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A North Carolina State Trooper and a few good Samaritans helped save the life of a woman caught in rapids while tubing in the Tuckasegee River near Bryson City.  

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By Dr. Tara Hogan, D.C. • Guest writer

According to the Mayo clinic’s experts, sitting too often can cause a number of health conditions such as heart problems, metabolic syndrome, obesity and high blood sugar. In addition, sitting has been linked to an unhealthy brain. So, how can sitting be this bad? 

By Jerica Rossi • Guest writer

While people were walking into class, I heard a woman whisper to her friend, “I’m really nervous to go to class right now.”

As someone who loves diving head-first into the unknown, I had a hard time relating, but I’m sure there are many of you out there who do. Whether you’re brand new to yoga or someone who has been out of practice for quite some time, the nerves can be real. So let’s break it down and see what you can do about it.

By Wende Goode • Guest writer

Negativity surrounds us, is embodied in us.

Until a couple of years ago, I felt like I was a pretty positive person. Seeing the good in others, feeling good about life and my journey. One day this all changed. That day I realized that I had been lying to myself.

There is increasing interest in knowing where our food comes from. But how about milk? I recently posted a photo of a dairy farmer on his farm in Buncombe County and received this tweet in response:

To the Editor:

Just over a year ago, Charlottesville, Virginia, was flooded with hate, thinly-veiled fascism, and white supremacy, all over the Charlottesville City Council’s decision to remove Confederate monuments from public spaces. 

Now, UNC Chapel Hill is staunchly divided over the UNC administration’s complacency over Silent Sam — the Confederate monument UNC calls its own that was recently toppled by protestors.

This isn’t a concept foreign to Southern Appalachia. In fact, many Confederate monuments call Western North Carolina home. This includes the Confederate monument depicting a Civil War soldier that stands halfway up the stairs to the historic Jackson County courthouse that overlooks the town of Sylva. The statue is just a handful of miles away from Western Carolina University, where racial tensions have continued to peak and plateau for years.

Western Carolina students and Jackson County residents have experienced racially charged chalking, the N-word being shouted from residence halls and public spaces, a lackluster administrative response, and numerous other things that hardly make it easy for the university to retain students, faculty, and staff of color.

The last thing we need is another Confederate monument, overlooking the our college town as a reminder that once upon a time, and maybe more recently than we care to admit, people of color were not welcome here. I believe the dark history of the U.S., while not to be forgotten, should not be paraded like “participation trophies” for the Confederate Army, scattered across the places we call home.

Sara Mears

Cullowhee

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To the Editor:

I recently attended the Jackson County Board of Commissioners meeting specifically to apologize to Commissioner Charles Elders. 

I was appointed to the DSS (Department of Social Services) Board last year. The commissioners voted to combine the Health Department with DSS this year and the commissioners offered me a seat on that combined Health Services Board.  

From the very first meeting — there have been three meetings — complaints have been logged ad nauseam and ad infinitum regarding the reasons for the commissioners’ decision. In fact, one board member made a motion to have the county manager request from the commissioners a written explanation for the merger of the two departments.  

The commissioners declined to submit a letter, so the new Health Services Board member that submitted the original request made a motion to withhold consent on hiring a director for the combined departments “until after the November elections.” 

I felt as if I was hijacked. I thought I would be serving on a board that would help people, not serving on a board that wanted to usurp the powers of the elected board of commissioners. The newly formed Health Services Board is not an elected board. The county did not have an opportunity to vote on those appointments. The Jackson County Board of Commissioners, however, were elected by the people of the county. That is a political move pure and simple. 

However, I was having trouble with how to respond to the motion — should I say “aye” or “nay?” I said aye. Upon reflection, I determined I made an error in that vote. 

The commissioners’ vote to combine DSS and the Health Department was a 3 to 2 split along party lines. The reason the combined board member made the motion to forestall the hiring of a new combined board director until after the election was a political move, hoping to put a liberal in Commissioner Charles Elder’s seat in November so that the liberal could dissolve the union. She has already stated she will do that if elected. 

