SLICES OF LIFE FROM YOUR NEIGHBORS AND FRIENDS FARMER AND THE DAIL’S RECIPE FOR SUCCESS
EARLY COLLEGE HELPS KEEP GREENE CLEAN
RAMS BRING JOY OF FOOTBALL TO SNOW HILL ALLIE GRAY, TREY CASH AND MORE
GREENE COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA
Zac and Stacy Bailes, who started what would become Farmer and the Dail at Stacy’s familiy farm, expanded into a 7,500-square-foot building at 1329 U.S. 258 in April 2021.
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‘Best parkin the county’
Persistence pays o in Hookerton’s quest to upgrade rec facility
By Ariyanna SmithWhenApril Baker moved to Hookerton in 2007, she recalls the town’s park consisting of a gazebo, a metal slide, a swing set with a torn, decaying seat and basketball courts with grass sprouting between the cracked surface.
“I don’t even think there was a rim on the goal. It was just run down and dilap idated,” Baker said of Hookerton Recre ation Park.
Established in the 1970s, the park at 484 Morris Barbeque Road also featured a ball eld and a popular community building. Town leaders knew the park needed xing, but their small budget could not easily accommodate upgrades.
Baker, who now serves as town clerk, said o cials in 2010 began a serious search for options to x the park at the request of residents. ey had been stuck at a stand still in part because leasing a portion of the property made them ineligible for grants from the state Parks and Recreation Trust Fund (PARTF).
“You can’t make any money o of your park if you receive funds from PARTF. We
were collecting a lease on the land and that prevented us from getting help funding the project. is had been a problem since I came here. It took until about four years ago to nally get in touch with the right people to tell us the steps we needed to take to address it,” Baker explained. e town went to work and made the necessary changes, which included split ting the parcel to cut out areas that violated the grant requirements. A er making a few other adjustments, they were nally ready to start working on a grant application.
In 2020, o cials sought the help of the Eastern Carolina Council of Government, an economic planning and development organization, to assist with the PARTF grant application. eir initial project in cluded plans for a park with a splash pad, an amphitheater and restroom upgrades.
When they found out the application was rejected, they were devastated. “We understood it was competitive, but we had just gotten everything done and we thought it was a strong application,” said Baker.
Baker and others quickly got back to brainstorming for the next application.
is time they worked with Bob Clark, a
Hookerton Recreation Park
The park at 484 Morris Barbecue Road on the southeast side of town o ers a modern playground with accessible equipment, newly resur faced basketball, tennis and pickle ball courts, and a paved walking trail in addition to a ball eld, pic nic shelter, gazebo and a commu nity building. The charge to rent the community building is $250 for rental from 6 a.m. to 11 p.m. plus $150 cleaning deposit. The com munity o ers projector and screen as well as internet hotspot. The ball eld and shelter is $75 and a $150 cleaning deposit. Lights for the ball eld are extra. Call the town hall at 747-3816, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday or stop by at 227 E. Main St.
consultant the town had on contract. ey decided to widen the net and apply for both PARTF and a Land & Water Conser vation Fund grant.
“We had really pumped up the commu
nity and let them know that we needed their input to help us get this park done. We received stacks of surveys from people giving us their input on what they wanted in the park,” Baker said.
e responses showed the residents prioritized a walking trail, new playground equip ment and restoring the basket ball and tennis courts. Many seniors requested cornhole boards and horseshoe pits as well. “We decided that we were going to hold o on the splash pad and the amphitheater and go with what the surveys sug gested,” Baker said. is time, they received good news. e town was awarded a $195,400 PARTF grant for the park project. “When we found out, we were told that it wasn’t likely that we would receive the LWCF money too. Folks wanted to hit the ground running since we didn’t antici
While your in Hookerton
Located on Contentnea Creek, Hookerton is home to a N.C. Wildlife Resources Service boat landing with a kayak/canoe launch at 107 N. William Hooker Drive as well as public access to the creek at Daughtry’s Boat Landing, located o of Main Street just North of Mount Calvary FWB Church. For a picnic or overnight camping, the town’s website says be sure to visit Caswell’s Landing Nature Trail, accessible from N.C. 123 just north of town.
Walking trails, a kayak/canoe launch, picnic/camping area provide access to the beauty of the Contentnea Creek
Luckily, they had waited to purchase the new equipment, which now includes multiple slides, spring riders and acces sible swings.
Baker explained that the park was created to allow children in wheelchairs or walkers to move freely around the space. ere are patches of rubber ooring intermixed with bark throughout the play area. Ramps also were added to the shelter to allow everyone easier access to this area of the park.
