www.smokymountainnews.com
Western North Carolina’s Source for Weekly News, Entertainment, Arts, and Outdoor Information
April 10-16, 2019 Vol. 20 Iss. 46
State bills seek to bring sports betting to Cherokee Page 4 The Brothers Gillespie to play album release show Page 24
CONTENTS On the Cover: Maggie Valley pioneers reflect on the history surrounding the town’s incorporation efforts 45 years ago as they look toward what’s in store for the unique mountain community moving into the future. (Page 6)
STAFF EDITOR/PUBLISHER: ADVERTISING DIRECTOR: ART DIRECTOR: DESIGN & WEBSITE: DESIGN & PRODUCTION: ADVERTISING SALES:
News Tribe a big player in state campaign contributions ..................................................3 State bills seek to bring sports betting to Cherokee ..............................................4 Candidates appeal decertification letters ....................................................................5 Design Center to present N.C. 107 proposals ..........................................................9 Jackson jail death caused by hanging ........................................................................10 Drug dealers could be charged with murder ..........................................................11 Haywood remains poised for more landslides ........................................................14 Archaeologist presents history of Nikwasi ................................................................15 Jackson settles with student housing developer ....................................................17 Business News ..................................................................................................................19
Opinion
WAYNESVILLE | 144 Montgomery, Waynesville, NC 28786 P: 828.452.4251 | F: 828.452.3585
A&E
INFO & BILLING | P.O. Box 629, Waynesville, NC 28786
Gardening by the square foot ......................................................................................34
The naturalist’s corner The PR of Pittman-Robertson ......................................................................................47
April 10-16, 2019
CONTACT SYLVA | 629 West Main Street, Sylva, NC 28779 P: 828.631.4829 | F: 828.631.0789
Outdoors
Smoky Mountain News
ACCOUNTING & OFFICE MANAGER: DISTRIBUTION: CONTRIBUTING:
Home is far way, but also here with me ....................................................................20
The Brothers Gillespie to play album release show ..............................................24
2
CLASSIFIEDS: NEWS EDITOR: WRITING:
Scott McLeod. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . info@smokymountainnews.com Greg Boothroyd. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . greg@smokymountainnews.com Micah McClure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . micah@smokymountainnews.com Travis Bumgardner. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . travis@smokymountainnews.com Jessica Murray . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . jessica.m@smokymountainnews.com Susanna Barbee. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . susanna.b@smokymountainnews.com Amanda Bradley . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . jc-ads@smokymountainnews.com Hylah Birenbaum. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . hylah@smokymountainnews.com Scott Collier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . classads@smokymountainnews.com Jessi Stone. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . jessi@smokymountainnews.com Holly Kays . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . holly@smokymountainnews.com Cory Vaillancourt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . cory@smokymountainnews.com Garret K. Woodward. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . garret@smokymountainnews.com Amanda Singletary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . smnbooks@smokymountainnews.com Scott Collier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . classads@smokymountainnews.com Jeff Minick (writing), Chris Cox (writing), George Ellison (writing), Gary Carden (writing), Don Hendershot (writing), Susanna Barbee (writing).
Copyright 2019 by The Smoky Mountain News.™ Advertising copyright 2019 by The Smoky Mountain News.™ All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited. The Smoky Mountain News is available for free in Haywood, Jackson, Macon, Swain and parts of Buncombe counties. Limit one copy per person. Additional copies may be purchased for $1, payable at the Smoky Mountain News office in advance. No person may, without prior written permission of The Smoky Mountain News, take more than one copy of each issue.
SUBSCRIPTIONS SUBSCRIPTION:
1 YEAR $65 | 6 MONTHS $40 | 3 MONTHS $25
Tribe a big player in state campaign contributions Elections watchdog calls for more transparent donation reporting BY HOLLY KAYS STAFF WRITER longtime democracy nonprofit director and self-proclaimed “watchdog” of political activity is calling for an investigation into how the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians reports its donations. Bob Hall, who served as executive director of Democracy N.C. for 25 years before retiring in 2017, said that he began looking into the issue following introduction of legislation to legalize sports betting. “I knew the legislature was considering that, so I did some research on political donations and wanted to see how much influence they (the EBCI) may have on the legislature through their money,” said Hall.
A
REQUEST FOR AN AUDIT
‘WE’RE IN COMPLIANCE’
COMMENTS FROM LEGISLATORS In the 2018 election cycle, the tribe contributed to 69 candidates for state House and Senate seats — 40.6 percent of the 170 total members of the General Assembly. The two versions of the sports betting bill have a combined 31 sponsors, 19 of whom — 61.3 percent — received campaign contributions from the tribe in the last election cycle. Local representatives said the contributions had no impact on their position on the sports wagering bill. “It has no relationship to my service to them or any other constituent,” said Sen. Jim Davis, R-Franklin, who received $5,200 in the last election cycle. “I do it because I’m willing to do it. Nobody has ever threatened me with the lack of or promise that if I do something that I will get a campaign contribution. It’s never a quid pro quo.” “I accept contributions from across the board, from different entities, and I never once had somebody say, ‘We’ll give you a campaign contribution and by the way, we want you to do so and so,’” agreed Rep. Kevin Corbin, R-Franklin, who received $5,000 from the tribe. “I’ve never had that happen. If it did I would give it back to them. I don’t work that way.” In fact, said Corbin, he’s got multiple examples of bills he’s championed that his donors have opposed. For instance, in March 2018 he received $1,000 from the North Carolina Beer & Wine Wholesaler Association but has twice introduced legislation that would increase school calendar flexibility, something the group opposes. Corbin said he’s taken other votes that have conflicted with the wishes of donors such as Southern States Police Benevolent Association PAC Fund, which gave him $1,000 in February 2016, and various medical groups.
“They actually do not influence me in any way,” said Rep. Michele Presnell, RBurnsville, who received $5,200 from the tribe in the last election cycle. “I just use them to pay for signs and brochures and things like that.” Unlike Corbin and Davis, she is not a sponsor of the sports betting bill and when asked her opinion on it said she was not aware of it. Waynesville Democrat Rep. Joe Sam Queen’s situation is opposite that of Presnell’s. While he has received donations from the tribe in past elections, the Eastern Band did not contribute to his campaign this time around. Nevertheless, he signed on as a cosponsor of the House bill. “I’m doing it because it’s good for Western North Carolina,” he said. “I think it’s good public policy. It’s a good way to manage and contain a popular kind of gambling that’s in demand.” Queen doesn’t take it personally that the tribe declined to donate to him this time around. “They are not a particularly partisan player,” Queen said of the tribe. “They are a selfinterested player. They represent their own tribal interests with their PAC monies, and if they think the power structure is Republican, they contribute to the power structure.” That was evidently the tribe’s read on things in 2018, with Republicans making up 62.3 percent of its donation recipients in that election cycle. Nearly all of those donation recipients won their races — of the 69 General Assembly candidates the tribe gave to, only six lost their election bid. In Queen’s view, there’s a lot wrong with campaign finance laws overall right now, with money playing too big a role in who wins elections. “Money in politics is corrosive from any source,” he said. “My friends or your friends. Big, dark money is not good for North Carolina or America.” But as far as the tribe is concerned, he said, they’re just trying to win the game based on the rules that have been laid out for them. “They’re playing the hand they’ve been given,” he said. 3
Smoky Mountain News
A lot has changed since 2002, when the casino was just five years old. While the tribe isn’t allowed to use its gaming revenue for campaign contributions, the growth of that industry has certainly stimulated other revenue streams to flourish alongside it. “The level of money is getting so large that they need to go ahead and begin to file electronically,” said Hall. “Money talks in the legislature, and this is a serious amount of money,” he added. Principal Chief Richard Sneed said that Hall’s research turned up some reporting errors that should be addressed, but he pushed back against any implication that the tribe’s donations are unduly influential or purposely opaque. “Those need to be corrected,” he said of the reporting discrepancies, “and we need to make sure we’re paying close attention to the reports, but there were no instances of inappropriate donations. There were no accusations of donations that are larger than what is allowed by law. We’re in compliance on the donations.” Regarding the difficulty of accessing reports filed on paper versus electronically, Sneed said that’s an issue that should be dealt with by the Board of Elections. “We don’t make the rules,” he said. “We’re just going by the rules they gave us.” As to whether the tribe’s sizable campaign contributions will be a factor in whether the legislature legalizes sports betting on the
Qualla Boundary, Sneed said there is “no correlation between the two.” “We didn’t make this,” he said. “We’re just participating in a system that was created by the state and federal government. Is that how it should be? No, I would love it if it was a different system, but it is what it is.”
April 10-16, 2019
Hall soon found that question was hard to answer, or at least to answer quickly. In 2017, a new state law went into effect that required any political committee raising or spending more than $10,000 to file its campaign disclosure reports electronically. This makes sifting through even the lengthiest reports relatively easy — the start and end date of each report is clearly labeled, the entries are searchable, and the information is displayed in a uniform and easy-to-scan manner. However, the EBCI is not a political committee. It is a sovereign nation, and it is not subject to the electronic reporting requirement. The tribe mails in paper reports that are then scanned into the Board of Elections website as PDFs. The PDFs are cumbersome, with just two entries per page, and not searchable. In the letter he sent to N.C. Elections Director Kim Strach requesting the investigation, Hall included a list of all campaign contributions the tribe had made between 2013 and 2018, with two columns beside each to indicate whether the contribution was reported by the candidate, the tribe, or both. Hall said it took “many hours” to compile that report. In verifying Hall’s findings on the EBCI’s reported contributions for the 2018 season, The Smoky Mountain News spent two hours going through the data — continuing that process for an additional four years’ worth of data, and then doubling back to check whether each contribution appeared on the legislator’s reports as well, would have required a considerable time investment. Hall found that the tribe had donated a total of $1.3 million spread across more than 400 donations in the six years he analyzed. If the EBCI were a political action committee, he said, it would be one of the state’s three largest, alongside the Duke Energy PAC and the N.C. Realtors PAC. He also found more than two dozen reporting discrepancies — that is, instances in which either the tribe did not report a contribution noted by a candi-
date or a candidate did not report a contribution noted by the tribe. “That’s why I was calling for a complete audit of their activity,” said Hall. “Not that I’m suggesting there is something illegal. It could just be a matter of some clerical errors or some oversight somewhere along the line.” Patrick Gannon, public information officer for the election board, said that state law prohibits him from commenting on whether an investigation resulted from Hall’s letter. Before 2002, the tribe wasn’t allowed to make campaign donations at all. In 1998, the state’s election director ruled that the tribe was barred from making donations due to its status as a corporation. But in 2002, the tribe secured a hearing before the N.C. Board of Elections and argued that it had not used its status as a corporation — it did not file any corporate reports, have a board or corporate directors, or pay federal or state corporate tax. But it is, they told the board, a federally recognized Indian tribe with a governmentto-government relationship with the U.S. As such, it should be allowed to donate. The board agreed with the tribe. In addition to lifting the ban on contributions, the resulting order stated that the tribe is subject to contribution limits — the limit for 2018 was $5,200 per election — and that it “shall not use funds from any business entity they have an ownership interest in, or funds subject to the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act” to make donations.
news
State bills seek to bring sports betting to Cherokee BY HOLLY KAYS STAFF WRITER pair of bills now working their way through the state House and Senate would legalize sports betting on tribal lands, bringing to fruition a possibility that’s been discussed ever since the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on the subject in May 2018. Previous to the court’s 6-3 decision in Murphy v. National Collegiate Athletic Association, sports betting had been prohibited under the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act of 1992. However, the court ruled that the act was illegal under the 10th Amendment, which says that powers not specifically delegated to the federal government are reserved for the states. The act prohibited states from allowing sports betting, which the court ruled conflicted with the constitution. That decision meant that states could decide for themselves if and how to allow sports wagering in their jurisdiction. “The tribe asked me to, and they want to expand their gaming and their wagering operations to include sports betting and include professional and collegiate sports. The Supreme Court said it’s legal, so I told them that I’d be willing to sponsor it,” said Sen. Jim Davis, R-Franklin, who sponsored the Senate version of the bill. Rep. Kevin Corbin, R-Franklin, introduced a similar bill on the House side. “Personally I’m not a gambler. I’m not into all that,” said Corbin. “The thing is it’s legal. The casinos are already there, and this is just something that’s been ruled legal that the tribe wants to take up. They’re in my district and Jim (Davis’) district, so we felt like it was the right thing to do, to give them that opportunity if that’s what they choose to do.” As originally introduced, the bills are identical, and short. They propose adding just three lines of text to the existing statute governing gaming on Indian lands. Those lines add sports wagering to the list of games allowed on tribal land and define sports wagering as “the placing of wagers on the
Smoky Mountain News
April 10-16, 2019
A
“Across the country, attitudes toward gaming have changed, and certainly the Eastern Band has demonstrated over the last 20 years that we have done a good job of running a responsible gaming operation.” — Principal Chief Richard Sneed
Language added to a second version of the Senate bill makes that limitation more explicit and also seeks to allow betting on horse races. The bill expands the definition of sports wagering to stipulate that “the wager shall be deemed to occur where it is initiated and received, all of which must occur on Indian lands within the State lawfully permitted to conduct Class III gaming activities.” Horse race wagering would include fixed odds or pari-mutuel wagering on thoroughbred, harness or other racing of horses, including simulcasting and off-track betting. This type of betting would also be required to occur on-site. The Senate bill was introduced a few days earlier than the House bill — Feb. 27 as
opposed to March 7 — and is a bit further ahead on its quest to become law. It appeared on the calendar for April 9, though any action on the bill occurred after press time. The House bill has been sitting in the Committee on Judiciary since March 11. Rep. Joe Sam Queen, D-Waynesville, is a cosponsor on the House bill and said that, while he wouldn’t favor a blanket authorization of sports betting in North Carolina, he feels that the proposed action is responsible and would benefit the region overall. “I wouldn’t want it opened up everywhere,” he said. “I’m very much in favor of if we do it, let’s do it where we know we’re doing it at an institution that’s responsible, that has a good track record.” Twenty years after welcoming its first guests, Harrah’s Cherokee Casino now has locations in Cherokee and Murphy, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors each year and returning hundreds of millions of dollars in profit to the tribe. A $250 million expansion slated to be complete in 2021 is only expected to increase those metrics. “Across the country, attitudes toward gaming have changed, and certainly the Eastern Band has demonstrated over the last 20 years that we have done a good job of running a responsible gaming operation,” said Sneed.
April 5 & 12 • 4-7 p.m.
If you have limited mobility, contact us about an in-home visit.
Jeffrey W. Norris & Associates, PLLC
828-452-2221
Norris Professional Building 177 North Main St., Waynesville www.norrisandassoc.com www.norriselderservices.com
Sneed said that revenues from sports betting are expected to be relatively small, with data from establishments in Las Vegas indicating it might make up 3 to 5 percent of the revenue. However, he said, it’s something that guests have definitely been asking for and an amenity the casino wants to give them. If the bill passes, sports betting could be up and running at the casino by this summer, said Sneed. It would be a pretty easy offering to add, as no specialized equipment or staff is needed. The odds would come from Las Vegas, with Harrah’s Cherokee essentially acting as a satellite for the Caesar’s Entertainment property there. “We’ve identified some space on those properties (in Murphy and Cherokee) where we could immediately put in a sports betting lounge,” Sneed said. “Basically it would be like a sports bar, but you’d be able to place bets.” The state already receives about $11 million annually from gaming revenues on tribal lands, said Sneed. According to Davis, sports betting is expected to produce about $14 million in revenue and add about $1 million in state taxes. The Senate bill is online at www.ncleg.gov/billlookup/2019/S154, with a link to the House version available at the top of the page.
Fry-Day Night Fish Fry
Estate Planning Estate Administration Trustee Services
The Law Offices of
4
outcome of professional and collegiate sports contests.” The bill would not allow for bets to be placed online — players would have to be on casino property to participate. “A big concern with some of the legislators is will the Eastern Band be able to do sports betting via an app where the player would not have to be on property,” said Principal Chief Richard Sneed. “The short answer to that is no. That is a violation of NIGRA (the National Indian Gaming Regulatory Act).”
Dine-In or Carry Out
10
$
Beer Batter Cod or Fried Shrimp Wisconsin Cheese & Mac Rye Bread or Hushpuppies
St. John's Catholic Church • 234 Church St., Waynesville
A
the vice chief ’s seat, receiving certification in each instance. She has hired Waynesville attorney Rusty McLean to defend her and said that she has ample evidence to show that she in fact did nothing wrong. McCoy believes there is no reason she should lawfully be disqualified from running. “I am appealing and I will follow the election ordinance to do that,” she said.
“In light of the negative view this has brought onto my family and myself and my campaign and this negative light within the community, I want to be afforded the right to defend myself in public before my people.”
DANCE LESSONS
Fun, Quick & Easy to Learn Sign up Now!
Only
$30 with this coupon!
SWING TANGO SALSA • WALTZ • FOXTROT • RUMBA CHA CHA • BALLROOM • LATIN
• 3 Private Lessons • 1 Group Class • 1 Practiced Dance Party • No Experience Needed! • No Partner Required!
Call to book @ 828-316-1344 61 1/2 Main St. (UPSTAIRS) Canton
Taste of Local Ingles in Asheville
— Mary Crowe
follow us facebook.com/smnews
575 New Leicester Hwy. Asheville Thursday, April 18 • 3-6 p.m. Lusty Monk Mustard - Asheville Mimi's Mountain Mixes - Hendersonville Munki Foods (trail mix) - Asheville New Sprout Organic Farm (produce) - Black Mountain Roots Hummus - Asheville Sunshine Sammies (ice cream sandwiches) - Asheville
Smoky Mountain News
Crowe, declined to comment on the facts alleged in her decertification letter but said that “in light of the negative view this has brought onto my family and myself and my campaign and this negative light within the community, I want to be afforded the right to defend myself in public before my people.” The letter alleges that in 2011 Crowe signed a housing agreement that required her to pay $105 monthly to the tribe as an administrative fee, but that she stopped those payments. A December 2016 judgment determined that she owed the tribe $5,015, of which $3,848 is still owed. Because the debt is more than 90 days old, the letter said, she is not qualified to run for office. “I hope that I will be given the opportunity to be put on the ballot and allow my people to decide who they want to be the next principal chief,” Crowe said. The letter to Bradley is similar, alleging that she promised in a 2007 agreement to pay the Qualla Housing Authority $189,000 for a home but is behind $4,500 on her monthly payments. Bradley did not reply to a request for comment. The Smoky Mountain News requested copies of the letters the women sent asking for an appeal but had not received them as of press time.