The Asheville Citizen Times on Sunday, Aug. 19, had a column by John Boyle on Buncombe County’s government scandal for, I quote, “a lack of oversight.” The federal indictments against former Buncombe County Manager Wanda Greene, et al, are still coming in. The column from Boyle further states, speaking of Green: “… it looks like she had no qualms about misleading commissioners, county officials and the media, or intimidating underlings into not asking a lot of questions, all the while commissioners adored her.”  

I am not impugning either Jackson County’s manager or the current two directors of the Health Department and DSS. I, personally, have admiration for these three people. Yet, in light of what is happening in Buncombe County, why in the world would anyone push away more oversight in Jackson County? The contention is because it creates a new position of director over the combined departments. 

Yet, isn’t that what the left always seeks, an increase in government jobs? Bill Clinton heartily approved such events, as does the Democratic Party. Why? The reason for these shenanigans is to try to dislodge Charles Elders from his seat on the county commission. Elders is one of the finest men in this county. He cares a great deal more about service to those in need than do those jockeying with politics. 

Elders would like to see the new Health Services Department become more efficient and cost saving. Other counties have reported this came about for them, according to some of the other commissioners. It doesn’t necessarily mean it would for Jackson County, but more oversight is a good thing. I don’t have to ask Buncombe County officials to know that. 

I apologize to you, Charles Elders, for falling into that political trap. I volunteered to serve on the DSS Board and Health Services Board to give back to this wonderful community. I did not expect to be pressured into this political mess. Shame on those who try to jam politics down people’s throats.

Just as an aside, please, when you say, “If it’s not broke, don’t fix it,” think a little about what you have just said. The ad nauseam part comes in here. I have heard this said on this issue until I gag. You need to buy a horse and buggy then, because that mode of transportation was never broken. Thank you, I like improvements, I’ll take the car.

Deborah J. Stanley

Sylva

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My doctor has recommended that I get more omega 3's in my diet but I don't like fish. What are some other options?

By Martin Dyckman • Guest Columnist

The two most abused and misused words in America are “conservative” and “populist.” Politicians and the media are the grossest offenders. 

Safire’s Political Dictionary defines “conservative” as “a defender of the status quo who, when change becomes necessary in tested institutions or practices, prefers that it come slowly, in moderation.” It also came to stand for resistance, sometimes rational, sometimes not, to taxes and regulations. What all American conservatives shared, however, was a healthy concern over the potential abuse of political power. They also venerated the Constitution and all of our fundamental institutions.

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By Kirkwood Callahan • Guest Columnist

Crime does not pay — so most Americans have been told. However, it places enormous costs on society. Victims and families are traumatized by the tragic loss of life and property while government at all levels bears the burden of apprehending, prosecuting and confining offenders. No region is shielded from crime’s evil effects and costs. 

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To the Editor:

Phillip Price, who is running for U.S. Congress from the 11th District, lists 289 “Past Events” on his “Phillip Price for Congress” Facebook page (as of August 23). That’s almost 300 events just since he announced his candidacy. He also lists, as of the same date, 27 more “Upcoming Events.” From these numbers alone it’s clear that Phillip Price cares about what the people of Western North Carolina think and that he’s dedicated to listening to them and interacting with them. He has made himself available to the people. I personally have seen and heard him twice in Sylva, once in Webster and once at Balsam Mountain.

Now guess how many past and upcoming events are listed at Rep. Mark Meadows for Congress Facebook page? Keep in mind that it’s less than 70 days until the election, and consider that the U.S. House has been out of session the entire month of August. They don’t reconvene until Sept. 4. Meadows has had both incentive and ample opportunity to interact publicly with his constituents. Most members of Congress who are running for re-election welcome the August recess as a time to seriously reconnect with the voters back home. 

First, guess the number of “Past Events” listed. (Hint: guess a low number.)  The correct answer is three. Of those three, one was in 2012, one was in 2014, and the most recent was over two years ago in June of 2016. 

Now guess the number of “Upcoming Events” listed (as of August 23). The correct answer is zero. A big fat zero. 

