Home Blog Page 183

NC House of Representatives District 6 candidates share their views

0

The Observer asked the candidates for the N.C. Senate and House to answer the following:

1. What are the crucial challenges facing eastern North Carolina and what can the General Assembly do that can help? 

2. How well is the COVID-19 pandemic being handled on the state level and what can be done to reduce the number of hospitalizations and deaths caused by this virus?

3. Many people are distraught that many members of political parties have shown little interest in working with the opposition to the benefit of all North Carolinians. Would you be willing to find common ground and seek bipartisan support? If so, on what issues?

4. Do you support or oppose offshore drilling?

NC House of Representatives District 6 candidates respond below.

Bobby Hanig (R-Powells Point; incumbent):

Bonny Hanig

1. A couple of the challenges facing eastern North Carolina are healthcare and rural broadband. COVID-19 has magnified the need to expand rural broadband. The General Assembly has allocated $56 million to rural broadband just this year. We also signed into law the GREAT act, which allocates $150 million over 10 years. This number must increase next year when we begin budget discussions.

Telemedicine and Tele psychiatry are going to play a vital role in helping with some of our remote healthcare issues.

 2. COVID-19 is a real disease and yes it does affect many people. The governor and secretary Cohen have done an extremely poor job in managing this disease. They have continually moved the bar for the reopening process and have caused unnecessary and irreparable harm primarily to our children who need to be in school and need to have structure. They have also caused undue and irreparable harm to thousands of businesses across the state. We can do these things safely and effectively.

 3.The perception primarily due to the media that says issues in the General assembly are not negotiated in a bipartisan way. Over 92% of the bills passed in the 2019–20 session were bipartisan. The COVID-19 funding committees were bipartisan committees and the funding was voted on unanimously in those committees.

4.I have been very vocal about my opposition to offshore drilling. I firmly believe that our energy independence in the United States is vital to a strong economy and keeping our country safe! With that said we are currently a net exporter of fossil fuels. When the time comes that we need it we can go get it. I believe the technology will improve in the future and will make it much safer when the time comes.

Tommy Fulcher (D-Southern Shores; challenger):

Tommy Fulcher

1. Eastern North Carolina has been poorly represented and underserved by the General Assembly in the last 10 years.  The gap between urban and rural communities for job opportunities, infrastructure and public schools has widened under their leadership.  Since the Republican takeover in 2010 we have witnessed a shrinking commitment to our public schools as funding hasn’t kept up with rising enrollments and increasing costs. 

The state should accept federal money to expand Medicaid like they accepted federal CARES Act money to offset the adverse impacts of the pandemic.  If elected, I will work to create jobs, save rural hospitals and lower health care costs by expanding Medicaid.

The GOP leadership has enacted irresponsible income tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations while raising fees and sales taxes that impact working people. So, working people were conned into thinking they got a tax cut but in reality are paying more in overall taxes.

2. It’s been over 100 years since our country has experienced a deadly pandemic.  The ongoing spread of the COVID-19 virus has resulted in over 200,00 deaths and counting.  This public health crisis has also resulted in historic job losses and decimated our economy.  There is no way to fully revive our economy until we are able to control the spread of the virus. 

Gov. Cooper has done an outstanding job of limiting the spread of the virus while phasing in the re-start of our economy.  His decisions have been guided by science and the recommendations of public health experts.

The GOP leadership has downplayed the threat of the virus and recommended that everything return to normal – without regard to the public health consequences from not wearing a mask, not social distancing and not gathering in large crowds.  We are fortunate Gov. Cooper is in charge and not the GOP. Enough said.

3. The current legislature is broken.  Since the current majority took control in 2010 all the power in the General Assembly is concentrated in the GOP leadership – just a handful of elected members all of whom are elected from gerrymandered districts.  They dismiss any input from the minority party and their own GOP members.  All major decisions are made by the leadership behind closed doors without public comment.  Once they have made their decisions, they tell their GOP members how to vote — including my opponent.  He works for his bosses in Raleigh not for you. 

This broken system has made voters more cynical and apathetic about politics and government.  It has also resulted in extreme legislation that is out of step with the beliefs and views of most voters.  Legislation that comes from both parties working together and where neither side gets everything they want results in the best legislation and will be supported by the most voters.