April 10-16, 2019
BY HOLLY KAYS STAFF WRITER ppeals are underway following the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians Board of Elections’ decision not to certify three candidates to run for election. Mary Crowe and Teresa McCoy, who had filed to run for principal chief, had appeal hearings Tuesday, April 9, though results were not available as of press time. Prospective school board candidate Sharon Bradley has also requested an appeal hearing. According to tribal law, a tribal member can be disqualified from running for office for any of six reasons. Those reasons include having committed a felony, participating in defrauding the tribe, being impeached and removed from office, resigning from a tribal office while under a criminal investigation, being more than 90 days in default of a debt to the tribe or not meeting residency requirements. When denied certification, candidates can appeal to the Board of Elections. If the denial is upheld, the candidate can appeal to the Cherokee Supreme Court. Certification denial letters from the Board of Elections cited being more than 90 days in default of a debt to the tribe as the reason for denying Crowe and Bradley. The letter sent to McCoy, meanwhile, alleged that she had defrauded the tribe and aided, abetted or encouraged another to do so. McCoy’s letter referenced a 1996 trip that she took to the University of Alabama for a Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act consultation. According to the letter, the tribe reimbursed $432 in expenses for McCoy, who at the time was on Tribal Council representing Big Cove. However, the University paid McCoy an additional $1,500 that included a consultation fee, mileage, meals and motel expenses. The letter alleges that McCoy should have diverted the university’s money to the tribe since, “you knew, or should have known, that you were being compensated for your time and the University payment could have helped defray tribally incurred expenses.” The letter does not reference a specific policy or ordinance that would have required McCoy to divert the money. It also states that, following a criminal investigation by the Cherokee Indian Police Department, the U.S. Attorney’s Office in 1999 declined to bring charges and declined once more in 2003. By 2003, the five-year statute of limitations had expired. McCoy retired from Tribal Council in 2017 after having spent 20 years as a member of that body and launched multiple bids for
Dance Tonight Haywood news
Candidates appeal certification decisions in Cherokee
5
news
Maggie at 45: looking forward, looking back BY CORY VAILLANCOURT STAFF WRITER teadfast she stands in a yellow bonnet, wearing the mountain range behind her like a shawl draped upon her blouse of green, one arm clutching the yellow apron atop her red dress and the other outstretched as though waving or beckoning to someone or something unseen off in the distance. The iconic “Miss Maggie” logo is more than just the personification of this quaint mountain village tucked into a narrow Haywood County valley where the Smokies meet the Blue Ridge Mountains. Miss Maggie is a character in her own right — a character amongst characters in place of curious contradiction and constant change, where million-dollar mountaintop homes overlook humble cabins and moonshiners and teetotalers cast trout lines with farmers and Floridians and bikers and bankers and banjo pickers. They’re all part of the never-ending dance between custom and change, between tradition and transition — leaving Miss Maggie to look out and to call out to both her future, and her past.
S
f all the things worthy of celebration, the 45th anniversary of the ratification of a municipal corporation seems a bit mundane, especially when viewed in light of the area’s long, colorful history. For centuries, the Cherokee called Southern Appalachia home, from Alabama and North Georgia through East Tennessee, Central Kentucky, Virginia, upstate South Carolina and Western North Carolina. European explorers like Hernando DeSoto made forays into Western North Carolina as early as the 1530s and were followed by permanent settlers not long after that. The Old Names, as they’re known, were among them and their descendants today still fill the phonebooks — Boyds and Caldwells, Queens and Leatherwoods, along with many others. Mostly untouched by the American Revolution and the Civil War, they persisted in isolated coves and hollers, or fertile bottomlands. During the 1800s, the western edge of Haywood County — just over the mountain from Cherokee — was still an out-of-the-way place, compared to relatively cosmopolitan towns like Canton, Waynesville and far-off Asheville. That didn’t stop some, like Jack Setzer, from calling it home in the 1890s; Setzer is one of the first important characters in the lore of this place, all for the want of a post office. It’s said that Setzer grew tired of the long journey to the area’s post office miles away and so petitioned the federal government for permission to open one. When he finally got the OK in 1904, he was asked to submit three names. Cora and Mettie were rejected as being to 6 similar to other place names, but on May 10,
Smoky Mountain News
April 10-16, 2019
O
The Town of Maggie Valley was incorporated on April 12, 1974. Cory Vaillancourt photo 1904, their sister had her name approved as the name of the settlement. The 14-year-old Maggie Mae Setzer was mortified, and burst into tears. Yes, that iconic town logo was once a real person, perhaps the most important character in the history of the place then called, simply, Maggie. The real Maggie married not long after and lived her life off in Texas, but visited the settlement that bore her name a number of times before she passed away at the age of 88 in 1979. Long before that, though, changes had begun taking place in the valley — or, more accurately, in the mountains that embrace it — that the blonde-haired teenage mountain girl would have never believed if she hadn’t lived to see them with her own blue eyes. he may be 95 years old now, but Alaska Presley still remembers what it was like coming to Maggie Valley in 1955. “Well, it was a little ol’ nothing,” Presley laughed. “It was one straight road, it’s still one straight road. It was not very much inhabited at that time. But the tourists was coming through, and it was still good business in the summertime.” With the creation of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park in 1934 and the Blue Ridge Parkway not long after, nearby Maggie began to see more than just fishermen and through-travelers visiting the area; Presley and her family have been involved in Haywood
S
Ghost Town, 1963.
County’s hospitality industry for decades. “My family has had several hotels. Fact is, my family helped pioneer Maggie Valley,” she said. “There’s about 14 different businesses my family was instrumental in. I could recite them off to you right now but you don’t want to hear all that.” One of those businesses would define the area for decades to come. “R.B. Coburn came into our life. When he first came into this area he put a down payment on a piece of property over in Ratcliff Cove, and somebody told him to come to the Presleys in Maggie, so he came to see us,” Presley said. “We got acquainted with him and then Hubert, my husband, took him over to see uncle Dan Carpenter
who owned that property on the mountain, and he and my husband built Ghost Town.” Ghost Town in the Sky was a wild west-themed amusement park that opened in May 1961 high atop Buck Mountain. Given its name by the young son of legendary Asheville Citizen-Times sportswriter Bob Terrell — who kept shouting out “Ghostie! Ghostie!” as they were discussing what to call it, according to Presley — Ghost Town drew hundreds of thousands of visitors to the area each season, and remains revered among generations of families in the American Southeast even though it’s been closed for several years now. “It brought the people in,” said Presley. “You couldn’t take care of the people, there was so many of them. I stood there at Ghost Town many a time and made more of them mad than anything else, because I couldn’t get them up on the mountain.” Business was booming in the mid-1960s and beginning to outstrip both lodging capacity and local infrastructure; talk about formally incorporating some manner of municipal government began in 1963. “I was for it,” said Presley. “I was for anything to help Maggie Valley. Maggie Valley was just a little hole in the wall, then. It had good people in it. Aggressive people, Good old-timers. They wanted to see something happen here.” Those talks went nowhere, probably because two more legendary Maggie Valley
characters — a couple — had yet to make their appearance.
A
showed that inside the proposed town limits, only 33 people were opposed to the idea, out of about 90 registered voters. On April 3, Messer further pushed the bill with opponents, reassuring them that the N.C. Local Government Commission would monitor the town’s debt levels and intercede if necessary. Meanwhile, the bill passed its second reading in the House, and headed to the Senate April 4. On April 8, Sen. Taylor scheduled a hearing before the Senate’s Calendar Committee for April 9, to let opponents make their final push to derail or delay the effort. With the April 12 adjournment looming, it was beginning to look like they might succeed. Opponents Bill Ewing, Harvey Eure, Jim Rich, Mrs. Jim Plott and Rev. Charles Mehaffey, represented by attorney Ed Thornhill, continued to fight the measure, as proponents Sam McCrary, Mr. and Mrs. Tip
Cory Vaillancourt photo
Hargrove, Tom Ferguson and Clarence W. Fowler, represented by Haywood County Attorney Chip Killian, made rebuttals until 6 p.m. that night. All they succeeded in doing was changing the proposed election date for town officials from June to November, but that was almost enough to run out the clock on the bill. The Calendar Committee put it on the Senate floor the next day, where it was voted up, but the slight change — the elections provision — meant that it would have to go back to the House for a sign-off, presenting yet another opportunity for the bill to die there. It didn’t, and a day after that, on Friday, April 12, 1974, around noon, the Town of Maggie Valley, hewn from half-billion yearold rock by erosion and tectonic machinations, ancestral home to the Cherokee and Horace Kephart’s Southern Highlanders, was willed into existence with a pen in Raleigh. Four years later, the General Assembly authorized Maggie Valley voters to hold an election on whether or not to allow alcohol. It passed, overwhelmingly. “I’m not foolish enough to say it wasn’t about alcohol, because of course it was,”
I
Smoky Mountain News
and extraterritorial zoning powers that would compel those close to town to “dispose of all their cows, chickens and hogs and require them to remove all house trailers from the area.” Messer responded to the alcohol concern by correctly stating that towns needed at least 500 permanent residents to vote to allow for alcohol, and the proposed town of Maggie Valley wasn’t anywhere near that. He also redrew the bill, adding amendments against involuntary annexation and extraterritorial zoning authority. More than 400 people attended the March 30 meeting, held at the old Maggie school and led by Messer and Senator (later, Congressman) Charles Taylor. Of the 33 speakers over three hours, just nine voiced support for the town. Those opposed said they wanted Maggie to stay the way that it was — free, alcoholfree, and debt-free. They worried that once a town was established, it would take over the entire valley. “It will be more big salaries for big bosses,” Grady Henry told the Mountaineer April 1. “The idea is the work of the devil.” Petitions circulated by Joey’s group
n 1977, Canton native Al Matthews was working for Canton Town Manager Bill Stamey when he heard that the Town of Maggie Valley was looking for a full-time town manager instead of continuing to split one with Hazelwood. He applied and got the job he’d spend nearly a quarter of a century in, over the town’s most formative years. “A little bit has changed,” said Matthews. “Initially, it was … let’s call it a little more raucous then it is today. When I came here, there were 13 street lights throughout the entire town, no sidewalks, no sewer.” As Brenda O’Keefe explained, proponents of the town weren’t doing it for the alcohol, but knew they’d need the alcohol revenue to pay for things the town needed just to survive the onslaught of visitors. “One of the first assignments I had within a matter of days of coming here was meeting with groups in Raleigh to get bonds issued for the construction of the sidewalks,” Matthews said. More importantly, as Ghost Town continued to both feed and be fed by the chain of mom-and-pop motels now lining Soco Road, the infrastructure in Maggie — population 202, in 1980 — wasn’t prepared to handle their waste. “It was a necessary thing to do because of the numbers of motels and restaurants and things like that,” said Matthews. “Straightpiping was not very healthy for the creek.” With some critical infrastructural enhancement underway, the town in the form of Matthews began to craft ordinances, one by one, that would refine Maggie Valley’s aesthetic while managing responsibly the growth that was expected. “Of course, name recognition came primarily through Ghost Town, and then spinoffs from that like the Parkway, and the area in general,” he said. “People became enamored of the little village of Maggie Valley.” Some ordinances dealt with the proliferation of signs, or the mobs of transient roadside vendors that showed up seasonally, but the most irritating even above and beyond alcohol — especially to the Old Names — was zoning. “The attitude was, it’s my property and I can do whatever I want to with it,” Matthews said. “It’s my land, and my daddy’s land before me, and you can’t tell me I can’t do this.” Matthews related an incident from early on in his career that illustrates how some locals viewed the comparatively new government. “I hadn’t been here but a couple of months,” Matthews said, “and there was a
April 10-16, 2019
For the last 63 years, Alaska Presley has been an integral part of Maggie Valley’s identity.
Brenda said. “At that time, the money from the liquor store would be what would pay for the town staff and the police department. That would be the value of the ABC store — most of that money would come back to pay for things that we couldn’t otherwise pay for. Joey knew that with alcohol would come the funds to run this town. So when they were saying they weren’t interested in alcohol, that wasn’t true.”
news
n Irish guy from Philly, Joey O’Keefe had always worked in hospitality; while visiting Maggie friends in the mid1960s with his Tybee-born, Miami Beachbred bride Brenda, he decided it would be a good place to set up shop. What followed was 50 years of hash browns and handshakes and pancakes and pleasantries at Joey’s Pancake House, just blocks down from Ghost Town. Joey passed away in 2001 and Brenda sold the place in 2018, but its new owners haven’t changed a thing, down to the sign out front and the paper menus and with Joey’s cartoon face on them. Together, Brenda and Joey left an indelible imprint on the valley, but it wasn’t just about the Belgian waffles — by the early 1970s, they were engaged in helping to create a community, over coffee. “They started talking about it because we didn’t have any funds to do anything — build sidewalks, have regular police protection, fire hydrants,” Brenda said. “To get the things that becoming a town made available, we just couldn’t do it.” Brenda dug up old land deeds, while Joey headed off to the UNC Institute (now School) of Government in Chapel Hill, where he researched the possibility of municipal incorporation. “He realized that if we were incorporated we would be on the list of people to get road funds, sidewalks, all those little things,” Brenda said. “So we drew a line down Maggie Valley, this little short area here from Ghost Town to Maggie Mountaineer Crafts. That was the corporate limits. We told people in business, ‘This is going to benefit you.’” The proposed town of Maggie Valley was about 13,000 feet long and less than a quarter mile wide and clung tight to the sides of U.S. 19, but for some, especially among the Old Names, incorporation was a sinister encroachment on their ancient way of life, in more ways than one. “A lot of people were against it, the churches, because of the alcohol,” said Brenda. “We tried to reassure people that that wasn’t our goal. We weren’t promoting the alcohol part, we were promoting the town part.” At the time, in no county, city or town west of Asheville could one find alcohol sold. Legally. In early 1974, Joey presented Rep. Ernest Messer, D-Canton, with a petition asking for incorporation. On March 20, Messer, along with House Speaker Liston Ramsey, of Madison County, introduced the bill. Over the course of the next three weeks, coverage in the Waynesville Mountaineer showcased the controversy almost daily, on the front page. The General Assembly’s deadline for the filing of local bills had already passed, but Messer convinced the House to suspend the rules to allow for filing. The town was to be chartered without a popular referendum, because a large percentage of homeowners lived out of state and couldn’t vote. With the legislative session slated to end
April 12, time would be of the essence, especially since the bill would have to make it through various House and Senate committees and be read twice in each chamber before a vote could be taken. On March 22, a public hearing was announced for March 30 but on March 28, Joey held a private meeting, including a long phone call with Messer, telling him that residents wanted incorporation in order to support planned and orderly growth, property value protection and a general increase in services. The next day, the Mountaineer headline announced that the legislative bill wouldn’t be going anywhere in the General Assembly until after the April 1 public hearing. In the story, Messer said he’d learned that most opposition came from outside the town, and, aside from alcohol, for two primary reasons — involuntary annexation that would force the unwilling into the town,
S EE MAGGIE, PAGE 8 7
MAGGIE, CONTINUED FROM 7
Smoky Mountain News
April 10-16, 2019
news
guy who had one of those names. He owned some piece of property.” Matthews had to explain to the man that what he was doing on his land wasn’t permitted. “You’re nothing but an import,” he snapped at Matthews. “Man,” Matthews replied. “I’ve come from just 18 miles away!” “But you’re still a [expletive] import,” the man told him. “You put one foot on my property, and 12 good men will decide my fate.” Matthews had the fortune to encounter many of the latter-day characters and controversies that swirled about the booming young town through the 1980s. “You could say it was a little more rough-and-tumble in the early years,” he said. “The first Harley rally, that was quite controversial. People didn’t want them. Some of the business owners closed their businesses, some of them were afraid. Before the rally, I talked to a police captain in Myrtle Beach, and he said he’d rather have the Harley rally than the Shriners, because they were less trouble. Yes, there were complaints and yes, there were problems, but they were handled.” Handled — by the town’s first police chief. “I. C. Sutton had a unique way about him,” said Matthews, adding that like fictional N.C. small-town Sheriff Andy Taylor, Sutton would often leave his firearm behind, in favor of diplomacy. Matthews also recalls an instance in which he, Sutton, and the town’s other police officer were standing outside an establishment where a large fight was taking place. The officer unholstered his weapon and prepared to raise it to the door when Sutton laid his arm across the officer’s chest. “Whoa, son,” Sutton told him. “It’s easier to whip the winners than it is all of ‘em.” The town continued to grow through annexations, eventually extending another mile east down Soco Road, to total 3.6 miles, end to end, and the sewer system really took shape under Maggie Valley’s second mayor. “Jim Miller,” Matthews recalled. “He owned the Soco Garden Zoo. Only mayor in North Carolina that milked rattlesnakes for a living.” The town also acquired the old Maggie school thanks to an anonymous donor who financed the purchase with very attractive terms. Today it’s town hall, but back then, it was also the police department, where Matthews said he’d run into another legendary Maggie Valley character from time to time. “I knew Popcorn Sutton for years and years and years, and you could either make up your mind to get along with him or not,” said Matthews of the convicted moonshiner. “And he didn’t care.” Once, during the Christmas season, Popcorn entered the back door of the police station, approached a small Christmas tree perched atop a table, and began clipping $100 bills to it, like festive ornaments. “Corn,” Matthews said. “You can’t do 8 that, son.”