That’s right, the note under “Upcoming Events” says, “Mark Meadows for Congress does not have any upcoming events.” And remember it’s less than two months until early voting begins. It’s true that Meadows also has another (non-campaign) Facebook page, so to be fair we should include the events noted there as well.  That page lists one past event dated in August of last year, and under the “Upcoming Events” heading you will find the note “Mark Meadows does not have any upcoming events.”

The facts speak for themselves. Meadows is hiding out.  He’s refusing to interact with voters on a personal level, presumably because he doesn’t really consider us as constituents that he has to answer to. In sharp contrast, Phillip Price is accessible and caring, a true man of the people.

It’s time to put Meadows out to pasture.

Bill Spencer

Cullowhee

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To the Editor:

I attended the Sylva Town Meeting the other week and viewed the plan for the road re-design. The room overflowed with townspeople and concerned business owners who spoke against this plan as drawn. The point that hit home to me, a Glenville resident, was the failure of communication between DOT and the people.  

Jay Coward spoke eloquently on the plan being flawed and offered excellent alternatives. I am hoping that the DOT heard the people and will work with the people now. Businesses that have been present in Sylva for decades should remain untouched and respected. Round-bouts properly constructed with nice centers would not only add charm to Sylva but would be efficient for traffic flow. The idea of having a median constructed where drivers have no access to turn into businesses without having to do u-turns is extremely dangerous. Slow down and meet with the people! People make the town.

I’ve been a resident in Jackson County since 2009 but have vacationed here since 1978 and realize I’m considered a transplant; I accept that … but I must address the expansion of N.C. 107 South issue as well. 

I love the mountains ... the curves that follow the river ... the roads that are a bit narrow; it lets you know you should slow down to enjoy where you are. I am sickened by what the DOT has done on U.S. 64 East in Toxaway, tearing apart several mountains just to cut a road. I am sickened by the work on N.C. 107 South toward Cashiers too. Are we trying to just plow our way through these gorgeous mountains making it faster to go from one place to another?  

Sure, the curvy roads can be dangerous if drivers are dangerous. Personal accountability again is being taken away for us. If all drive responsibly, we shouldn’t have to drill into our mountains only to try to prevent accidents of those who aren’t responsible. That’s again making laws for all because of the few, or one.  Insane.

God made our mountains for us to enjoy. You have to slow down to see their majesty. We don’t need a wider road ... we need folks to leave a bit earlier to get to places. I want the mountains to remain as they were meant to be, mighty and respected.

Trish Chambers

Glenville

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To the Editor:

The U.S. is a country of asylum seekers and their children. Every immigrant to the U.S. arrived at our borders looking to escape from either government tyranny, economic hardship or criminal violence.

U.S. law and international law requires that asylum seekers who present themselves to our immigration personnel be given the opportunity to prove their reasons for seeking asylum. A new policy recently implemented requires that asylum seekers be turned away at the border; federal agents are actually standing at the borderline at established border crossings to physically prevent an asylum seekers from stepping foot on U.S. soil. A person must be actually standing on U.S. soil in order to request asylum; preventing these people from stepping across the painted borderline means there is no opportunity for them to plea their case to an immigration judge. 

These asylum seekers are not choosing to present themselves to U.S. immigration courts because they plan to live off U.S. government largess. These people are escaping from the government and gang-related torture and murder common in their country of origin. The deadly trek these asylum seekers take across thousands of miles of inhospitable landscape is a dangerous but necessary risk to take, a risk that keeps their children out of the hands of murdering gang members and corrupt government policies in their native countries.

Most Americans learned something about the history of asylum seekers coming to America. In particular, we have all seen the images of thousands of Irish, German, Polish and other European refugees, escaping starvation from crop failures and political pogroms, standing in line waiting to have their asylum request processed on Ellis Island in New York Harbor.

The people did not come to America simply to live off the largess of the American. They came to escape the certain death awaiting them and their families if they did not flee their native lands. The asylum seekers coming from South and Central America are facing the same kinds of threats of death and unlawful imprisonment as did the European asylum seekers who came to America in the late 19th century and early 20th century.  

