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Lives on the line
by Abbi Overfelt
Editor
Marshall Epps, of Lumbee RIver Electric Membership Cooperation, works to dislodge a dummy nicknamed ‘Cool’ from the top of an electrical pole. Epps rescued the dummy in four minutes. | Photos by Abbi Overfelt | The Red Springs Citizen
Marshall Epps, of Lumbee RIver Electric Membership Cooperation, works to dislodge a dummy nicknamed ‘Cool’ from the top of an electrical pole. Epps rescued the dummy in four minutes. | Photos by Abbi Overfelt | The Red Springs Citizen
slideshow
A lineman is timed as he mimes performing CPR on a dummy. | Abbi Overfelt | The Red Springs Citizen
A lineman is timed as he mimes performing CPR on a dummy. | Abbi Overfelt | The Red Springs Citizen
slideshow
OJ Oxendine
OJ Oxendine
slideshow

Abbi Overfelt

Editor

RED SPRINGS — The U.S. Senate recently passed a resolution that designated April 18 as National Lineman Appreciation Day.

For electrical workers in the town of Red Springs, it was anything but a holiday.

Derrick Edge, the town’s Electrical supervisor, and his crew clocked in at the regular time, and went to work. They didn’t stop until Friday’s sun peeked over the horizon.

Being on call comes with the job. And for linemen, the hardest part of the year is coming up — hot weather, and hurricane season.

“It seems like the times when they have to do the most work is when the conditions are worst,” said Walter White, spokesman for Lumbee River Electric Membership Cooperation.

“Linemen are true public servants,” said Perry Cummings, interim CEO for Lumbee River EMC. “They work every day in potentially hazardous conditions, oftentimes during extreme weather like hurricanes and ice storms, to keep the lights on for the rest of us.”

The cooperation has a “mutual aid” system established with other agencies, so even if no hurricane hits here, Tony Oxendine’s crew might have to go to a hard-hit region — as it did in 2005, when they helped to restore power to Katrina-ravaged areas.

But Oxendine, a foreman who recently marked his 21st anniversary with the cooperation, will point out that every job is a dangerous one.

“You’re dealing with 7,200 volts,” he said. “It will kill you, or put you in the burn center.”

It’s the danger of the job that Oxendine says forges a bond between the members of a crew — a linemen has to know that in an emergency, the others have his back, and that they can count on support when an accident that knocks out a line hits close to home.

In the April 18 case, the town was working to fix damage caused by a piece of farm equipment, but workers could have arrived at the scene to find a relative or friend behind the wheel of a car that wrapped itself around an electrical pole.

“It’s real hard to go right to sleep after something that,” Oxendine said. “But you have to get up in the morning and go to work like nothing ever happened.”

Those mornings begin with “tailgate meetings,” to make sure every crew member is up to speed on the latest safety measures, and has their equipment at the ready — to include hard hats, rubber boots, and and long rubber gloves that hook on the upper back like suspenders and are designed to neutralize an electric charge. But when the temperature rises above 80 degrees, the very things designed to protect the crew become a pressure cooker.

Men doing work in the “bucket,” at least 40 feet above the ground, must be lowered every 15 minutes or risk heat exhaustion. And when their feet hit the dirt, they pull their gloves off, turn them upside down, and release a river of sweat.

Safety remains of utmost importance to the men whom Oxendine says have a bond forged by danger. And competitions like the one held Monday, at a substation at the intersection of Old Lowery and Mt. Tabor Church roads, help to teach linemen how to rescue one of their own if they get shocked or otherwise stuck near the top.

They are designed to prevent accidents like the 10-foot fall the broke O.J. Oxendine’s arm.

O.J., who is set to retire in May, signed on 44 years ago, when there was no bucket to raise workers to the top of a pole. His fall could have been much worse, as could have the burn that happened when he fell into a shallow ditch and his arm brushed against a newly welded piece of metal.

“He fell right in there,” said Melvin Rachels, a foreman on the job where O.J. could be found on Friday. “All I heard was a couple of grunts, and now he’s got a real nice tattoo.”