“[Joey] realized that if we were incorporated we would be on the list of people to get road funds, sidewalks, all those little things. So we drew a line down Maggie Valley, this little short area here from Ghost Town to Maggie Mountaineer Crafts. That was the corporate limits. We told people in business, ‘This is going to benefit you.’” — Brenda O’Keefe
“By God, I can give money to my friends if I want to!” Popcorn growled. “No, you can’t do it here little pal,” said Matthews. “I’m sorry.” Popcorn stormed out, bunches of crumpled hundreds in his hands. Of course, no discussion about the characters of Maggie Valley would be complete without mentioning storied banjo player Raymond Fairchild, who recently turned 80 and can still be seen performing around the valley today. After Matthews left Maggie Valley to return to Canton in 2001, he hired Fairchild to perform some stonework at the town’s pool. Fairchild, as Matthews tells it, spent the day pointing at rocks and at pointing at laborers, but performing no actual physical work. “Raymond,” Matthews said. “Ain’t you gonna do anything?” “I don’t want to hurt my pickin’ fingers,” Fairchild grumbled. Looking back on it all, Matthews thinks that Fairchild is a fair example of the Maggie Valley ethos. “He’s a unique individual,” said Matthews. “You can sum up a lot of the people around here that way. They are their own people, they have their own core values, and they stick to them.”
lmost 115 years after Maggie Mae Setzer lent her name to a post office and almost exactly 45 years after a pancake baron, an amusement park owner and a host of local businesspeople banded together to engage in this experiment of local self-determination, none of the concerns raised by opponents seems to have materialized. Maggie has not, as was noted in a newspaper headline of the time, “gone to Hell in a handbasket” because of alcohol. The creation of a universal development ordinance — to replace and refine longstanding zoning standards — is well underway and should be complete this year. The town’s corporate limits still haven’t swelled much past Soco Road on either side. Property taxes have traditionally been the lowest, or among the lowest, of any municipal government in Haywood County. The town itself — population 1,150 in 2010 — has less than $95,000 in debt against a yearly general fund budget of $2.4 million, and town aldermen could decide to pay it off altogether in the 2019-20 fiscal year’s budget, due to be passed by July 1. The town also has a fund balance — think of it as a government’s savings account — of $2.7 million, which means that in case of emergency, operations and services could
A
continue for more than a year without additional revenue being needed. Objectively, the town’s been managed in exceptional fashion, thanks not only to Al Matthews and elected boards of the last 45 years, but also to two Matthews protégées, longtime Town Clerk Vickie Best and Town Manager Nathan Clark. “Vickie has an extreme amount of knowledge,” Matthews said. “You ask her, and she’s got it. And Nathan. Sit down with Nathan, and you’ll find out he’s one of the sharpest guys around. The town is extremely fortunate to have the boy, they really are.” All that took place even as Ghost Town began its long slow slide toward sputtering fits and starts and sales and auctions and a general decline that hit the local economy hard during the Great Recession. Alaska Presley reacquired the park a few years ago. “At the time, I never dreamed about owning it myself, but then later on as years passed, why, it just sort of come handy, and I ended up a-buyin’ it,” said Presley. She’s been looking for a buyer herself, and has entertained several offers, the most recent of which fell through at the last minute, last winter. Even if a rumored current attempt is successful, today Ghost Town would merely be an addition — albeit a welcome one — to Maggie Valley, instead the definition of it, as in years past. “Everybody bases everything on Ghost Town,” said Brenda O’Keefe. “I don’t. I have tried to say, ‘People, this is not about Ghost Town anymore. This is 50 or 60 years later. We have the National Park, we have the Smoky Mountains, we have the Blue Ridge Parkway.’ That’s what Maggie Valley is really about. We have the Appalachian culture, clean streams and rivers and we’re the closest mountain range to Florida. That’s why people are coming here.” Matthews thinks that means even more growth for Maggie Valley over the next 45 years. “It will grow down towards Dellwood, and down Jonathan Creek, and up Soco. I see a growth pattern there that’s continuing in the same vein,” he said. “More and more, people are finding scenic tourism, heritage tourism, agritourism — all these various and sundry buzzwords on tourism that have always been here and always appealed to people but have never had a name stuck to them. That will continue to grow, and I think the town is continuing to foster growth and protect what they have.” Miss Maggie at middle age? Maybe. Indeed, 45 years is but the blink of an eye in ancient Appalachia, but as the personification of a municipal government with some strong years under her belt, Miss Maggie’s eyes are fixed not only on the next 45 but also on the first 450. Maggie Valley’s most important character thinks most important Maggie Valley’s character. “We have maintained it, and that’s one of the things we have always said. We don’t want to be a Gatlinburg,” said Matthews. “That was not our mission or goal. We wanted to be the unique little mountain valley community with a nice mix of businesses and residences that could all get along.”
T
Sunday, April 21 · 11:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Easter Buffet Soup: Shrimp Bisque Cold Items: Assorted Deviled Eggs • Peel & Eat Shrimp Fresh Fruit with Imported & Domestic Cheeses Tri-Colored Fusilli Pasta with Surimi Crabmeat Mixed Greens Salad Bar with Assorted Toppings & Dressings Carving Station: Slow Roasted Round of Beef au Jus Smithfield Spiral Ham with Organic Honey & Orange Marmalade Glaze Hot Items: Atlantic Haddock with Crabmeat & Meyer Lemon Beurre Blanc Marinated Grilled Chicken with Lemon & Fresh Herbs Fresh Asparagus Polonaise • Bacon Macaroni & Cheese Green Beans with Onions & Applewood Bacon • Rolls & Butter Desserts: Chocolate Dipped Strawberries • Berry Cobbler Assorted Cakes & Pies • Chef ’s Selection of Miniature Desserts A service charge of 18% will be automatically applied to parties of 6 or more Adults $32.95 ~ Young-at-Heart (70+) $26.95* Children 6-12 $15.95 *Additional discounts do not apply to Young-at-Heart Price All prices include coffee, tea, water or fountain drinks.
Reservations Required
176 COUNTRY CLUB DRIVE, WAYNESVILLE, NC 828.456.3551
Comfortable Lake Junaluska Home 570 COUNTY RD. WAYNESVILLE • Well maintained • 3 Bedrooms / 2 Baths • 2213 Square Feet • Full unfinished Basement • 2-car Basement Garage • Formal Living Room w/Fireplace • Sunroom off Dining Room • City Water / Sewer • All Lake amenities
April 10-16, 2019
OFFERED AT $299,500 MLS#3478865
Phyllis Robinson
Smoky Mountain News
had by and large already been examined by the DOT and found unworkable. However, Joyell said the March 21 meeting yielded some potential for areas to explore. “Coming out of last week’s meeting, our team has a clear idea of what concepts are worth further investigation and which ones have been adequately addressed,” he said March 26. “We’ll use the month between this meeting and our next community meeting April 17 to finalize our recommendations. We will make some landscaping/beautificaBY HOLLY KAYS tion recommendations, as well.” STAFF WRITER According to draft minutes from the he Asheville Design Center will present its findings on alternatives to the current town, Joyell presented eight suggestions that plan for N.C. 107 in Sylva during a com- he’d received from public input, as well as munity meeting 5:30 to 7 p.m. Wednesday, information on the feasibility of each. Joyell April 17, at the Jackson County Public Library. said that the ADC would look into some of The process has been going on since the areas of concern further to see if they August, when the ADC offered its services fol- could be used to lessen the project’s impact lowing a standing-room-only town meeting — those locations included the intersections Aug. 6 in which residents expressed over- with N.C. 107 and Jim Sellers Road, Cope whelming opposition to the N.C. Department Creek Road and Chipper Curve of Transportation’s preliminary plans for 107. Road/Municipal Drive — but consultation with the DOT had disqualified the remaining suggestions as potential solutions. Perhaps the most widely discussed suggestions were a proposal to make N.C. 107 one-way and build a parallel road going the opposite way, and alternative designs to the U.S. 23/N.C. 107 intersection — both an overpass and a roundabout had been suggested for the location. Joyell told the town board that topography along N.C. 107 would make the parallel road concept impossible due to the cost of acquiring land and moving earth. It would be administratively difficult as well, requiring an entirely new environmental assessment for the project and a renewed application for funding, with the town bearing a much higher portion of the cost than for the plan as proposed. Those steps could push the redesign an additional five to seven years down the road. DOT said building an overpass at 23/107 would also require a large amount of land acquisiAsheville Design Center Director Chris Joyell, left, talks to tion, and therefore more funding, community members during a Jan. 14 meeting. Holly Kays photo and that a roundabout would not carry the necessary traffic volume. The timeline for the road project has been Since then, the ADC has assembled a team of volunteer planners and traffic engi- moved back considerably since its inception, neers to examine the issue and held multiple due to the extensive right-of-way planning meetings with various stakeholders to gather that will be required. When the project was input and vet ideas. During a Jan. 14 forum, announced in 2017, right-of-way acquisition members of the public shared their concerns was set to begin in 2019 with construction and suggestions about the plan, which the slated for 2021 to 2023. The current plan is ADC then studied in order to develop poten- for right-of-way to begin in 2020 and contial solutions. On Feb. 18, the group met with struction in December 2022. The road project has proven highly conutilities involved with the project to get their input and held a joint meeting March 21 with troversial due to the high impact it’s expected to have on local businesses. According to 25 the Town of Sylva. Following receipt of DOT’s responses to percent plans released last year, 54 businessthe ADC’s suggestions based on the Jan. 14 es, one nonprofit and five residences would meeting, Joyell was candid that a silver bullet need to be relocated. Those plans are prelimmay well be elusive. The ideas residents put inary, however. Updated plans that include forth to lessen the extensive impact the road utilities and are considered 65 percent comproject is expected to have on local businesses plete are expected in June.
news
Asheville Design Center to present recommendations for N.C. 107
OWNER/BROKER
828.712.5578
lakeshore@lakejunaluska.com
91 N. Lakeshore Dr. • Lake Junaluska 828.456.4070 • LakeshoreRealtyNC.com Conveniently located in the Bethea Welcome Center
9
news
Jackson jail death caused by hanging, autopsy says An autopsy has been completed on a woman who died in county custody Jan. 18. File photo
WHO: The Brothers Gillespie WHAT: "Love & Death" album release party WHEN: 9 p.m. Friday, April 12 WHERE: The Gem downstairs taproom Boojum Brewing Company, Waynesville BY HOLLY KAYS STAFF WRITER anging was the cause of death for a woman who died Jan. 18 while in custody of the Jackson County Sheriff ’s Department, according to documents provided by the N.C. Office of the Chief Medical Examiner. Melissa Middleton Rice, 49, was found hanging by a phone cord in the Jackson County Detention Center Jan. 16, the autopsy said, prior to the 7:10 p.m. 911 call in which a detention officer told dispatch that an inmate had collapsed and was not responding. Rice was taken to Harris Regional Hospital in Sylva and then transferred to Mission Hospital in Asheville for further evaluation. Her family was told that the injuries were “non-survivable,” and she was made do not resuscitate, the medical examiner’s report of investigation said. Rice was pronounced dead at 1:05 p.m. Jan. 18. The day that she hung herself, Rice was arrested for trespassing at her ex-husband’s home in Cashiers. Following a 9:09 a.m. 911 call, an officer was dispatched to the scene and arrested Rice on 10 charges. The charges included breaking and entering, simple assault, larceny of a motor vehicle, burning personal property and assault on a government official, among others. She was booked at 1:32 p.m. According to the medical examiner’s report of investigation, Rice was taken to the emergency room for evaluation and treatment of a hand injury. Afterward, she was taken to the attorney/booking room in the detention center. It was while she was there, waiting for the magistrate, that she hanged herself with a phone cord, just outside clear range of the monitoring camera, the report said. By the time she was found, the report said, “she had probably severe anoxic brain injury with organ dysfunction of the respiratory, renal, neurological, immune, heme and GI systems.” Jackson County Sheriff Chip Hall said he
Smoky Mountain News
April 10-16, 2019
H
10
Hailing from Haywood County, The Brothers Gillespie are an up-and-coming Americana/indie act. With its debut fulllength album, "Love & Death," the band will be hosting a one night only release party, which will include special musical guests amid an evening of live music and libation.
presented by
could not comment on the documents because Rice’s death is under investigation by the State Bureau of Investigation. Hall had requested the investigation, something that SBI Special Agent Kelly Oaks said in a January interview is typical when a person is injured or dies in custody. “It’s an open investigation. I wouldn’t have a comment. It would be improper for me to comment on it,” said Hall. Anjanette Grube, public information director for the SBI, said that the bureau has completed its investigation, which now goes to District Attorney Ashley Welch, who will determine whether any criminal charges should result from the incident. State law mandates that detention officers lay eyes on inmates at least twice per hour, with four checks per hour required for inmates who are suicidal, mentally ill, intoxicated, violent or displaying erratic behavior. According to the report of investigation, Rice’s medical history did not include alcoholism, substance abuse, depression, smoking or seizure disorder. While events show that she was suicidal, it’s unknown whether she was displaying signs of that condition that would have triggered the more frequent checks. Hall said department policy is that inmates must be accompanied by an officer if they’re being moved from one facility to another, but that if they’re contained in, for example, a magistrate’s office, the twice-perhour observation rule would apply. Jail logs obtained by The Smoky Mountain News in February showed that detention officers did check the pods and booking area twice per hour during the time Rice was in custody. Rice’s death marked the third suicide in five years to occur in the Jackson County Detention Center. Charles “Chuckie” Moose died on Nov. 21, 2014, and Steve Ross died on March 13, 2015. In those instances, visual checks were not performed as required by law, with gaps as large as 106 minutes. The SBI investigated Ross’s death, though not Moose’s, and Welch declined to file charges.
Death by Distribution Drug dealers could be charged with murder BY J ESSI STONE N EWS E DITOR rug dealers in North Carolina could face more prison time for selling someone a deadly dose of narcotics if newly proposed legislation becomes law. If enacted, House Bill 474, Death by Distribution Act — introduced by Rep. Dean Arp, R-Union, March 29 — would make it easier for prosecutors to hold dealers and distributors responsible for an overdose death without having to prove malice. This type of murder conviction could result in a three to 23-year prison sentence depending on the person’s criminal record. District Attorney Ashley Welch, who represents the seven most western counties, supports the bill and served on the committee that helped draft the legislation. “We’re trying to help the people so addict-
D
ed to drugs that they can’t help themselves,” Welch said. “The James Dodsons of the world are peddling this poison knowing addicts can’t resist it. I think there needs to be a punishment for that.”
See full report at www.drugpolicy.org. Source: Drug Policy Alliance
MURDER CONVICTION The James Dotson conviction in Haywood County last December is what caught the attention of other prosecutors in the state and what landed Welch on the special committee to draft the bill. In a rare occurrence, Welch’s prosecution team was able to show malice to proceed with the second-degree murder charge against Dotson. He ended up taking an Alford plea and was sentenced to 25 to 31 years in prison after accepting responsibility in the death of 20-yearold Haywood County woman Danielle Ashe. Dotson was involved in selling an opiate laced with fentanyl to Ashe, which caused her to overdose. A second-degree murder conviction for these types of cases is hard to come by for prosecutors battling the opioid epidemic because the charge comes with the burden of proving malice. “Right now we could charge dealers with manslaughter — which has no malice element — but they could just get out on probation,” Welch said. “We know we’re not going to stop the drug trade but I think dealers need
to have a more serious deterrent. They do it knowing they might get caught but the consequences aren’t enough. For selling and delivering they may do a couple years, but if they realize they could catch a serious charge they might think twice.” Welch said passing the Death by Distribution Act would also give the families of overdose victims a sense of justice. It’s a tragedy she and law enforcement officers have seen time and time again — a young per-
son’s life cut short because of addiction. “Within a month a few years ago we saw a series of overdoses of young people — one was this young lady in Haywood,” she said. “I met with her parents and they were just broken. Their daughter had just gotten out of rehab and the same day she overdosed. They’d done everything right as parents. (Danielle) was going places. This could have
S EE DISTRIBUTION, PAGE 12
HealthPATH SMOKY MOUNTAIN NEWS
Specializing in Pediatric Dentistry Teens for Infants, Kids, Special Needs & Te
Orthodontic Specialists Teens & Adults for Kids, Te
ROCKCLIFF IS YOUR PLACE FOR EXPERT ORAL & DENTAL IMPLANT SURGERY
Dr. Warburton Waynesville
Dr. Burgon Waynesville
Dr. Consky Sylva
37 Crestview Heights, Sylva • 828-354-0307 50 A Bowman Drive, Waynesville • 828-564-2510
Now Accepting New Patients
A trusted guide makes all the difference. Care Navigation Home Care Palliative Care Hospice Care Bereavement Support Clinical Research
Four Seasons helps you and your loved ones ficult navigate diffi care options.
Call to learn more. (866) 466.9734
Franklin Location Opening May 2019! Haywood County’s only Doctors of Audiology Serving WNC for 30 years.
Working to improve the health status of Haywood County, its individuals and families. Educational Programs • Grants • Scholarships Leadership Opportunities
haywoodhealthcarefoundation.org
Diagnostics, hearing aids, cochlear implants, tinnitus, rehabilitation, custom molds, hearing protection. In network with most major insurers
Smoky Mountain News
Drs. Chambers, Baechtold, Haldeman, Pratt, Chambers, Hogue, Blackman & Chadwick Asheville 828-274-9220 Asheville 828-274-8822 Waynesville 828-407-4034 Waynesville 828-454-9156 Sylva 828-586-9333 Sylva 828-586-9333 BeGreatDental.com Reynolds Mountain 828-785-5825
April 10-16, 2019
Now Accepting New Patients!
Leslie Gant, AuD • Founder | Erika Hendrickson, AuD Alex Snyder, AuD | Emma Maxwell, MA • Owner/Manager Patient Care Coordinators: Tammy Carter & Lauren McMullen
828.627.1950 | www.mtnaudio.com In Haywood Professional Park near Coffee Cup Café On Facebook @MountainAudiology 11
news
DISTRIBUTION, CONTINUED FROM 11 been anybody’s daughter.” While it was too late to save Ashe’s life, Welch said she didn’t want to see more parents have to go through what she’s seen so many other struggle through. Trying to prosecute drug dealers is a constant frustration for law enforcement officers and prosecutors who watch the same distributors cycling in and out of the system only to be released back into the community where they continue to sell drugs. “I told those parents I’d push to get a new law passed making it easier to charge dealers with second degree murder,” she said. “Dotson pled to murder but we had to show malice and that’s hard to show and it’s very rare.”
SUPPORT FROM SHERIFFS
April 10-16, 2019
Law enforcement in the region are also in favor of the measure, which was first included in the Heroin & Opioid Prevention & Enforcement (HOPE) Act but taken out before the act became law last year. “If this legislation was already in place I know it could have led to to the arrests and prosecution of individuals in Macon County who have played a significant role in the death of sons and daughters in our community,” said Macon County Sheriff Robert Holland. “This legislation would go a long way in allowing us to prosecute and hold accountable those people who are putting the poison into our community.” Many rural jails, including the Macon County Detention Center, are already experi-
encing issues with overcrowding as pretrial inmates are having to wait months and even years to get their case heard in court. They’re also having a problem making space for an increased amount of female inmates there on myriad drug charges. Haywood County Sheriff Greg Christopher has taken a multi-pronged approach to dealing with the drug crisis and high recidivism rates that includes having peer specialists working with inmates inside the jail and taking part in the LEAD (Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion) program to get people the addiction and mental health services they need before they end up in jail. However, Christopher still believes in sending people a clear message that drug dealing will not be tolerated. “I support the message our District Attorney’s office is sending, that there needs to be stronger accountability for those who are profiting from selling a product that is destroying lives and families every day,” he said. “We are fully aware the topic of addiction/addiction-related crimes have many layers and it needs to be addressed with a multifaceted approach.”