The moral, ethical and lawful imperative to offer these modern-day asylum seekers refuge is no different than it was 100 years ago. The color of their skin and their native language may be different then that of their predecessors from Europe 100 years ago, but their plights are no less compelling. These people are no less a member of the family of man as were the asylum-seeking people who came before them.

John Barry

Franklin

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To the Editor:

As a teacher for 25 years, I realize the importance of good role models for children. They look to others for cues, especially persons in authority like parents, teachers, ministers, and those in official capacities. Children want to know if our character is comprised of honest, fair-minded, consistent, compassionate actions. Young people also appreciate a willingness to apologize and to admit failures — two components of humility.

Sadly, the one at the highest level in our nation is serving as one of the poorest role models a child could have. Our children are being cheated and deserve better. Adults who chose Donald Trump as president cannot plead ignorance as to his character. We all witnessed his behavior in the Republican primary and again in his presidential campaign.

Ideally, all of us, including children, would be able to look at our president as someone with honorable character. Naturally, humans experience occasional lapses in judgement, but when these lapses become incorporated into a public lifestyle of dishonesty, childish insults, vulgarity, arrogance and lack of grace and compassion, well, no conscientious parent wants a child to emulate that. 

Corroborating this point is the fact that not one of my Republican friends has ever provided an answer to my question: what aspect of Trump’s character would you like your child to adopt?

One only has to observe the chaos and intrigue in this administration to see how necessary character is. We discount its importance at our own peril.

Larry Brown

Bryson City

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To the Editor:

I remember not so long ago when I could have a civil discussion with a friend who was a Republican. I did not think George Bush was the sharpest pencil in the box and my friend was sure Obama was totally unprepared to be President. We argued about deficits, how to fix health care, free trade and immigration. We were talking in a common language, and the facts were still the facts. My friend had good reasons for his  positions. 

Today when I question the reasons for an exploding deficit I get no such response. Where are the Republicans who for eight years attacked President Obama because of rising deficits? They correctly argued that the increasing interest bill on our deficit will have to be paid by our children. Apparently that no longer matters. 

Back in the day, before the Affordable Care Act  (ACA), everyone agreed that the old system was badly broken and something had to be done. We strongly disagreed on how to fix the skyrocketing cost of health care, but fix it we must. Where are the Republicans who had a better plan? Today there is no plan except to drive a stake into the heart of the ACA. Do the Republicans want to go back to the days when the leading cause of bankruptcies was health care debt?

The United States learned a hard lesson from the Great Depression. Trade barriers like tariffs are a double-edged sword. Since the end of WWII, Republicans have been advocates of free trade and the creation of the global economy. They were right. The last 70 years of global economic growth, led by the United States, have created the prosperous world we now live in. Not every trade deal was great, but on balance far more jobs were created than lost.

Where are those Republicans now that Canada and the European Union are our trading enemies? How is it that soy farmers in the Midwest and U.S. steel consumers are already in serious trouble because of a trade war we started with China? 

Immigration stirs deep feeling in both political parties, but even very conservative business owners acknowledge that we need a supply of short-term labor. Literally millions of these jobs are now filled with both legal and illegal immigrants. Where are these Republicans now that there is an all-out attack on every form of immigration? How do they plan to fill those jobs that American workers traditionally will not do?

I do not understand where my Republican friends have gone. Have they been chased out of the party they created and loved? Are they waiting and hoping that the principles they once advocated for will come back in fashion? Or are they willing to live in a world of alternative facts and where loyalty to this president is all that matters? 

Louis Vitale

Franklin

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An additional 150 acres of land in Jackson County has been conserved with Highlands-Cashiers Land Trust. 

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The Great Smoky Mountains Institute at Tremont is inviting volunteers to take part in monarch tagging in the Cades Coves area of the park. 

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Friends of the Smokies collected $210,525 in donations during its 24th annual Friends Across the Mountains Telethon from hundreds of callers, online donations and support from sponsors Dollywood, Mast General Store, Pilot Flying J and SmartBank.