Rachels said that the job has been made safer by new technology — but also more complicated. For some electrical work, he said, a laptop must be plugged in to the top of the pole.

“Used to be, all a lineman had to do was know how to climb,” he said. “Now there’s a lot more to it than climbing poles.”

A quick shake of O.J.’s head put a rest to any speculation as to whether or not he will use his skills learned on the job once he hangs up his hard hat, and just as quick came the answer for what he will do.

“Hunt and fish,” he said.

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Red Springs adopts budget
by Abbi Overfelt
Jun 18, 2013 | 504 views | 0 0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend | print

RED SPRINGS — After shifting $55,000 from the Capital Reserve and General Fund to provide for a basketball court and a communication system for the town’s vehicles, the Red Springs Board of Commissioners on Tuesday approved a $9.3 million budget for the upcoming fiscal year.

The budget includes a 3 percent pay increase for the town’s employees, the first in six years. It keeps the tax rate of 63 cents for every $100 property, but includes a $1 monthly hike in sanitation fees to raise revenue for a new garbage truck.

The commissioners also nixed a proposed $25 reconnect fee for residents who are late on their utility bill but whose service has not been disconnected, a proposal that had been debated in previous budget and board meetings and would have added $30,000 to the town’s bottom line in savings and new revenue. The town currently spends about $25,000 annually paying someone to disconnect customers, some of whom get tipped that their service will be interrupted and rush to pay their bill at the last minute.

“The situation is very real, because the economy makes it real, and I think we need to explore it more,” Commissioner Eula McNeill said.

A motion by Commissioner Edward Henderson to move $25,000 from the town’s reserves to the Recreation Fund in order to pay for a new basketball court in the Westgate Terrace or Mill Village areas was seconded by Commissioner Duron Burney and passed unanimously. Ronald Oxendine, executive director of the Robeson County Housing Authority, said that the authority would be providing playground equipment for small children in Westgate Terrace, a concern brought to the board by residents at its regular June meeting.

After hearing a request from Burney that prices on a communications system for the town’s vehicles be brought to the board, the commissioners unanimously voted that $20,000 from the town’s General Fund be reserved for that expense, dropping the General Fund to $162,000. The town’s Capital Reserve now totals $67,000.

“I think this has been one of the longest and most drawn-out budget processes ever,” Mayor John McNeill said. ” … The shocking thing is that we probably increased line items rather than decreased which is more the norm, but I think the board put a tremendous amount of thought into working with this budget … .”

Also on Tuesday, the board:

— Approved a request from Strata Solar Inc. for a conditional-use permit it needs to place a solar farm on the corner of N.C. 71 and Milk Dairy Road.

— Authorized the town manager to submit an application for a $200,000 grant from the North Carolina Department of Commerce, which will pay for construction of eight rental housing units for people with disabilities on East Seventh Avenue.

Abbi Overfelt works for Civitas Media as editor of The Red Springs Citizen and The St. Pauls Review.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Just Laughing
|
June 17, 2013
Heard today that the town employees are furious at Burney voting against their first pay raise in years. Why is he against them getting a raise?
Heavy Metal
|
June 17, 2013
You were elected to represent the citizens, not hide behind their coat-tails. You oppose a budget in the newspaper and not in the meetings? I was at a budget meeting and I don't recall you bring up these issues. Help us out and lead the Board through this process to get it right.
Just Laughing
|
June 13, 2013
Heard that some of the Council members are doubled over laughing at the Little Man's comments. Seems he did not raise any objections to any of this in the many budget sessions, or even know that the budget is still being worked on by the Board. Most are saying that Burney has little or no understanding of the towns finances, so who wrote this letter? Wait and see who files.
The Project Graduation Committee works to make final plans for tonight's event. | Contributed
The Project Graduation Committee works to make final plans for tonight's event. | Contributed
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Red Springs adopts budget
by Abbi Overfelt
Jun 18, 2013 | 504 views | 0 0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend | print

RED SPRINGS — After shifting $55,000 from the Capital Reserve and General Fund to provide for a basketball court and a communication system for the town’s vehicles, the Red Springs Board of Commissioners on Tuesday approved a $9.3 million budget for the upcoming fiscal year.