COALITION OPPOSITION Despite backing from law enforcement and apparent bipartisan support in the state legislature, some in the addiction and recovery community see the bill as counterproductive to understanding addiction and the underlying causes of why people take or sell drugs. The North Carolina Harm Reduction Coalition, a nonprofit that has done quite a
bit of work in Western North Carolina over the last year, has taken a stance against the Death by Distribution Act and similar laws passed in other states. The coalition works to educate the public about addiction and harm reduction methods like clean needle and syringe exchange programs, Naloxone and overdose prevention and opioid substitution therapies like Suboxone. The coalition also is a huge proponent of the LEAD program to allow law enforcement to redirect low-level offenders engaged in drug or sex work activity to community-based programs and services, instead of jail and prosecution. Haywood County law enforcement is already utilizing the LEAD program thanks to a state grant and a director position through the NC Harm Reduction Coalition. Virgil Hayes, advocacy and program manager for the coalition, said the Death by Distribution Act is just a knee-jerk reaction to what the coalition considers a serious public health issue. While he understands the pain and heartbreak associated with losing a family member to an overdose, Hayes says this kind of legislation hasn’t been shown to be effective. “Usually legislation like this is drafted because a number of grieving parents understandingly are hurt by losing a loved one to an overdose. In your grief and pain it’s easy to want to cast blame on someone who distributed those drugs,” he said. “But we have a number of parents advocating with us who said immediately following the death of their loved one they would have supported the bill but after thinking about it, ultimately they came to the conclusion that if they didn’t get
it from this person they would have gotten it from someone else.” Prosecutors and law enforcement hope harsher penalties will deter people from trafficking opioids and other deadly drugs, but Hayes says there’s no evidence to support that claim — not even from the 20 other states who’ve enacted similar drug-induced homicide laws. “In North Carolina we have to ask ourselves, ‘are we committed to reforming our criminal justice system or are we going to reignite and further exacerbate the issues in our criminal justice system,” Hayes said. Sheriff Christopher said he cannot foresee this legislation heavily affecting the jail population, which he and Capt. Glen Matayabas actively monitor to keep numbers at a manageable and safe level. “Our office, now more than ever before, is actively engaged in various community partnerships that have the goal of finding solutions to the issues involving drug addiction,” Christopher said. “We have peer support specialists working in our jail full-time to help guide those who are battling addiction issues toward a plan for re-entry when they are released. Our county is also part of an innovative pre-trial reform program which, so far, has yielded positive results reducing our inmate population.” Hayes says it would impact the overall jail and prison populations in the state, and more importantly, wouldn’t do much to rehabilitate people or prepare them for life once they are released. A serious felony murder conviction on someone’s record will make it more
A Year from the Naturalist’s Corner VOLUME 1
————————————————————————————————————————————————
Smoky Mountain News columnist
Smoky Mountain News
Don Hendershot’s first collection of columns “Whether in the field observing the natural world directly — with exceptionally sharp eyes — or at his desk recording experiences in the easygoing informative manner readers of his weekly Naturalist's Corner columns have learned to anticipate, Don Hendershot is the real deal. This selection of his columns in book form is long overdue.”
A Year from the Naturalist’s Corner VOLUME 1
DON HENDERSHOT FOREWORD BY THOMAS RAIN CROWE
— George Ellison, naturalist and author
Available at Blue Ridge Books 428 HAZELWOOD AVE. WAYNESVILLE
828.456.6000 · BLUERIDGEBOOKSNC.COM ————————————————————————————————————————————————
P U B L I S H E D B Y T H E S M O K Y M O U N TA I N N E W S 12
Time to cleanse! $99 for a 2 week cleanse designed specifically for your body! NOW-APRIL 15 Work one on one with an Ayurveda Health Coach to remove excess toxins and prepare the body for spring.
828.944.0288 | MaggieValleyWellness.com 461 MOODY FARM ROAD, MAGGIE VALLEY
news April 10-16, 2019 Smoky Mountain News
t difficult for that person to find a job, housing and other resources when they are released, e which makes them more likely to begin sell- ing drugs again to be able to survive. t “How do we get this person rehabilitated t and transition them back to society so they s don’t become a burden in the community - again?” Hayes said. “Prison is not the best place for people with drug addiction. Then when they get out they have a high felony r classification with murder attached to it. If want people to pull themselves up by their n bootstraps we really have to provide them with the resources to do so.” e There are also questions about how the - Death by Distribution Act could impact the s Good Samaritan Law that allows people to - call 911 in the case of an overdose without fear of being charged with a drug crime. s Welch said the proposed legislation wouldn’t negate the Good Samaritan law, but Hayes - thinks the proposed law could deter people from calling 911 in the event of an overdose - emergency. The language in the bill states the purpose is to hold “illegal drug dealers” s accountable, but drug dealer is not defined. e Without a more detailed definition, Hayes said - the concern is that a fellow addict — maybe a friend or a family member of the victim — r could be charged with second-degree murder. “This legislation is very black and white l and drug addiction is not black and white,” e Hayes said. - Welch said she probably wouldn’t choose y to prosecute a case where it was a friend or family member that distributed a drug to a loved e one that caused a deadly overdose. Those aren’t the people she’s after — she’s looking to get the big-time dealers off the street. “It will be up to the DAs to decide which cases to prosecute,” she said. Furthermore, Hayes has heard many law enforcement officers say that “we can’t arrest our way out of the drug epidemic,” yet that’s exactly what this bill aims to do. Until the state is willing to tackle the deeper issues like affordable housing, a living wage and Medicaid expansion, he said people will continue to take desperate measures to make ends meet. “Drug distribution is similar to drug addict and if we don’t address the underlying issues we’re going to be hard pressed to solve the problem.” The NC Harm Reduction Coalition has been advocating in Raleigh and trying to explain to legislators why this law would do more harm than good. From what he’s seen, legislators are in favor of it and are entrusting the DAs in their district to use the law in the manner it is intended. The proposed legislation has not yet come to a vote in the General Assembly, and Hayes encourages residents to reach out to their representatives to share their opinions about the bill. “If this bill does pass, we’re going to look back on this and come to the conclusion that maybe we should have taken a different route,” he said. “And it’s a mistake that has come at the expense of people’s lives and families. We want to make sure we’re taking an approach to the issue that’s evidence and research based.” To view the entire bill, visit www.ncleg.gov/Sessions/2019/Bills/House/ PDF/H474v1.pdf.
13
news
Haywood remains poised for more landslides BY CORY VAILLANCOURT STAFF WRITER orking in municipal government, one often encounters geographic challenges that exist in some areas, but not in others. “I come from Burke County, and there is some mountainous terrain there, but of course it’s nothing like here,” said Haywood Emergency Management Director Greg Shuping. “It’s not a secret that we’re probably going to be more prone to landslide hazards than others.” Western North Carolina has seen a slew of slides over the past three months — including a high-profile incident on Interstate 40 that briefly closed the highway and made national news — but more than a few of those took place in other locations around Haywood County, including in Waynesville. Waynesville’s Town Manager Rob Hites, who’s enjoyed a long career mostly down east, said he’d never really had to deal with the phenomenon until he came to work in the highest elevation county east of the Mississippi River. “I found out the most feared thing a transportation engineer can deal with in the western part of the state is a landslide, whether it be rock or soil,” said Hites. “What happens is, the soil gets so super-saturated that it slides off the rock shelf it resides on, and if the city has built a road where the slope beside the
Smoky Mountain News
April 10-16, 2019
W
14
road is less than a 45 degree angle, it naturally slides. That’s just the way physics works.” Heavy rains so far this year have left soils saturated for long periods of time, meaning that conditions have been ripe for landslides; data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration show that the first quarter of 2019 was exceptionally damp for Haywood County. In January, the county saw precipitation of between 6 and 8 inches, up to 150 percent of historic totals. February was even worse, with 8 to 15 inches of precipitation coming in at 150 to 300 percent of average. March was more in line with traditional expectations, but still at about 110 percent of normal. Through April 9, Haywood’s already received about two-thirds of the precipitation it should receive for the entire month, just as WNC enters the rainiest part of the year through September. “It was just an influx of rain, which is not unprecedented here in the mountains,” Shuping said. “It caused and triggered some landslides. I don’t remember how many we had, but they were all about the county. The one on Paradise Lane was the one we focused on quite a bit, because for a time it isolated the residents that were living on the other side of it.” Other slides, Shuping said, didn’t directly impact people travelling to or from work. Haywood’s not totally helpless, though; in
An aerial photo shows a landslide in Waynesville just off U.S. 74. A Shot Above WNC photo a county where this sort of thing happens a few times a year, Shuping’s department has a number of resources at its disposal. “We are blessed here with our own internal erosion control specialists at the county level, and that’s unique because of our volume of landslide activity,” he said. “Other counties have to lean exclusively on the North Carolina Geological Survey. I can go meet with [Haywood’s specialists] on a daily basis if I want to, and learn about the geology of the county and how it affects emergency response. That’s a huge blessing that not everybody has.” Another thing that not everybody has — in fact, almost nobody has — is a plan to respond to landslides. “What we created was a landslide response plan for Haywood County. As emergency management we do try to plan ahead, and we do try to predict the things we can control — what do we do if and when the conditions are ripe for landslides? What we learned was, there are trigger points to determine if the likelihood is high for a landslide,” said Shuping. “For example, 4 inches of rain in a 24 hour period — we’ve learned that that’s a trigger.” Landslide response plans are so rare that
Shuping said he had trouble even finding an example of one. “Like all good planners, we tried to find a plan to kind of mirror ours after, because we don’t want to start with nothing,” he said. “Guess what we found? Nobody has one. I even contacted Ventura County, California, because of the La Conchita landslide years ago, and they didn’t even have one.” The La Conchita slide killed 10 people in 2005, after a 1995 slide caused major property damage on the same site. “We kind of broke the mold there,” said Shuping of the plan’s creation. “I wouldn’t call it real high-falootin’ or comprehensive, but man, it works great for us.” That, combined with soil map layers in the county’s GIS system, allow emergency responders to be prepared; the plan outlines each agency’s role — from law enforcement to fire suppression to erosion control and paramedics. “When we see heavy rain, we can look at soil layers and disturbed areas and historical landslides from a GIS perspective and we can at least know that those are the high likelihood areas,” he said. “Now, that doesn’t mean it’s going to happen, but does give us a point to start with.”
Waynesville comprehensive planning sessions continue
Engineering over the past several months to perform that public-driven update. This month, there will be three drop-in sessions where people can see what they’ve been up to, and weigh in on the final plan. The sessions are on Thursday, April 11, from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. at the Waynesville Recreation Center, 550 Vance Ave., Waynesville; Tuesday, April 16, from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. at Waynesville Fire Station #1, 1022 North Main St., Waynesville; and Thursday, April 25, from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. at the Folkmoot Center, 112 Virginia Avenue, Hazelwood. To learn more, contact the Waynesville Development Services Department at 828.456.8647 or visit waynesvillenc.gov/ comprehensive-plan-update.
The Town of Waynesville is again asking citizens to contribute their thoughts and ideas on the town’s comprehensive plan overhaul. Most towns in North Carolina have such a document, which is intended to guide community development and growth over a period of about 20 years; Waynesville’s was created around the turn of the century, and is due for an update. Town development services personnel have been working in conjunction with Stewart
O
BILL LY Y CASE
Awarded Aw
CCIM Designatiion
Certified Commercial Investment Member The CCIM designation is awarded to commercial real estate professionals upon successful completion of a graduate-level education curriculum annd presentation of a portfolio of qualifying experience. CCIMs are recognized experts in commercial real estate brokerage, leasing, asset management, valuation, and invesstment analysis.
Billy Case, CCIM (828) 508-4527 | billycase@naibeverly-hanks.c com
Bookstore
Poetry Month Celebration Saturday, April 13th at 3 p.m. 3 EAST JACKSON STREET • SYLVA
828/586-9499 • citylightsnc.com
Saturday, April 13th · 1-4pm
April 10-16, 2019
®
FREE Fried Chicken Lunch
Live entertainment by
from The Rendezvous 1:00 until it’s gone
Door prizes, 50/50, Contest, & More Proceeds go to Relay for Life
Smoky Mountain News
n Tuesday, April 16, the lecture series “Where We Live: History, Nature, and Culture” at Cowee School Heritage Center, will present a program by Dr. Ben Steere on the Nikwasi Mound in Franklin, an important Cherokee cultural site. Steere is the director of the Cherokee Studies program and assistant professor of anthropology at Western Carolina University. He will review the archaeology and history of the Nikwasi Mound and discuss the significance of the site for understanding the remarkable cultural landscape of the Cherokee heartland of western North Carolina. Steere has worked on a collaborative Dr. Ben Steere study of ancestral Cherokee mound and town sites with the Tribal Historic Preservation Office of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians since 2011. He is the author of The Archaeology of Houses and Households in the Native Southeast (University of Alabama Press) and the recipient of the 2016 Principal Chief Leon D. Jones Award for Archaeological Excellence, presented by the THPO. Since the Nikwasi Mound has generated a lot of attention lately in the news, organizers say the presentation will be a great y opportunity for community members to get clear, accurate information on the history of the mound. The town of Franklin has held the deed on the mound since 1946 when residents scraped enough money together to buy it and save it from being developed. The l deed states that the mound “shall be preserved for the citizens of Macon County and for posterity.” Nikwasi Initiative, nonprofit partnership between the town of Franklin, Macon County, Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians and Mainspring Conservation Trust, has asked the town to deed over the mound to the partnership in order to have a sense of joint ownership among all the stakeholders. EBCI and the Nikwasi Initiative also have plans to redevelop parcels surrounding the mound in East Franklin to better promote the mound and other culturally significant sites in the county. While the town council seems willing to deed over the mound to the nonprofit, some residents are adamant that the town maintain ownership of the mound and have filed a lawsuit against the town asking for an injunction. The town board tabled the issue until its May meeting. The program will begin at 6:30 p.m. at the Cowee School Heritage Center, off NC 28 North in Franklin.
Congratulations to NAI Beverly-H Hanks’ news
The Archaeology of the Nikwasi Mound
Exit 100 off U.S. 74 82 LOCUST DRIVE | WAYNESVILLE | NC
SMSH.CO FOR OUR FULL INVENTORY
828.452.7276
Hours: Tuesday - Friday 9:00-6:00 Saturday 9:00-5:00
Follow us on Facebook 15
news
Let Us Sell Your House
The #1 Listing & Selling Team In Haywood County
Noland-Proben Team Brian K. Noland & Catherine Proben RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL PROFESSIONALS
74 N. Main Street, Waynesville bknoland@beverly-hanks.com • 828.734.5201 cproben@beverly-hanks.com • 828.734.9157
April 10-16, 2019
beverly-hanks.com
This is more than great rates This is more savings for wherever you’re going. Platinum Savings Account
%
2.10
µÜÜãÏÚ ÄÓàÑÓÜâÏÕÓ Í×ÓÚÒ ÔÝà _` ÛÝÜâÖá å×âÖ ÜÓå ÛÝÜÓç ÒÓÞÝá×âá ÝÔ Ïâ ÚÓÏáâ r`c ^^^ ÏÜÒ Ï Û×Ü×ÛãÛ ÒÏ×Úç ÏÑÑÝãÜâ ÐÏÚÏÜÑÓ ÝÔ r`c ^^^ Ýà ÛÝàÓ_
Guaranteed Fixed-Rate CD
%
2.40
µÜÜãÏÚ ÄÓàÑÓÜâÏÕÓ Í×ÓÚÒ ÔÝà ÏÜ __#ÛÝÜâÖ âÓàÛ å×âÖ ÜÓå ÛÝÜÓç ÒÓÞÝá×âá ÝÔ Ïâ ÚÓÏáâ r`c ^^^`
Smoky Mountain News
Talk to a banker for details. ÃøÓà ÓæÞ×àÓá ÁÏç a_ `^_g ¶ãá×ÜÓáá ÝåÜÓà Ask about our business savings rates.
