with the expectation of not really saying anything because I was kind of nervous about it,” Silas said. “I went out of my comfort zone a little bit.”

At this point, fiction writing is more up his alley, but he enjoyed the Saturday afternoon workshop more than he realized.

“I enjoyed it, but it’s easier for me to write fiction because you can create a similar story and you still share the same thoughts but you don’t really have to say that what you’re experiencing is true,” he said.

His mom, Kelley, noted that even though the COVID-19 pandemic is preventing people from congregating, the virtual world is a way to experience new things, often free of charge.

“That was one that easily presented itself because it’s Jaki and her affinity for Ocracoke,” Shinn said about the event. “Here’s a chance to get off island right here at home and to be exposed to some pretty cool people.”

Silas and Ocracoke students are navigating the new world of virtual learning just like the rest of the country. While he has only four classes, he has more homework.

One of his classes this semester is gym and Coach Adam Burleson, the school’s athletic director, is finding ways to keep the youngsters moving.

“They do different workouts, or different exercises or activities after each Zoom,” Burleson said during one of his six-mile morning walks around the island. “And they share it with me either in an email or their health activity tracker on their phone. They’re supposed to be traveling at least 10,000 steps a day.”

Now students have to report on what they’ve done.

“They’re way more responsible for their actual learning than they’ve ever been,” he said.

Burleson said the school year so far is going well with the adjustments the staff has had to make.

Adam Burleson, aka ‘Coach B,’ stops to chat about virtual gym class while getting his own exercise in. Photo: C. Leinbach

“We’ve made some adjustments to elementary and middle,” to try to lessen the Zoom time. With high school, because of online classes and the Beaufort Community College classes, we have to follow that traditional model.”

Hyde County schools are following Plan C for instruction during the COVID-19 pandemic, which requires online learning only.

But with the slowing of the virus, Gov. Roy Cooper in September announced that North Carolina elementary school grades Kindergarten through fifth grade may now choose plan A, or in-school learning, for operations as soon as Oct. 5.

“The Hyde County Board of Education stated in making their original decision that we were going to be under Plan C through the end of the first nine weeks, which is in October for all our schools, but that they would review the current data during their regular monthly meetings and make adjustments to that plan when appropriate,” said Steven Basnight, superintendent of Hyde County schools.

When the school board approved Plan C, Hyde had 36 COVID-19 cases, but since then the number has risen to more than 125.

“Just like so many of our teachers, administrators, students, and parents it remains our desire to have all of our students back in their classrooms with their teachers as quickly as possible and in the safest, most welcoming environment possible,” he said.

The Hyde County Board of Education will hold a special meeting at 5 p.m. Tuesday to review the latest updates and their decision to remain in Plan C. Anyone interested in participating in the public comment segment should email Basnight at sbasnight@hyde.k12.nc.us to be added to the agenda.

Members of the public will be able to view a simulcast of the meeting on the Hyde County Schools Facebook page.

Four confirmed dead in Friday morning fire in Buxton

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The remains of a duplex where the fire appears to have originated. Photo by Don Bowers/Island Free Press

From our news services

Dare County Emergency Management has confirmed that four people died in an early Friday morning fire in Buxton that sent two others to the hospital.

Names of the deceased are being withheld, pending notification of their next of kin.

The fire happened in the Cottages at the Cape neighborhood, which was once part of military housing dating back to 1958 for Naval Facility Cape Hatteras. 

“Thoughts and prayers are with all who have been impacted by this tragic fire, especially those that lost loved ones,” said Drew Pearson, Dare County Emergency Management Director.  “We thank all those that answered the call, from the 911 call takers to each and every first responder, numerous volunteers and the fire investigators for their tireless efforts.”   

Crews from Buxton Volunteer Fire Department assisted by Avon, Hatteras and Frisco Volunteer Fire departments responded to reports of visible flames coming from a residence at 46110 Cape Hatteras Lane shortly after 4 a.m. on Friday. 

Dare County EMS, the Dare County Sheriff’s Office, Hatteras Island Rescue, Kill Devil Hills Fire Marshal, and the American Red Cross were also on scene to assist. 

The fire caused severe damage to neighboring residences on Cape Hatteras Lane.  

Investigators from the State Bureau of Investigation, Office of the State Fire Marshal, the Dare County Sheriff’s Office and the Dare County Fire Marshal assisted by Buxton firefighters continue to investigate the cause of the fire.

Updates will be provided by the Dare County Fire Marshal’s office as additional information becomes available. 

Navy detonates WWII-era bomb found on Cape Hatteras beach

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Screenshot from Brett Barley video from Buxton as the Navy detonated a device found on the beach. Photo courtesy of OBX Today

From our news sources

The Explosive Ordnance Disposal Detachment Norfolk from Naval Station Norfolk Friday successfully detonated a WWII-era bomb on the Buxton beach shortly after 12:30 p.m.

The three-person team reported that the concussion, set off by a combination of explosives, made a dull thud and sent up a 60-foot plume of smoke and sand around 12:30 p.m.

The U.S. Navy EOD unit had buried the unexploded 100-pound aerial bomb from the World War II era deep in the beach near the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse Beach Access parking area.

Cape Hatteras National Seashore maintenance staff worked to cover the hole. The perimeter was removed and all areas of the beach have reopened.

“Cape Hatteras National Seashore appreciates the significant efforts and expertise provided by U.S. Navy EOD Detachment Norfolk,” said David Hallac, Superintendent, National Parks of Eastern North Carolina. “Their immediate response helped protect visitors and nearby structures.” 

The Navy had originally planned to detonate the device Friday morning, but a large fire in Buxton delayed that plan. 

View a video of the detonation here, courtesy of OBX Today.

The Island Free Press reported earlier that Hatteras Island resident Michele Quidley was walking her dog near the Old Cape Hatteras Lighthouse site and Buxton Beach Day Use Area when her dog noticed an object high on the shoreline.

Some beach visitors got a little too up close and personal with what turned out to be a still live World War II-era bomb. Photo by Pam Smith Murray photo, courtesy of OBX Today

“When we reached it, I thought it was a log,” she said, “but then I realized it was made out of metal.”

When Quidley got a little closer and saw the unusual tail at the end of the object, (which resembled the end of an ordnance or torpedo), she called the authorities and stayed near the site until they arrived.

“I was worried about just leaving it there, because there are a lot of visitors on the beach, and I didn’t want kids to play with it, or someone to accidentally pick it up and take it home as a souvenir,” she said.

She called the National Park Service, and then reached out to the Dare County Sheriff’s Office dispatch center, noting that John Conner of the Buxton Volunteer Fire Department was the first to arrive at the scene.

This is not the first time a potential unexploded ordnance has washed ashore on Hatteras Island. The Outer Banks played a key role in World War II, as German U-Boats lurked just off the coast, earning the area the nickname of “Torpedo Junction.”