The budget includes a 3 percent pay increase for the town’s employees, the first in six years. It keeps the tax rate of 63 cents for every $100 property, but includes a $1 monthly hike in sanitation fees to raise revenue for a new garbage truck.

The commissioners also nixed a proposed $25 reconnect fee for residents who are late on their utility bill but whose service has not been disconnected, a proposal that had been debated in previous budget and board meetings and would have added $30,000 to the town’s bottom line in savings and new revenue. The town currently spends about $25,000 annually paying someone to disconnect customers, some of whom get tipped that their service will be interrupted and rush to pay their bill at the last minute.

“The situation is very real, because the economy makes it real, and I think we need to explore it more,” Commissioner Eula McNeill said.

A motion by Commissioner Edward Henderson to move $25,000 from the town’s reserves to the Recreation Fund in order to pay for a new basketball court in the Westgate Terrace or Mill Village areas was seconded by Commissioner Duron Burney and passed unanimously. Ronald Oxendine, executive director of the Robeson County Housing Authority, said that the authority would be providing playground equipment for small children in Westgate Terrace, a concern brought to the board by residents at its regular June meeting.

After hearing a request from Burney that prices on a communications system for the town’s vehicles be brought to the board, the commissioners unanimously voted that $20,000 from the town’s General Fund be reserved for that expense, dropping the General Fund to $162,000. The town’s Capital Reserve now totals $67,000.

“I think this has been one of the longest and most drawn-out budget processes ever,” Mayor John McNeill said. ” … The shocking thing is that we probably increased line items rather than decreased which is more the norm, but I think the board put a tremendous amount of thought into working with this budget … .”

Also on Tuesday, the board:

— Approved a request from Strata Solar Inc. for a conditional-use permit it needs to place a solar farm on the corner of N.C. 71 and Milk Dairy Road.

— Authorized the town manager to submit an application for a $200,000 grant from the North Carolina Department of Commerce, which will pay for construction of eight rental housing units for people with disabilities on East Seventh Avenue.

Abbi Overfelt works for Civitas Media as editor of The Red Springs Citizen and The St. Pauls Review.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Just Laughing
|
June 17, 2013
Heard today that the town employees are furious at Burney voting against their first pay raise in years. Why is he against them getting a raise?
Heavy Metal
|
June 17, 2013
You were elected to represent the citizens, not hide behind their coat-tails. You oppose a budget in the newspaper and not in the meetings? I was at a budget meeting and I don't recall you bring up these issues. Help us out and lead the Board through this process to get it right.
Just Laughing
|
June 13, 2013
Heard that some of the Council members are doubled over laughing at the Little Man's comments. Seems he did not raise any objections to any of this in the many budget sessions, or even know that the budget is still being worked on by the Board. Most are saying that Burney has little or no understanding of the towns finances, so who wrote this letter? Wait and see who files.
The Project Graduation Committee works to make final plans for tonight's event. | Contributed
The Project Graduation Committee works to make final plans for tonight's event. | Contributed
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Read More Sports
Opinion
Red Springs adopts budget
by Abbi Overfelt
Jun 18, 2013 | 504 views | 0 0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend | print

RED SPRINGS — After shifting $55,000 from the Capital Reserve and General Fund to provide for a basketball court and a communication system for the town’s vehicles, the Red Springs Board of Commissioners on Tuesday approved a $9.3 million budget for the upcoming fiscal year.

The budget includes a 3 percent pay increase for the town’s employees, the first in six years. It keeps the tax rate of 63 cents for every $100 property, but includes a $1 monthly hike in sanitation fees to raise revenue for a new garbage truck.