16
ÃøÓàá ÏäÏ×ÚÏÐÚÓ ×Ü µÆ ·È ¸· ºÀ »µ Á¸ ÁÇ Â· ¾ ÂÍ Ç· ÈÌ ÏÜÒ Êµ Portfolio by Wells Fargo] ÑãáâÝÛÓàá ÏàÓ ÓÚ×Õ×ÐÚÓ âÝ àÓÑÓ×äÓ ÏÜ ÏÒÒ×â×ÝÜÏÚ ÐÝÜãá ×ÜâÓàÓáâ àÏâÓ ÝÜ âÖÓáÓ ÏÑÑÝãÜâá 3 _ ÈÝ ßãÏÚ×Ôç ÔÝà âÖ×á ÝøÓà çÝã Ûãáâ ÖÏäÓ Ï ÜÓå Ýà Óæ×áâ×ÜÕ ÄÚÏâ×ÜãÛ ÇÏä×ÜÕá ÏÑÑÝãÜâ ÏÜÒ ÓÜàÝÚÚ âÖÓ ÏÑÑÝãÜâ ×Ü âÖ×á ÝøÓà ÐÓâåÓÓÜ ^a*`c*`^_g ÏÜÒ ^c*a_*`^_g ÈÖ×á ÝøÓà ×á áãÐØÓÑâ âÝ ÑÖÏÜÕÓ Ïâ ÏÜç â×ÛÓ å×âÖÝãâ ÜÝâ×ÑÓ ÈÖ×á ÝøÓà ×á ÏäÏ×ÚÏÐÚÓ ÝÜÚç âÝ ÄÚÏâ×ÜãÛ ÇÏä×ÜÕá ÑãáâÝÛÓàá ×Ü âÖÓ ÔÝÚÚÝå×ÜÕ áâÏâÓá µÆ ·È ¸· ºÀ »µ Á¸ ÁÇ Â· ¾ ÂÍ Ç· ÈÌ ÏÜÒ Êµ ½Ü ÝàÒÓà âÝ ÓÏàÜ âÖÓ ÇÞÓÑ×ÏÚ ½ÜâÓàÓáâ ÆÏâÓ ÝÔ ` ^f° (ÇÞÓÑ×ÏÚ ÆÏâÓ) çÝã Ûãáâ ÒÓÞÝá×â r`c ^^^ ×Ü ÜÓå ÛÝÜÓç (ÔàÝÛ áÝãàÑÓá Ýãâá×ÒÓ ÝÔ ËÓÚÚá ºÏàÕÝ ¶ÏÜÙ Â µ Ýà ×âá ÏûÚ×ÏâÓá) âÝ âÖÓ ÓÜàÝÚÚÓÒ áÏä×ÜÕá ÏÑÑÝãÜâ ÏÜÒ ÛÏ×ÜâÏ×Ü Ï Û×Ü×ÛãÛ ÒÏ×Úç ÏÑÑÝãÜâ ÐÏÚÏÜÑÓ ÝÔ r`c ^^^ âÖàÝãÕÖÝãâ âÖÓ âÓàÛ ÝÔ âÖ×á ÝøÓà ÈÖÓ ÑÝààÓáÞÝÜÒ×ÜÕ µÜÜãÏÚ ÄÓàÑÓÜâÏÕÓ Í×ÓÚÒ (µÄÍ) ÔÝà âÖ×á ÝøÓà ×á ` _^° ÈÖÓ ÇÞÓÑ×ÏÚ ÆÏâÓ å×ÚÚ ÐÓ ÏÞÞÚ×ÓÒ âÝ âÖÓ ÓÜàÝÚÚÓÒ áÏä×ÜÕá ÏÑÑÝãÜâ ÔÝà Ï ÞÓà×ÝÒ ÝÔ _` ÛÝÜâÖá áâÏàâ×ÜÕ ÝÜ âÖÓ ÒÏâÓ âÖÓ ÏÑÑÝãÜâ ×á ÓÜàÝÚÚÓÒ ×Ü âÖÓ ÝøÓà ¼ÝåÓäÓà ÔÝà ÏÜç ÒÏç Òãà×ÜÕ âÖÏâ _` ÛÝÜâÖ ÞÓà×ÝÒ âÖÏâ âÖÓ ÒÏ×Úç ÏÑÑÝãÜâ ÐÏÚÏÜÑÓ ×á ÚÓáá âÖÏÜ âÖÓ r`c ^^^ Û×Ü×ÛãÛ âÖÓ ÇÞÓÑ×ÏÚ ÆÏâÓ å×ÚÚ ÜÝâ ÏÞÞÚç ÏÜÒ âÖÓ ×ÜâÓàÓáâ àÏâÓ å×ÚÚ àÓäÓàâ âÝ âÖÓ áâÏÜÒÏàÒ ×ÜâÓàÓáâ àÏâÓ ÏÞÞÚ×ÑÏÐÚÓ âÝ çÝãà ÄÚÏâ×ÜãÛ ÇÏä×ÜÕá ÏÑÑÝãÜâ µá ÝÔ ^`*_c*`^_g âÖÓ áâÏÜÒÏàÒ ×ÜâÓàÓáâ àÏâÓ ÏÜÒ µÄÍ ÔÝà Ï ÄÚÏâ×ÜãÛ ÇÏä×ÜÕá ÏÑÑÝãÜâ ×Ü µÆ ·È ¸· ºÀ »µ Á¸ ÁÇ Â· ¾ ÂÍ Ç· ÈÌ ÏÜÒ Êµ å×âÖ ÏÜ ÏÑÑÝãÜâ ÐÏÚÏÜÑÓ ÝÔ r^ ^_ ÏÜÒ ÏÐÝäÓ ×á ^ ^c° (^ ^c° µÄÍ) ¹ÏÑÖ â×Óà áÖÝåÜ àÓúÓÑâá âÖÓ ÑãààÓÜâ Û×Ü×ÛãÛ ÒÏ×Úç ÑÝÚÚÓÑâÓÒ ÐÏÚÏÜÑÓ àÓßã×àÓÒ âÝ ÝÐâÏ×Ü âÖÓ ÏÞÞÚ×ÑÏÐÚÓ µÄÍ ½ÜâÓàÓáâ ×á ÑÝÛÞÝãÜÒÓÒ ÒÏ×Úç ÏÜÒ ÞÏ×Ò ÛÝÜâÖÚç ÈÖÓ ÏÛÝãÜâ ÝÔ ×ÜâÓàÓáâ ÓÏàÜÓÒ ×á ÐÏáÓÒ ÝÜ âÖÓ ÒÏ×Úç ÑÝÚÚÓÑâÓÒ ÐÏÚÏÜÑÓá ×Ü âÖÓ ÏÑÑÝãÜâ ÉÞÝÜ âÖÓ ÓæÞ×àÏâ×ÝÜ ÝÔ âÖÓ _` ÛÝÜâÖ ÞàÝÛÝâ×ÝÜÏÚ ÞÓà×ÝÒ áâÏÜÒÏàÒ ×ÜâÓàÓáâ àÏâÓá ÏÞÞÚç Á×Ü×ÛãÛ âÝ ÝÞÓÜ Ï ÄÚÏâ×ÜãÛ ÇÏä×ÜÕá ÏÑÑÝãÜâ ×á r`c µ ÛÝÜâÖÚç áÓàä×ÑÓ ÔÓÓ ÝÔ r_` ÏÞÞÚ×Óá ×Ü ÏÜç ÛÝÜâÖ âÖÓ ÏÑÑÝãÜâ ÔÏÚÚá ÐÓÚÝå Ï ra c^^ Û×Ü×ÛãÛ ÒÏ×Úç ÐÏÚÏÜÑÓ ºÓÓá ÛÏç àÓÒãÑÓ ÓÏàÜ×ÜÕá ½ÜâÓàÓáâ àÏâÓá ÏàÓ äÏà×ÏÐÚÓ ÏÜÒ áãÐØÓÑâ âÝ ÑÖÏÜÕÓ å×âÖÝãâ ÜÝâ×ÑÓ ËÓÚÚá ºÏàÕÝ ÛÏç Ú×Û×â âÖÓ ÏÛÝãÜâ çÝã ÒÓÞÝá×â âÝ Ï ÄÚÏâ×ÜãÛ ÇÏä×ÜÕá ÏÑÑÝãÜâ âÝ ÏÜ ÏÕÕàÓÕÏâÓ ÝÔ r_ Û×ÚÚ×ÝÜ ÃøÓà ÜÝâ ÏäÏ×ÚÏÐÚÓ âÝ Äà×äÏâÓ ¶ÏÜÙ×ÜÕ Ýà ËÓÏÚâÖ ÑãáâÝÛÓàá ` µÜÜãÏÚ ÄÓàÑÓÜâÏÕÓ Í×ÓÚÒ (µÄÍ) ×á ÓøÓÑâ×äÓ ÔÝà ÏÑÑÝãÜâá ÝÞÓÜÓÒ ÐÓâåÓÓÜ ^a*`c*`^_g âÝ ^c*a_*`^_g ÈÖÓ __#ÛÝÜâÖ ÂÓå ¸ÝÚÚÏà ·¸ áÞÓÑ×ÏÚ àÓßã×àÓá Ï Û×Ü×ÛãÛ ÝÔ r`c ^^^ ÐàÝãÕÖâ âÝ ËÓÚÚá ºÏàÕÝ ÔàÝÛ áÝãàÑÓá Ýãâá×ÒÓ ÝÔ ËÓÚÚá ºÏàÕÝ ¶ÏÜÙ Â µ Ýà ×âá ÏûÚ×ÏâÓá âÝ ÓÏàÜ âÖÓ ÏÒäÓàâ×áÓÒ µÄÍ ÄãÐÚ×Ñ ºãÜÒá ÏÜÒ ËÖÝÚÓáÏÚÓ ÏÑÑÝãÜâá ÏàÓ ÜÝâ ÓÚ×Õ×ÐÚÓ ÔÝà âÖ×á ÝøÓà µÄÍ ÏááãÛÓá ×ÜâÓàÓáâ àÓÛÏ×Üá ÝÜ ÒÓÞÝá×â ãÜâ×Ú ÛÏâãà×âç ½ÜâÓàÓáâ ×á ÑÝÛÞÝãÜÒÓÒ ÒÏ×Úç ÄÏçÛÓÜâ ÝÔ ×ÜâÓàÓáâ ÝÜ ·¸á ×á ÐÏáÓÒ ÝÜ âÓàÛ ºÝà âÓàÛá ÚÓáá âÖÏÜ _` ÛÝÜâÖá (adc ÒÏçá) ×ÜâÓàÓáâ ÛÏç ÐÓ ÞÏ×Ò ÛÝÜâÖÚç ßãÏàâÓàÚç áÓÛ×#ÏÜÜãÏÚÚç Ýà Ïâ ÛÏâãà×âç (âÖÓ ÓÜÒ ÝÔ âÖÓ âÓàÛ) ºÝà âÓàÛá ÝÔ _` ÛÝÜâÖá Ýà ÛÝàÓ ×ÜâÓàÓáâ ÛÏç ÐÓ ÞÏ×Ò ÛÝÜâÖÚç ßãÏàâÓàÚç áÓÛ×#ÏÜÜãÏÚÚç Ýà ÏÜÜãÏÚÚç µ ÔÓÓ ÔÝà ÓÏàÚç å×âÖÒàÏåÏÚ å×ÚÚ ÐÓ ×ÛÞÝáÓÒ ÏÜÒ ÑÝãÚÒ àÓÒãÑÓ ÓÏàÜ×ÜÕá ÝÜ âÖ×á ÏÑÑÝãÜâ ÇÞÓÑ×ÏÚ ÆÏâÓá ÏàÓ ÏÞÞÚ×ÑÏÐÚÓ âÝ âÖÓ ×Ü×â×ÏÚ âÓàÛ ÝÔ âÖÓ ·¸ ÝÜÚç µâ ÛÏâãà×âç âÖÓ ÇÞÓÑ×ÏÚ ÆÏâÓ ·¸ å×ÚÚ ÏãâÝÛÏâ×ÑÏÚÚç àÓÜÓå ÔÝà Ï âÓàÛ ÝÔ d ÛÝÜâÖá Ïâ âÖÓ ×ÜâÓàÓáâ àÏâÓ ÏÜÒ µÄÍ ×Ü ÓøÓÑâ ÔÝà ·¸á ÝÜ àÓÜÓåÏÚ ÒÏâÓ ÜÝâ áãÐØÓÑâ âÝ Ï ÇÞÓÑ×ÏÚ ÆÏâÓ ãÜÚÓáá âÖÓ ¶ÏÜÙ ÖÏá ÜÝâ×ùÓÒ çÝã ÝâÖÓàå×áÓ _ ` ¸ãÓ âÝ âÖÓ ÜÓå ÛÝÜÓç àÓßã×àÓÛÓÜâ ÏÑÑÝãÜâá ÛÏç ÝÜÚç ÐÓ ÝÞÓÜÓÒ Ïâ çÝãà ÚÝÑÏÚ ÐàÏÜÑÖ ËÓÚÚá ºÏàÕÝ àÓáÓàäÓá âÖÓ à×ÕÖâ âÝ ÛÝÒ×Ôç Ýà Ò×áÑÝÜâ×ÜãÓ âÖÓ ÝøÓà Ïâ ÏÜç â×ÛÓ å×âÖÝãâ ÜÝâ×ÑÓ Á×Ü×ÛãÛ ÜÓå ÛÝÜÓç ÒÓÞÝá×â àÓßã×àÓÛÓÜâ ÝÔ Ïâ ÚÓÏáâ r`c ^^^ ×á ÔÝà âÖ×á ÝøÓà ÝÜÚç ÏÜÒ ÑÏÜÜÝâ ÐÓ âàÏÜáÔÓààÓÒ âÝ ÏÜÝâÖÓà ÏÑÑÝãÜâ âÝ ßãÏÚ×Ôç ÔÝà ÏÜç ÝâÖÓà ÑÝÜáãÛÓà ÒÓÞÝá×â ÝøÓà ½Ô çÝã å×áÖ âÝ âÏÙÓ ÏÒäÏÜâÏÕÓ ÝÔ ÏÜÝâÖÓà ÑÝÜáãÛÓà ÒÓÞÝá×â ÝøÓà àÓßã×à×ÜÕ Ï Û×Ü×ÛãÛ ÜÓå ÛÝÜÓç ÒÓÞÝá×â çÝã å×ÚÚ ÐÓ àÓßã×àÓÒ âÝ ÒÝ áÝ å×âÖ ÏÜÝâÖÓà ÜÓå ÛÝÜÓç ÒÓÞÝá×â Ïá áâÏâÓÒ ×Ü âÖÓ ÝøÓà àÓßã×àÓÛÓÜâá ÏÜÒ ßãÏÚ×ùÑÏâ×ÝÜá ÃøÓà ÑÏÜÜÝâ ÐÓ ÑÝÛÐ×ÜÓÒ å×âÖ ÏÜç ÝâÖÓà ÑÝÜáãÛÓà ÒÓÞÝá×â ÝøÓà ÓæÑÓÞâ âÖÓ ÄÝàâÔÝÚ×Ý Ðç ËÓÚÚá ºÏàÕÝ rc^^ ÝøÓà ÏäÏ×ÚÏÐÚÓ ÔàÝÛ ÁÏàÑÖ `c `^_g ãÜâ×Ú ÁÏç a_ `^_g ÃøÓà ÑÏÜÜÝâ ÐÓ àÓÞàÝÒãÑÓÒ ÞãàÑÖÏáÓÒ áÝÚÒ âàÏÜáÔÓààÓÒ Ýà âàÏÒÓÒ a ÈÖÓ ÄÝàâÔÝÚ×Ý Ðç ËÓÚÚá ºÏàÕÝ ÞàÝÕàÏÛ ÖÏá Ï ra^ ÛÝÜâÖÚç áÓàä×ÑÓ ÔÓÓ åÖ×ÑÖ ÑÏÜ ÐÓ ÏäÝ×ÒÓÒ åÖÓÜ çÝã ÖÏäÓ ÝÜÓ ÝÔ âÖÓ ÔÝÚÚÝå×ÜÕ ßãÏÚ×Ôç×ÜÕ ÐÏÚÏÜÑÓá r`c ^^^ Ýà ÛÝàÓ ×Ü ßãÏÚ×Ôç×ÜÕ Ú×ÜÙÓÒ ÐÏÜÙ ÒÓÞÝá×â ÏÑÑÝãÜâá (ÑÖÓÑÙ×ÜÕ áÏä×ÜÕá ·¸á º¸½·#×ÜáãàÓÒ ½Æµá) Ýà rc^ ^^^ Ýà ÛÝàÓ ×Ü ÏÜç ÑÝÛÐ×ÜÏâ×ÝÜ ÝÔ ßãÏÚ×Ôç×ÜÕ Ú×ÜÙÓÒ ÐÏÜÙ×ÜÕ ÐàÝÙÓàÏÕÓ (ÏäÏ×ÚÏÐÚÓ âÖàÝãÕÖ ËÓÚÚá ºÏàÕÝ µÒä×áÝàá ÀÀ·) ÏÜÒ ÑàÓÒ×â ÐÏÚÏÜÑÓá (×ÜÑÚãÒ×ÜÕ _^° ÝÔ ÛÝàâÕÏÕÓ ÐÏÚÏÜÑÓá ÑÓàâÏ×Ü ÛÝàâÕÏÕÓá ÜÝâ ÓÚ×Õ×ÐÚÓ) ½Ô âÖÓ ÄÝàâÔÝÚ×Ý Ðç ËÓÚÚá ºÏàÕÝ àÓÚÏâ×ÝÜáÖ×Þ ×á âÓàÛ×ÜÏâÓÒ âÖÓ ÐÝÜãá ×ÜâÓàÓáâ àÏâÓ ÝÜ ÏÚÚ ÓÚ×Õ×ÐÚÓ áÏä×ÜÕá ÏÑÑÝãÜâá ÏÜÒ Ò×áÑÝãÜâá Ýà ÔÓÓ åÏ×äÓàá ÝÜ ÝâÖÓà ÞàÝÒãÑâá ÏÜÒ áÓàä×ÑÓá å×ÚÚ Ò×áÑÝÜâ×ÜãÓ ÏÜÒ àÓäÓàâ âÝ âÖÓ ¶ÏÜÙ á âÖÓÜ#ÑãààÓÜâ ÏÞÞÚ×ÑÏÐÚÓ àÏâÓ Ýà ÔÓÓ ºÝà ÐÝÜãá ×ÜâÓàÓáâ àÏâÓá ÝÜ â×ÛÓ ÏÑÑÝãÜâá âÖ×á ÑÖÏÜÕÓ å×ÚÚ ÝÑÑãà ãÞÝÜ àÓÜÓåÏÚ ½Ô âÖÓ ÄÝàâÔÝÚ×Ý Ðç ËÓÚÚá ºÏàÕÝ àÓÚÏâ×ÝÜáÖ×Þ ×á âÓàÛ×ÜÏâÓÒ âÖÓ àÓÛÏ×Ü×ÜÕ ãÜÚ×ÜÙÓÒ ËÓÚÚá ºÏàÕÝ ÄÝàâÔÝÚ×Ý ·ÖÓÑÙ×ÜÕ Ýà ËÓÚÚá ºÏàÕÝ Äà×ÛÓ ·ÖÓÑÙ×ÜÕ ÏÑÑÝãÜâ å×ÚÚ ÐÓ ÑÝÜäÓàâÓÒ âÝ ÏÜÝâÖÓà ÑÖÓÑÙ×ÜÕ ÞàÝÒãÑâ Ýà ÑÚÝáÓÒ \ `^_g ËÓÚÚá ºÏàÕÝ ¶ÏÜÙ Â µ µÚÚ à×ÕÖâá àÓáÓàäÓÒ ¸ÓÞÝá×â ÞàÝÒãÑâá ÝøÓàÓÒ Ðç ËÓÚÚá ºÏàÕÝ ¶ÏÜÙ Â µ ÁÓÛÐÓà º¸½· ÂÁÀÇÆ ½¸ aggf^_
South Painter Road project moves forward
P
April 10-16, 2019
SPACE AVAILABLE
Smoky Mountain News
BY HOLLY KAYS STAFF WRITER lans for a proposed housing development on South Painter Road in Cullowhee will proceed following the Jackson County Commissioners’ decision to accept a settlement agreement with Atlantabased Mallory and Evans Development LLC. Mallory and Evans brought its lawsuit against the county in August 2017 following a June 2017 Cullowhee Community Planning Council meeting in which members denied the developer’s application for a special-use permit to build a 388-bed housing complex. Court documents claimed that the decision was “the result of errors in law” and was “unsupported by substantial material and competent evidence, and is otherwise arbitrary and capricious.” Rather than going to court on the matter, the parties opted to settle. Under the settlement agreement, Mallory and Evans will still get to build its development, but with significant changes to the original plan. The county spent about $15,000 on legal fees and costs related to the lawsuit. Instead of building 97 units containing 388 bedrooms, the developer will construct 62 units containing 248 bedrooms. The number of parking spaces will likewise be reduced from 418 to 285, and the retaining wall to be built at the rear of the property will be 7 feet tall compared to the original 20 feet. A sidewalk will be built along South Painter Road continuing as far as the sidewalk segment the N.C. Department of Transportation is proposing for its Monteith Gap Road improvement project. “I’m happy with it,” said Scott Baker, chairman of the Cullowhee Council. “I think it was a good compromise.” “We worked closely with the local leaders on a plan that everyone involved could get behind and support,” said Brantley Basinger, principal for Mallory and Evans. “I believe we accomplished this together and have built stronger relationships through this process. We view this agreement as a win-win for Cullowhee, Western Carolina University and Mallory and Evans.” The developer hopes to break ground in late spring for an August 2020 opening. The Cullowhee Council voted unanimously April 1 to recommend that the county accept the agreement. Following a closed session April 2, commissioners voted unanimously on three items related to the development. They approved the settlement agreement, accepted a $10,000 offer from Mallory and Evans for a sewer and stormwater easement and agreed to sell Mallory and Evans a 0.19-acre property adjoining the development for $25,000.