4. I am vehemently opposed to offshore drilling.  If elected I will work to put a permanent ban in place by statute that will prohibit seismic testing and offshore drilling.  The recently proposed moratorium is not sufficient.  Republican legislative leaders — both state and federal — still support oil and gas exploration.  We can’t trust their leadership because they accept millions of dollars in campaign contributions from the fossil fuel industry.

Another difference between me and my opponent is I don’t support weakening the National Environmental Policy Act.  Republican leadership — local, state and federal — supported these rollbacks which ultimately leaves the door open to offshore drilling for oil. 

Offshore drilling and seismic testing make no sense because the future of energy production is moving away from fossil fuels.  Our fishing, farming and tourism industries are too important to be destroyed by this reckless scheme. That’s all there is to it.

Randal Mathews’ open letter to the Ocracoke community

0
Rep. John A. Torbett, R-Gaston, chair of the N.C. House Select Committee on Strategic Transportation Planning and Long-Term Funding Solutions and a fan of Ocracoke, visited the island recently and met with Randal Mathews, right, who will be Ocracoke’s next county commissioner. Photo: P. Vankevich

Editor’s note: Randal Mathews was unopposed for Ocracoke’s county commissioner seat in the primary this spring, is on the Nov. 3 ballot, and will be the next commissioner as of Dec. 7 when he is sworn in during the monthly Hyde County commissioners meeting.

By Randal Mathews
I would like to thank everyone who encouraged me to file my candidacy for commissioner of Ocracoke township. It was not an easy decision for me. So, everyone’s positive input was the deciding factor.
Of course, the most important input was from my wife Marlene and I would never consider it without her agreeing to it. She has been my partner and my rock for 30 years.
Secondly, I have no illusions about the challenges and difficulties I will face.

Ocracoke and its citizens are challenged because of continued rebuilding from Hurricane Dorian. From this disaster we have been dealing with issues that none of us have ever experienced and we can be sure that we will deal in the future natural disasters.

The aftermath of Hurricane Dorian is new territory for everyone here. Many residents have been more than up to the task of dealing with it.  The strength and resilience of our community after hurricane Dorian’s devastation is amazing.

I am humbled by the volunteerism and charity of Ocracokers and the people that have helped and continue to help us. There are many who have put themselves front and center in leadership and decision-making roles and then there are the ones who are completely off the radar. There are amazing people here to say the least. You know who you are, and I am in awe of all of you.

Thirdly, I am a candidate mainly because I feel it is my civic duty, and I have experience as a 37-year resident.
I have had the privilege of serving on the Occupancy Tax board for seven years beginning in the late 90s.

I also served on the Ocracoke Health Center board for three years and did a short stint with the Ocracoke Volunteer Fire Department in the mid-80s where I learned firefighting and became a certified EMT. 

Many of our older residents know that I worked here as the lone “telephone man” from 1983 until 1998 until I resigned and then returned in 2003 to Century Link. I retired after 37 years.

I have also been in the retail business briefly, having co-founded Ride the Wind Surf Shop, and was the co-owner/proprietor of the Thurston House B&B, which was my wife’s grandfather’s home built in the 1920s. Marlene and I have owned six properties through the years. So we understand the value of real estate on Ocracoke.

Finally, I pledge that I will always work and make decisions based on what I think is best for our community and Hyde County. Ocracoke provides more than half of the tax base for Hyde County and that is both good and bad. It’s a legal fact of life here that will probably not change anytime soon.

I have had the privilege of knowing all the Ocracoke commissioners since our first one, who was Irvin Garrish.

Experience is the best teacher and I know that all our previous commissioners worked tirelessly for the benefit of our community and made personal sacrifices, which I admire. I also know that they all contributed in ways that many of us are unaware of sometimes at great personal and financial cost.

I know that many other boards and or foundations have volunteers who have contributed to the island wellbeing.

Both of our churches and their leaders and boards are critical to the spirituality of Ocracoke, so they and their members deserve great respect.

I plan on representing and supporting the local fishing and hunting community, whether commercial or recreational.

I support our local restaurants and retail establishments. Anyone who invests their time and money here does it at risk and everyone should admire and appreciate them for the jobs they provide.

