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The Friends of the Rickman Store will be hosting a forum for music and poetry at 7 p.m. on June 24, at the store in Franklin. Performers such as Steve Brady, Angela Faye Martin and many more will take the stage.
All are encouraged to come out to the store, dust off that flat-top or bring out some of that stowed poetry you would like to share among neighbors, songwriters, poets and local talents. Short stories are welcome, too. The time of each presentation will be kept to around 15 minutes to increase the chance that everyone gets a chance to present. To sign up ahead of time, call 828.369.5595 or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
When asked to paint a picture of a dream vacation she would like to take, 68-year-old Hazel Wells began conjuring her image of an airplane en route to Hawaii. With impressive depth and detail, she incorporated her favorite color, blue, and flowers across the bottom.
Wells and other artists who are part of LIFESPAN have become professionals, selling and displaying their work at venues such as the Waynesville Recreation Center and Twigs and Leaves Gallery in downtown Waynesville.
LIFESPAN provides education, employment and enrichment opportunities to children and adults with developmental disabilities. Since 1973, the organization has grown from its roots in Charlotte to 20 locations from Haywood to Alamance counties. LIFESPAN started a creative campus in 2010, introducing clients to art, horticulture, and health and wellness enrichment programs.
Pamela Hjelmeir, the arts assistant of the LIFESPAN Creative Campus in Waynesville, started building the arts program on a local level a year ago. With an art degree from the University of Florida, Hjelmeir had plenty of ideas to inspire the participants.
She has introduced several artistic elements including painting, weaving, drawing and mixed media. Although many participants are non verbal, art allows them to communicate through creativity and illustrate their passions and thoughts.
“Everyone has their own special gifting and their own special talent,” Hjelmeir said. “We all have our weaknesses, but we all have unique contributions to make. You have to look beyond the disability and look at the ability of somebody.”
During the summer of 2010, Hjelmeir worked closely with participants to create art to sell to the community and raise awareness about LIFESPAN’s mission. Their debut appearance was at a booth at the International Festival Day during Folkmoot last July.
Having their work on display is a source of excitement and pride for the participants, who now consider themselves working artists after selling several pieces at various events.
In addition to the gallery showings, LIFESPAN art was used on the Thanksgiving cards for the Haywood County Arts Council. Many participants won blue ribbons for their crafts at the Haywood County Fair and often show their work at state shows in Charlotte and at the Charlotte Douglas International Airport.
Carrie Keith, an owner of Twigs and Leaves, was so impressed with the artworks’ level of professional appeal she purchased one of her own – a vibrant painting of a tractor. She hung it proudly in the room where her grandson sleeps when he comes over.
“I think it has a lot of fun color,” Keith said. “It’s amazing the talent they possess.”
In March the Waynesville Recreation Center mounted several pieces of their art along the walls facing the new fitness equipment on the second floor. Having LIFESPAN artist’s work at the fitness center has been an effective way to expose the organization to the community and ties into the program’s encouragement of health and wellness.
Each piece of art is priced competitively and fairly in regards to other arts and crafts being sold in the community.
“It’s not as though just because they have a disability we should lower the price,” Hjelmeir said. “It’s very fairly priced, and I have the responsibility to make sure that we protect their interest. They work very hard on these projects.”
In their studio at the LIFESPAN building, Hjelmeir combines group art activities and one-on-one instruction for each of the students involved. While group activities provide a fun atmosphere, one-on-one work allows participants to push their goals and show what they can do individually.
Robert Rogers is also a representational painter with a fascination with farms. His art is full of detailed fences, farm tools, animals and barns, one of which sold at Waynesville’s recent Whole Bloomin Thing Festival. He also admits a love for working with beads and weaving.
Stacey Delancey takes a more abstract approach to her work. She enjoys interactive projects and is drawn to mixed media. During instruction, Hjelmeir sometimes offers suggestions for color mixing and layering and helps them rinse off the paint brush between colors, but otherwise allows the students to create their unique vision.
“We don’t want to box in their creativity and say there is a prescribed formula because there is none,” Hjelmeir said. “It’s individualized just as much as they are.”
Participant Kenneth Grant creates most of his art around political themes and has painted presidential portraits of George Washington and Abraham Lincoln as well as military tanks and war arsenals.
Hjelmeir tries to organize regular field trips for the students to inspire their art. Some of these include swimming at Haywood Regional Health and Fitness Center and the Pisgah Astronomical Research Institute.
LIFESPAN relies on grant money and monetary donations from supporters to purchase art and craft supplies. They are always looking for opportunities to show the work of the artists.
In the annual report for 2010, LIFESPAN reported that it had sold 1,125 pieces of participant’s art from all the communities totaling $21,667 over two years.
Hjelmeir is currently working to create digital portfolios of each student’s work and hopes to create an online store to sell each piece.
— By DeeAnna Haney • SMN Intern
“The American people are losing confidence in the system and they want electoral reform ....”
What American political leader, a veteran of high office, made this statement then put his name in support of voter photo ID. Was it Ronald Reagan? Newt Gingrich? Dick Cheney?
Guess again. It was Jimmy Carter.
In September 2005 the former President joined with colleagues on the Federal Election Reform Commission to endorse voter photo IDs. The commission, organized by American University’s Center for Democracy and Election Management, had 87 recommendations, and highlighted photo voter IDs in announcing its presentation to President Bush and Congress.
The bi-partisan, 21-member commission, commonly referred to as “Carter-Baker,” was co-chaired by Carter and former Secretary of State James Baker.
Support for photo ID at the polls has also come from the federal judiciary. In April, 2008 Justice John Paul Stevens, a liberal, wrote the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision upholding Indiana’s requirement of government-issued voter photo ID (Crawford vs. Marion County). The opinion recognizes the necessity and prudence of such legislation to guard against election fraud, which could affect the outcome of an election.
Stevens’ decision cited examples of fraud including the 2004 Washington State gubernatorial race where one person voted 19 times using the names of dead people.
Additional evidence of voting fraud in American elections is abundant. A leading source is Stealing Elections: How Voter Fraud Threatens Our Democracy, by John Fund, a veteran investigative reporter with the Wall Street Journal. Fund’s book examines the 2004 Washington state gubernatorial race; the 2000 general election in Missouri when 56,000 St. Louis area voters held multiple voter registrations and more than 100 felons voted illegally; and misconduct in Georgia, Illinois, Mississippi and other states.