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After years of controversy and debate, the town of Bryson City has finally approved relinquishing its right of way to Fry Street as well as a connecting portion of Greenlee Street. 

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The Francis Asbury trail along the Lake Junaluska Walking Trail and a portion of Lakeshore Drive will be closed the week of Aug. 27 for the removal of five dead and dying trees.

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By Todd Vinyard • Special to The Smoky Mountain News

Taking over a football program coming off five wins in the previous three seasons before you arrived as coach would certainly require a plan and changing the culture. Mark Speir has relied on both in his past seven years as the head coach at Western Carolina University.

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The 112th annual Canton Labor Day Festival will be held Sept. 2-3 in Sorrells Street Park in downtown.

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I’m a fan of coffee but keep in mind that calories can easily add up!

To the Editor:

I hear that Trump derangement syndrome has now morphed into Trump anxiety disorder. I guess that means some leftists are anxious and concerned that the successes trump has achieved to the benefits of Americans will extend into more successes and eventually his re-election in 2020. 

I doubt if those who are anxious include the unemployed who are now employed; the steel workers who are back on the job; the employees who received bonuses earlier this year (deemed crumbs by Democrat Rep. Nancy Pelosi); minorities whose employment is at an all time high for the first time in decades;  the executives who have returned their operations back to the U.S. because they are not subjected to business killing government regulations; the international traders who see the beginnings of fair trade practices; the Israelis, who after years of promises by other presidents, have a U.S. embassy in Jerusalem; Catholic nuns and other religious groups that are no longer forced by government to pay for abortions; the families of  three North Korean hostages returned; the loved ones of Korean War  soldiers whose remains are being returned; legal immigrants waiting in line who are hopeful that there is control on illegal entrants who bust through our borders and float out into our country; taxpayers who see NATO members paying some of their fair share; taxpayers who like their income tax reductions (don’t let the left tell you the tax plan is only for the rich); investors in 401Ks, pension funds and stockholders whose investments are gaining in value as the stock market booms; veterans who now see private health providers when the VA hospital wait is too long. 

All of these beneficiaries are Americans who are experiencing America becoming great again. President Trump has been in office less than two years. In that time he has accomplished not only an amazing number of advantages for Americans but he engages and listens to all factions to learn their needs and goals. Leftists subscribe to the “glass is half empty” attitude. One recently said the remains from North Korea contained pig bones, that there is increased employment but wages are low, Trump gained nothing for meeting with Kim Jung Un … forget that hostages were returned and there is evidence of denuclearization. 

With attitudes like that you can bet if President Donald Trump cured cancer the left would denounce him for not curing heart disease. For me the glass is half full and filling up fast! Trump on America!

Carol Adams

Glenville

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To the Editor:

North Carolina now has five political parties represented on the ballot. They include the Republican Party, Constitution Party, Libertarian Party, Democratic Party and Green Party. Most of these organizations encourage people to join them. The Green Party seeks to join with others to foster peace, economic justice, social harmony and a vibrant economy. 

Green Party values include the following: 

  • Grassroots democracy giving every person a say in the decisions that affect their lives.
  • Ecological wisdom understanding that we are part of nature, not separate from nature.
  • Non-violence alternatives to our current pattern of violence in our families and in the streets of nations around the world.
  • Social justice and equal opportunity for all persons to have the rights and opportunities to benefit equally from the resources provided us by society and our environment.
  • Decentralization of wealth and power from centralized social, political and economic institutions that benefit a few.
  • Community-based economics that create jobs and provide a decent standard of living for all people while maintaining a healthy ecological balance including health and wellness in our communities.
  • Feminism providing more cooperative ways of interacting which respects differences of opinion and gender.
  • Respect for diversity that values culture, ethnic, racial, sexual, religious and spiritual diversity.
  • Future focus and sustainability to protect valuable natural resources, safely dispose of all waste we create while developing sustainable economies that don’t depend on continual expansion for survival.
  • Personal and global responsibility in which individuals act to improve their personal well-being and enhance ecological balance and social harmony.

If you have interest in an organization that clearly defines and lives its values, please Google WNC Green Party to learn more.