The taxes they generate provide critical funding for our fire department and health center which are both special to me and the reason I served on the Occupancy Tax board. Our state and federal employees including Tideland Electric, the water department, the post office, the school, and the Park service are all what I consider the pillars of our community, and I know there are more.

I also want to get to know everyone who lives on Ocracoke as I feel everyone should have a voice and everyone’s opinion on local issues is important to me. EVERYONE!

I love meeting new people and I love listening to their stories. Everyone who makes a life here on Ocracoke is special as we face challenges no one on the mainland can relate to. It doesn’t matter if you are a native, a local, a new resident, or a part time. Even the visitors who love our island bring to it the color, flavor and diversity that make it unique.

We are a rural community though more “urban” than the mainland. Please remember that I will be only one of five Hyde County commissioners. I plan to work amicably with the other four commissioners even though I know we will have our differences. My vote will be one of five so I will not always get my way.

I believe that everyone’s opinion and input is important, but I also want to relate something I learned my first year as a resident and telephone man on Ocracoke.

It was from a gentleman named Alex Ely who was the man that originally established the Pony Island Motel and Restaurant. When I told him what I was doing here and that I wanted to make everyone happy he looked me in the eye and stated, “Son, you ain’t gonna do that.”
Despite that, I’m still going to try as I will represent all of you. Please feel free to call me anytime at 252-921-0329, or write to me at P.O. Box 208, Ocracoke, NC 27960.

Nov. 3 election: Hyde County commissioner candidates

0
Hyde County Commissioner candidates in the 2016 forum at the Community Center, from left Thomas Midgette and Earl Pugh Jr. Photo: P. Vanekvich

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

The Ocracoke Observer asked the opposed candidates running for county commissioner and candidates for the General Assembly districts that include Ocracoke for their views on several issues.

Three of the five Hyde County commissioner seats are up for general election Tuesday, Nov. 3.

All registered voters in Hyde County can vote for all commissioner candidates since they represent the county at large.

The following Hyde County commissioner candidates are unopposed in their respective townships:
Randal Mathews (D) for Ocracoke, Goldie Topping (D) for Swan Quarter and Benjamin Simmons III (R) for Fairfield.

For the the Lake Landing District, incumbent Earl Pugh Jr. (R) will square off against Thomas Midgette (D). In the March 3 Democratic primary, Midgette defeated Marsha Gibbs 357 to 326 and Barbara Gibbs finished third with 83 votes. 

This will be a rematch from the 2016 election which Pugh won with 1,219 votes to Midgette’s 841.

The following are comments by Earl Pugh Jr. and Thomas Midgette, both running to represent the Lake Landing District:

Earl Pugh Jr.

Earl Pugh Jr. (R-incumbent) I am thankful for the opportunity to represent Hyde County as a commissioner for the past eight years. I am seeking re-election because of my love for this great county. I am a lifelong resident of the mainland and a frequent visitor of Ocracoke. I understand the issues and concerns of all areas of the county. I am always available for questions or comments. The decisions I make will always be for the best interest of the county and will be based on facts. I am thankful for the support over the past eight years and ask for your continued support on Nov. 3.

Thomas Midgette (D-challenger)

Thomas Midgette

I am a retired educator with more than 30 years in education. I am running because I believe we need to have governance that is representative of our community.

I want to be a voice for my community, but more importantly I want to be the ears of my community. As a commissioner I will push for a more transparent government. We have lost the trust of our commissioners because we see them as a secret group that rarely, if ever, communicates directly with the citizens.

With a day’s drive to doctors and medical facilities (especially Ocracoke) we need to find alternatives, such as telemedicine, which means we need to make sure that all our families have access to the necessary technology to make this happen.

The children also need this technology as we have moved to virtual teaching and learning and don’t know when this might change. 

We need look for job opportunities for our citizens. I want to work with the county planner/manager to create both a short- term and a long- term growth plan for the county. We must explore and take advantage of resources to promote tourism on the island and the mainland.

I want to work with neighboring counties and form regional partnerships to attract businesses to the region.

I know what it means to struggle with college debt. I know what it’s like to struggle to pay rent. I know what it’s like to work for minimum wage. I know what it’s like to not have enough savings to last three months. In other words, I am one of you (99%) and not one of them (1%). A vote for me is a vote for you.