My point? The issue of voter photo ID is not a partisan issue, and it should not be conceived as a conservative or liberal matter — though it has been depicted as both by its critics in North Carolina. The issue is trust and confidence in the American political system. The legitimacy of the political system flows from the electoral process. When Americans lose trust in the electoral process they lose faith in the entire political system. This was President Carter’s point.
To advocate the photo ID requirement for voters in no ways casts aspersions on election officials. In North Carolina’s case, it recognizes that our way of life has changed. We live among strangers, and this is why photo IDs are required to cash a check, board an airplane, and enter many federal buildings. Does not the integrity of our political system deserve such protection also?
Opinion polls by Rasmussen and the Civitas Institute in Raleigh demonstrate a majority of Americans and North Carolinians say yes; and 12 states, including our neighbors Tennessee, Georgia, and South Carolina, require voter photo ID.
So why the opposition? Some say the legislation is a solution in search of a problem: there is no demonstrable fraud and estimated costs, borne by the state, could exceed $2 million. This criticism falls short.
Voter photo ID laws are intended to prevent fraud. Prevention is basically easier than detection and the legal challenges it brings (I have never lost a home to fire, but I still carry fire insurance). North Carolina officials allocate funds exceeding tens of billions of dollars. The cost of protecting the peoples’ voice through elections is small by comparison.
Liberal members on the Carter-Baker Commission expressed dissenting views that photo ID could deter minorities from voting. Similar views were reported last week in The Charlotte Observer by Jim Morrill: “Critics, including the AARP, say the ID requirement would lower turnout among seniors, students and African-Americans. There are about 460,000 active N.C. voters who don’t have a driver’s license …. A disproportionate number are black voters, who tend to vote Democratic.”
Morrill quoted Rep. Ray Rapp, D-Mars Hill, whose district includes most of Haywood County: “The name of this bill should be the “Voter Suppression Bill.”
North Carolina Republicans have repeatedly rejected this charge, and have countered, as Morrill reported, that when Georgia adopted a photo ID law in 2006, minority voting saw an upsurge two years later.
So what should Gov. Perdue do? Listen to Jimmy Carter and John Paul Stevens and do the right thing — support voter photo ID and make it the law in North Carolina!
(Kirkwood Callahan is retired and lives in Waynesville. He has taught American government at four southern universities. He may be reached at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..)
To the Editor:
The past few months have been filled with letters to the editors, editorials and presentations to the Haywood County Board of Commissioners. All of this has been over property re-evaluations and raised property taxes. In our depressed economy where jobs have been lost, almost half of the people of Haywood County have received an increased valuation of their homes. Indeed, some homes have seen a value increase of nearly 100 percent and have created a situation possibly forcing people out of their homes.
No government is given the constitutional right to harness people with taxes, which will force them to leave what has been their family’s home afor generations. These “salt of the earth” people are what have made this country strong. Now, the “powers that be” are really saying that those people no longer belong here. One commissioner even had the nerve to tell a man that, “he didn’t have to live in Haywood County if he didn’t like the new valuation of his property.” That is an irresponsible and immature response to a citizen of our community.
On top of facing that impossible burden, people of our county may not know that commissioners will vote on a new budget which will hit residents with an approximately 5 percent tax rate increase. Having both more property taxes and an increase of the county tax rate is like putting a double barreled shotgun to the heads of our fellow citizens. It makes one wonder how our county commissioners can live with themselves, when most of our surrounding counties elected to do no re-evaluation due to the blighted economy.
Like most Haywood County residents, we expect our county budget to hold fast, just as each of our household budgets must do. Since we have tightened our belts and do with less, so must departments within the county operations. As the Chairman of the Haywood County Republican Party, I urge the county commissioners to hold the fiscal line, and repeal any tax increase within the budget.
We can live with it, and so must you.
John Meinecke
Haywood County Republican Party Chairman
To the Editor:
The State of North Carolina has been blessed in many ways. One of her blessings, in spite of her rugged, dangerous coastline, is that she has never had to attempt to survive a tsunami sweeping in from the sea and destroying all in its path.
However, she has been subjected to a tsunami of newly-elected young (and old) Turks who have systematically staged and produced a greatly devastating wave of what they determine to be economically inspired changes. They believe this will make the state a domain in which they believe their party and their programs will prosper. But they forget about the people who do not have incomes, or voices, on the level of senators and representatives. These mostly silent people form the underlying cushion for so many of the activities in which all of us participate.
They have seriously damaged the entire system of education in North Carolina which had heretofore been a source of great pride to the people of this state, and which has been formed over many years of struggle and sacrifice. Those years produced the North Carolina Community College System, tops in the nation; schools of math and science which turned out students highly proficient and capable of leading the way in our nation today; health care systems, including Medicaid and women’s services which have stood as models for other states. In the days ahead, we will know for sure that these proud accomplishments are in the past.
These politicians, in their determination to make up for all the years when North Carolina could depend on the Democrats to provide for the common welfare, and in their efforts to force their own philosophies down the throats of people who cannot help themselves, have done more damage since November of 2010 than can be repaired through many years, even if their terms ended tomorrow.
In the past two days, the papers have been filled with information about the fearless leader of these destroyers – Thom Tillis. According to stories in the Asheville Citizen-Times, Tillis has lost no time in padding his salary and that of his assistants. He gave himself a 27 percent raise. He gave his chief of staff a 25 percent increase, boosting him from $120,000 per year to $150,000 per year. His general counsel received a 27% raise, going from $110,000 to $140,000 per year. Two of his policy advisers received $12,000 raises for each of them, putting them up from $70,000 to $82,000. Do policy advisers work a 40-hour week, or is this job just a moonlighting addition to a regular job? Tillis himself received a reported 27 percent increase.
And here we all thought being a legislator was not really a full-time job, since most legislators still have a home many miles from Raleigh, and other income. By the way, don’t they also receive travel reimbursement and per diem for meals away from home, and lodging, and other fringe benefits?
I must say that Tillis’ promises before the election to cut expenses in his office and in the spending of state tax money seem to have as much validity as his protestations that his party has done no damage to the educational system of this state, among other destructive activities we are now hearing about. And, by the way, none of those people receiving those huge raises will pay the first dime of Social Security tax on the amounts they receive above $106,000.00. That is the present cap on Social Security taxes which anyone receiving a salary must pay. Seems a strange balance — wouldn’t common sense require that any forgiveness of paying into Social Security be on the lower end of the scale, rather than on the highest end?