When her family frequents the park, her two teenage boys like to play basketball while her 3-year-old daughter sticks to the spring riders and the parent-child swing. “It’s a place where families can come together and have something for everyone to do. It’s what everyone had been asking for.”
A er many years of waiting and a few setbacks along the way, the town celebrated the park’s grand opening on April 30.
It now features basketball, tennis and pickleball courts, a baseball field, a paved walking trail, a playground, a shelter, corn hole boards and horseshoe pits. Officials are planning to continue to seek funds to expand the park further.
pate getting any more money,” Baker said.
ey had begun work on the parking lot and the courts when they found out they had received a matching LCWF grant, bringing their total to $390,800 for the project.
Unfortunately, the funds could not be used to pay for the work that was already in progress. Baker said they are considering using the extra funds to expand the new play ground even further.
Mayor Bob Taylor is proud to have this park in his town. At 85 years old, he said he doesn’t have much use for it himself but it’s important to the town. Taylor was one of the rst on the scene when the playground was vandalized shortly a er it opened. He went out to the park and scrubbed the equipment himself.
He hopes people from across the county will continue to come to the park saying.
“ is is the best park in the county and we want people to visit it and enjoy it. We just ask that everyone remember to treat it nicely.”
The town added two pickle ball courts and a tennis court with professional surfacing with grant money it received.
Prior to the upgrades, grass grew in cracks in the town’s basketball court and the hoops themselves were dilapidated. Rubberized bark surrounds slides, climbing apparatus, a merry-go-round, spring riders and swings at a playground designed to be accessible to everyone. Plenty of open space and a fresh coat of paint welcome visitors to the breezy picnic shelter, spacious enough to accommodate a large family reunion, church gathering or a couple of ball clubs.HigHway cleanup shows commitment to community
Early college sta , students mark 10 years keeping Greene clean
By Donna Marie WilliamsTimeies when you’re having fun — at least that’s how Greene Early Col lege English teacher Natasha Martin feels about the school’s 10-year commit ment to the N.C. Department of Transpor tation’s Adopt A Highway program.
“Time has a way of going by so quickly and slowly at the same time. When I got our plaque in the mail saying it had been 10 years … I hadn’t realized that number of years had already gone by,” Martin said. e school began participating in the Adopt A Highway program in 2012, shortly a er the school was incorporated with Martin as one of its original orga nizers. To establish the program, Martin joined former GEC social studies teacher Josh McClure, who submitted the original application.
“We were talking about Adopt A High way and thought it would be cool,” Martin said. “We were in the o ce and he put in the application. A er that he le our school and I picked up the torch. I have been renewing our application every four years so we can keep the road.”
School o cials said interest in this project began in response to a tornado that destroyed the Greene County Middle School in April 2011. Martin and McLure applied to adopt the 1.2 mile road where the school was located and rebuilt.
When school is in session, more than 1,200 students travel the stretch daily to either the middle school or Greene County Intermediate School across the street.
e same torna do destroyed GEC’s rst com
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Greene Early College students in September conducted the rst of four cleanups they will carry out over the year. Service projects are required of students to graduate from the school. The cleanup is one of the most popular.
munity service project: moving and restoring the Walstonburg train depot to the Greene County Sports Complex in Snow Hill.
Since 2012 students at GEC have par ticipated in 41 cleanups covering 61.5 miles over the 10-year period along Middle School Road, their designated road. For students and sta at GEC, the cleanup has become a welcome tradition.
“I think sometimes places don’t have enough traditions. I love the idea of tradition — keeping something going and taking care of something that was started even before you took part in it. It becomes part of your history and culture,” Martin said.
“ e cleanup of the highway became part of our culture. We are founded on the idea of community service. Cleaning up the highway and having our name on it helps to illustrate our commitment to community service.”
Participating in the program for 10 years is a feat to be recognized.
e Adopt A Highway program only requires participants to partake in the
cleanup of a designated road for four years at a time.
To honor their commitment, DOT gave GEC a plaque and letter thanking them for their service and recongnized them with a marker on their Adopt A Highway sign.
“We had made a commitment and stuck to it. Now we were actually being recognized for it. at token of appre ciation, the plaque, the letter saying thank you for your service for 10 years — that really meant a lot to me and to all the sta here,” Martin said.
While the appreciation was well received, students like senior Wyatt Grantham of Snow Hill, junior Tyreek Jones of Snow HIll and senior Tyler Crawford of Farmville were happy to join the cause. Grantham and Jones have participated in the program since they started at the school.
“I try to get out there every time I can. It’s a really good place to be. It’s fun to be able to participate and help clean up the community,” Grantham said.