Artists to paint Ocracoke

2
Outdoor artist Joanne Geisel paints an Ocracoke harbor scene. Photo: C. Leinbach

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

Eight North Carolina artists will return today for the fifth year to paint historic Ocracoke.

All plein air–or outdoor–artists, the group will paint all week throughout the island, in front of their easels on the beaches, by the marina and throughout the community. 

A socially distanced, front porch sale of their freshly done paintings will be held from 4 to 7 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 16, at 187 Silver Lake Road. 

All are invited to stop by to meet the artists, enjoy their many creative interpretations and purchase their art.

A percentage of all art sales will be donated to an Ocracoke nonprofit.

“Ocracoke’s unspoiled beauty provides a magical setting for artists to commune, create art, share ideas and enjoy,” said Ann Hair, one of the group members. “While painting on previous years, I loved meeting the people who call Ocracoke home, learning about their beautiful island and sharing our interpretations of it at our wet paint show and sale.”

The artists, Mike Rooney, Dan Nelson, Joanne Geisel, Ann Hair, Karen Crenshaw, Peg Sharp, Oona Lewis and Lynda Chambers bring experience and talent to the island.  Among the group are painting instructors, award winning artists and highly recognized ones represented by North Carolina galleries. 

Their varied approaches and their final paintings represent their unique perspectives of the Ocracoke marina, historic homes, marshes and beaches.

“Artist retreats like this one are valued parts of an artist’s life,” said Geisel.  “It is unusual for artists to come together like this for a period of time to enjoy the camaraderie of new and old friends, and to share ideas and enthusiasm for plein air painting. Because of this and the fact that many of us have been isolated, this retreat is particularly meaningful.”

Joanne Geisel’s oil painting ‘From Captain’s Landing.’ Photo: C. Leinbach

Interviewers to seek islanders’ thoughts on extreme weather

0

Eastern North Carolina has experienced many storms in recent decades.

Dynamics of Extreme Events, People and Places (DEEPP) would like to understand how families and communities prepare for, are affected by, and recover from these events.

One of the best ways to do this is to ask people directly and DEEPP will launch a survey in six communities affected by Hurricanes Matthew, Florence and Dorian. Interviewers will be on Ocracoke and the mainland in October and November to talk to islanders on the following topics:

● storm impacts on property

● disruptions of day-to-day life

● access to recovery programs

● stress felt during and after storms

● how neighbors help each other get through challenging times

● attitudes about the future

This survey is one part of the larger DEEPP project which brings together social and environmental scientists and engineers, said Dr. Elizabeth Frankenberg, project director.

“Our broad goal is to understand the environmental, economic, social and psychological impacts of flooding in Carolina communities,” she said.

DEEPP will combine the survey data with satellite imaging, flood mapping and storm surge mapping in order to provide communities and policy makers with information they can use in preparing for and recovering from these disasters.

“We hope our work will help North Carolinians and other residents of flood-prone areas in the United States,” Frankenberg said.

Please email questions, comments or suggestions to DEEPP@unc.edu.

DEEPP is a collaborative effort of the Carolina Population Center, the Institute for Marine Sciences, the Institute for the Environment, the Odum Institute, and the Coastal Resilience Center.

The project is made possible through a Creativity Hub grant from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and a Growing Convergence Research award (CGR 2021086) from the National Science Foundation.

Hyde school board extends virtual learning into January

0
The Hyde County Board of Education meets virtually. Steve Basnight is the school superintendent, Julio Morales is the district information officer and Ken Chillcoat is the district financial officer.

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

By Richard Taylor

The Hyde County Board of Education voted unanimously on Tuesday to continue virtual learning through at least the end of the current semester in mid-January.

Superintendent Steve Basnight detailed seven options during a two-hour work session, followed by a two-and-a-half-hour board meeting.

Options ranged from a combination of face-to-face and virtual classroom instruction (N.C. Plan B), to continuation of the current remote learning (state Plan C).

Using 85 detailed PowerPoint slides during the Zoom/Facebook meetings, Basnight explained the myriad of stringent state and local requirements for keeping students and staff safe from the coronavirus when the district eventually returns to in-person learning.