When Jim Davis was running against John Snow in the late, lamented election last fall, he charged Snow with having cut a great many teachers’ jobs. Apparently he and his present owner, Art Pope, who purchased his own private legislator with almost half a million dollars invested in the election in a small, obscure mountain county, felt that the new guys in town could do an even better slash job, ignoring their spurious promises to keep all teachers and aides and other school personnel. I suppose Sen. Davis, R-Franklin, voted to uphold all the cuts and slashes his party has made against our school system.
Those of us who have lived a couple of generations have seen many changes come and go, but few of us have seen such punitive changes visited on an entire state. But I do have faith that this worm will turn one day, if those of us who care about and strive for the good of our fellow man as well as ourselves, will only keep the faith, and will put ever more effort into electing representatives and senators who will also care about the people who put them in office, and who will strive for the common welfare.
I remember a line from the John Steinbeck book, The Grapes of Wrath, when one of his characters from dust-bowl Oklahoma was thinking of all the troubles and trials they had endured, when she said “But we are the people, and the people go on forever.”
Hopefully there will be enough people of good will who will begin to think about the trampling of the state policies which have just occurred, and will right some of those wrongs on another day to come. If we cannot find the will and the effort to elect people of honor to these positions of responsibility, perhaps we deserve a situation in the state of which we have just had a small taste. I suggest there will be worse to come.
Sue Waldroop
Franklin
“Sowing in the sunshine, sowing in the shadows, we shall come rejoicing bringing in the sheets.”
— (slight adaptation from Knowles Shaw beautiful hymn)
Standing on the banks of the Pigeon River in the early 1960s on a hot summer day, I watched the baptisms of newly saved souls along with the members of our small country church. The church, Sonoma Baptist, has long since dissolved, but when I close my eyes I can still feel the heat of that summer Sunday afternoon, hear the off-key singing of traditional hymns and smell the cool damp scent of black snakes lounging on the riverbank.
Summer Bible School had just ended and we had a new crop of young converts who — lured with grape Kool-Aid, cookies, and the promise of eternal life — marched to the front of the church to exchange their short stories of repentance for a new white Bible and a cool dunk in the Pigeon River. Already the nosy, budding psychologist, I loved to hear those sordid stories of woe and tried to imagine just how those life sagas would end.
I also loved river baptisms. They took our congregation outside the hot muggy sanctuary and marked the start of long summers in the mountains. Baptisms and summers symbolized clean new beginnings. As I sang those wonderful old hymns and watched each new convert solidly dunked in the cold water, I imagined the dark and ugly stains of sin washed from the dirty souls and sent down the river from Bethel to Canton.
When my daddy once showed me the Pigeon River in Fiberville, just downstream from the mill (Champion Paper in those days), I was sure that I was viewing the vile aftermath of sin in the roiling murky polluted waters and smelling the putrid stench of the devil himself.
I remember belting out “Amazing Grace” and “Washed in the Blood,” but the song that I most remember singing on those hot afternoons was a favorite from the old Baptist Hymnal on page 432 called “Bringing in the Sheaves.” I loved this song about sowing, reaping and rejoicing but my child’s ear heard “sheets” rather than “sheaves.” I didn’t know then what sheaves were, but I did know that bringing in the sheets from our old clothesline in Bethel was a weekly ritual that brought me great joy.
There are few household tasks that are as rewarding as hanging out clothes on a summer day. The act, much like river baptisms, symbolizes a fresh start and promises the reward of clean and dry clothes at the end of the day. It made more sense in my small child’s world that one would surely rejoice when bringing in the freshly cleaned sheets from their imprisonment on the clothesline.
I haven’t been to a river baptism in ages, but I still hang out clothes on an old clothesline most every day. As I take each towel or bed sheet from the line, I can’t resist holding it to my face and breathing deeply in the warm summer sun. It is a better meditation exercise than sitting cross-legged and trying to chase unwanted thoughts from my mind and, best of all, it brings back memories of the simple pleasures of growing up in a world without fancy baptismal pools or clothes dryers.
Cleansing of the body through baptism and washing clothes to hang out on the clothesline seem to have parallel lessons of redemption. Dirt and grime are washed from clothes; sin is washed from the soul; all is ultimately forgiven in sparkling waters. Both are summer rituals that define growing up in a small mountain community where good people live, work and care for one another by sowing seeds of kindness. Forgiveness is a gift given to lost souls and dirty laundry; redemption is followed by rejoicing; and everyday rituals performed in a simple mountain hollow are treasured for a lifetime. And we shall come rejoicing bringing in the sheets.
(Share your memories of summers in the mountains with Karen Dill at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..)
Two $500 scholarships have been awarded to Lella Dougherty of Cherokee County Schools and Sarah Bruegger of Jackson County Schools by the Center for Diversity Education. The scholarships will be used to travel with the Western Region Education Service Alliance (WRESA) for a 10-day visit to China in June. Forty local teachers will be traveling to Beijing, Xi’an, and Shanghai.
828.232.5024 or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Western Carolina University’s Theatre Summer camp has space remaining for campers ages 7 to 17. Registration will run through July 7. The camp will be 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. for 7- to 12-year-olds and from 1:30 to 5:30 p.m. for 13- to 17-year olds July 11 through 15. The camp isled by actors from the Asheville-based Bright Star Children’s Theatre and will include games, improvisation, stage direction and discussions intended to inspire creativity and a passion for live theater.
The cost is $100 per child. Additional children from the same family will be $80. Campers are responsible for bringing their own lunches and beverages. 828.227.2305, email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or visit fapac.wcu.edu.
Money and donations of clothing, furniture and other household items are being accepted at the Swain County Sheriff’s Office to help Michael Harrison, a school resource officer whose home burned down.
Harrison was called home to Swain County last Friday from his National Guard duty after the fire, which occurred shortly after electric power had been restored that afternoon. His wife and two children had been staying with relatives and were not home at the time.