That sale is now in the midst of the upset bid process. If nobody offers a better price before April 15, the sale will go through. “They definitely reduced the number and the traffic flow count, and with it being gated I think that will help to alleviate a lot of extra vehicles going out that are not entitled to,” said Commissioner Mickey Luker. “I think with the unanimous approval from the Cullowhee committee, it pretty much put us in a thought to say, OK, we need to agree with those people we put on that board and move forward with it.” This will not be the last time that Mallory and Evans will come before a county board, however. The developer will have to present the Jackson County Planning Board with a modified plan for approval, likely in May. Mallory and Evans brought its original proposal before the Cullowhee Community Planning Council in June 2017, hoping to build the complex on an 11.6-acre piece of property along South Painter Road across from the Cullowhee Community Garden. However, council members were concerned about the plan, especially in light of the 2016 death of pedestrian Daniel Brown on nearby Ledbetter Road, a hit-and-run involving a Western Carolina University student. The incident highlighted the danger of rapid, high-density development in an area whose narrow, winding roadways were not built to accommodate it. Council members were afraid that the development would only exacerbate that situation, especially since the lack of sidewalks in the area meant that students would either have to drive to school or walk and bike in the already overtasked roadways. They were also concerned that the plan didn’t call for enough parking and that students would end up parking along the road and in people’s yards. Evidence presented by the developer and its experts in traffic and engineering, meanwhile, told a different story. A study from Waynesville-based J.M. Teague Engineering concluded that the development would not negatively impact the roads. Basinger asserted that students would not be parking on the road. In order to allow the development to move forward, council members had to vote yes on each of six standards, with votes based on evidence presented. The council did not return a majority yes vote on two of the standards — one dealing with the development’s compatibility with natural and topographic features, and another dealing with whether the development would cause traffic hazard or congestions. With the reduction in the development’s size and upcoming improvements to Ledbetter and Monteith Gap Roads — Baker said the DOT is planning a project there to improve pedestrian and bicycle safety — he’s feeling much better about the traffic safety aspect.
news
Jackson County settles with student housing developer
Advertise in The Smoky Mountain News 828 | 452 | 4251
17
news
WOMEN IN BUSINESS WOMEN IN BUSINESS LUNCHEON
Leah Wong Ashburn Thursday, April 25th
BUSINESS STARTER GRANTS
11:30 AM - 1:00 PM EST
Wells Event & Reception Center 33 Wells Events Way, Waynesville
• Business Start Up Contest
Leah Wong Ashburn is a second-generation family owner of Highland Brewing Company and serves as President and CEO. Highland is the largest brewery native to NC, the largest family- owned brewery in the Southeast, and Asheville’s beer pioneer – it was the first brewery in Asheville since Prohibition. It was founded in 1994 by Leah’s father, Oscar Wong. Asheville now has over 30 breweries, ranking at or near #1 in breweries per capita in the US.
SPONSORS
-Up to $10,000! - Deadline May 10
Haywood Advancement Foundation HRMC • Duke Energy Evergreen Packaging Sponsorships still available haywoodchamber.com
WELLS EVENT & RECEPTION CENTER
Thursday, April 25th • 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.
Smoky Mountain News
April 10-16, 2019
$25/Chamber Members
$30/Non-Members
ventureasheville.com/microgrant
B s B B
a m
C J L b t
S s B a a a
f
18
f S
Business
Smoky Mountain News
Lake Junaluska wins marketing awards Lake Junaluska won 13 awards including Best in Class honors for Internet Communication in an annual awards program held recently in St. Louis, Missouri, by the United Methodist Association of Communicators. Best in Class honors for Internet Communications went to both Lake Junaluska’s Instagram account and Facebook account, which tied for first place in the social media category and were submitted jointly by Mary Bates, director of marketing, and Liz Boyd, senior marketing coordinator. Judges noted the Instagram account offers “stunning imagery” and the Facebook account has strong engagement with “well-written content” and “eye-catching” photos and Lake Junaluska photo videos. Bates said compelling photos and videos have been key to sharing Lake Junaluska’s beauty and mission with regional, national and worldwide audiences. In addition to winning awards for Internet communications, nine other Lake Junaluska communication initiatives won first-, second- or third-place in the awards programs.
Chief Sneed to speak during Bizweek
Richard Sneed, Principal Chief of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians will be the keynote speaker at the 2019 Macon County BizWeek Banquet being held Thursday, April 11, at Bloemsma Barn. Social hour begins at 6 p.m. and dinner starts at 6:30 p.m. Limited seats remain. Register at maconedc.com.
HCC hosts free business series
The Small Business Center at Haywood Community College will offer a free Business Jump-Start Series at the Haywood County Public Library Canton Branch. The three part series will be held from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Tuesdays, April 30 through May 14. The first in the series will be “Are You Ready to Start a Business?” on April 30. Learn the basics of starting a business from idea to opportunity. Budding entrepreneurs will learn the importance of a self-assessment, feasibility and the resources available to assist in the planning and startup of a business. Visit SBC.Haywood.edu or call 828.627.4512 for additional information or to register today.
Broadband input needed
The Swain Broadband Committee needs input from area businesses and entrepreneurs. Significant regional grant opportunities are
becoming available for broadband investment that will benefit economic development. To win them, Swain must demonstrate need and economic development success from better broadband. Share your business’s experience with broadband in this 5 minute survey and share this link with others www.surveymonkey.com/r/QKYB3CJ.
Cody’s Kitchen opens in Franklin The Franklin Chamber of Commerce recently held a grand opening celebration to welcome Cody’s Kitchen into the Franklin business community. Cody’s Kitchen, located at 349 Westgate Plaza, the former location of Gondola’s, is a newly established Italian/American restaurant. “We have everything from pizza and pasta, to sandwiches and salmon,” said Manager Cody Sanders. “Our goal at Cody’s Kitchen is to provide something that everyone can enjoy, so we have tried to create a very vast, affordable menu for our customers.” Drop by for lunch or dinner, eating in or taking out. Call in orders for pick up is available at 828.524.9048.
Swain chamber to award businesses Tickets are now on sale for the annual Swain County Chamber of Commerce Membership Banquet to be held 6 to 9 p.m. Thursday, April 18, at the Fryemont Inn. Highlights of the evening will include the presentation of the Swain County Chamber of
Commerce Business Citizen of the Year Award and the Duke Energy Service and Citizenship Award; live jazz provided by One Leg Up; and the exceptional food and service of the Fryemont Inn. Tickets cost $35 per person and may be purchased using cash, check or credit card at the Chamber office on Main Street, and with credit card by phone at 828.488.3681, or online at www.greatsmokies.com/chamber-banquet.
SCC announces upcoming seminars This spring, the Small Business Center at Southwestern Community College has a schedule full of free seminars and opportunities for small business owners in and around Jackson, Swain, Macon counties and the Qualla Boundary. These events are open to the public at no cost. Attendees must register in advance at tinyurl.com/y46uqeo9. n Women’s Power Breakfast- Life/Work Balance for Business Owners; from 8:30-9:45 a.m. on April 10 at the Franklin Chamber of Commerce. n How to Start a Business; from 5:30-8:30 p.m. on April 18 at the Franklin Chamber of Commerce n Grow Your Small Business with Excellent Customer Service; from 8:30-10 a.m. on April 24 at the Highlands Civic Center. n Making An Offer They Can’t Refuse; from 8:3010 a.m. on April 24 at the SCC Swain Center. n Financing Your Business; from 5:30-9:30 p.m. on April 25 at the Franklin Chamber of Commerce. For more information, contact Henry at t_henry@southwesterncc.edu or call 828.339.4426.
Mountain Credit Union earns certification Mountain Credit Union now has six certified financial counselors on staff to assist members with their daily financial decisions that will help them achieve financial success. Staff with CCUFC designations include: Kim Wagner, regional manager in Franklin; Tanya Haskett, regional manager in Waynesville; Fadrian Merrell, loan officer in Waynesville; and Chris Angel, business development director. Mountain Credit Union plans to continue to add more counselors in the future. “These employees illustrate perfectly the credit union philosophy of ‘People Helping People,’” said President & CEO Patty Idol. “Their efforts give credibility to our mission of being a financial partner to those in our communities who might need that extra push to begin their journey to financial freedom.” To schedule an appointment, visit www.mountaincu.org.
WCU to host PR networking event Western Carolina University will host a “meet and greet” to support the formation of a new
19
• The Cashiers Planning Council will hold its regular meeting at 5 p.m. Monday, April 29, at the Glenville-Cashiers Recreation Center. • The Small Business Center at Haywood Community College will offer a free seminar titled, “How to Find Your Customers,” Tuesday, April 16, 5:30 p.m.-8:30 p.m. in room 3021 at the HCC Regional High Technology Center. “Financing Your Business” will be held Thursday, April 23, 5:30-7:30 p.m. Visit SBC.Haywood.edu or call 828.627.4512 to register.
ALSO:
• A Breakfast Nosh Mob event with Cashiers Chamber of Commerce Leadership will be held Tuesday, April 16, at the Zookeeper Bistro. Call 828.743.7711 to make a reservation. • DML TWO Enterprises, LLC of Bryson City, a Dana Smith and Mike Martone partnership, purchased both the Sylva and Waynesville locations of Jack the Dipper Ice Cream. The new owners said they are looking forward to a strong reintroduction of the community involvement and fundraising tradition and activities.
chapter of the Public Relations Society of America for Western North Carolina from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 23, in Room 204 of WCU’s Health and Human Sciences Building. “Currently, communications professionals in Western North Carolina have to travel to Charlotte or the Tri-Cities area in Tennessee to attend PRSA meetings. There is both the need and the desire for a PRSA chapter headquartered in WNC,” said Janet Oppenheimer, who is spearheading the new chapter formation. Event attendees will have the opportunity to provide feedback on programming ideas for monthly WNC PRSA chapter professional development events, as well as network with other local public relations and allied communication professionals. The event is free and open to any communications professional. Reservations are requested. Contact Betty Farmer at bfarmer@wcu.edu or 828.227.3804.
New financial advisor in Franklin Robbie Cagle, Edward Jones Financial Advisor, recently opened in Macon Center Plaza at 112 Macon Center Drive, Franklin. “My family and I are grateful to become a part of such a beautiful mountain community full of wonderful people,” Cagle said. “My fiancée, Mary, son, Vance and I absolutely love Franklin and are ready to serve its people. I enjoy seeing people succeed.” BJ Huerta partners with Cagle as the branch office administrator as they serve clients together in Franklin and across the country.
20
Opinion
Smoky Mountain News
Home is far way, but also here with me arrived in Costa Rica at the beginning of February. After floundering for a few too many months in the shallows of real life following college graduation in May, I decided to flounder somewhere else and wound up teaching yoga and cooking meals at a surf camp in Avellanas. It’s difficult to explain the feeling of being lost and alone that comes at the end of the growing up road map, wherever that end may be (and I know that growing up never really ends). But I’m sure it’s a feeling most everyone has felt in this life. When you add in losing a best friend and falling hard out of a long-term relationship in the same year that road map ended for me, I Guest Columnist wound up with a feeling similar to that of being blindfolded, spun around hundreds of times, and then told to go run a marathon. I was confused, unsure, detached from those I had loved and depended on, and tired from everything and nothing. Now, I finally feel as though I’ve landed, if only for the time being. I feel like I can breathe again. Take a second to think about where I am, where I’ve come from, and where the hell I could possibly go. I am thankful beyond measure. It is nearing the end of the dry season here. Water is scarce and the land is all shades of brown and yellow and seems to be covered in a thin layer of dust. There is a sense of waiting, expectation, and hope that the rains to come will indeed come and bring some much needed hydration to the land. It’s easy to forget that, though, when you’re on the beach. Just the last line of trees, sand, and the vast ocean. Here in Avellanas surfing is what is done. If you come here you better be able to surf or keen to learn. Though you could hardly call what I do surfing, being out beyond the break, watching the ocean move with some invisible force from beneath (and above, outside this earth), and the vast horizon resting calmly on top has become a meditative activity. In reading news and columns from back home, I hear people talking of a similar feeling to the expectation of rain — the coming of spring. And the feeling is so easy to remember. Watching daily as the mountains become at first just a bit less
Hannah McLeod
I
GOP has no health care plan To the Editor: President Trump abruptly announced that he supports the court’s efforts to eliminate Obama Care. This would fulfill one half of the thus far unrealized Republican promise to repeal and replace. That is, the courts would repeal Obama Care without a plan to replace it. For those who think there’s no way that could happen, think again. Despite the promises and years of rhetoric, Republicans are not even close to a transition plan, let alone a replacement. If the courts prevail, it would eliminate health care for tens of millions. Collateral damage would include: removing no charge preventive services and increase drug costs for people on Medicare; void Medicaid expansion — opioid treatment, children’s programs and all; remove protections for preexisting condi-
scarce with each twig on each tree growing tiny buds. And then there are the occasional warm days between those still wintery ones. There is a yearning for the full expression of spring that no matter how much we hope for just isn’t in our power to determine. And there’s something comforting in that, being at the mercy of the earth’s whims and the patterns it follows. A few weeks ago, the brother of the owner of this camp and his girlfriend came down from the surf camp in Nicaragua (which they run) to stay in Avellanas. Scarlett is from northern Nicaragua, close to Leon. Meeting her gave me the feeling of being home again. Not in the dizzying way I had felt before I left, but in the things I appreciate and love about home. Like so many people in Western North Carolina, she is from here, her family has been here for countless generations, and she is oozing with knowledge of the land and culture of this specific place on earth. What’s more, being around her was like being around my mother again, learning countless things each day just by working alongside her. We planted a small garden of spices in the courtyard, and she showed me how to prune the basil of mature leaves while the plant is still growing to maturity, so that it expends energy growing in size rather than producing big leaves. If you don’t take these leaves from the plant it will forever remain small, just making a few big leaves every week or so. By removing some larger leaves, after there are already smaller ones beginning to grow above them, you allow the plant time and energy to grow in form and strength throughout its branches and stems. I could hear my grandmother (a plant witch in her own right) speaking through my mother as Scarlett told me to make sure and cut each leaf close to the stem so the plant doesn’t think the leaf is still there and send nutrients to a dead end stem. And when we planted Papaya seeds she knew exactly the place to do it based on the texture and makeup of the soil in different spots. She made sure also that we planted them on a new moon, apparently of vital importance, and was careful that no one (including the camp cats and dogs) packed down the soil covering the seedlings thereby leaving them space to reach the air and sunshine above. She squats to the level of the plants with the same ease that others would sit
tions, the single most popular provision; allow private insurers to eliminate or reduce payment for almost anything, for example maternity care or mental health treatment. A huge chunk of the insurance industry would go away with nothing to fill the void. The health care payment system could just implode. We all know that Obama Care has problems, not the least of which are premium costs, high deductibles, and limited choice especially in rural areas like ours. Democrats in the House of Representatives are now hard at work creating legislation to fix Obama Care. The legislation aims to close loopholes, mitigate current weaknesses, and bring costs down to a level where health insurance is affordable for every day Americans. No matter how many times the refrain “The Republicans are the party of health care” is repeated, it just isn’t true. They’re just empty words. If you believe like I do — that quality, affordable
down in a chair, and handles the plants and earth with the same tenderness you would show a newborn baby. And just like folks at home she is the person who can talk your hopes, sorrows, and dreams out of you over a cup of coffee and a slow morning. While I am reveling in my time here teaching yoga, being steps away from the ocean, and am nowhere near ready to leave, being around Scarlett helped me remember and realize how thankful I am for the place I come from. For my family, the mountains, the seasons and all of the change they hold. I saw again the value of having roots, being from a place and really knowing it. This day and age, there is so much emphasis placed on traveling, seeing new places, and often (especially when you’re from a small town) pressure to get out into the world. Traveling, meeting new people, and experiencing new cultures gives incomparable insights and understandings that are so important. But having a home — whatever that word means for each person, it means so many different things — is also of immeasurable importance. I am beginning to understand that part of home is a deep knowledge/ understanding of a place and its people (why some people feel they have many), and I am so thankful for mine. When I returned home after school, I never meant to stay there long. It was always supposed to be a short time, save some money, and then make the next move. But, as I settled in that place, and the loss, confusion, and darkness settled in, it became harder and harder to point my feet in any direction. Looking back I am so thankful for the people that allowed me to be in that space. The people that embraced me despite the ball of confusion I was. People who became fast friends and gave support they probably didn’t even have in themselves to give. While I sit in the shade of the courtyard here, another perpetually sunny day, I am overcome with gratitude for where I’ve landed at the moment. I don’t think that feeling could be as strong or as clearly comprehended without the knowledge of home, of roots, and of a place of belonging in the mountains I get to call home. (Hannah McLeod, whose home is in Waynesville, can be reached at mcleodh828@gmail.com)
You can’t please them all
Susanna Barbee
to make health care a universal right for all. We can make it happen with your support. Elaine Slocumb Bryson City
Smoky Mountain News
health care is the right of every citizen, not a privilege reserved for those fortunate enough to have it — take a look at the evidence and remember who is really working
April 10-16, 2019
because they wanted to know what was next for my two boys and me. The writers at The Smoky Mountain News receive daily emails and phone calls from readers. Like all journalists, we have to field both compliments and complaints. It’s part of the job. I’ve had emails bashing me for talking negatively about Trump. I’ve had emails commending me for leaving an unhappy marriage. I’ve had people give me advice on everything from nutrition to cat rearing to triathlon training to single parenting. People sometimes ask what I plan to write about in my next column and the interesting thing is, I never really know. When it’s time to write, I sit down at my computer and just let the words flow. Whatever is heavy on my heart or a highlight in my life ends up on the page. Recently, one reader suggested that some of The Smoky Mountain News columnists should write more factually, using quotes and statistics, as opposed to writing on personal topics. But then, remember, other readers only enjoy the personal columns. All of this made me pause to ponder the difference between a column and a news story. Here is one clarification taken from the ever-faithful Wikipedia: What differentiates a column from other forms of journalism is that it is a regular feature in a publication — written by the same writer or reporter and usually on the same subject area or theme each time — and that it typically, but not universally, contains the author’s opinion or point of view. I believe the definition is intentionally vague. It sounds like a column can pretty much be about anything as long as it’s written by the same person and generally covers the same theme. At the end of the day, I don’t let reader criticism bother me. It’s part of being a writer. I actually appreciate anyone who’s willing to take the time to offer feedback, whether positive or critical. For me, it’s what keeps journalism pulsating. If everyone was in continual agreement and all hunky-dory about every column or story written, what fun would that be? As I go forth with this column, which has come to mean very much to me, I’m going to keep on keeping on. I may write about my life or I may write about the world. Who knows? What I do know is, I will stay to true to my original commitment to Scott and ensure the words on the page are authentic and true. And if I inspire or enlighten even one reader, I’ve done my job as a columnist. (Susanna Barbee is a writer, editor, sales professional and a digital media specialist. susanna.b@smokymountainnews.com)
opinion
I’ve learned it’s impossible to make everyone happy. This column has been a part of my life for a number of years. I remember my first meeting with Scott McLeod, the publisher of The Smoky Mountain News. We met for coffee to discuss how the column would manifest. There’d been only a handful of female columnists before me and he wanted a woman’s voice included in the Opinion section of the paper. At the time, I was in the midst of mothering two very young boys and posting at least three times a week on my mom Columnist blog. I remember Scott telling me he wasn’t looking for crafts, recipes and flowery articles about rainbows and Play-Doh. He didn’t say those exact words, but that’s what I took from it. He said he wanted truth and honesty. He wanted a female columnist who could be real and authentic. It was a challenge I hadn’t been offered before. Up to that point, most of my writing had been in the parenting realm. I had played it safe, only allowing my readers to hear the white-picket-fence storyline of my life. When Scott’s challenge was offered, I felt empowered. At that time, my life was pretty comfortable with two healthy parents, two beautiful, happy little boys and a marriage that was on autopilot. I remember worrying that I wouldn’t have enough “hard-core” stuff to write about or if I did write about rough patches, they would sound trite. What I didn’t know at that first meeting with Scott was that my life would soon come crumbling down one brick at a time, and that raw, authentic fodder for my column would be aplenty. Shortly after I was tasked with writing this column, my mom was diagnosed with breast cancer. After she fought that like a champion, she was diagnosed with Multiple Myeloma, an awful blood cancer that attacks your body from the inside out. Meanwhile, my marriage started unraveling. And over the past four years, my mom passed away, I got a divorce, became a single parent, started working full-time at The Smoky Mountain News and moved from the family home into a smaller house. Over those years, this column became a lifeline and an outlet. Readers began following along with my story and if I veered one week to write about a political or social issue, some readers would get frustrated
21
tasteTHE mountains
Real New Yorkers. Real Italians. Real Pizza. Dine-In ~ Take Out ~ Delivery
Join Us for Weekly
PASTA NIGHT!
