South Charlotte Weekly March 4, 2022

Page 1

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

@southcltweekly

Firm consolidates HQ

Nursing Foot Care

Dianne Nguyen, RN, CFCS

thecharlotteweekly.com

Trimming toenails Reducing thick toenails Reducing corns and calluses

PINEVILLE – MPV Properties and Nance Companies announced SUMMIT Engineering, Laboratory & Testing will be consolidating operations into a new regional headquarters building in Pineville Distribution Park later this year. SUMMIT hopes to break ground this spring on the new 30,250-squarefoot building, which will be co-developed by MPV and Nance Companies. The building should be completed by the end of 2022. The new facility will provide SUMMIT with additional office, lab and warehouse space to serve their grow-

$10 OFF FOR NEW CLIENTS Cell/text: (704) 957-5458 Web: www.TheraTouchFootCare.com 165 S. Trade Street | Matthews, NC 28105 (Inside Studio 165 Salon and Spa)

ABOUT US P.O. BOX 1104 Matthews, NC 28106 (704) 849-2261 justin@cmgweekly.com charlottemediagroup.org

ing customer base. The firm offers full-service departments including environmental, geotechnical, subsurface drilling, special inspections, materials testing, forensic and structural engineering. The new building will be 10121 Pineville Distribution Park. It will be a state of-the-art tilt-wall concrete building featuring 24-foot clear heights, multiple drive-in and dock high doors and modern office space. Pineville Distribution Park is also home to Campbells Snacks’ 525,000-square-foot distribution center.

SUMMIT’s future headquarters building will be located in the Pineville Distribution Park. Photo courtesy of MPV

WHAT'S INSIDE:

Tony Marciano Reverend

A spiritual experience at the dentist's

W

Gov. Roy Cooper greets Charlotte Mayor Vi Lyles on Feb. 24 at the Ritz at Washington Heights park to celebrate a partnership that led to the PoleVolt solution for electric vehicles. City of Charlotte

A jolt of innovation Charlotte deploys pioneering curbside station for charging electric vehicles CHARLOTTE – An electric vehicle charging station was deployed on Feb. 24 at the Ritz at Washington Heights park, pioneering technology that could provide a solution for people that lack the offstreet parking needed for home charging systems. The new solution, PoleVolt, uses existing streetlight infrastructure to slash the costs associated with installing charging stations by as much as 50%. In Charlotte, much of the streetlighting infrastructure uses overhead wiring. By connecting to those circuits, additional wiring is not needed underground. The project is a partnership between

the Energy Production and Infrastructure Center at UNC Charlotte, the City of Charlotte, Centralina Regional Council and Duke Energy. “As North Carolina’s urban research university, UNC Charlotte is uniquely positioned to partner with Duke Energy, the City of Charlotte and the Centralina Regional Council in the development of the PoleVolt, the first universal electric vehicle charging solution of its kind in the country,” said Rob Keynton, dean of The William States Lee College of Engineering. “The PoleVolt is just one of many examples of how UNC Charlotte’s research combined with community and business

partnerships leads to creative solutions for current and relevant societal needs.” Duke Energy manages the city’s streetlights and was a key partner in the project. “Duke Energy is working hard to eliminate barriers such as access to charging, so we’re proud to play a role in innovative solutions such as PoleVolt,” said Stephen De May, Duke Energy’s North Carolina president. “We are committed to supporting state and local policy goals that deliver a cleaner energy future for all our customers.” The new station is the first of its kind in North Carolina.

Pantry opens to Ballantyne-area families Ballantyne Families Helping Neighbors in Need announced that its new community food pantry is open at Community House Middle School. Stocked with non-perishable food, the pantry is available for any family that attends or works for one of the nine schools in the Ardrey Kell High School feeder pattern.

BFHNIN was born in 2019 out of an informal group that came together to provide Thanksgiving meals for 100 families identified by the school counselors of the nine Ardrey Kell feeder schools. When schools began to close in March 2020 because of the pandemic, Ballantyne Families quickly acted to provide food assistance to school families with

the help of the school counselors. This assistance was given in the form of grocery gift cards and bags of food on a monthly basis. Since 2020, BFHNIN has given out nearly $191,000 in gift cards and more than 1,700 bags of food. The idea for a food pantry developed in 2021 as the board continued to think about ways to execute its

vision of bringing together the community to care for others in their time of need. In addition to providing food support four times a year (Thanksgiving, December holidays, spring break and summer), the BFHNIN leadership believed that a food pantry would allow families with emergency see PANTRY, Page 5A

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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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South Charlotte Weekly March 4, 2022 by Charlotte Media Group - Issuu