Clothing sizes needed are: men’s large shirts, 35-26/32 pants, and 10 or 10 1/2 shoe size; women’s small shirts, size 5 pants, and 7 1/2 shoe size; for a 5 year old boy: 5T clothes and child size 10 shoes; and for a 2 year old girl: 2T clothes and child size 2 shoes. Children’s toys acceptable for a 5 year old boy and a 2 year old girl as well as children’s books would be appreciated, along with encouraging letters or cards.
828.488.0159
The SEJ Laity Conference, a family experience, will be offered June 30 through July 3 at Lake Junaluska Conference and Retreat Center.
A two-hour “Festival of Families” event will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. Friday, July 1, and Saturday, July 2, featuring the Rev. Clayton Jordan, a ventriloquist and stringed instrument musician from Dothan, Ala. During the same time period, participants may choose to attend two of the nine interest groups, meeting on a variety of subjects. A special project that emphasizes “Stop Hunger Now” will be held at 12:45 p.m. Friday, July 1. Participants can help package meals.
Registration fees are $35 for an individual or $60 for a couple. 1.800.222.4930 (group code #406796) or 828.454.6656
William Shelton is off the local community college’s board of trustees after the Jackson County Board of Commissioners, in a 3-2 vote, instead appointed Dewayne Elders, Commissioner Charles Elders’ son.
Shelton, a Democrat, was a former Jackson County commissioner who lost his bid last November for re-election — to Elders, a Republican.
Shelton had served as a board of trustee member for Southwestern Community College since 2007.
“It was a pleasure to serve as a trustee, and now it is time for someone else to step in,” Shelton said the morning after the vote, adding he wished the SCC board the “best of luck.”
Elders, before voting, asked stand-in county Attorney David Moore (the usual attorney, Jay Coward wasn’t there) for a legal opinion.
“I don’t think this is a conflict, because I’m not going back to school, but I want to make sure before I vote,” Elders said.
Moore responded that he was not particularly prepared to answer such a question, but that in his best off-the-cuff response it was really up to Elders and the board to make that decision.
Without Elders, the board would have had a split vote, 2-2.
Asked by Chairman Jack Debnam if he wanted to abstain, Elders responded that no, he did not. And he didn’t, instead choosing to vote with Debnam (who nominated Dewayne Elders) and fellow Republican Doug Cody. Debnam is an Independent, but his votes are in line with the Republicans.
Amanda Martin, an attorney for the N.C. Press Association, said the law prohibits elected officials from gaining a direct personnel benefit, meaning Elders didn’t violate the state statute.
Democrat Joe Cowan spoke in favor of Shelton, alluding to the former commissioner’s leadership qualities and service. He and Democrat Mark Jones voted against Dewayne Elders.
“I’ve had a number of requests from constituents of mine that the board reappoint (Shelton),” Cowan said.
Macon County non-profit organizations have until July 30 to apply for grants through the Macon County Community Funding Pool.
Organizations applying for funds must provide financial statements such as budgets and federal tax-exempt reports, organization goals and objectives and program descriptions, and board/staff roster. Groups not incorporated as non-profits may enlist an established non-profit to serve as their fiscal agent.
Application forms and instructions are available on the Macon County website, www.maconnc.org, or at the Macon County Public Library.
First-time applicants should contact Karen Wallace, 828.524.3600, or Mary Ann Sloan, 828.526.4280, to discuss their proposal.
MedWest Health System’s osteoporosis bus provides bone density testing each week to women throughout rural Western North Carolina. Osteoporosis causes bones become brittle and more likely to break. The Osteoporosis Center at MedWest-Haywood is currently the only center accredited in Western North Carolina by the International Society for Clinical Densitometry. A full range of osteoporosis services are offered at the Osteoporosis Center as well as a monthly community education program, which is free and open to the public.
828.452.8850
There’s only one way to tell how right — or wrong — Haywood County’s recent property revaluation is. Appraisers attempt to peg the price of house or lot, predicting what a buyer would pay should a ‘for sale’ sign go up in the yard.
As hackles fly over whether the county’s assessed values are too high or low, the only way to tell for sure is delving into the world of property sales.
The Smoky Mountain News compared the selling price of 84 properties in April and May to the new values assessed by the county. Of those, 20 percent were accurate within a 10 percent margin of error.
Of the 68 whose assessed value was more than 10 percent off the actual selling price, 37 sold for less than their assessed values and 29 of them sold for more.
Property in Maggie, Crabtree, Bethel and Beaverdam were more likely to be overvalued in the county’s appraisal. Property in Waynesville was more likely to be undervalued compared to the sale prices — more likely to fetch a higher selling price than what appraisers had pegged it for.
Waynesville sales shows 17 properties outside the margin of error. The majority — 12 out of 17 — sold for more than the revaluation amount.
However, six out of nine properties in the Beaverdam community were valued higher by county appraiser than what the actually sold for. For example, a three bedroom, three bathroom house in Beaverdam valued at $262,900 was sold for $192,500.
According to the data, assessors undervalued three out of four properties in Crabtree and all properties in the Iron Duff community.
Maggie Valley properties were appraised for more than their actual selling price in seven out of 10 instances. A three bedroom, three bathroom house in Maggie Valley that was valued at $204,800 sold for $115,000.
There are few discernable trends when comparing the accuracy of appraised value by price bracket.
Of 14 properties that were appraised at $100,000 or less, 12 of them sold for more than the revaluation assessment.
Of the 42 properties appraised between $100,000-$300,000, 14 fetched a higher selling price than the county’s value and 28 sold for less than the county’s value.
Of the 7 properties appraised between $300,000 and $500,000, four sold for more and three for less.
Only two properties sold in April and May with an appraised value of more than $500,000. One home in Maggie, revalued at $520,400 sold for less at $340,000. Another in Waynesville appraised at $541,000 sold for more at $620,000.
— By DeeAnna Haney • Contributing writer
A press release from Duke Energy reports that almost 20,000 customers in the six western counties are without power as of 2 p.m. Thursday, June 16, and about 6,700 of those customers in Swain County may not have their electricity service restored until Sunday night, June 19.
The power outages are a result of an intense thunderstorm with high winds that hit the area Wednesday evening. Falling limbs and trees broke down lines and poles. Hardest hit are the Bryson City, Cherokee, Cullowhee and Sylva areas of Swain and Jackson counties.
The storm caused about 26,000 power outages, the most since Hurricane Ivan in September 2004. (Hurricane Ivan knocked off 31,720 customers overnight on Sept. 16-17, 2004.)