The commissioners also nixed a proposed $25 reconnect fee for residents who are late on their utility bill but whose service has not been disconnected, a proposal that had been debated in previous budget and board meetings and would have added $30,000 to the town’s bottom line in savings and new revenue. The town currently spends about $25,000 annually paying someone to disconnect customers, some of whom get tipped that their service will be interrupted and rush to pay their bill at the last minute.

“The situation is very real, because the economy makes it real, and I think we need to explore it more,” Commissioner Eula McNeill said.

A motion by Commissioner Edward Henderson to move $25,000 from the town’s reserves to the Recreation Fund in order to pay for a new basketball court in the Westgate Terrace or Mill Village areas was seconded by Commissioner Duron Burney and passed unanimously. Ronald Oxendine, executive director of the Robeson County Housing Authority, said that the authority would be providing playground equipment for small children in Westgate Terrace, a concern brought to the board by residents at its regular June meeting.

After hearing a request from Burney that prices on a communications system for the town’s vehicles be brought to the board, the commissioners unanimously voted that $20,000 from the town’s General Fund be reserved for that expense, dropping the General Fund to $162,000. The town’s Capital Reserve now totals $67,000.

“I think this has been one of the longest and most drawn-out budget processes ever,” Mayor John McNeill said. ” … The shocking thing is that we probably increased line items rather than decreased which is more the norm, but I think the board put a tremendous amount of thought into working with this budget … .”

Also on Tuesday, the board:

— Approved a request from Strata Solar Inc. for a conditional-use permit it needs to place a solar farm on the corner of N.C. 71 and Milk Dairy Road.

— Authorized the town manager to submit an application for a $200,000 grant from the North Carolina Department of Commerce, which will pay for construction of eight rental housing units for people with disabilities on East Seventh Avenue.

Abbi Overfelt works for Civitas Media as editor of The Red Springs Citizen and The St. Pauls Review.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Just Laughing
|
June 17, 2013
Heard today that the town employees are furious at Burney voting against their first pay raise in years. Why is he against them getting a raise?
Heavy Metal
|
June 17, 2013
You were elected to represent the citizens, not hide behind their coat-tails. You oppose a budget in the newspaper and not in the meetings? I was at a budget meeting and I don't recall you bring up these issues. Help us out and lead the Board through this process to get it right.
Just Laughing
|
June 13, 2013
Heard that some of the Council members are doubled over laughing at the Little Man's comments. Seems he did not raise any objections to any of this in the many budget sessions, or even know that the budget is still being worked on by the Board. Most are saying that Burney has little or no understanding of the towns finances, so who wrote this letter? Wait and see who files.
The Project Graduation Committee works to make final plans for tonight's event. | Contributed
The Project Graduation Committee works to make final plans for tonight's event. | Contributed
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Local Features
Red Springs adopts budget
by Abbi Overfelt
Jun 18, 2013 | 504 views | 0 0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend | print

RED SPRINGS — After shifting $55,000 from the Capital Reserve and General Fund to provide for a basketball court and a communication system for the town’s vehicles, the Red Springs Board of Commissioners on Tuesday approved a $9.3 million budget for the upcoming fiscal year.

The budget includes a 3 percent pay increase for the town’s employees, the first in six years. It keeps the tax rate of 63 cents for every $100 property, but includes a $1 monthly hike in sanitation fees to raise revenue for a new garbage truck.

The commissioners also nixed a proposed $25 reconnect fee for residents who are late on their utility bill but whose service has not been disconnected, a proposal that had been debated in previous budget and board meetings and would have added $30,000 to the town’s bottom line in savings and new revenue. The town currently spends about $25,000 annually paying someone to disconnect customers, some of whom get tipped that their service will be interrupted and rush to pay their bill at the last minute.

“The situation is very real, because the economy makes it real, and I think we need to explore it more,” Commissioner Eula McNeill said.

A motion by Commissioner Edward Henderson to move $25,000 from the town’s reserves to the Recreation Fund in order to pay for a new basketball court in the Westgate Terrace or Mill Village areas was seconded by Commissioner Duron Burney and passed unanimously. Ronald Oxendine, executive director of the Robeson County Housing Authority, said that the authority would be providing playground equipment for small children in Westgate Terrace, a concern brought to the board by residents at its regular June meeting.