Jones added, “It’s a good thing to par ticipate in. Everyone has always liked to
GEC o cials said 1,200 students a day travel on Middle School Road to Greene Middle and Greene Intermediate, one of the reasons it is important to keep the road clean.
participate in it.”
e cleanup has become very popular among the students, according to Martin. “ ey are ready to go. I have to take the list away so that no more can sign up since our bus can only hold a certain amount of kids. Within the rst day or so the list gets full,” Martin said.
“ e thing that wows me the most is how excited kids get about picking up trash. ey can make everything into a game. If you can make cleaning up fun it’s great,” Martin said.
Grantham, Jones and Craw ford joined more than 40 eager students Sept. 23 to participate in the rst of four highway clean ups for the 2022-23 school year.
is was the rst for Craw ford, who was surprised at the number of cigarette butts found along the road.
“We got started late walking down the road. Most of the trash had already been picked up. One thing, we found a lot of is cigarette butts,” Crawford
said.
“Our bag would have been empty, if not for the large por tion of cigarette butts. It was genuinely something I didn’t expect to nd.”
For Grantham, the amount of safety that went into the cleanup surprised him initially.
“With my rst experience, I didn’t realize we needed all this protective gear. ere is a proper way to go about these things and learning about that made me more aware that as easy as something sounds, it’s always better to be aware of the hazards,” Grantham said.
Crawford, Grantham and Jones also serve as ambassa dors and are members of the Student Government Associa tion. For them, participating in the cleanup and other commu nity service projects available through GEC helps to build friendships, community and support for each other.
“It allows us to be exposed to an array of di erent skills and things we wouldn’t normally be
exposed to. Like the highway cleanup, being part of a group and having that team-building activity,” Grantham said.
“Being out there — not only with the people from our grade or class, but with other people that we usually would not have had the chance to connect with — we are able to build rela tionships and have that team mentality.”
e cleanup also demon strates leadership to students at Greene County Middle School and Greene County Interme diate School — both of which are located on Middle School Road.
“It’s an important thing because it builds character. A lot of the people from middle school are trying to gure out who they are and what they want to be. By us going out there and showing them this is a good thing to do, it’s a fun thing to do and it needs to be done, it helps their develop ment and gives them a good reason to come to GEC,”
Grantham said.
Jones added, “ is is a very small school compared to (Greene Central High School). Having these opportunities, like the highway cleanup … allows everyone to become more of a family, which is what I believe we are here.”
Keeping the tradition alive is important to Martin who believes that the students are developing essential life skills while participating in the cleanup.
“Cleaning up is important because just the behavior of cleaning up is an activity and behavior that you should show in nearly anything you should do. Cleaning up is bigger than in your house or at your school. It applies in real life and in the real world,” Martin said.
“Just like cleaning up your desk helps you focus on what’s in front of you or cleaning up at home keeps your living environment clean, cleaning up your community or world helps keep that other place you
live clean also.”
Deemed as an essential skill to learn, this year GEC required all of its students to participate in one of the school’s various cleanup e orts.
“It’s a life skill. Cleaning up the highway is a way to make the idea of cleaning up larger. Its very important and a ects everyone. It applies to real life,” Martin said.
“We’re founded on service and community and giving back. Our program is very unique. e opportunities that they get here are very unique and very free. I feel at minimum we can give back
by doing something so simple but so important.”
Students hope some of these life skills transfer over into the community. “Keeping the environment clean is not a hard task … When we keep the environment clean as a community we will be better o . It will make us as a community look better and feel stronger and connected,” Grantham said.
Since participating in the cleanup, Jones and Grantham have observed there has been less trash on Middle School Road.
“It is one thing that is helping and doing these cleanups so o en it lowers the amount of trash people throw away. e more trash that is out there, the more comfortable people are going to feel throwing trash out,” Jones said.
Crawford added, “I feel like it is a simple and easy thing to do. It goes a long way and I think we are representatives of that.”
e Adopt A Highway program is just one of the many commu nity service activities students at GEC can participate in. Students are required to receive 100 hours of community service in order to graduate.
is requirement re ects the school’s commitment to serving the community and giving back. “We’re founded on service and community and giving back. Our program is very unique. e opportunities that they get here are very unique and very free. I feel at minimum we can give back by doing something so simple but so important,” Martin said.
“It’s been a rewarding experience overall and I’m glad it’s become a culture in our school. Picking up trash is an easy way to teach kids about cleaning up our community, safety and the importance of keeping our environment clean.”
Community at the heart of the recipe for Farmer and the Dail
Restaurant’s popular menu, engaging online presence have helped make it a destination
By Pat GrunerFortravelers through North Carolina and Greene County locals alike, the Farmer and the Dail has become a place they can get a taste of home. Its owners said that comes from community collaboration that has helped the bakery and restaurant put Snow Hill on the map for foodies.