Here is Duke’s estimate of when power will be restored, though the power company says it hopes to beat its estimates:
• Cherokee County
138 without power
Estimated restoration: 11 p.m. Friday, June 17
• Graham
1,215 without power
Estimated restoration: 5 p.m. Saturday, June 18
• Jackson
9,592 without power
Estimated restoration, Cashiers: 11 p.m. Thursday, June 16
Estimated restoration, rest of Jackson County: 11 p.m. Sunday, June 19
• Macon
2,141 without power
Estimated restoration: 11 p.m. Friday, June 17
• Swain
6,775 without power
Estimated restoration: 11 p.m. Sunday, June 19
Total: 19,861
Outage statistics by county are available at the Duke website, http://www.duke-energy.com/north-carolina/outages/current.asp
Duke hydroelectric generating reservoirs are currently are handling the runoff. Lake levels are at: http://www.duke-energy.com/lakes/nantahala/nantahala-lake-levels.asp
So far 570 individual sites with damage have been identified. While damage assessment is ongoing, scouting teams have reported more than 50 broken poles.
The first wave of over 400 additional Duke crews and contractors from Hickory, Greensboro, and Charlotte areas have begun work in the area.
Duke Energy’s Nantahala Area is a rugged mountain area of 1,729 square miles with about 75,000 customers. They are in Cherokee, Graham, Jackson, Macon, and Swain counties. Customers in these counties include the Eastern Band of the Cherokee Indians, located mostly in Jackson and Swain counties.
Protect appliances by turning off lights and as many appliances and electronics as possible – including heating or air conditioning systems — while the power is out. This will help prevent circuit overload situations when power is restored. You will also reduce the potential for damage to sensitive equipment such as computers, microwave ovens, televisions and recording devices.
Call 800.769.3766 to report a power outage
Come learn about and see live owls Thursday evening, June 16, at The Highlands Biological Foundation’s Nature Center amphitheatre.
The event begins at 8 p.m. with an hour-long educational presentation by the Carolina Raptor Center in collaboration with the Highlands Plateau Audubon Society. Then, at nightfall, participants will have the chance to learn the different calls of local owls from members of the Highlands Plateau Audubon Society before they split into small groups to prowl for owls.
The “Owl Prowl” is part of the foundation’s “Think About Thursdays” summer lecture series that focuses on the beauty and biodiversity of the southern Appalachians.
Participants should wear light clothing and bring a flashlight. The Owl Prowl is free to the public but contributions to the Carolina Raptor Center are appreciated.
Parking is extremely limited, so visitors are encouraged to carpool or park downtown and walk. 828.526.2221 or www.wcu.edu/hbs.
A guided hike covering ancient Cherokee trails in Highlands will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Thursday, June 23. Wild South Cultural Preservation Director Lamar Marshall will lead the hike.
The Highlands Biological Foundation, as part of their “Think About Thursdays” summer event series, will host the hike. Much of the road system in the Southeast is built directly on Cherokee trails and corridors, which means that, essentially, the Cherokee developed our road system. Marshall has been part of a recent initiative to find and restore the trail and road system of the Cherokee Nation in Western North Carolina.
The hike will leave from the Highlands Nature Center (parking is limited). Advanced registration is required. $10, including lunch.
828.526.2602.
A hike along the Devil’s Britches Trail will be held at 11 a.m. on Tuesday, June 21, at Cataloochee Ranch in Maggie Valley. The Southern Appalachian Highlands Conservancy (SAHC) is holding the hike.
Judy Coker, ranch owner, and Claire Hobbs, SAHC Public Relations and Outreach Associate, will lead the hike. The hike is of moderate difficulty and covers about four miles, including vistas of the Plott Balsam Range, Hemphill Bald and Soco Gap. The trail will begin at the Ski Lodge Road and turn down the Bunchberry trail until it intersects with the Devil’s Britches road.
Lunch will be at Todd’s Folly rest area, and the return is downhill on Pine Tree Gap Road. Participants should bring water, a camera, warm jacket, sturdy shoes and lunch. Free for SAHC members, $10 for nonmembers. RSVP required.
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“WNC Nesters,” a field trip from Heintooga Road down to Kituwah, will be held at 7:30 a.m. on Saturday, June 18, by the Great Smoky Mountains Audubon Society as part of their summer program schedule.
Don Hendershot will lead the field trip. Hendershot is a naturalist, biological consultant and freelance writer. His column, “The Naturalist’s Corner,” has appeared in The Smoky Mountain News for more than a decade. He was one of seven journalists in the Southeast nominated for Wild South’s 2011 Roosevelt-Ashe “Outstanding Journalist in Conservation” award.
The field trip group will meet at the Wal-Mart parking lot near Verizon in Waynesville. Participants should bring a bag lunch, water and rain gear. The field trip is free and open to everyone. GSMAS.com.
Discover Life in America (DLIA) is holding a number of events this summer for the public to experience the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
Discover Life is a nonprofit organization devoted to identifying every creature in the park. Volunteers are critical to the group’s project.
Tree-team training will be held from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday, June 18. The event is a special, initial training session for a special long-term project in the Smokies. The goal is to document the associated invertebrates of the declining trees of the park. Three or four collecting events will follow the training.
Additionally, DLIA’s Biodiversity Days in the Smokies begins June 22 with a presentation on the Spruce-Fir Moss spider. On June 23, scientific illustrations will be featured. On June 24, there will be a presentation on Springtails and on June 25, there will be a Fern Foray field survey.
828.430.4757.
The Little Tennessee Watershed Association will hold an all-day fundraiser June 23 at local restaurants.
The money raised will benefit the nonprofit organization, which for the past 21 years has worked to protect and restore the health of the Little Tennessee River and its tributaries.
The restaurants involved are Anthony’s in Bryson City, Grapes and Beans Café, in Clayton, Ga., Rana Rinata in Franklin and Fresser’s Eatery in Highlands.
Additionally, Outdoor 76 in Franklin will provide discount coupons for clothing and outdoor recreational equipment at all restaurant locations for this event.
A locally produced summer brunch will be provided by the Jackson County Farmers Market at 11 a.m. on June 26. A tour of three Cullowhee farms will follow the brunch.
