Matthews-Mint Hill Weekly March 4, 2022

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INSIDE ▼ Time to start booking your child's summer camp PAGE 1B Friday, March 4, 2022 • Vol. 15 • No. 9

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Trimming toenails Reducing thick toenails Reducing corns and calluses

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Leaders: Count the deer by Justin Vick

justin@cmgweekly.com

MATTHEWS – Town leaders want to know how many deer are roaming Matthews before deciding on if they need to decrease the population. Feedback from residents has been split. “Just from my own interactions with people in my neighborhood, people in town and people at Renfrow’s, it appears that half the town love deer and half hate them,” Mayor John Higdon said. From Higdon’s vantage point

WHAT'S INSIDE:

overlooking Four Mile Creek, he recognizes the same eight to 12 deer pass through his yard every day around the same time. Deer forced him to install a fence around his garden to prevent them from eating everything. Still, he didn’t want to start culling the herd without additional information. Town staff reached out to a wildlife biologist who believes Matthews deer counts are too high, but he was too busy to do an official count. Staff outlined in a memo some strategies to thin out the deer population. The most cost effective means

would be specialized hunts, in which experts with guns or bows would set up bait locations to hunt late at night or early mornings. This would be repeated every one or two years. The cost per deer is $300. A more humane method deployed at Bald Head Island involves giving female deer contraceptives at a cost of $2,078 each deer. This has to be repeated every two or three years. The last option involves relocating the deer, which biologists say is the least effective option. This would cost between $3,000 and $5,000 per deer.

Higdon

McCool

Staff did not have any estimates on how much a deer count would cost. Mayor Pro Tem Ken McCool assumed such a count won’t be cheap. “From what I’ve heard, a lot of people don’t want us killing deer,” McCool said. “I’m not sure I have a see DEER, Page 5A

Tony Marciano Reverend

A spiritual experience at the dentist's

W

CLOCKWISE FROM TOP RIGHT: Calvin Johnson of the Matthews Police Department, Harry McLaughlin of the Matthews Fire Department, Matthews Commissioner Larry Whitley and Matthews Parks and Recreation Director Corey King. CMG file photos

Leading by example

50 influential African Americans in the community Black History Month gives us a chance to reflect on the past, but these 50 leaders provide hope for the future. They are in positions that allow them to shape the region for years to come. Stacey Alston: dentist, Fine Art Dentistry Joe Badgett: basketball coach, Carmel Christian School Chiquita Boyd: assistant principal, Rocky River High School Harvey Boyd: artist (living legend) Jamila Brown: assistant principal, Mint Hill Middle School Leisa Christian: principal, Northeast Middle School Preston Davis, basketball coach, Independence High School Stan Davis: president, Mint Hill Historical Society Jeffrey Elam: homeowner services manager, Greater Matthews Habitat for Humanity Sandtrica Elliott: president, Matthews Chamber of Commerce Board Michelle Givens: principal, Clear Creek Elementary School Vincent Golden: principal, Butler High School Seth Goldwire: facility executive, Atrium Health Union West Orlando Gray: football coach, Rocky River High School Michael Henderson: senior pastor, New Beginnings Church Twanna Henderson: commissioner, Town of Mint Hill David Houseton: baseball coach, Covenant Day School Nate Huggins: chief operating officer, Blessed Assurance Adult Day Care Navondria Huggins: CEO, Blessed Assurance Adult Day Care Sharon Johnson: CEO, H&S Therapeutic Services Anthony Jones, chief operations officer, Thompson Child & Family Focus Shatorie Jones: basketball coach, Rocky River High School Corey King: Parks and rec director, Town of Matthews Donald Kirby: basketball coach, Rocky River High School David Legrand: principal, Independence High School Darryl McFadden Jr.: football coach, Independence High School Carlo McKoy: code enforcement, Town of Matthews Harry McLaughlin, firefighter, Matthews Fire Department Lashaunda Pankey: assistant principal, Butler High School Errica Redmond-Klaus: project manager, Matthews Free Medical Clinic Julius Robertson: sergeant, Matthews Police Department Mark Sanders, girls basketball coach, Butler High School Dericus Scott: owner, Standing Ovation Barbershop Antoine Sidberry: track coach, Rocky River High School Charles Smith: recreation program manager, Town of Matthews Quincy Smith: assistant principal, Independence High School Robert Smith: owner, Mint Hill Coffee & Social House Kwame Stith: principal, Rocky River High School Danielle Terrell: owner, Zeal for Life Dance Company Tina Townsend-Strong: operations director at COSKids Ericia Turner: athletics director, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools Kim Tuttle: English teacher, Levine Middle College High School Sherrika Walton: clinical director/nurse practitioner, Matthews Free Medical Clinic Larry Whitley: commissioner, Town of Matthews Hazel Williams, president-elect of MARA Rochelle Williams: social worker, Servant’s Heart of Mint Hill Tangela Williams: community superintendent, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools Tetnika Williamson: owner, The Poise Group LLC Douglas Willie: president, Blessed Assurance Adult Day Care Earnest Winston: superintendent, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools Calvin Young: officer, Matthews Police Department

Quincy Smith (above) speaks at a community rally. Tetnika Williamson not only leads The Poise Group but she serves on the board of directors for the Mint Hill Chamber of Commerce.

see FAITH, Page 4A

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hen it came to COVID-19, I thought I was bulletproof. While I am double vaccinated, I knew I could still get the virus. I took all the necessary precautions. I wore my mask. At the gas station, I used glove’s when I pumped gas. Yet I wasn’t afraid to shake hands when I met people. I’d often joked that when I greeted someone, my right hand came up as if I was in a gun fight in the wild, wild West. Would the other person shake my hand, fist bump me, elbow bump me, wave me away, or grab me and hug me? While other people got the virus, I seemed to skirt it. I began to boast. No matter what I did, I couldn’t get the virus. I told my wife the CDC needed to extract my blood and make a vaccine with it and spread it over the planet to end this global pandemic. I forgot the scripture verse that says, “Pride comes before the fall.” Let me take you back when I was eighteen. At the time, I was a very good canoeist. I could navigate an aluminum canoe down whitewater rapids on the Delaware River. That is, until the day I wrapped it around a rock. Yes, “Pride comes before the fall. The day after Christmas, I came down with COVID. My wife and I had plans to go away. The next day I was scheduled to speak at a retreat for our Café staff. I was looking forward to it. Dec. 27, I had four rapid tests. The fourth one I waited in line four hours just to prove the other three were wrong. They weren’t. I wasn’t going anywhere. Gratefully, I did not have to go to the hospital. I developed a bad cough and at times felt like I got beat up. I was home the week after Christmas recovering from COVID. I tried going to work but the team sent me home. I was no longer contagious, but I didn’t feel well. Here’s the problem. I had a dentist appointment on Jan. 10. I was not contagious. The dentist’s office welcomed me into the office. But I still had a cough. The dental hygienist was going to work inside my mouth. I needed to be calm while she was scraping my teeth. I told her I would close my eyes. Back in May 2020, I had an intense prayer time in the pasta aisle at the grocery store. Could this be another of those deeply spiritual moments? Some people feel more comfortable praying on their knees. When I get on my knees, I fall asleep. Praying behind the wheel of a car works best for me.

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