Farmer and the Dail is the source of almost 50 full or part-time jobs in Greene County as well as a destination restaurant thanks to its menu, which blends creative with contemporary, and its engaging online presence. Owners Zac and Stacy Bailes o cially began what would become the business in 2017 on Stacy’s family farm — she grew up in Greene County as Stacy Dail. Operating out of a 1,250-
foot building Tuesday through Saturday, they dished up cookies, cakes, fried pies and biscuit bombs that began draw ing crowds.
“It’s like Millennial home cooking I guess,” Zac Bailes explained. “We have some of those old-school things like chew bread. e fried pies, I created that recipe because I couldn’t nd a good one around here.
“We try to have a sense of community and inclusion in what we do so that people of di erent backgrounds and di erent sto
ries can see themselves in the food, and the story of the food,” he continued.
“Our community is not monolithic so we are trying to be something that can repre sent folks that love their collards and their hamburger steak with gravy, and the people who like their yogurt cups and their choco late chip cookie brownies.”
Zac Bailes is a Kentucky native who came to North Carolina for graduate school at Wake Forest University. He spent a few years working in political fundrais
ing, which is when he met his future wife. When she moved back to Snow Hill to be close to her family, he would eventually move to Greene County along with her.
Before the bakery operated ve days a week, in October 2015, Stacy Bailes began teaching cookie decorating classes, which she advertised through word of mouth and on her personal Facebook page. Ten-per son classes were quickly booked, Zac Bail es recalled, and the couple started to feel like they had something on their hands.
In January 2016, the couple began host ing Saturday pop-up shops to sling their sweets along with other items, like bacon and cheese biscuit bombs and fried pies. Zac Bailes said he expected some buzz but they were met with much, much more.
“ e rst one we were not expecting a lot of people to come,” he recalled. “A ton of people showed up and it was taking people an hour and a half to get their food, but they were very gracious and kind to do it.”
In 2017 Farmer and the Dail was open ve days a week out on the farm.
e bakery very quickly outgrew its space, prompting the acquisition of a 7,500-square-foot building at 1329 U.S. 258 in April 2021. e space operates as a full-service, family-style eatery and a retail market with two 15-foot displays – one for sweets and another just for cakes.
Trey Cash, Greene County economic development director, said the business has spurred tourism in the county.
“Farmer and the Dail is now a destina tion restaurant in eastern North Carolina,”
Cash said. “Even when me and my wife have eaten there we’ve seen people from Raleigh or an hour or two away here in Snow Hill to eat at Farmer and the Dail.”
at trip means Snow Hill is getting more revenue than the price of a biscuit.
“People out of the county are here spending money in the county,” Cash explained. “ ey’re stopping by downtown Snow Hill. ey are buying gas here.”
Stacy Bailes’ original posts about cookie decorating served as a sort of blueprint for the restaurant’s branding and strategy moving forward. Its strongest platform remains on Facebook, with over 31,000 followers, but its presence on Instagram is nearing 10,000 followers and it began using TikTok as a tool in June of 2021 and has picked up a dab over 1,500 followers on that platform.
Farmer and the Dail has also launched a new website that Zac Bailes said incorpo rates its new logo and other new branding. e branding is part of continued growth, he said. e family is now in the process of out tting a building for USDA inspections of products like chicken salad or frozen biscuit bombs. ose products would then be available for wholesale at grocery stores. e online presence was key in making the business a destination restaurant.
“We’ve been very intentional about telling a certain story and, trying now, to be very intentional about branding,” Zac Bailes said. “It’s an incredible way for using things … to tell your story and to help people connect with it both near and far.
It is remarkable the number of people who have visited us out of state.
“Other times people will create a di er ent route when they’re heading to the coast from say Maryland to come visit us. It’s because of social media and that story.”
Zac Bailes recalled that a business in Snow Hill once paid $600 to overnight ship a package of Farmer and the Dail biscuits to their board of directors in Seattle. He said that there are groups who do quarterly trips from Charlotte to stock up.
Cash said that the social media presence
of Farmer and the Dail helps promote Greene County.
Community partnerships are key in ensuring the food is more than just Internet buzz. All of the bakery’s dairy products are sourced from nearby Simply Natural Creamery. Hundreds of fresh eggs are purchased weekly from local chicken farmers and sausage comes from Nahunta Pork Center in Goldsboro. Co ee comes from Farmville’s Lanoca Co ee Company. Produce varies from collard greens out of Wilson or sweet potatoes from Ham Farms “four miles” down the road.
“We try to source everything that we can as locally as we can,” Zac Bailes said. “We have a small marketplace that we’ve opened up inside the restaurant that obviously sells our prepared foods people can get to have a frozen dinner, but we also partner with other local businesses to sell either cra ed products or others in that
marketplace.”