The farms available for touring are: Full Spectrum Farms, a 34-acre farm on a mission to serve adults on the autism spectrum; Avant Garden Farm and Venue, a small farm focused on sustainability; and Registered Nursery, a Caney Fork flower garden with select perennials, herbs and lilac bushes.
Ticket prices for the brunch include a buffet prepared by professional chef Chris Dole, beverages, tax, gratuity and farm tour for $40. Tickets are sold at the farmers market or online. Tickets are also available for the farm tour portion only for $10 per car. Proceeds benefit the farmer’s market.
828.631.3033 or locallyproducedevents.com.
The Haywood Historic Farmers Market will be even more festive and lively than usual this Saturday, June 18.
Farmers and market vendors will be cooking up dishes using local foods, including a grilling booth, and giving out free samples and recipes.
Jeanne Driese, a master gardener, will present a soil talk and slideshow at 9 and 11 a.m. about why old-growth forests don’t need fertilizer and how they grow without our “help.” Driese is a member of Big Spring Master Gardeners Association of Greene County Tenn., and has been an organic gardener for 50 years.
Barbara Duncan, awarding winning author, singer, songwriter and poet, will be on stage. Duncan is the educational director at the Museum of the Cherokee Indian. She’ll be featured from 9:30 a.m. till 11 a.m.
The Farmers Market runs from 8 a.m. until 1 p.m. at the HART Theater parking lot, next to the Shelton House on Pigeon Street in Waynesville
Catherine Carter, a WCU professor and poet, will read from and discuss her collection of poetry, Memory of Gills, at City Lights Bookstore at 10:30 p.m. on Thursday, June 16. The Coffee with the Poet gathering is an ongoing series held every third Thursday of the month and is cosponsored by City Lights Bookstore and NetWest.
Carter’s first volume of poetry exudes a genuinely classical quality: clear-eyed, intelligent, unsentimental, self-aware, and witty in the fullest and best sense.
828.586.9499.
Author Hattie Caldwell Davis will read at the Haywood County Library in Waynesville at 3 p.m. on Sunday, June 19, as part of the Sunday Concert Series at the library.
Davis has written seven books that document the true life stories and histories of the people and places of the Cataloochee and Maggie Valley regions. Her stories describe the life and times of the Western North Carolina pioneer families who settled in the Cataloochee Valley during the 1800s.The event is sponsored by the Haywood County Arts Council. www.haywoodarts.org.
Friends of the Haywood Library will offer a new series, Discovering the Literary South, the Louis D. Rubin Jr. Series, from 4 to 6 p.m. beginning June 23 at the Waynesville branch in the auditorium.
The books in this series demonstrate the “southern-ness” which Rubin noted in his study of Southern literature in the 1950s. The books in the series were all published within the last 20 years, and the region these books travel is home to coal miners, peach growers, tenant farmers, storekeepers, Pentecostal preachers and rockabilly crooners.
The five books to be discussed are Gap Creek: The Story of a Marriage on June 23, A Virtuous Woman, July 14, The Jew Store, Aug. 11; Clover, Aug. 25; and The Coal Tatoo, A Novel, Sept. 15.
The books are free and available at the library beginning June 2. Discussions will be led by scholars and professors from nearby colleges and universities.
828.456.5311 or e-mail This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
Auditions for Playfest will get under way Wednesday, June 22, in Cashiers for actors who can play roles between ages 30 to 80. Auditions will be held in the meeting room/theater of the Albert Carlton Cashiers Library. Afternoon auditions begin at 2 p.m. and evening auditions at 6:30 p.m.
Playfest is an evening of staged play readings with blocking, lighting, sound effects, and suggestions of costuming, but with scripts in hand so that no memorization is necessary. Ellen Greenwald at 828.743.1802.
“Educating Rita,” an award-winning play, will be on stage June 15 through 19, and again from July 1 to 3, at the Martin-Lipscomb Performing Arts Center in Highlands.
The play follows the relationship between a young working-class hairdresser and Dr. Frank Bryant, a cynical middle-aged university lecturer, over a year of night classes.
The Small Stage Production is co-produced by the Martin -Lipscomb Performing Arts Center and the Highlands-Cashiers Players.
828.526.9047.
A craft festival will be held from 9:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. on June 18 at the Old Mill 1886 in Cherokee.
Artists from all over the Southeast will demonstrate and sell their hand-crafted works. Artists will include Cherokee artists, wood carvers, blacksmiths, quilters, jewelry designers, Appalachian crafters and authors. Smoked barbecue, kettle corn, homemade ice cream and music will be available.
Free admission. 828.497.6526
The Haywood Community Band will perform its second free concert at 6:30 p.m. on June 19, at the pavilion adjacent to the Maggie Valley Town Hall.
The theme is ‘Rhythmization’ and will feature songs such as “Syncopated Clock,” “Sentimental Journey,” and “Take Five.” The concert is sponsored by the Maggie Valley Civic Association. 828.452.5553 or 828.452.7530 or visit www.haywoodcommunityband.com.
The Schoolhouse Café will be opening in the Stecoah Valley Cultural Arts Center on June 15. The café is located in the main building and will be open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday and 12 to 5 p.m. on Sunday.
Patrons can use the free high-speed Internet as well as outdoor seating. Rose Moberly, formerly of Rosy’s Café in Robbinsville, will be both managing and cooking for the café, which will use local supplies whenever possible.
828.479.3364 or visit www.stecoahvalleycenter.com.
An old-time community songfest will be held at 4 p.m. on Sunday, June 19, at the Town Square in downtown Franklin.
The program will include group singing of old and not-so-old familiar and patriotic songs like “You Are My Sunshine,” “America” and “All I Have To Do Is Dream,” with emphasis on round and harmony singing.
Ubuntu Franklin, a local a cappella singing group, will demonstrate their special style of participatory singing. Food may be purchased from downtown restaurants and vendors, or attendees can bring their own.
828.524.7683 or visit www.artscouncilofmacon.org.
A Ladies’ Night Out pairing weaving and wine will be held at Oaks Gallery in Dillsboro from 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. on Tuesday, June 21.
Learn to weave a small project — a bookmark, festive coaster or a potholder — while spending some quality time with your female friends. Led by Susan Leveille, a weaver all her life and teacher for almost 40 years, she and her husband, Bob, have owned Oaks Gallery for 23 years.
Cost is $6 for the weaving yarn/supplies.