Ron Robinson

Sylva

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To the Editor:

Mark Meadows represents a district that covers over 6,600 square miles and a constituent base of nearly 750,000 people. Notice the word “represents.” He is supposed to be our representative. 

Yet it has been over one year since he had a town hall — August 7, 2017, at Blue Ridge Community College in Flat Rock. That was the last and only town hall he has had since he was re-elected in 2016. Given the size of the district, it would have taken over two hours for someone from Blowing Rock to have driven to Flat Rock to have been heard and about two-and-a-half hours from Murphy, in the west. That’s if that one day, which apparently was convenient for Meadows, could have worked with the schedules of the working people in Murphy or Blowing Rock.

As of today, August 10, Meadows’ website does not show that he has any town halls planned for this year — not a single one anywhere in the district. I am left wondering: why? Why is he not actively seeking input from his constituents so that he can represent us? Why has he held only a single Town Hall in one location in nearly two years? Why is he not interested in listening to and understanding our worries, concerns, needs? Why has he in the past forced people in the far reaches of the district to drive two hours plus to be heard? Why does he make it so difficult for constituents to be able to face him to ask questions and get answers? What is he afraid of?

Finally, why should we support a representative who does not seem to be interested in listening to and truly representing us?

Maria Chasins

Cashiers

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To the Editor:

Do you know why Donald Trump has refused to reveal his income taxes as each president has for decades? Do you know why Donald Trump has not told our U.S. Intelligence organizations what the meeting between him and Vladimir Putin was about (the actual translation)? Why should any responsible president not carry out these two duties to the American people?

His conscience does not require him to account to other people! Neither does he fear any consequences from his fellow Republicans in the U.S. Senate or the House of Representatives. Therefore, he can continue answering only to himself.

Many elected Republicans who want to be re-elected have abandoned the oath they took to serve in a co-equal branch of government, working in the interest of all Americans. They are hiding from their duty to force Trump to come clean.

Those who won’t stand up to Trump now certainly won’t stand up later. They are like algae, choking the life out of a pond. But, there is a solution in front of the American people to rid us of the nuisance and threat to our lives. We can elect people to replace them on November 6th, 2018! 

Newton’s third law: To every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. 

We can drain this swamp that Donald Trump has developed.

Dave Waldrop

Webster

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Increased bear activity is prompting the U.S. Forest Service to consider broadening the list of places in Western North Carolina where overnight campers will be required to use bear canisters. 

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Catharine Terry has been hired as the new president and CEO of the Great Smoky Mountains Institute at Tremont near Townsend, Tennessee, and is scheduled to start work Sept. 4. 

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Inductees for the 2018 Fly Fishing Hall of Fame have been announced, with an induction ceremony set for Saturday, Sept. 8, at Almond School near Bryson City. 

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A new report from the Environment North Carolina Research and Policy Center ranks North Carolina third for solar energy production growth and 13th for improvements in electric energy efficiency, showing an 82,514 percent increase in solar energy since 2008. 

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Harrah’s Cherokee Casinos’ housekeeping supervisor Arena Hall-Miller was one of three people chosen from across the Caesars brand for the Caesars Clean The World Employee Award. 

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The N.C. Clean Water Management Trust Fund is closing out the 2017 grant year after having given nearly $26 million in awards. 

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Is the rotisserie chicken at Ingles hormone-free?

A recent attempt to update my driver’s license has exposed long waits and online delays at the North Carolina Division of Motor Vehicles.

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To the Editor:

One only has to watch a GOP rally when the president is present to see and hear vicious, repeated lies, which draw the applause of the cult-like crowd. Such incitement has proven to be the national trigger for hatred and violence to run rampant. If you don't stand against such behavior, you have no sense of shame at all. Do your job, or forever hold your place in history as an enabler of the worst sort of behavior I’ve seen in my short 70 years.

This president may have picked up some polish in his many years, but it is a thin veneer covering an absolute lout, who comes out time and time again. It’s a matter of extensive record, just watch him in action at his rallies, easily found online, and judge for yourself if this is the kind of man you’d like to have in charge of America. Educate yourself, and make your choice. Vote as if it matters. 