“This is not an easy decision to make,” he said. “It’s like the weight of a piano on my shoulders.”

Some of Basnight’s slides showed school employees’ preferences for returning to in-person.

Of the 82 responses to the question of returning to in-person learning after the first nine weeks, 57% said no to returning and 43% said yes.

As to the question of whether staff would like to return to in-person instruction if the district remains on Plan C, 18% preferred to come back after Thanksgiving; 28% preferred after Christmas; 36% preferred to come back at the beginning of the second semester; and 13% (those with high risk factors) preferred not to come back to in-person instruction at all.

Some staff mentioned that employees leaving for holiday trips could possibly bring COVID-19 back with them. Twenty-four Ocracoke staffers responded to the survey.

Angela Todd, Ocracoke’s board member and mother of an eighth grader, cited students’ safety as she pleaded passionately to continue online instruction, before introducing a motion to continue virtually.

One poignant point in the13 emails she received, was the question, “How many lives are acceptable to lose? If that number is five, put it in your plans.”

“For me, that number is zero,” Todd said. “Students have worked hard on Ocracoke. They have found a rhythm, but we do not physically have a building to put children in now. Nothing’s ready at Ocracoke School.”

She noted that Ocracoke teachers have jumped through hoops for over a year.

“I think it would be terribly unfortunate to ask them to jump through another hoop to try to make in-person school work when it’s going to make everything immensely more difficult for everyone,” Todd said.

Basnight said that distance learning has been around for a long time.

“It works if you do it right and if you do it well,” Basnight said. “Our teachers have done a phenomenal job. They have worked themselves to the bone to make this work.”

Board member Aleta Cox agreed with Todd.

“I think we ought to stay with what we’ve doing now because the teachers have become comfortable with it,” she said.

Board member Lindsey Mooney was at first hesitant to support the continuation of virtual learning, but eventually went along with other board members to fully support continuing with Plan C.

“The logical side of me says that at some time you’ve got to make a move (towards in-person learning),” he said. “The one thing that discourages me from voting for face-to-face is that Ocracoke School is not set up and ready to go. I know they’re struggling and I’m really sympathetic to that.”

Vice-chair Thomas Whitaker stressed keeping students safe.

“We’ve all got to play a part in this,” he said. “We can do it, but at this stage, I cannot move forward. We have to take this one step at a time.”

Chair Randy Etheridge asked if anything could be done about internet problems on the mainland.

Basnight said he just received a text message from Riverstreet Networks saying that by the end of the month, we would begin to have better Internet access for (mainland) Hyde and students in Engelhard.

Basnight said the school system had just received 90 wireless hot spots from the state, which will greatly help connections in problem areas. Internet access on Ocracoke is not a major problem, except for occasional freezes due to traffic congestion.

Etheridge noted that there are so many variables now and that Hyde can learn from other districts as they move forward while Hyde stays virtual.

“We can benefit from their mistakes and their successes,” he said. “By the start of second semester, we will be more prepared to move forward.”

Basnight praised the 21st Century afterschool program, which can pick up where classroom teachers leave off. The enrichment portion of 21st Century program is currently suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic, while the highly praised tutoring portion continues in the afternoons.

The board also voted to allow in-vehicle driver’s education to continue as long as a parent or other adult was in the car with the instructor and student driver. All must wear masks, and cars must be disinfected after each use.

The board decided to discontinue fall volleyball and basketball practices after Todd said, “I don’t love the idea of practices. There’s too much shared contact, too much close contact, too much huffing and puffing. I really would like to think of a way for athletics to happen, but I just can’t justify it.”

Allowing athletic group practices was tabled until the next meeting.

In the northeast region, Hyde joined Hertford and Washington counties voting to remain on Plan C, while Bertie, Gates and Tyrrell counties will decide later this month. Dare County will use Plan B, a combination of in-person and virtual learning.

In recognition of October as National Principal’s Month, Basnight said, “We have three outstanding principals in our schools that are doing phenomenal jobs. Not one of them went to school to learn what they’re doing right now.

“They’re creating it on the fly and they’re doing a heck of a job at it. I really appreciate that they’re going out where no one’s been before and figuring out how to do it. They are going above and beyond. I just wanted to recognize them.”