After hearing a request from Burney that prices on a communications system for the town’s vehicles be brought to the board, the commissioners unanimously voted that $20,000 from the town’s General Fund be reserved for that expense, dropping the General Fund to $162,000. The town’s Capital Reserve now totals $67,000.

“I think this has been one of the longest and most drawn-out budget processes ever,” Mayor John McNeill said. ” … The shocking thing is that we probably increased line items rather than decreased which is more the norm, but I think the board put a tremendous amount of thought into working with this budget … .”

Also on Tuesday, the board:

— Approved a request from Strata Solar Inc. for a conditional-use permit it needs to place a solar farm on the corner of N.C. 71 and Milk Dairy Road.

— Authorized the town manager to submit an application for a $200,000 grant from the North Carolina Department of Commerce, which will pay for construction of eight rental housing units for people with disabilities on East Seventh Avenue.

Abbi Overfelt works for Civitas Media as editor of The Red Springs Citizen and The St. Pauls Review.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Just Laughing
|
June 17, 2013
Heard today that the town employees are furious at Burney voting against their first pay raise in years. Why is he against them getting a raise?
Heavy Metal
|
June 17, 2013
You were elected to represent the citizens, not hide behind their coat-tails. You oppose a budget in the newspaper and not in the meetings? I was at a budget meeting and I don't recall you bring up these issues. Help us out and lead the Board through this process to get it right.
Just Laughing
|
June 13, 2013
Heard that some of the Council members are doubled over laughing at the Little Man's comments. Seems he did not raise any objections to any of this in the many budget sessions, or even know that the budget is still being worked on by the Board. Most are saying that Burney has little or no understanding of the towns finances, so who wrote this letter? Wait and see who files.
The Project Graduation Committee works to make final plans for tonight's event. | Contributed
The Project Graduation Committee works to make final plans for tonight's event. | Contributed
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Red Springs adopts budget
by Abbi Overfelt
Jun 18, 2013 | 504 views | 0 0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend | print

RED SPRINGS — After shifting $55,000 from the Capital Reserve and General Fund to provide for a basketball court and a communication system for the town’s vehicles, the Red Springs Board of Commissioners on Tuesday approved a $9.3 million budget for the upcoming fiscal year.

The budget includes a 3 percent pay increase for the town’s employees, the first in six years. It keeps the tax rate of 63 cents for every $100 property, but includes a $1 monthly hike in sanitation fees to raise revenue for a new garbage truck.

The commissioners also nixed a proposed $25 reconnect fee for residents who are late on their utility bill but whose service has not been disconnected, a proposal that had been debated in previous budget and board meetings and would have added $30,000 to the town’s bottom line in savings and new revenue. The town currently spends about $25,000 annually paying someone to disconnect customers, some of whom get tipped that their service will be interrupted and rush to pay their bill at the last minute.

“The situation is very real, because the economy makes it real, and I think we need to explore it more,” Commissioner Eula McNeill said.

A motion by Commissioner Edward Henderson to move $25,000 from the town’s reserves to the Recreation Fund in order to pay for a new basketball court in the Westgate Terrace or Mill Village areas was seconded by Commissioner Duron Burney and passed unanimously. Ronald Oxendine, executive director of the Robeson County Housing Authority, said that the authority would be providing playground equipment for small children in Westgate Terrace, a concern brought to the board by residents at its regular June meeting.

After hearing a request from Burney that prices on a communications system for the town’s vehicles be brought to the board, the commissioners unanimously voted that $20,000 from the town’s General Fund be reserved for that expense, dropping the General Fund to $162,000. The town’s Capital Reserve now totals $67,000.

“I think this has been one of the longest and most drawn-out budget processes ever,” Mayor John McNeill said. ” … The shocking thing is that we probably increased line items rather than decreased which is more the norm, but I think the board put a tremendous amount of thought into working with this budget … .”