The Koch brothers, and all the rest of that dark money, wouldn’t be spending up to $400 million, if your vote didn’t matter. The GOP would not have engaged in gerrymandering and court-packing, if your vote didn’t matter. NCGOP wouldn’t be trying to pull a fast one with upcoming constitutional amendments, if your vote didn’t matter.

Don’t fall for the con. Educate yourselves. Turn out for good cause.

Bil Aylor

Bryson City

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To the Editor:

Last week I found in my mailbox a political flyer from Rep. Mike Clampitt, R-Bryson City. He awarded himself an A+ for supporting public schools and teachers in our state. I think Clampitt is indulging in “alternative facts” like his party’s leader in the White House.

Clampitt touts his support for teacher pay raises, safer schools and smaller classes. The truth is, according to “Real Facts N.C.,” that Clampitt voted for a budget that guts public education and siphons money away from public schools into school vouchers that use taxpayer money to send children to private schools. Yes. That’s one way to have smaller classes. 

Though Clampitt claims to have voted for teacher pay raises, the truth is that the salary increases for the majority of teachers was a pittance and comes to about 30 dollars a month, hardly enough to keep up with inflation. Or as the Charlotte Observer stated, “Big Pay Raises? N.C. teachers get just a tank of gas.” That leaves most teachers in public education in N.C. still dependent on second or even third jobs. 

All this, while providing tax breaks for those with the highest incomes. Clampitt’s voting record on the environment is abysmal, and he supported measures to restrict voting rights for minorities. And by the way, he co-sponsored House bill 147 which would remove from our state constitution a proscription for the state of North Carolina to secede from the Union. 

A+? More like, “Needs Improvement.”

Mike Jones

Sylva

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The Western Carolina University School of Art and Design and WCU Bardo Arts Center present a special evening with Mark Mothersbaugh at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 25, at the center in Cullowhee.

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Restoration and recreation work has begun on the Chattooga River in the Pisgah-Nantahala National Forest thanks to funding from the National Forest Foundation and REI granted in 2017.

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Farmland in several Western North Carolina counties will now be protected thanks to funding from the Agricultural Development and Farmland Preservation Trust Fund, which recently awarded more than $4.6 million statewide to obtain easements on 2,590 acres.

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The 2018 Haywood County Recreation and Parks Summer Soccer Tournament concluded Monday, July 30, with a victory for the team Queretaro. 

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The longest continuous section of the Mountains-to-Sea Trail is now complete in Western North Carolina thanks to Carolina Mountain Club volunteers and N.C. State Parks staff. 

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To the Editor:

On 30 July, the Waynesville Planning Board met once again concerning the proposed apartment complex on Plott Creek Road. Again, we see where the majority of the board members ignored the wishes of the local population in what appears as a desperate attempt to side with the developers. I was one of those who attended that marathon meeting, although I did not stay to the very end.  

During my stay, there were issues brought up by both sides but none more contentious than the building heights and the number of stories allowed. As presented, the ordinances in place today allowed for three-story structures but the developer proposed four-story buildings. They seemed to get around the three-story limitation by defining the lowest story as a basement and presumed exempt.

I certainly was not there when the ordinances were written but I am comfortable in assuming that the ‘intent’ of the restriction was to limit building height to three stories — period — for aesthetic reasons. For lawyers and engineers to get away with playing word games and call any story by another name to circumvent the restriction sets a dangerous precedent and flies in the face of the local residents concerned about the scope of the project. 

Also given the contentious nature of this proposal, the local residents would have tolerated a proposal that was strictly held to the intent of the ordinances. But again, that didn’t happen Monday night. The majority of the board chose to waive the restrictions so, again, the residents’ pleas go unheard. I highly recommend this decision be appealed and the original height limitation be enforced before it’s too late!!