Voices in the Laurel, a regional youth choir, is set to perform on June 18 at Turner Field for the Atlanta Braves game. Tickets are still available for the game on the Atlanta Braves website, www.atlantabraves.com, or tune in to MLB on FOX TV to see the performance.
The choir has been invited to perform every summer for the Atlanta Braves games, in addition to invitational performances around the world, including Washington, D.C., Denver, Manhattan, London, France, Nashville and Asheville.
828.734.8413 or visit www.voicesinthelaurel.org.
The Swannanoa Chamber Music Festival will host five concert showcases for five consecutive Sundays beginning June 19 and ending July 17.
All concerts will begin at 7:30 p.m., except two matinee concerts beginning at 3 p.m. on June 26 and July 3. The concerts will be held at the Performing Arts Center in Waynesville. The Enso String Quartet will play the June 19 and June 26 concerts and the Jasper Quartet will join the festival for the July concerts.
Tickets are $20 or $75 for a season ticket. Students are admitted free of charge. The concerts are sponsored by the Haywood County Arts Council.
828.452.0593 or visit swannanoachambermusic.com.
The Airing of the Quilts exhibit will be held at the new Jackson County Library Complex from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. on Friday, June 24, and from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. on Saturday, June 25. The event will include a quilt exhibit, a fashion show and a luncheon. It is the first event to be held at the library and will showcase the work of local quilt makers, both past and present. Antique quilts on loan from area residents will be a part of the show and the collection of quilts will be displayed throughout the library.
Tickets for Saturday’s fashion show and luncheon are $20. The exhibit is free.
828.508.8697 or e-mail This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., or 828.293.5004 or e-mail This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
The Haywood County Library’s reading program starts Saturday, June 18 with a party beginning at 1 p.m. at the Haywood County Public Library. Magician Ric Singleton will be performing and free popcorn and snow cones will be available.
The program’s theme is “One World, Many Stories.” A teen writing workshop will be offered from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. June 21 and 28, and July 5 and 12. Doris Mager, a.k.a. The Eagle Lady, will return with her Birds of Prey show, there will be appearances by Didgeridoos Down Under, a performance by the Red Herring Puppets, a show titled The Miracle of Science and a Lego Week in July among the features of this summer’s program, which caters to all ages.
828.452.5169.
The summer reading program at the Jackson County Public Library is getting started at 7 p.m. on June 20, with a performance by storyteller Lloyd Arneach.
His stories range from old Cherokee stories to contemporary pieces that he has collected, and many are light-hearted and humorous while highlighting the Cherokee reverence for nature.
The program will continue throughout the summer, with four age groups available: toddler (birth-2 years), preschool (3-5 years), school age (6-12 years), and young adult (13-18 years). The program will allow kids to explore places from Oceania to Russia through stories, crafts, music, dance and other activities.
Families are welcome to join the Read-to-Me portion of the program. Additionally, an evening program titled “Sleepy Time: Lullabies and Bedtimes around the World” will be held for families. The program began June 13 and will end the last week of July. Registration will be held at the Friends of the Library Used Book Store at 536 West Main Street.
No phone registration will be accepted. Fontanalib.org/Sylva or Betty Screven 828.586.1640 or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
To the Editor:
My name is Brian Strum and I live in Clyde. Just prior to my move to Haywood County six years ago, I had put myself into a situation where I had to seek legal advice. After speaking with another attorney regarding the nature of my situation, I was referred to Reid Brown.
From the moment I met Mr. Brown through the resolution of my legal issues, Mr. Brown treated me as a mentor. The time and care that he showed to me as a client didn’t save me from legal hassles, it did, however, save my life. Having become acquainted with other residents of Haywood County during the course of the last six years, I have encountered others whose lives have been profoundly blessed by time with Mr. Brown. I am forever in debt to Mr. Brown and have repeated my regard for him to many in my life with great and often numbing detail.
I repeat it here for those whom I have not yet had the pleasure of speaking with. In my opinion, Reid Brown is a saint and I will forever hold him in the highest regard.
Brian Strum
Clyde
To the Editor:
A new federal study confirms what many people have sensed — news coverage of state and local government is shrinking at a frightful rate. Politicians who used to fear the press no longer have to worry about being called out.
Here in North Carolina, we don’t have to look further than Raleigh to see what that means. The radical Republicans have cut off House debate 25 times since the session began in February. That compares to only seven times that the Democrats did it in the previous four years.
But I didn’t read that in a newspaper or hear it on television. I learned it from Rep. Ray Rapp’s weekly e-mail, “Ray’s Raleigh Report,” for June 10.
Although his news this time was mostly dismal, there was one bright spot unnoticed in the local media. It was thte passage of HB 824, a nonpartisan redistricting system similar to Iowa’s. Although it would not take effect until the 2020 redistricting, some progress is better than none. Let’s see what the Senate does.
But at the same time the House was abusing power at a breathtaking pace. Some examples:
• Voting to ban dues checkoff for the teacher’s union as punishment for its criticism of the Republicans’ barbarian budget.
• Intruding into doctors’ offices to require women to pay for pre-abortion ultrasounds and listen to what would amount to right-to-life propaganda.
• Plotting to repeal the Racial Justice Act as an amendment substituted for an unrelated Senate bill.
• Requiring picture IDs at the voting booth, where there is rarely fraud, but not for absentee voting, which is more vulnerable to abuse. Some 460,000 North Carolina voters do not have picture IDs. The Republicans know most of them to be students, the elderly, blacks, and poor; in other words, Democratic voters who the Republicans hope will neglect to get the photo IDs.
There hasn’t been such bullying, scheming, and dirty dealing since the Sopranos went off the air. Unfortunately, Republicans at Raleigh is a reality show.
Adding insult to injury with Orwellian doublespeak, they call their voter suppression act a bill to “Restore Confidence in Government.” The only way to restore confidence in North Carolina government is to vote that gang out of Raleigh
Martin A. Dyckman
Waynesville
To the Editor:
Carrie Hahn’s June 8 letter to the editor criticizing The Smoky Mountain News and Reporter Quintin Ellison for the article “Crossing the Line” fails to note that it is not the role of a newspaper to be a cheerleader for elected officials. A newspaper has a duty to hold elected officials accountable to the public. This is what the article does in regards to Macon County Sheriff Robbie Holland.