Matthew Wright, owner of Lanoca Co ee Company, said that Farmer and the Dail was the catalyst for the roaster’s growth. In 2016 he stopped by a pop-up shop late and inquired if the Bailes would be interested in a local product. He started supplying the bakery with his dark roast co ee and within three years had quit his corporate job to supply co ee full-time.
“I was doing roasting on the side because I loved doing it,” Wright said. “ eir business, as they kind of grew and got bigger, is part of what forced me into growing as well.”
Wright said the bakery brews with his beans onsite now due to how much co ee they sell. Initially cold brew was brewed in advance prior to shipping. e bakery also now o ers light and medium roast co ees from Lanoca.
“People nd out you do co ee for Farmer and the Dail, that gives you a little
legitimacy,” Wright said. “Now we are in a 60-mile radius from Bunn down to Goldsboro, little Washington up to Nashville.”
A er Farmer and the Dail’s new location opened up in 2021, Wright said he started selling commercial equipment to other co ee shops. Lanoca also now o ers an academy where Greene or Pitt County residents can stop in to learn how to roast their own beans.
Cash said the local avor makes for great food.
“My wife loves it,” Cash said. “It’s great for the county, for our regional community and for me to eat there. e food’s good, the portions are big and you get your money’s worth.”
Cash and Stacy went to school together, he said, and her family has been a propo nent for the area’s food scene for generations, both as caterers and farmers. e Bailes want to
continue that legacy.
“Snow Hill and the larg er county have been always incredibly supportive every day, and I think they’re proud of us,” Zac Bailes said. “ at is a big part of why we’re here, because we wanted to help bring value — long-term value — to the community. Something to help build up and attract people from out of the county to come visit and experience Greene County.” e taste of home that Farmer and the Dail provides visitors is not for show – Greene County is the Bailes’ home. e couple has two small children, which makes for a personal investment in both the area and the business.
“It’s a big part of staking a claim and trying to build legacy both for ourselves and this com munity,” Zac Bailes said. “ is is de nitely our home. A big part of it is trying to build a strong home that people are proud of.”
One week at a time
Greene Central head coach Jay Wilson, center, talks with his team following a win over North Pitt.
Greene Central Rams and head coach Jay Wilson bring joy of football to Snow Hill
By Craig MoyerTheGreene Central High School football team is o to one of its best starts in program history, but Jay Wilson is taking things a week at a time.
e fourth-year head coach said that’s the best way to build a good season and to build a program.
“We’re going to make sure that we don’t overlook any opponent, no matter their record or who’s out for them. Everybody is 0-0 on each Friday night, and that’s the approach we need to take,” Wilson said.
A North Carolina A&T alumnus, Wilson coached in the Greensboro area before coming back to the eastern part of the state and eventually taking the job at Greene Central.
He spent his high school playing days on the gridiron in the Johnston County com munity of Princeton, west of Goldsboro. He said he knew as soon as he graduated he wanted to get into coaching so he could pass along the life lessons his coaches taught him.
“My family was still here and so I came back home and pieces fall where they go and I wound up in a really good spot here in Snow Hill with Greene Central, and I made it my home,” Wilson said.
e Rams this year are happy he did. ey remained undefeated into October in dominant fashion, outscoring their oppo
nents by a combined 330-55 in the rst eight games.
at’s a change from recent history, which included a shortened campaign in 2020 thanks to COVID-19.
e team went a combined 9-20 in Wilson’s rst three years, including 4-7 last fall. is year, the team matched its 2015 campaign, when it had eight consecutive wins on the way to nishing 10-2 a er a rst-round state playo defeat.
Wilson needed just one word to describe the key to his team’s 2022 start: preparation.
He credited the hard work of his assistant coaches, from the coordinators to the specialists, in preparing their respective groups of players each week for Friday night.
Wilson added that for the two-and-a-half hours the team has to practice each day Mon day through ursday, not one moment goes to waste.
“ ere is no wasted time, there is no wasted motion, everybody is working hard on their individual skill that they’re going to bring back to the team,” Wilson said. ” en we put all those things togeth er and the product is what it’s been for these rst several games.”
For anyone who has ever been around the Rams pro gram on a game day or even at practice, Wilson’s energy trans fers its way through the team.
Coaches and players alike credit that energy for making the team play at its highest level every week.
“Him bringing that high en ergy every day can be contrib uted to the o ense. He throws his inputs in there and really gets us going,” o ensive line coach and co-o ensive coor dinator Demarcus Whitehurst said.
Lineman Tyler Williams added, “He pushes me a lot and challenges me to stay working
hard.”