In addition to Leslie Cole for Ocracoke School, the other Hyde County school principals are Alan Phillip Hagen, Mattamuskeet Early College, and Allison Etheridge, Mattamuskeet Elementary.

Numerous comments were posted to Facebook during the meetings.

Cole posted, “This was a difficult decision made during a difficult time” on the school’s Facebook page Wednesday. She thanked teachers for navigating this year with lots of dedication and perseverance. She thanked parents for their grace and patience and students for putting in so much effort.

New Ocracoke School design unveiled

0
The new design for Ocracoke School by Cahoon & Kasten Architects of Nags Head.

By Richard Taylor

The Hyde County Board of Education, school staff and islanders this week got their first look at the design and features of the new, nearly 20,000 square-foot, Ocracoke School building.

“This building roughly follows the footprint of what’s there now,” architect Ben Cahoon of Nags Head told the board Tuesday. “We’ve created a new commons area and moved the entrance.”

Because the building must comply with the new village flood elevation ordinance, it will be raised five and a half feet above ground level, or seven and a half feet above mean high tide. A structure resembling the former Ocracoke Coast Guard station tower (now the NCCAT building), a design idea suggested by Hyde County Schools Superintendent Basnight, will look out over the elevated entrance steps. A large Dolphin design will adorn the area below the tower’s four front windows, with the school name positioned above windows to the right.

The innovative new building design integrates all school departments — pre-K to 5, middle and high schools, and athletics.

The entire building will be two and a half feet above the existing gym floor. Steps will lead down to the playing floor.

Architect Ben Cahoon briefs high school English teacher Charles Temple on the design for the new Ocracoke NC school.  Photo by Richard Taylor
Architect Ben Cahoon briefs high school English teacher Charles Temple. Photo by Richard Taylor

Cahoon, a Hyde County native, said the gym entrance will be moved to the outside northeast wall, near the bleachers. “We wanted to do that so spectators would not have to cross the full width of the gym.” Athletes will enter from the locker rooms on the other side of the gym.

The gym lobby area will double as a multi-purpose room for community needs.

Long wheelchair ramps will grace the front and Back Road entrances into the building.

Passageways between the new integrated building and the existing two-story elementary wing will be level and enclosed. Since the new structure will be only one story, it does not require costly elevators or sprinklers.

“We were able to incorporate a number of improvements that we were asked to do in the spring,” he said. “This was very much the result of good cooperative effort between the teachers, principal and staff.”

Cahoon said conventional, wood frame construction is the most efficient way of construction, and that some overhead wooden beams from the existing “commons” will be displayed as decorative items somewhere in the new building, as a way to tie the past with the present.

Ocracoke School as it appears today. Photo: Richard Taylor
Ocracoke School as it appears today. Photo: Richard Taylor

Cahoon’s plan converts one existing first floor elementary classroom into three smaller rooms: an ESL classroom, an Exceptional Children classroom and a new 21st Century (afterschool) classroom.

The current walkway between the administration/commons building will be converted into a commons area with a STEM lab/maker space. Additional staff offices will be added in the administration area.

The athletic facility will have four locker rooms, two for home (boys and girls) and two for visitors, all accessible by stairs from the gym floor, plus a laundry room to wash uniforms.

The design was well received by the community Monday.

“They liked the way the space was arranged and its appearance,” Cahoon said.

School board members were equally enthusiastic about the new design.

“I love it. I think it’s a beautiful design,” Aleta Cox said.

“I think it’s fabulous,” said Board of Education Chair Randy Etheridge. “It’s fantastic that the community had so much input into the school’s design and functionality. It’s their school and they take a bunch of pride in it.”

Cahoon estimated construction costs for the 19,117 square-foot project at $255 per square foot, for a total of $4.87 million. This figure does not include the $174,717 to demolish the existing building, restoring and waterproofing the gym (which cannot be raised) and elevating the existing elementary wing to match the new building height. Furnishings are also separate budget items although much of the furniture has been donated.

Cahoon’s estimate is 145% above the state’s average construction guidelines, which is owing to significantly higher construction costs on Ocracoke.

“I feel comfortable with that figure,” said Basnight, who confirmed the money is all allocated and coming from up to six sources, including private donations, state funding and a grant from the Golden LEAF Foundation.