When a person puts himself up to run for public office, that person is no longer a private citizen. They are fair game to the media looking over their shoulders and reporting on their actions or non-action in their official capacity.
The article in question was well balanced by presenting both sides of this controversy and the issue is a legitimate news story. The role of a newspaper is to be a watchdog on elected officials to guard against abuse of power. That is why our founding fathers granted freedom of the press in the First Amendment. And, by the same token, that is why letters to the editor give those who disagree with a news story the right to air their views on the news of the day, as Hahn has done.
Hahn’s attack on Ellison, calling her reporting abilities as “amazingly inadequate” has not been my impression of Ellison. Let me assure Hahn that Ellison is one of the best investigative reporters it has been my pleasure to know. I spent many of my adult years as a newspaper reporter, beginning in 1960, so I feel qualified to pass judgment on Ellison’s reporting ability.
The story was not “tawdry sensationalist journalism in a local newspaper” as Hahn says. On its face, it appears to be an issue of community interest and therefore it has news value concerning an elected official, a sheriff.
All too often we are prone to accuse the messenger (reporter) who brings us the bad news of being prejudiced, biased, and/or inadequate when we disagree with their reporting. These criticism are often rendered in order to take the spotlight off the issue surrounding the story.
I do not know who is right or wrong in this controversy. But The Smoky Mountain News did not step out of bounds in bringing this situation to the public’s attention.
The Smoky Mountain News has left it up to the public to draw its own conclusion regarding this incident from the information in the story. Hahn has certainly presented her reaction to this story quite vocally. Although I disagree with her, I do commend her for taking the time to write.
Bob Scott
Franklin
Tony “T.J.” Eaves, a rising Western Carolina University senior from Hamlet, recently was elected 2011-12 WCU student body president.
Eaves previously served as chief justice of WCU’s Student Government Association supreme court. Eaves is pursuing a degree in business administration and law, and is a member of Mortar Board Honor Society.
He is the son of Tony and Tina Eaves and a 2008 graduate of Richmond Senior High School. As SGA president, Eaves serves as an ex-officio member of the WCU Board of Trustees.
MedWest Health System is now offering a nurse advice line.
The MedWest Nurse Line, 1-855-MEDWEST (633-9378) is a call center based service that will be available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The call center is operated by TeleHealth Solutions.
The call center is staffed with qualified customer service representatives and registered nurses trained to be experts in telephone triage.
The advice line is not intended to replace primary care physicians or to handle emergency health issues. Nurses will provide general information and cannot diagnose or provide patient-specific information as they do not have access to a patient’s medical records.
Common problems that might be appropriate for the MedWest Nurse Line include burns, chronic headaches or other persistent aches, and high fever. If follow-up care is needed, callers are directed to the nearest emergency department, urgent care center or physician practice — depending on the nature of the call.
Southwestern Community College is integrating some of its classes into the Web Technology program, which will allow students to develop applications for Android and Apple operating system devices.
The classes will look at Android phones and tablets and Apple iPhones, iPads and iPods.
Southwestern is also introducing two new programming courses including JAVA and C#. These are two of the most commonly used languages in mobile application development.
The college will offer a Mobile Design certificate that would be an option for those who don’t want a full two year degree or already have a degree.
Both the Web Technology and Computer Information Technology curriculums are offered totally online.
828.339.4494 or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
National HIV Testing Day is June 27. Free tests will be provided at the Haywood County Health Department all day from 8 a.m. until 5 p.m. No appointments are necessary and walk-ins will be accepted. Incentives will be available to those who are tested.
828.452.6675
“Ideas that Changed the World” will be the focus of the second-annual Explorations in History Summer Institute, a five-day program for teachers that will be held in June at Western Carolina University.
This year’s institute will assist teachers in investigating ways to teach world history and world literature in middle grade and secondary classrooms, with activities each day including seminars, hands-on activities and the use of primary documents. The institute will be held Monday, June 20, through Friday, June 24, with a different topic and speaker featured each day.
The program is designed for teachers of history, social science and literature, but it would also be relevant for other teachers and individuals interested in learning more about world history and literature.
learn.wcu.edu or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or 828.227.7397 or 800.928.4968.
Haywood County’s first Friends of Agriculture breakfast will be held from 7 a.m. to 8 a.m. Friday, June 17, at the Haywood Agricultural Center at 589 Raccoon Road in Waynesville.
This is an opportunity for farmers, chefs and other agriculture supporters to have a joint forum and discussion.
The Buy Haywood Market Development Project is sponsoring the breakfast with support from the Farmer-to-Chef program and N.C. Cooperative Extension Service. Lynn Sprague, director of the Office of Agricultural Economic Development for Polk County, will be the guest speaker. Free Admission. Call or email to confirm attendance. 828.713.5431 or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
The Regional Center for the Advancement of Children at Haywood Community College is still accepting children from the ages of 6 to 12 for its summer day camp.
The camp runs through August 17. Hours are 7:30 a.m. until 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Cost of the camp is $460 per month.
Children who attend the camp will participate in several activities and “field trips” to different areas on the college campus, including working in the vegetable garden with horticulture, disc golf, trips to the HCC Library, computer lab and a bug camp.
828.565.4187.
According to the Princeton Review, Western Carolina University is one of the most environmentally responsible colleges in the United States and Canada. The Princeton Review chose the colleges after surveying administrators at hundreds of colleges across the continent. One program that contributed to the success of WCU was WHEE Save, a campus-wide energy conservation program (now known as Reducing Our Carbon Paw Print). Through WHEE Save, energy was reduced by 10 to 15 percent. WCU also has a $5.6 million energy performance contract underway to make several campus buildings more energy efficient. 9 percent of WCU’s food budget is spent on local or organic food and the campus also switched to using E10 rather than petroleum. For more information about WCU’s sustainability efforts, cal 828.227.3562 or email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
Haywood Community College has received the top ranking in the state in the Recyclemania competition for the second consecutive year. HCC is also ranked as number seven in the nation. Recyclemania is a friendly competition between colleges and universities that is used to encourage waste reduction across campuses.
The rankings are decided by who collects the largest amount of recyclables per capita, the largest amount of total recyclables, the least amount of trash per capita or by the highest recycling rate. HCC, over the ten-week competition, recycled over 11,000 pounds of material.
For more information, call 828.627.4135.