“He’s very enthusiastic, hard-working, very hard on us, but that’s de nitely a good thing,” wide receiver Jaylen Wynn said. “He just makes sure we focus one week at a time on the next team.”
With the success of the team comes the coaching sta ’s chal lenge of keeping the players level-headed and prepared for each new opponent.
Wilson continues to stress a week-by-week approach, which seems to be e ective so far for his team, o ensive coordinator Delmus Willis said.
“It’s been fun, but it’s also been demanding because
you’ve gotta keep 16-, 17- and 18-year-olds level-headed and as you know, this day and age with social media it’s kinda hard sometimes, but they’ve done a great job of staying even-keeled and working hard every day,” Willis said.
While the team has several skill-position players on both sides of the ball, it all starts up front on the o ensive and defensive lines.
Willis, also in his fourth year with the team, knows his high-powered o ense would not be where it is today without the work by the linemen.
“I’ve always said as long as I’ve been coaching, you can’t
have a successful o ense with out a front ve,” Willis said.
“We could have 3,000 yards passing, 5,000 yards rushing, if the front ve ain’t working, then we’ve got zero.”
It was nearly a total rebuild a er the team lost a few starters from last season’s team.
Whitehurst stressed the hard work put in throughout the summer is paying o this fall.
“We did a lot of moving around, convinced a lot of guys to buy into the team and put together a great front ve that came together during the summer and worked hard all the way back to May,” White hurst said.
e core of the line on both sides of the ball is made up of underclassmen, with just one senior lineman on the roster this season.
One of those underclassmen is Williams, who plays on both sides of the ball for the Rams.
e sophomore said the team is enjoying the season’s strong start, but is still looking for more moving forward.
“It’s been fun. It just makes you want to play more when we’re winning and keep working hard going into the playo s,” Williams said.
Willis stressed that while the o ense has a handful of electric athletes, they would not be able to make the plays they have been making without the o en sive front ve.
One of those playmakers on the outside is Wynn, who also plays on the defensive side of the ball as a safety.
Wynn, a junior, credited the line for the team’s big jump from last year’s 4-7 record to this season’s undefeated start.
“It’s great seeing our running backs’ and receivers’ success. Our O-line is doing great this year and it feels better as a team this year than last year,” Wynn said.
As for the rest of the season, Wilson is looking for more of the same and hoping his team can stay healthy.
“ e main part is making sure that we’re as healthy as humanly possible going into
each week and making sure that we’re prepared going into each week,” Wilson said.
He added the community support has continued to be great, as parents and others help out with everything from laundry to feeding both the varsity and JV teams before games.
“ ey come by and make sure the guys understand they are proud of us and what we’re doing and they want us to keep going and keep representing the community and the county as we have been,” Wilson said.
Meet Allie Gray, teacher of the year
By Ariyanna SmithAllie Gray has always known she wanted to be an educator.
“I always say I got it from my grandmother. She was a teacher and I was born on her birthday. I got my middle name (Rose) from her and, as of now, I’m the only grand child of hers that became a teacher. I think she favored me a little bit because of that,” she says with a laugh.
Now, just seven years into
her career, the Greene County Intermediate School teacher is being recognized as the county’s 2022-23 Teacher of the Year.
Gray began pursuing her goal of becoming a teacher 10 years ago when she le her hometown in Maryland to attend East Carolina Univer sity. Her time in school and an internship in the third
grade at West Greene Ele mentary con rmed this was the job for her.
“I’ve always wanted to be involved in some part of the education system and work with children,” she said.
A er gradua tion, she accepted a teaching position at Greene County Inter mediate School. “At our rst meeting, I knew that she had what it took to be an awesome
teacher. One who would ded icate herself to ensuring the success of students academ ically and socially,” recalled Jada Mumford, GCIS princi pal. Gray went on to prove her principal’s predictions about her were correct.
Gray immediately felt at home in Greene County, recalling, “I really loved the small-town feel of teaching in Snow Hill. It reminded me of where I grew up because of the strong sense of commu nity.”
e 28-year-old spent her rst two years teaching fourth grade before moving to h grade for the next four years.
ough she enjoyed her time teaching h grade, she says there is something special about the fourth grade.
“Fi h grade is the year of really teaching them about responsibility and preparing them for middle school. I en
joyed being a part of that with them, but there is something magical about fourth grade.
e kids are 9 turning 10 and they still just really enjoy school. ey’re also learning who they are and nding their independence. Fourth grade is where my heart is.”
Now, in her seventh year of teaching, she has returned to the fourth grade where
she teaches students reading and social studies. Gray is an instructor in the Los Puentes Two-Way Immersion Pro gram, a dual-language pro gram where she spends half of the day teaching students in English then another instruc tor teaches them Spanish lan guage arts, math and science for the remainder of the day.