Wednesdays 3-9 p.m. 1295 incudes choice of salad, garlic rolls, choice of pasta and dessert.
$
243 Paragon Parkway | Clyde
828-476-5058 172 Sylva Plaza | Sylva
828-492-0641 All location hours: Mon-Sat 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., Closed Sundays
10% OFF April 10-16, 2019
WITH THIS COUPON
Whatever the Occasion, Let Us Do the Cooking!
Taste the Mountains is an ever-evolving paid section of places to dine in Western North Carolina. If you would like to be included in the listing please contact our advertising department at 828.452.4251 BLUE ROOSTER SOUTHERN GRILL 207 Paragon Parkway, Clyde, Lakeside Plaza at the old Wal-Mart. 828.456.1997. Open Monday through Friday. Friendly and fun family atmosphere. Local, handmade Southern cuisine. Fresh-cut salads; slow-simmered soups; flame grilled burgers and steaks, and homemade signature desserts. Blue-plates and local fresh vegetables daily. Brown bagging is permitted. Private parties, catering, and take-out available. Call-ahead seating available. BOOJUM BREWING COMPANY 50 N Main Street, Waynesville. 828.246.0350. Taproom Open Monday, Wednesday and Thursday 11:30 a.m. to 10 p.m., Friday & Saturday 11:30 a.m. to 12 p.m., Sunday 11:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Gem Bar Open Tuesday through Sunday 5 p.m. to 12 a.m. Enjoy lunch, dinner or drinks at Boojum’s Downtown Waynesville restaurant & bar. Choose from 16 taps of our fresh, delicious & ever rotating Boojum Beer plus cider, wine & craft cocktails. The taproom features seasonal pub faire including tasty burgers, sandwiches, shareables and daily specials that pair perfectly with our beer. Cozy up inside or take in the mountain air on our back deck." BOURBON BARREL BEEF & ALE 454 Hazelwood Ave., Waynesville, 828.452.9191. Lunch daily 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.; dinner nightly at 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. Closed Sunday and Monday. Wine Down Wednesday’s: ½ off wine by the bottle. We specialize in handcut, all natural steaks from local farms, incredible burgers, and other classic american comfort foods that are made using only the finest local and sustainable ingredients available.
Smoky Mountain News
CHEF’S TABLE 30 Church St., Waynesville. 828.452.6210. From 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday dinner starting at 5 p.m. “Best of”
22
Award of Excellence from Wine Spectator Magazine. Set in a distinguished atmosphere with an exceptional menu. Extensive selection of wine and beer. Reservations honored. CHURCH STREET DEPOT 34 Church Street, downtown Waynesville. 828.246.6505. 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Mouthwatering all beef burgers and dogs, hand-dipped, hand-spun real ice cream shakes and floats, fresh handcut fries. Locally sourced beef. Indoor and outdoor dining. facebook.com/ChurchStreetDepot, twitter.com/ChurchStDepot. CITY LIGHTS CAFE Spring Street in downtown Sylva. 828.587.2233. Open Monday-Saturday 7:30 a.m. to 9 p.m., Sunday 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tasty, healthy and quick. Breakfast, lunch, dinner, espresso, beer and wine. Come taste the savory and sweet crepes, grilled paninis, fresh, organic salads, soups and more. Outside patio seating. Free Wi-Fi, pet-friendly. Live music and lots of events. Check the web calendar at citylightscafe.com. THE CLASSIC WINESELLER 20 Church Street, Waynesville. 828.452.6000. Underground retail wine and craft beer shop, restaurant, and intimate live music venue. Kitchen opens at 4 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday serving freshly prepared small plates, tapas, charcuterie, desserts. Enjoy live music every Friday and Saturday night at 7pm. www.classicwineseller.com. Also on facebook and twitter. COUNTRY VITTLES: FAMILY STYLE RESTAURANT 3589 Soco Rd, Maggie Valley. 828.926.1820 Winter hours: Wednesday through Sunday 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. Family Style at Country Vittles is not a buffet. Instead our waitresses will bring your food piping hot from the kitchen right to your table and as many refills as you want. So if you have a big appetite, but sure to ask your waitress about our family style service. FERRARA PIZZA & PASTA 243 Paragon Parkway, Clyde. 828.476.5058. Open Monday-Saturday 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Sunday 12 to 8 p.m. Real New Yorkers. Real Italians. Real Pizza. A full service authentic Italian pizzeria and restaurant from New York to the Blue Ridge. Dine in, take out, and delivery. Check out our daily lunch specials plus customer appreciation
Wine • Port • Champagne Cigars • Gifts
1941 Champion Dr. • Canton 828−646−3750 895 Russ Ave. • Waynesville 828−452−5822
FIREFLY TAPS & GRILL 128 N. Main St., Waynesville 828.454.5400. Simple, delicious food. A must experience in WNC. Located in downtown Waynesville with an atmosphere that will warm your heart and your belly! Local and regional beers on tap. Full bar, vegetarian options, kids menu, and more. Reservations accepted. Daily specials. Live music every Saturday from 7 to 10 p.m. Open Mon.-Sat. 11:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday brunch from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. FROGS LEAP PUBLIC HOUSE 44 Church St., Downtown Waynesville 828.456.1930 Serving dinner 5 to 9 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday. 5 to 9:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Closed Sunday and Monday. Frogs Leap is a farm to table restaurant focused on local, sustainable, natural and organic products prepared in modern regional dishes. Seasonal menu focuses on Southern comfort foods with upscale flavors. Reservations accepted. HARMON’S DEN BISTRO 250 Pigeon St., Waynesville 828.456.6322. Harmon’s Den is located in the Fangmeyer Theater at HART. Open 5:309 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday (Bistro closes at 7:30 p.m. on nights when there is a show in the Fangmeyer Theater) with Sunday brunch at 11 a.m. that includes breakfast and lunch items. Harmon’s Den offers a complete menu with cocktails, wine list, and area beers on tap. Enjoy casual dining with the guarantee of making it to the performance in time, then rub shoulders with the cast afterward with post-show food and beverage service. Reservations recommended. www.harmonsden.harttheatre.org HAZELWOOD FARMACY & SODA FOUNTAIN 429 Hazelwood Avenue, Waynesville. 828.246.6996. Open six days a week, closed Wednesday. 7:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday; 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Breakfast until noon, old-fashioned luncheonette and diner comfort food. Historic full service soda fountain. JOEY'S PANCAKE HOUSE 4309 Soco Rd Maggie Valley. 828.926.0212. Open seven days a week! 7 a.m. to 12 p.m. Joey’s is a family-friendly
MAGGIE VALLEY RESTAURANT Daily Specials: Soups, Sandwiches & Southern Dishes
Meetings, Events, Parties & More Sun.–Thurs. 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.
nights on Monday and Tuesday 5 to 9 p.m. with large cheese pizzas for $9.95.
Featured Dishes: Fresh Fried Chicken, Rainbow Trout, Country Ham, Pork-chops & more
Breakfast : Omelets, Pancakes, Biscuits & Gravy!
828-452-6000
Mon/Wed/Thurs 11 a.m.-9 p.m.
Friday/Saturday 11 a.m.-10 p.m.
Closed Tuesday
Sunday 12-9 p.m.
20 Church Street Downtown Waynesville
Breakfast served all day!
Sandwiches • Burgers • Wraps
classicwineseller.com
OPEN SATURDAY & SUNDAY, 9AM-4PM CALL FOR MORE INFORMATION
32 Felmet Street
MONDAY - SATURDAY
2804 SOCO RD. • MAGGIE VALLEY
(828) 246-0927
10:00AM - 6:00PM
828.926.0425 • Facebook.com/carversmvr Instagram- @carvers_mvr
tasteTHE mountains restaurant that has been serving breakfast to locals and visitors of Western North Carolina for decades. Featuring a large variety of tempting pancakes, golden waffles, country style cured ham and seasonal specials spiked with flavor, Joey's is sure to please all appetites. Join us for what has become a tradition in these parts, breakfast at Joey’s. MAD BATTER FOOD & FILM 617 W. Main Street Downtown Sylva. 828.586.3555. Open Monday through Saturday 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. with Sunday Brunch from 10:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Hand-tossed pizza, house-ground burgers, steak sandwiches & fresh salmon all from scratch. Casual family friendly atmosphere. Craft beer and interesting wine. Free movies Thursday through Saturday. Visit madbatterfoodfilm.com for this week’s shows & events. MAGGIE VALLEY CLUB 1819 Country Club Dr., Maggie Valley. 828.926.1616. maggievalleyclub.com/dine. Open seasonally for lunch and dinner. Fine and casual fireside dining in welcoming atmosphere. Full bar. Reservations accepted. MAGGIE VALLEY RESTAURANT 2804 Soco Road, Maggie Valley. 828.926.0425. 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. daily. Daily specials including soups, sandwiches and southern dishes along with featured dishes such as fresh fried chicken, rainbow trout, country ham, pork chops and more. Breakfast all day including omelets, pancakes, biscuits & gravy. facebook.com/carversmvr; instagram @carvers_mvr.
RENDEZVOUS RESTAURANT AND BAR Maggie Valley Inn and Conference Center 70 Soco Road, Maggie Valley 828.926.0201 Home of the Maggie Valley Pizzeria. We
SAGEBRUSH STEAKHOUSE 1941 Champion Drive, Canton 828.646.3750 895 Russ Ave., Waynesville 828.452.5822. Sunday through Thursday 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.; Friday and Saturday 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Carry out available. Sagebrush features hand carved steaks, chicken and award winning BBQ ribs. We have fresh salads, seasonal vegetables and scrumptious deserts. Extensive selection of local craft beers and a full bar. Catering special events is one of our specialties. SPEEDY’S PIZZA 285 Main Street, Sylva. 828.586.3800. Open seven days a week. Monday-Friday 11 a.m.-10 p.m., Saturday 3 p.m.-11 p.m., Sunday 4 p.m.-10 p.m. Family-owned for 30 years. Serving hand-tossed pizza made to order, pasta, subs, gourmet salads, calzones and seafood. TAP ROOM BAR & GRILL 176 Country Club Drive, Waynesville. 828.456.3551. Open seven days a week serving lunch and dinner. 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Tucked away inside Waynesville Inn, the Tap Room Bar & Grill has an approachable menu designed around locally sourced, sustainable, farm-to-table ingredients. Full bar and wine cellar. www.thewaynesvilleinn.com. WAYNESVILLE PIZZA COMPANY 32 Felmet Street, Waynesville. 828.246.0927. Open Monday through Friday; 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.; Saturday, noon to 10 p.m.; Sunday noon to 9 p.m.; closed Tuesdays. Opened in May 2016, The Waynesville Pizza Company has earned a reputation for having the best hand-tossed pizza in the area. Featuring a custom bar with more than 20 beers and a rustic, family friendly dining room. Menu includes salads, burgers, wraps, hot and cold sandwiches, gourmet pizza, homemade desserts, and a loaded salad bar. The Cuban sandwich is considered by most to be the best in town.
THURSDAY 5-9 P.M.
SUNDAY 11 A.M-3 P.M.
Rib buffet, fried chicken, vegetables, and a twenty-three item salad bar!
Piano Man & Angie
Buffet Brunch
$11.95
Country Buffet
$11.95
featuring turkey and dressing
Pay online and pick up with no waiting! Menu at CityLightsCafe.com
MON.-SAT. 11AM- 8 PM
3 E JACKSON ST. • SYLVA, NC
34 CHURCH ST. WAYNESVILLE 828.246.6505
www.CityLightsCafe.com
twitter.com/ChurchStDepot
828-246-6996 429 Hazelwood Avenue Waynesville Monday, Tuesday Wednesday Thursday, Friday Saturday, Sunday
7:30am to 8pm Closed 7:30am to 8pm 8am to 8pm
THANK YOU, HAYWOOD COUNTY,
FOR VOTING US
#1 BURGER! facebook.com/ChurchStreetDepot
AT BEARWATERS BREWING Sunday: Noon-6 p.m. • Tue-Thurs 3-8 p.m. Fri-Sat: Noon-9 p.m. • Monday: Closed
101 PARK ST. CANTON 828.492.1422 PIGEONRIVERGRILLE.COM
Experience a casual, relaxing atmosphere perfect for all walks of life, from families to golf groups to ladies who lunch. We pride ourselves on using fresh ingredients from our gardens and supporting local farmers. The details are priority.
Open to the Public, 7 Days A Week! Daily hours: 11 a.m. - 5 p.m. Call 828-926-4848 Winter Menu Includes Hot Soups & Snacks for reservations.
$12.95
Smoky Mountain News
WEDNESDAY 5-9 P.M.
Order Online for Takeout
April 10-16, 2019
PIGEON RIVER GRILLE 101 Park St., Canton. 828.492.1422. Open Tuesday through Thursday 3 to 8 p.m.; Friday-Saturday noon to 9 p.m.; Sunday noon to 6 p.m. Southern-inspired restaurant serving simply prepared, fresh food sourced from top purveyors. Located riverside at Bearwaters Brewing, enjoy daily specials, sandwiches, wings, fish and chips, flatbreads, soups, salads, and more. Be sure to save room for a slice of the delicious house made cake. Relaxing inside/outside dining and spacious gathering areas for large groups.
deliver after 4 p.m. daily to all of Maggie Valley, J-Creek area, and Lake Junaluska. Monday through Wednesday: 11:30 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Thursday: 11:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. country buffet and salad bar from 5 to 9 p.m. $11.95 with Steve Whiddon on piano. Friday and Saturday: 11:30 a.m. to 11 p.m.; Sunday 11:30 to 8 p.m. 11:30 to 3 p.m. family style, fried chicken, ham, fried fish, salad bar, along with all the fixings, $11.95. Check out our events and menu at rendezvousmaggievalley.com
1819 Country Club Drive Maggie Valley, NC
828.926.0201 At the Maggie Valley Inn • 70 Soco Road, Maggie Valley
M AG G I E VA LLEY C LU B . CO M 23
24
A&E
Smoky Mountain News
Want to go?
The Brothers Gillespie (from left) are Davis Gillespie, Max Pollifrone, Aaron Gillespie and Clay Gillespie.
All in the family The Brothers Gillespie to play hometown album release show BY GARRET K. WOODWARD STAFF WRITER n a leap of faith move last summer, Americana/indie act The Brothers Gillespie left its native Waynesville and took off over the state line to Johnson City, Tennessee. Comprised of three Gillespie siblings — Davis (singer/rhythm guitar), Clay (drums), Aaron (lead guitar) — and longtime friend Max Pollifrone (bass), the quartet chose Johnson City to create and perform its music as Clay finished up college at nearby East Tennessee State University (where he’s currently studying Appalachian music). With his graduation next month, The Brothers Gillespie will once again relocate back to Haywood County, this time returning to Western North Carolina with a debut fulllength album, “Love & Death.” Captured by producers Garrett Derhofer and Tom Osmunson at Studio-412 in Candler, the record is a seamless blend of Americana, psychedelic rock and honky-tonk stylings, gliding across the musical spectrum, all while making additional stops in the realms of country and folk music. It’s an impressive release from a young band, one that pushes The Brothers Gillespie across the threshold between weekend warriors playing the real-time soundtrack to another wild Saturday night and an actual touring act
I
with the potential to genuinely go the distance. Smoky Mountain News: Though three of y’all are brothers, how did it all come together musically? Aaron Gillespie: I came home from college one weekend during my senior year. Davis and Clay were upstairs jamming on a song Davis had recently written. It shocked me because I had never heard Davis sing or play guitar and it was a really good tune, which would eventually become “Wake Up.” Right there, I knew that we had to get some songs together and play — it was too good not to share. SMN: At what point did you decide to make a go at it, something you feel is worth all the blood, sweat and tears to try and make it? AG: I worked in an office in Charlotte before all this and it was the worst. I love creating and playing music, so I had to ask myself why was I wasting my time building a career in something I don’t care about when I could put all that effort towards something I love? Clay Gillespie: I’ve always wanted to pursue music. I think about cruising with my dad on fishing trips listening to The Beatles, Kiss, David Bowie, and thinking that I would do that one day. As I got older, my musical taste became more refined where, eventually, I got educated in music by the good folks of the bluegrass, old-time and country music pro-
The Brothers Gillespie will host an album release party as part of the “Brews & News” music series at 9 p.m. Friday, April 12, in The Gem downstairs taproom at Boojum Brewing Company in Waynesville. The series is a monthly collaboration between Boojum Brewing Company and The Smoky Mountain News. For more information about The Brothers Gillespie and the “Love & Death” album, visit www.brothersgillespie.com.
for attention — anyone who knew me as a child will tell you. SMN: What is it that keeps you going and inspired to push ahead and overcome the tough financial and professional challenges of being an independent act in the digital age? CG: Personally, I believe that we’re currently living in one of the greatest generations of music. We live in a time where an unsigned artist such as Chance the Rapper can release universally acclaimed albums, where grassroots “We live in an age that’s not reliant on artists resonate more than the over-produced, overradio play — even though it’s played artists that are crammed down our throats. welcomed, it’s not essential. What We live in an age that’s not keeps me inspired is the outpouring of reliant on radio play — even though it’s welcomed, support from a generation yearning for it’s not essential. What something different.” keeps me inspired is the outpouring of support from — Clay Gillespie a generation yearning for something different. AG: You just kind of come in when you nervous while you’re playing or maybe you’re not completely invested, they can feel that, and come in, and you have to make the best of it. they’ll respond accordingly. I really pay atten- That being said, I think we’re very fortunate to tion to what my favorite bands and singers do live in a time that makes music production and during their live performances, as far as danc- distribution so accessible. We produced our ing, yelling and really getting into the perform- [self-titled debut] EP from my bedroom and just recently surpassed a combined 10,000 ance, and I try to draw from that. CG: The live setting is where I thrive. streams on all platforms. I think it’s great that Sitting behind the drum kit doesn’t get all the you don’t have to be in Los Angeles or New glory, but engaging with the live audience is a York City or somewhere huge to make music joy of mine. Performing in front of people has — some of the best music comes from these litnever really been a difficulty of mine, being the tle pockets across the world doing their own youngest of three you’re constantly searching thing in their communities. gram at ETSU. As a student there, I realized that this could be a reality — you’re being educated by seasoned veterans of the industry, who not only round out your skills, but teach you a little bit about the life. SMN: What does the live setting spark within you, and also within your band? Davis Gillespie: One of the things we’ve learned — the energy and emotion in the audience is directly proportional to ours. If you’re
BY GARRET K. WOODWARD
Bristol Motor Speedway. Garret K. Woodward
HOT PICKS 1 2 3 4 5 Lazy Hiker Brewing (Franklin) will host The Melody Trucks Band w/The Donna Hopkins Band at 7:30 p.m. Friday, April 12.