Also on Tuesday, the board:

— Approved a request from Strata Solar Inc. for a conditional-use permit it needs to place a solar farm on the corner of N.C. 71 and Milk Dairy Road.

— Authorized the town manager to submit an application for a $200,000 grant from the North Carolina Department of Commerce, which will pay for construction of eight rental housing units for people with disabilities on East Seventh Avenue.

Abbi Overfelt works for Civitas Media as editor of The Red Springs Citizen and The St. Pauls Review.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Just Laughing
|
June 17, 2013
Heard today that the town employees are furious at Burney voting against their first pay raise in years. Why is he against them getting a raise?
Heavy Metal
|
June 17, 2013
You were elected to represent the citizens, not hide behind their coat-tails. You oppose a budget in the newspaper and not in the meetings? I was at a budget meeting and I don't recall you bring up these issues. Help us out and lead the Board through this process to get it right.
Just Laughing
|
June 13, 2013
Heard that some of the Council members are doubled over laughing at the Little Man's comments. Seems he did not raise any objections to any of this in the many budget sessions, or even know that the budget is still being worked on by the Board. Most are saying that Burney has little or no understanding of the towns finances, so who wrote this letter? Wait and see who files.
The Project Graduation Committee works to make final plans for tonight's event. | Contributed
The Project Graduation Committee works to make final plans for tonight's event. | Contributed
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Red Springs adopts budget
by Abbi Overfelt
Jun 18, 2013 | 504 views | 0 0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend | print

RED SPRINGS — After shifting $55,000 from the Capital Reserve and General Fund to provide for a basketball court and a communication system for the town’s vehicles, the Red Springs Board of Commissioners on Tuesday approved a $9.3 million budget for the upcoming fiscal year.

The budget includes a 3 percent pay increase for the town’s employees, the first in six years. It keeps the tax rate of 63 cents for every $100 property, but includes a $1 monthly hike in sanitation fees to raise revenue for a new garbage truck.

The commissioners also nixed a proposed $25 reconnect fee for residents who are late on their utility bill but whose service has not been disconnected, a proposal that had been debated in previous budget and board meetings and would have added $30,000 to the town’s bottom line in savings and new revenue. The town currently spends about $25,000 annually paying someone to disconnect customers, some of whom get tipped that their service will be interrupted and rush to pay their bill at the last minute.

“The situation is very real, because the economy makes it real, and I think we need to explore it more,” Commissioner Eula McNeill said.

A motion by Commissioner Edward Henderson to move $25,000 from the town’s reserves to the Recreation Fund in order to pay for a new basketball court in the Westgate Terrace or Mill Village areas was seconded by Commissioner Duron Burney and passed unanimously. Ronald Oxendine, executive director of the Robeson County Housing Authority, said that the authority would be providing playground equipment for small children in Westgate Terrace, a concern brought to the board by residents at its regular June meeting.

After hearing a request from Burney that prices on a communications system for the town’s vehicles be brought to the board, the commissioners unanimously voted that $20,000 from the town’s General Fund be reserved for that expense, dropping the General Fund to $162,000. The town’s Capital Reserve now totals $67,000.

“I think this has been one of the longest and most drawn-out budget processes ever,” Mayor John McNeill said. ” … The shocking thing is that we probably increased line items rather than decreased which is more the norm, but I think the board put a tremendous amount of thought into working with this budget … .”

Also on Tuesday, the board:

— Approved a request from Strata Solar Inc. for a conditional-use permit it needs to place a solar farm on the corner of N.C. 71 and Milk Dairy Road.

— Authorized the town manager to submit an application for a $200,000 grant from the North Carolina Department of Commerce, which will pay for construction of eight rental housing units for people with disabilities on East Seventh Avenue.