Gray says one of the most
gratifying things about her job is “seeing students fall in love with reading.” One of her favorite books to read with her class is called “Wish” by Barbara O’Conner. It tells the story of a girl who nds the true meaning of family in unexpected places.
“I do this speci c novel every year. is book seems to be the one that shows them, if
GCIS Assistant Principal Taylor Moore, left, and Principal Jada Mumford, right, congratulate Gray on being named the school’s teacher of the year in March. Gray would go on to with the district teacher of the year recognition. (Greene County Schools)
they don’t already know, that reading can be so powerful.” e story is also set in North Carolina, a bonus for Gray who strives to make their assignments engaging and relatable.
Encouraging her students’ autonomy is another core principle of her teaching philosophy. “I’m always focused on the needs of the whole child. I see them as more than just fourth graders and I try to really get to know them as people,” she explains. “Before you can teach them, you have to know them. You have to build a relationship and let them know you are invested in them and their wellbeing. It really makes the job easier when they feel like they can open up.”
She says the daily time allotted for social-emotional learning helps build those important interpersonal skills that students will need both at home and school.
To help them practice those skills, she says she takes every opportunity available to get the kids talking. “My favorite class memories are any of the moments where my kids and I are just laughing uncontrollably over something silly. I like to see them just being kids.”
She also attends their sporting events whenever she can. “I want to show them that I see their success outside of school and it’s not just about grades and test scores. Any chance, big or small, to talk with them and encourage them shows that you are invested and that can go a long way,” she said.
Despite feeling ful lled by the work she is doing with her students,
Gray says it’s a di cult time for teachers. She said the past few years have been especially challenging, even for the most experienced teachers. She notes that the pandemic has magni ed some existing issues with the education system such as insu cient teacher recruitment and retention rates.
“Teacher retention is an issue that impacts all of us because it a ects class sizes. is is one of the biggest issues we are facing, especially in the upper grades of elementary. I’m really passionate about having smaller class sizes because we need to make sure that all the kids are getting the attention they deserve.”
Gray recalls a period at the start of the pandemic when classes were halved as a safety measure saying, “It was amazing what we could get done and just how quickly you can build your relationships with your students when you have a smaller class.”
Despite the challenges public school teachers are facing, Gray plans to keep working with her fellow teachers and school sta for their students. “I am real ly thankful for Greene County and I feel that I’ve been given a lot of opportunities
to grow as a teacher here,” she said.
Gray was selected as the teacher of the year in March from among ve nalists for the honor, one from each of the county’s schools.
She encouraged col leagues to stay strong for the students during an opening meeting at the start of the school year.
“Even though we have been pushed these past few years, each child in your class was placed there for a reason. We must be our best because we mean more to them than we realize.”
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Greene County’s Trey Cash embraces new role
Economic developer will devote energy to growing industry
By Beyonca MewbornTreyCash likens economic develop ment to dreaming and to tending a garden.
Dreamers imagine the bounty that can grow; good gardeners lay the ground for a new crop and take care of existing rows to help them ourish.
“Economic development is really a dreamer’s job, so you’re not thinking about today, you’re thinking about ve years, 10 years, and 15 years down the road,” said Cash, Greene County Economic Developer with the N.C. Global TransPark Economic Development Region.
“It’s not just trying to attract new business, but making sure you grow your own garden, so we’re making sure that we are keeping our existing businesses here, keeping them happy. We’re trying to help them expand and improve their success
right here, and we want to be their partner in that.”
e folks who hired Cash for his new role in June said the 32-year-old Greene County native is in a prime position to do just that. He was born and raised in Greene County and has devoted his life to public service here, most recently serving as the county’s elections director. While working for the county, he’s seized on op portunities to help those trying to add jobs and improve the county’s quality of life.
O cials said he was a natural pick for a job that will bring focus to the county’s economic health, a post leaders envisioned in 2020 when Greene, Wayne and Lenoir county governments along with the N.C. Global TransPark created the NCGTEDR to combine resources to focus on region al assets in an e ort to bene t all. Cash knows the county and its people, and has the energy and passion needed for the
mission.
“Anytime I needed help doing anything with a client, Trey was always willing to step forward and say look, I will help you, and it didn’t matter if it was working hours or a er hours,” said Harold omas, the TransPark organization’s former vice pres ident. “He was willing to help, he showed up, he showed a lot of willingness, and desire to see Greene County improve as well as a desire to see the Global Trans park Economic Development Association improve.”