Cahoon said demolition of the current building could start within two weeks and take about 45 days. The design is expected to go out for bids in late winter or early spring, as soon as mechanical and electrical designs and construction drawings are completed. Construction could begin by late spring or early summer, with occupancy by fall 2022.

The historic devastation caused by Hurricane Dorian on Sept. 6, 2019, flooded all campus buildings beyond use, except for the second floor of the elementary building. School staff scrambled to find alternative locations for administration and classroom space in the Ocracoke Child Care building and at NCCAT.

Even though 10 modular units have been set up in for use while the school is being rebuilt, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, all Ocracoke instruction went virtual in mid-March.

Hyde Superintendent Steve Basnight monitors the new Ocracoke School presentation. Photo by Richard Taylor
Hyde Superintendent Steve Basnight monitors the new Ocracoke School presentation. Photo by Richard Taylor

A historic general election looms

2

Imelda Marcos was filmed saying something rather chilling in a 2019 documentary of her life: “Perception is real; the truth is not,” she says in “The Kingmaker,” a Showtime documentary.

This observation is at once disturbing and all too true.

For the last several years the polarization of American politics has borne this phrase out, and intolerance, it seems, is informing perception.

Democrats believe one thing; the Republicans another but neither side, it seems, is cordially allowing the other their views.

In 2017, a political operative in a Sunday morning Meet the Press interview used the term “alternative facts” in defending a false statement.

The Ocracoke Observer rarely strays into national politics, preferring to focus on the more influential county commissioners and the state’s legislature, the General Assembly. Their actions can have a major impact on the island’s community.

But the Nov. 3 General Election, in which we vote for the incumbent president Donald J. Trump or challenger Joe Biden, will be one of the most critical in American history in terms of the direction and stability of the country. We felt we had to weigh in.

A wary, cynical electorate is nevertheless galvanized as Republicans and Democrats play to their base and court the growing number of unaffiliated voters.

Voter registrations for all political parties have increased in the last few months and record numbers of mail-in ballots have been issued. As of Oct. 8, North Carolina voters have requested 1.25 million absentee ballots.

In 2016 on the same date only 152,030 requests had been made. 

Already, of the 7.23 million registered voters, 420,695 votes, or 6%, have already been cast. A combination of high interest in choosing candidates coupled with safety concerns from waiting in long lines to vote account for such high numbers.

What is most disturbing during this election—indeed these last four years—is the vitriol with which the two political parties are going at each other and the attempts to crush any opposition viewpoint.

At the same time, others are working feverishly against mail-in voting due to concerns of unsubstantiated fraud.

Reporters who ask questions the president does not like and news outlets who question the president and report on his untruths are labeled as “fake” news. But the right to criticize our leaders was a crucial concept of our nation’s founders.

The first presidential “debate,” which featured a belligerent president railing and stomping on the challenger’s answers, demonstrated that (good and bad) behavior begins at the top.

Is this really us? Is this the way we want our leader to behave?

What happened to the give-and-take of ideas–without yelling or demonizing the opposition–that has been the hallmark of our free country?

The United States was founded on the right of the people to “petition the government” to seek redress and to peaceably assemble. In the last four years these values have been turned upside down.

Since the 2016 presidential election, our country has experienced great chaos and turmoil: An impeachment of the president (though failed removal from office), a pandemic that has already killed more than 200,000 Americans and still rages. Violence at protests over racial inequality in numerous cities recalls those of the 1960s.

But is this truth, or is it perception?

Whose truth/perception do you believe?

Whatever your viewpoint, your vote matters. Many elections have been won or lost by a few votes.

So, we can’t stress enough that truly, your vote does count, whether it be via mail-in or in person.

The North Carolina early voting period runs from Thursday, Oct. 15, to Saturday, Oct. 31, with Ocracoke’s early voting days of Oct. 22 and 23.

Information about local candidates is in this paper and online at ocracokeobserver.com., and information about state and federal candidates can be found at Ballotpedia.com.

We hope everyone takes this election very seriously and does what many in the world are not able to do and that is to vote. 

Following dredging, regular ferry schedule in Pamlico Sound might resume Thursday

0
The dredge M/V Merritt is seen dredging Big Foot Slough in the Pamlico Sound. Photo: P. Vankevich

Update Oct. 8. Additional runs for the Cedar Island and Swan Quarter routes have been added. Click here for the updated schedule.