Steven Winchester

Plott Creek Road

Waynesville 

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To the Editor:

I would like to know why the animal rescue agencies in the Waynesville area, which there are many including Haywood Animal Welfare and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, did nothing to save the lives of the three wild turkeys that had for some reason made the circle at the intersection of Old Asheville Highway and Ratcliff Cove Road their home.   

They can not say they did not know they were there for newspapers and television had produced stories about them.

Unfortunately at that time there were already only two of the three left alive. Now, there is only one left alive.

What was their excuse for not relocating these creatures to a safe location? They certainly can not claim that the middle of a busy intersection is the “natural habitat” of these animals. In my opinion there is no excuse other than simple laziness on their part.   It would have taken all of one hour or so to capture and relocate them. The members of these agencies should be ashamed of their lack of action.

Bill Patterson

Waynesville

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To the Editor:

Donald Trump can bellow out from the tallest building in New York that he is an innocent man who is being maliciously badgered by a spiteful media. He can tweet hourly that he has no business ties to Russia. But, he will only be making more noise than the noise is making. The noise is S.A.Y.I.T., which has been repeated thousands of times since his campaign and questionable election as president. S.A.Y.I.T. is, of course, an acronym for Show America Your Income Taxes.

By revealing that information Trump might dispel the notion that he is being manipulated by Vladimir Putin. On the other hand, it might simply prove that Trump is, indeed, beholden to Putin because of money. Have you ever wondered why Trump has refused to reveal that relevant tax information as his presidential predecessors have?

Come clean, Mr. Trump. S.A.Y.I.T.!!!!

Dave Waldrop

Webster

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To the Editor:

It is always amusing to hear supporters of President Trump claim that others are uninformed and vicious. Talk about vicious!

I have never before seen a president attack disabled people, a senator suffering from terminal cancer, a gold star family who lost their only son in combat, or the type of vicious name calling during and after the campaign.

The first two paragraphs of the letter on August 1 had no fewer than six erroneous assertions along with a few questionable ones. Kim Jon Un is not dismantling his nuclear arsenal — he has all of his nuclear weapons. According to recent evidence, they are continuing building missiles and expanding their nuclear arsenal. North Korea got international recognition and persuaded Trump to cancel joint military exercises. All Trump got was a small box that supposedly had remains of servicemen, but in the past such boxes also had bones of pigs in addition to some human remains.

The writer asserts that trade deficits are being corrected, but to date no such thing has happened. Some of our deficits continue to grow while some of our companies are moving production to other countries as a result of Trump tariffs or his unpredictability and others are reconsidering building here. Prices to consumers will rise because they — not countries — actually pay the tariffs like taxes. There is no sign of any significant “manufacturing coming back to us” as the writer claims. Just because they might say that on Fox News does not make it a fact. Talk about fake news.

Another assertion is that there is “greater respect for America around the globe.” There is no evidence for this! As one who is in contact with people in other countries, I can assure you that there is no improvement in respect — quite the contrary. People used to say that they like Americans even though they didn’t necessarily like the policies of the president at the time. But now people are starting to say they don’t like Americans because of what they see as our values exemplified by the president.

The writer says taxes are down. Yes, taxes are down if you are rich or making a lot of money, but the rest of us see very little, if any, benefit from the Trump Tax Cut. Unemployment is down, but that does not mean people have a livable income. Wages are so low that many, including teachers, have to take second jobs to make ends meet. The corporations that got huge tax breaks are paying executives and shareholders, but not passing much, if anything, to workers.

Finally, the writer complains that Democrats block everything because it is a Trump idea. May I remind her that ObamaCare was originally a Republican concept? As soon as Obama accepted the plan, every Republican — including Trump — was against it. By the way, ACA premiums are going up in part because Trump is sabotaging ObamaCare. A few cities are suing Trump about this. Most people who object to Trump’s proposals, like the wall and trade wars, do so because the ideas are bad, unrealistic, or ill advised — not because they come from Trump.

Norman Hoffman

Waynesville

Comment

Ever wonder how many local ( Western NC) products we sell at Ingles? 

A trio of local high school students recently represented Haywood County at a weeklong environmental workshop, the Resource Conservation Workshop, held at N.C. State University in Raleigh. 

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