Cash and other leaders in Greene, Wayne and Lenoir counties along with state Global Transpark o cials see great promise in working together to capitalize on the jetport in Kinston and the area’s workforce, education system and natural charms.
omas was a plant manager at Du pont in Lenoir County then the economic
development assistant working with Lenoir County when he retired for the rst time 14 years ago. He started working with Greene County as eco nomic developer when o cials formed the TransPark group, but approached it as a tempo rary role.
“I went into it because at that point Greene County had sev eral organizations that weren’t functioning, so the goal was to set those up, and also bring some new industry into the county and help expand what was already in the county,” said omas.
“So, I set out working on developing a Greene County manufacturing association which included all people that make things in the county, developing the Greene County Transportation committee, and Trey was a part of that; he assisted, he was aggressive, he was interested, he showed a lot
of willingness to work and try to make improvements in the county, and pretty quickly he became a possible candidate in our eyes.”
With those three counties and the Global Transpark com ing together, there was a need for sta ng to put boots on the ground, said Cash, who lled omas’ post as vice president in addition to Greene County economic developer.
“We have me in my new po sition, we have our senior vice president (Mark Pope), who’s a very experienced developer, and a marketing sta , so it gives us more of an opportu nity here in Greene County to function at a higher level and be able to market ourselves better because we have a bigger and more experienced sta to do so,” said Cash.
Cash said their goals with the Global Transpark Econom ic Development Region are
to market the region better to attract new businesses and to ensure their existing businesses and industries are growing.
“So what we’re doing is we’re looking at the future, looking at our workforce, look ing at our demographics, and our school systems to ensure that we’re prepared for ve years to 15 years down the road for potential growth from new businesses and existing businesses,” said Cash. E orts have already borne fruit for Greene County.
In August, state grant funds totaling $175,000 were announced to help H&T Trucking expand its hub in Bullhead Township south of Stantonsburg, eventual ly adding 75 jobs. Building Envelope Erec tion Service — BEES — cut the ribbon on an expansion in April that will add 17 jobs. And o cials in November announced circuit board maker Precision Graphics is opening a facility that will create 70 jobs in Snow Hill, expected to start up early next year.
As a hometown booster, it’s that kind of success Cash wants to see more o en.
“I was born and raised here in Greene
County, I’m a Greene Central graduate, I got an associate’s degree from Wilson Community College, then I got my bachelor’s degree from Western Carolina and my MBA from Fayetteville State Universi ty,” Cash said.
He worked for Greene County Emergency Management including a stint as deputy director for emergency services, then he was a planner for the state department of Emergency Management. He served as county elections director for four years.
He and his wife also have a daughter who’s a year and a half old, and Cash wants to build a future for her.
Cash said his hopes are to say to his little girl in 20 years, look what we’ve been able to do for Greene County, and hopefully watch it grow from now until that time has passed.
“I’ve been working in state and local government for 10 years, the last four years I was the elections director for Greene
County, and that was a great opportunity for me to meet and greet all the citizens of Greene County when they went out and voted,” said Cash.
“I listened to their concerns I heard their feedback and that opened my ears and my eyes to a lot of citizens here, so I’m able to tran sition into the economic development role by knowing all these citizens and being able to speak to them, and say look I’m here for you now, I’m here to help support your business.”
Kyle DeHaven, Greene County man ager for seven years, said that’s why Cash is someone they are really excited to have working with the county. He brings a di erent perspective to every conversa tion, a valued perspective, and they’re very fortunate to have someone of his caliber of education, training, and experience around”, he said.
“I’m hoping that that fresh perspective translates into a new look at how econom
ic development and Greene County work together so that we can bring the best busi nesses and improve current businesses the most in Greene County for our business and our citizens,” said DeHaven.
Being a native of Greene County put him a step ahead of others who may have been quali ed for the position because leaders in industry and commerce are already familiar with him. His familiarity with the region and his love for it also help him sell it to prospec tive employers.
“I think new business is vital to a community for many reasons,” said DeHaven. “Expansion and development of that community provide employment, it gives a reason for people to come, It increases tax base, and it’s just great for growth in a local economy.”
Cash said he thinks people will be excited for him to step
Cash worked in
Greene County
into this role and that he is go ing to put all his energy into it.
“I’m a younger guy, so I’m putting a lot of energy into this role that hasn’t had a lot of energy in a long time,” said Cash. “We are going to try new endeavors, we’re going to talk to more business owners, and just put ourselves out there
state
more.”
before
He said he will focus on existing businesses “to make sure they know we are here. We want to grow our own garden and that means going out to our existing businesses because if you look at the data from the past 10 years, 70 percent of jobs created in any county in North
on
economic development post. (NCGTEDR)
Carolina have been through those existing businesses and industries that are already in your county.
“So we’re going out this year and we’re trying to meet all business owners to let them know that hey this is what we do, we’re here to help you and support you,” said Cash.