By Connie Leinbach

If all goes well today, the U.S. Coast Guard will approve the recent dredging of Big Foot Slough in the Pamlico Sound and the three-boat ferry schedule can resume possibly on Thursday.

Hyde County Manager Kris Noble informed the board of commissioners on Monday night that the state sidecaster dredge M/V Merritt did 12 days of dredging and she is awaiting the Coast Guard report.

“It looks like they got to a depth of 10 feet,” she told the commissioners, “but it’s very narrow.”

After dredging finished on Sunday, the Merritt went back to the Ferry Division’s boat yard in Mann’s Harbor.

It is scheduled to return to Ocracoke after Oct. 15 when the new federal funding cycle starts again, she said. At that time, the dredge will work to widen the channel.

The federal allocation for dredging this slough is $500,000, Noble said, which typically is enough for 20 days of dredging broken into two 10- to 12-day dredging operations.

Funding of the $251,666 project was thanks to a partnership between the NC Ferry Division and Carteret County, which supplied the $62,916.50 local match required, along with the state contributing $188,749.50, she said.

Hyde County can thank Carteret County for coming to their aid by supplying the local match required for this most recent dredging, but this cost-sharing irks Ocracoke Commissioner Tom Pahl.

Requiring local governmental entities to supply matching funds is not a fiscal issue but a policy issue and is tantamount to a shake down, he said in an earlier interview.

Big Foot Slough is a federal channel and it’s the Army Corps of Engineers’ responsibility to dredge it, he said, and they’re not doing it.

“And they’re in effect holding Hyde county hostage until we come up with the dough,” he said. “And it’s not a lot of dough. It’s not a whole lot different than a mob underling going door to door to businesses, saying, ‘You know, we think you ought to buy a little protection.’”

In the overall budget the Army Corps of Engineers has for dredging the nations ports, the amount needed for Big Foot and even the Rollinson Channel at Hatteras are less than a pittance, he said.

“This is an increase in federal taxes, is what they’re attempting to do is to increase federal taxes by leaning on local governments and forcing them to cost share,” he said. “Even in the context of Hurricane Dorian in the context of COVID-19, they’re willing to lean on Hyde County in order to advance their policy position that local entities should cost share with the federal government.”

Pahl said our legislators need to know that if they want to raise taxes they should do it.

“They should have the guts to do it. They shouldn’t force the county government to raise taxes for them,” he said.

In the meantime, the Ferry Division is seeking a Federal Lands Access Project (FLAP) grant, which is a pot of money designated for communities adjacent to national parks, to fund permitting of and dredging another slough, called Nine Foot, which is west of Big Foot.

If the county gets a FLAP grant, they will begin the permitting process for this slough because continued dredging of Big Foot is just a band aid anyway.

“It seems every time the wind blows Big Foot shoals in,” Noble said.

Nine Foot is a natural channel and would require less maintenance, she said. Moreover, if the Ferry Division could use this channel for the long ferry routes in the Pamlico Sound, it could shave about 15 minutes off each ride.

Voter registration deadline is Friday

0

For more details about the upcoming general election, click here for Hyde County information and here for the State Board of Elections web site.

Voter registration deadline for the 2020 General election is at 5 p.m. Friday (Oct. 9).

Voters can register to vote online, by mail (postmarked by Oct. 9), or in person at the Board of Elections Office in the Public Safety Center in Swan Quarter.

After the regular voter registration deadline, you can still register and vote in person at one-stop sites during the early voting period, which runs from Thursday, Oct. 15, to Saturday, Oct. 31.

Ocracoke has two days of early voting, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Oct. 22 and 23, at the Ocracoke Volunteer Fire Department, 822 Irvin Garrish Hwy.

Same-day registrants must attest to their eligibility and provide proof of residence. Within two business days, the county board of elections will review the registration and the registrant’s address. Your vote will be counted unless the county board of elections determines that you are not qualified to vote.

Absentee ballots began to be mailed on Sept. 4. As of Oct. 5, of the 7,220,724 registered voters in North Carolina, 1,210,936 have requested ballots and 386,300 have already been cast.