Abbi Overfelt works for Civitas Media as editor of The Red Springs Citizen and The St. Pauls Review.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Just Laughing
|
June 17, 2013
Heard today that the town employees are furious at Burney voting against their first pay raise in years. Why is he against them getting a raise?
Heavy Metal
|
June 17, 2013
You were elected to represent the citizens, not hide behind their coat-tails. You oppose a budget in the newspaper and not in the meetings? I was at a budget meeting and I don't recall you bring up these issues. Help us out and lead the Board through this process to get it right.
Just Laughing
|
June 13, 2013
Heard that some of the Council members are doubled over laughing at the Little Man's comments. Seems he did not raise any objections to any of this in the many budget sessions, or even know that the budget is still being worked on by the Board. Most are saying that Burney has little or no understanding of the towns finances, so who wrote this letter? Wait and see who files.
The Project Graduation Committee works to make final plans for tonight's event. | Contributed
The Project Graduation Committee works to make final plans for tonight's event. | Contributed
slideshow
Red Springs adopts budget
by Abbi Overfelt
Jun 18, 2013 | 504 views | 0 0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend | print

RED SPRINGS — After shifting $55,000 from the Capital Reserve and General Fund to provide for a basketball court and a communication system for the town’s vehicles, the Red Springs Board of Commissioners on Tuesday approved a $9.3 million budget for the upcoming fiscal year.

The budget includes a 3 percent pay increase for the town’s employees, the first in six years. It keeps the tax rate of 63 cents for every $100 property, but includes a $1 monthly hike in sanitation fees to raise revenue for a new garbage truck.

The commissioners also nixed a proposed $25 reconnect fee for residents who are late on their utility bill but whose service has not been disconnected, a proposal that had been debated in previous budget and board meetings and would have added $30,000 to the town’s bottom line in savings and new revenue. The town currently spends about $25,000 annually paying someone to disconnect customers, some of whom get tipped that their service will be interrupted and rush to pay their bill at the last minute.

“The situation is very real, because the economy makes it real, and I think we need to explore it more,” Commissioner Eula McNeill said.

A motion by Commissioner Edward Henderson to move $25,000 from the town’s reserves to the Recreation Fund in order to pay for a new basketball court in the Westgate Terrace or Mill Village areas was seconded by Commissioner Duron Burney and passed unanimously. Ronald Oxendine, executive director of the Robeson County Housing Authority, said that the authority would be providing playground equipment for small children in Westgate Terrace, a concern brought to the board by residents at its regular June meeting.

After hearing a request from Burney that prices on a communications system for the town’s vehicles be brought to the board, the commissioners unanimously voted that $20,000 from the town’s General Fund be reserved for that expense, dropping the General Fund to $162,000. The town’s Capital Reserve now totals $67,000.

“I think this has been one of the longest and most drawn-out budget processes ever,” Mayor John McNeill said. ” … The shocking thing is that we probably increased line items rather than decreased which is more the norm, but I think the board put a tremendous amount of thought into working with this budget … .”

Also on Tuesday, the board:

— Approved a request from Strata Solar Inc. for a conditional-use permit it needs to place a solar farm on the corner of N.C. 71 and Milk Dairy Road.

— Authorized the town manager to submit an application for a $200,000 grant from the North Carolina Department of Commerce, which will pay for construction of eight rental housing units for people with disabilities on East Seventh Avenue.

Abbi Overfelt works for Civitas Media as editor of The Red Springs Citizen and The St. Pauls Review.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Just Laughing
|
June 17, 2013
Heard today that the town employees are furious at Burney voting against their first pay raise in years. Why is he against them getting a raise?
Heavy Metal
|
June 17, 2013
You were elected to represent the citizens, not hide behind their coat-tails. You oppose a budget in the newspaper and not in the meetings? I was at a budget meeting and I don't recall you bring up these issues. Help us out and lead the Board through this process to get it right.
Just Laughing
|
June 13, 2013
Heard that some of the Council members are doubled over laughing at the Little Man's comments. Seems he did not raise any objections to any of this in the many budget sessions, or even know that the budget is still being worked on by the Board. Most are saying that Burney has little or no understanding of the towns finances, so who wrote this letter? Wait and see who files.
The Project Graduation Committee works to make final plans for tonight's event. | Contributed
The Project Graduation Committee works to make final plans for tonight's event. | Contributed
slideshow