P
CASUAL FINE DINING WITH LIVE MUSIC COVERED PATIO LATE NIGHT MENU
KITCHEN 743 TUESDAY THRU SUNDAY FROM 5PM UNTIL... SUNDAY BRUNCH 10AM TO 2PM
Smoky Mountain News
The Catawba Brewing “Beer Dinner” will be held ulling off US-11E and at 6:30 p.m. Monday, April 15, at Mad Anthony’s into some random perTaproom & Restaurant in Waynesville. son’s backyard last f Saturday afternoon, I handed The Japanese sumi-e painting workshop with the woman $10 and was Allan Grant will be held at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, directed to park my truck April 13, in the Atrium of the Jackson County along the tree line behind the Public Library in Sylva. rickety garage. Boojum Brewing Company (Waynesville) will host Stepping out of the vehiThe Brothers Gillespie (rock) at 9:30 p.m. Friday, cle, I could hear the sounds April 12. of 110-mph stock cars roaring around the half-mile Balsam Falls Brewing (Sylva) will host Bird in — track across the street at the Hand (Americana/folk) at 8 p.m. Friday, April 12. Bristol Motor Speedway — “The Last Great Colosseum” racing goes back as far as I can remember. — in the rolling hills of Eastern Tennessee. In terms of my attitude toward attending Raised in Upstate New York, I remember being a young kid and going with my father the ALSCO 300 (NASCAR Xfinity Series), to the local dirt track, the Airborne my fun level was “in it to win it,” as seen by Speedway, which was, and remains, one of my attire of a trucker hat, party shirt, the oldest continuously run racetracks in muddy boots and a pair of Daisy Dukes (a Christmas gag gift from a co-worker that has the country. Racing has always been a part of my now turned into a wardrobe option). dad’s side of the family. He was a child of Popping a cold domestic beer, I saluted the 1940s and 1950s, an era when car racing the unknown day, gazing over at the enor(and NASCAR) came to fruition. And he mous structure with only one thought in would tell me stories of being a teenager in mind — “It’s Bristol, baby.” Approaching the late 1950s, climbing over the fence in w the speedway in the blazing hot spring sunthe woods behind Airborne and sneaking shine, the noise of the stock cars became into the races. deafening, the smell of burning rubber and Back then, my dad’s uncle owned a spent fuel radiating into the air. mechanic’s garage (Bill’s Body Shop, which My love and relationship with stock car
April 10-16, 2019
The wheels on the track go ‘round and ‘round f
arts & entertainment
This must be the place
still is in operation) in his hometown of Peru, New York. My father and his cousins would rumble through the back fields in those ironclad tanks that were American cars of the 1950s, yanking the steering wheel and flying across wide-open cornfields. That garage also sponsored a racing team in those early days, and did so even when I would find myself in the early 1990s as a kid in the pit at Airborne, standing there alongside my dad, cheering on the family’s team as the cars spit mud all over the tracks, the smell of gasoline and oil wafting through the warm summer night air. Another reason I was big into racing is because of my Uncle Bobby. A retired Navy veteran from the Vietnam War, Uncle Bobby is, well, a car freak, to say the least. He’d show up to my parent’s house in some fast sports car or truck decked out with all the bells and whistles. And he’d always take me for a ride, my favorite being his 5.0L V8 1992 Ford Thunderbird (brand new at the time), the gas pedal pushed to the floor on some backcountry road — lord, that thing was a rocket. And I looked forward to watching racing with my Uncle Bobby. He lived in a mobile home way out in the country side of Schuyler Falls, New York. Every Sunday, my dad would take me for breakfast at the local diner, then we’d motor over to Uncle Bobby’s to say hello. Like clockwork, there’d be NASCAR on the large TV in the corner, my uncle sitting in the recliner, a big smile on his face as we’d walk in, his voice saying, “I figured you would come by today.” So, it meant a lot — more than I initially realized when I decided to go — when I stepped foot in the Bristol Motor Speedway. I look around and noticed all those legendary names of my youth now emblazoned on the walls surrounding the track — Earnhardt, Waltrip, Stewart. Sitting in that box suite high above the track, I sipped on my beer, munched on some fried chicken and found myself yelling along with the others near me, each of us cheering on our respective competitor, mine being Concord, North Carolina, driver #17 Kyle Weatherman. Toward the end of the ALSCO 300, one of the speedway attendants tapped me on the shoulder. He asked if I’d be interested in watching some of the race from “The Rooftop,” the patio bar in the middle of the track field. Sold. Handing me the infield passes, I took the elevator down to the mezzanine, then wandered into the tunnel that runs underneath the track. A moment later, I popped up in the Southern Appalachian sunshine, the piercing sounds of the engines speeding by me. Putting in my earplugs, I stood atop the patio in sheer awe of these technological marvels zooming by me in an instant. I immediately thought of my Uncle Bobby and what he would think of me being there, front-and-center in the field at Bristol, that trademark smile of his from ear-to-ear. He’ll get a kick out of it the next time I find myself back home in Upstate New York, ideally on a Sunday afternoon — race day. Life is beautiful, grasp for it, y’all.
AVAILABLE FOR PRIVATE EVENTS 743 HAYWOOD RD • WEST ASHEVILLE
ISISASHEVILLE.COM 828.575.2737
25
arts & entertainment
On the beat Isaac Quillen and Abby Sparks.
Civic Orchestra performance at WCU
Smoky Mountain News
April 10-16, 2019
The Western Carolina Civic Orchestra will present their annual spring concert at 7:30 p.m. Monday, April 15, in the School of Music Recital Hall (Coulter building) on the campus of Western Carolina University. The concert will include performances of music by Gounod, Sibelius, Mozart and Hanson, as well as the Cullowhee premiere
Open call for youth musicians There is an open call currently underway for the “Mountain Youth Talent Contest,” which will be held during the Greening Up the Mountains Festival on Saturday, April 27, in downtown Sylva. The Jackson County 4-H supports traditional music and storytelling by hosting the “Mountain Youth Talent Contest” that are held each spring and summer. You do not need to be a 4-H member to participate. Youth will showcase their talents in a variety of individual and group instrumental categories. This year, they will return to awarding prize money for first place win-
ners by age as well as first and second place “Best of Show” winners. The top two “Best of Show” winners from each of three community contests move on to the final contest on the Heritage Stage at the Mountain Heritage Day at Western Carolina University in September. Information about the “Mountain Youth Talent Contest” is available at the Jackson County Cooperative Extension/4-H website: jackson.ces.ncsu.edu at the 4-H blog at jackson4-H.blogspot.com and on Facebook at Heritage Alive Mountain Youth Talent Contest of WNC. Entry deadline is April 17. Contact the Jackson County 4-H Agent, Heather Gordon, for any additional details at 828.586.4009 or heather_gordon@ncsu.edu.
Quality Trailers, Quality Prices
Bob Sheppard.
WCU Jazz Festival Western Carolina University’s 17th annual Jazz Festival will be held Saturday, April 13, on the campus in Cullowhee. The festival will feature a free public concert, masterclasses with professional musicians for students and a general daylong celebration of the distinctive music genre. Guests include Bob Sheppard, a saxophonist whose list of credits includes playing alongside Natalie Cole, Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock, and movie soundtracks including “Forrest Gump,” “Nixon” and “Austin Powers”; and drummer Ed Soph, who has performed with Cedar Walton, Bill Evans and Joe Henderson. He also played with Glenn Miller, Stan Kenton and Woody Herman orchestras and is known for his big band drumming. Soph is an inductee in the Percussive Arts Society’s Hall of Fame.
The concert, featuring both guest artists and faculty and student musicians, begins at 7:30 p.m. in the recital hall of the Coulter Building and will feature a big band and combo repertoire. Pavel Wlosok, a Czech-born American pianist and professor of jazz with WCU’s School of Music, has organized the festival since 2003. He has recorded and played with jazz notables such as John Riley, Donny McCaslin, Rick Margitza and Bobby Watson. He also holds the distinction of being a recipient of the Gil Evans Fellowship, presented by International Association of Jazz Educators. “Ed Soph says that the best improvisers are the fastest thinkers,” said Wlosok. “I think that comment says a lot about jazz and the excitement of music as a stream of thought. We are truly excited about how this year’s festival is shaping up. In addition, (WCU assistant professor of music) Chris Beyt will sit in on guitar with these artists and myself during the second half of the concert, and we’ve hired Zack Page, an Asheville-based musician with impeccable sound and time-feel, on double bass, to help us out with all this.” A timeframe of select events, all in the recital hall of the Coulter Building and subject to change: • 9-10 a.m. — Jazz drumming masterclass with Soph. • Noon — Improvisation masterclass with Sheppard. • 1 p.m. — Faculty jam and prepare repertoire for evening performance. • 3 p.m. — Wlosok directs WCU Jazz Ensemble dress rehearsal. For more information, contact Wlosok at 828.227.3261 or pwlosok@wcu.edu.
Bryson City community jam A community jam will be held from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Thursday, April 18, at the Marianna Black Library in Bryson City. Anyone with a guitar, banjo, mandolin, fiddle, dulcimer, anything unplugged, are invited to join. Singers are also welcomed to join in or you can just stop by and listen. The jam is facilitated by Larry Barnett of the Sawmill Creek Porch Band. The music jams are offered to the public each first and third Thursday of the month — year-round. This program received support from the North Carolina Arts Council, an agency funded by the State of North Carolina and the National Endowment of the Arts. 828.488.3030.
ENSLEY TIRE SERVICE MOBILE TIRE SERVICE - WE COME TO YOU!
We Specialize in
Farm & Agriculture Tires & Repairs Farm Tires pricing starting at $499
26
of a piece by North Carolina composer, Corydon Bell, Long After Bach. Featured on the program will be the winners of this year’s Jackson County Arts Council Solo Competition. Winners in the junior category, violinists Isaac Quillen and Abby Sparks of Sylva, will perform the first movement from the Vivaldi Concerto Grosso Op. 3 No. 8. Competition winners Michelle Lang and Mickey McCabe, both WCU School of Music students, will also perform with the orchestra. Lang, a student of Dr. William Martin, will sing the soprano aria “Ach, Ich fühl’s” from Mozart’s The Magic Flute. Ms. McCabe, a flutist and student of Dr. Eldred Spell and will perform Howard Hanson’s Serenade for flute, harp, and strings. The WCU School of Music sponsors the orchestra, which also receives support from the Jackson County Arts Council, a division of the Department of Cultural Resources, with funding from the National Endowment for the Arts, so that the concert is free and open to the public. The orchestra includes members from around the Western North Carolina region, including amateur, student and professional players; and welcomes new playing members each year. For further information, call the School of Music 828.227.7242.
Trailer Center
financing available, ask for details
HaywoodBuilders.com 828-456-6051 | 100 Charles St. | Waynesville
Lee Ensley 828.342.1796 Patty Ensley 828.421.0146 548 STEPHENS ROAD, SYLVA NC
On the beat
• Balsam Falls Brewing (Sylva) will host Bird in Hand (Americana/folk) April 12 and Alma Russ (old-time/Americana) April 19. All shows start at 8 p.m. Free and open to the public. www.balsamfallsbrewing.com. • Blue Ridge Beer Hub (Waynesville) will host an acoustic jam with Main St. NoTones from 6 to 9 p.m. April 11 and 18. Free and open to the public. www.blueridgebeerhub.com. • Boojum Brewing Company (Waynesville) will host a bluegrass open mic every Wednesday, an all-genres open mic every Thursday, The Brothers Gillespie (rock) April 12, Kathryn O’Shea (Americana/folk) April 13 and PMA (reggae/rock) April 20. All shows begin at 9:30 p.m. unless otherwise noted. www.boojumbrewing.com.
ALSO:
• Frog Level Brewing (Waynesville) will host Scoundrel’s Lounge April 12, Todd Hoke April 13, Kathryn O’Shea April 19 and Frank & Allie (Americana/folk) April 20. All shows begin at 7 p.m. unless otherwise noted. Free and open to the public. www.froglevelbrewing.com. • Grand Old Lady Hotel (Balsam) will host “Bluegrass on the Mountain” w/Bobby Maynard & Breakdown April 20. Dinner buffet at 5:30 p.m followed by the show at 7:30 p.m. For more information and/or to purchase tickets, call 828.456.9498 or visit www.grandoldladyhotel.com.
• Innovation Station (Dillsboro) will host a fundraiser show with Matt Stillwell (country, $20 cover) April 11-12, Liz & AJ Nance (Americana/folk) April 13 and Alma Russ (Americana/old-time) April 20. All events are free and begin at 7 p.m. unless otherwise noted. www.innovation-brewing.com. • Isis Music Hall (West Asheville) will host Oliver Penn (blues/country) 7 p.m. April 10, Mama’s Broke w/Anna Tivel (Americana/folk)
• The Macon County Public Library (Franklin) will host “Songwriters in the Round” 7 p.m. April 13 and C-Square (big band/jazz) 1 p.m. April 18. Events are free to attend. • Mountain Layers Brewing (Bryson City) will host the “Stone Soup” open mic night every Tuesday, Scott Stambaugh (singer-songwriter) April 12, Frank & Allie (Americana/old-time) April 13, Kate Thomas (singer-songwriter) April 19 and Twelfth Fret (acoustic/folk) April 20. All shows are free and begin at 7 p.m. www.mountainlayersbrewingcompany.com. • Nantahala Brewing (Bryson City) will host Red Clay Revival April 12, The Northside Gentlemen April 13, The Company Stores April 19 and Nice Couch April 20. All shows are free and begin at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. www.nantahalabrewing.com. • Pub 319 (Waynesville) will host an open mic night from 8 to 11 p.m. every Wednesday. Free and open to the public. www.pub319socialhouse.com. • Salty Dog’s (Maggie Valley) will have Karaoke with Jason Wyatt at 8:30 p.m. on Tuesdays and Fridays, Mile High (classic rock) 8 p.m. Wednesdays and Saturdays, and a Trivia w/Kelsey Jo 8 p.m. Thursdays. • Satulah Mountain Brewing (Highlands) will host “Hoppy Hour” and an open mic at 6 p.m. on Thursdays and live music on Friday evenings. 828.482.9794 or www.satulahmountainbrewing.com. • The Water’n Hole Bar & Grill (Waynesville) will host an “Open Mic Night” on Mondays, karaoke on Thursdays and semi-regular music on Fridays and Saturdays. All events at 10 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 828.456.4750.
Smoky Mountain News
• Innovation Brewing (Sylva) will have an Open Mic night April 10 and 17, and a jazz night with the Kittle/Collings Duo April 11 and 18. All events are free and begin at 8 p.m. www.innovation-brewing.com.
• Lazy Hiker Brewing (Franklin) will host an open mic night at 6:30 p.m. every Thursday, The Melody Trucks Band w/The Donna Hopkins Band 7:30 p.m. April 12, El Dub 8 p.m. April 13, Karaoke Throwdown 8 p.m. April 19 and “Lazy Hiker’s Outdoor Music Jam” w/Porch 40 (rock/funk) and The Company Stores from 5 to 11 p.m. April 20. All shows begin at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. For more information and a complete schedule of events, visit www.lazyhikerbrewing.com.
April 10-16, 2019
• Currahee Brewing (Franklin) will host “Merrell Magic” with Three Eagles Outfitters and live music from Bad Kenny from 4 to 9 p.m. April 13. Free and open to the public. www.curraheebrew.com.
7 p.m. April 11, Amy Steinberg (folk/rock) 8:30 p.m. April 11, Dan Frechette & Laurel Thomsen (Americana/folk) 7 p.m. April 12, Danielle Nicole Band (blues) 9 p.m. April 12, Plywood Cowboy (Americana/alt-country) 7 p.m. April 13, Bruce Katz Band (jazz/blues) 8:30 p.m. April 13, Lula Wiles (folk/rock) 6 p.m. April 14, Al Petteway & Amy White (blues/folk) 7:30 p.m. April 14, Rob Parks & Friends (bluegrass) 7:30 p.m. April 16 and Wyatt Edmondson & Laura Rabell 7 p.m. April 17. For more information about the performances and/or to purchase tickets, visit www.isisasheville.com.
arts & entertainment
• Andrews Brewing Company (Andrews) will host the “Lounge Series” at its Calaboose location with George Ausman (singer-songwriter) April 12, Heidi Holton (blues/folk) April 13, Gabe Myers (singer-songwriter) 5 p.m. April 18, Tom Edwards (singer-songwriter) April 19 and A. Lee Edwards (indie/folk) April 20. All shows are free and begin at 6 p.m. unless otherwise noted. www.andrewsbrewing.com.
27
arts & entertainment
On the table
On the street
Craft beer, gourmet dinner at Mad Anthony’s
Wheels Through Time Museum updates name Dale Walksler.
The Catawba Brewing “Beer Dinner” will be held at 6:30 p.m. Monday, April 15, at Mad Anthony’s Taproom & Restaurant in Waynesville. Four craft beer selections will be paired with four chef-created courses prepared by Chef Matt Kuver. All attendees will receive a gift pack from the brewery. Tickets are $60, which includes tax and gratuity. Only 50 tickets available. Tickets are available for purchase at Mad Anthony’s. For more information, call the taproom at 828.246.9249. • The “Uncorked: Wine & Rail Pairing Experience” will be held from 10:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Saturday, April 13, at the Great Smoky Mountains Railroad in Bryson City. Full service all-adult first class car. Wine pairings with a meal and more. 800.872.4681 or visit www.gsmr.com.
ALSO:
• Free cooking demonstrations will be held from 5 to 7 p.m. on Saturdays at Country Traditions in Dillsboro. Eat samples and taste house wines for $3 a glass. www.countrytraditionsnc.com.
Wheels Through Time, “The Museum That Runs,” has announced that they are updating their name in honor and recognition of museum founder and curator, Dale Walksler. The new name will be, “Dale’s Wheels Through Time Museum.”
Coinciding with the name change will be a new logo and branding as well as new and updated merchandise. Beginning over 50 years ago, Walksler set out with a vision to create and establish a collection that would preserve the
history of American Transportation. After 24 years as a successful Harley-Davidson dealer in Mt. Vernon, Illinois, he made the move to beautiful Maggie Valley and has spent the last 17 years shaping the museum into a world-class institution. The museum now boasts over 375 of the countries rarest and historic two and fourwheeled vehicles, spanning over 115 years of motorcycle history. During that time, over 1.5 million people, representing almost every country on the globe, have visited the museum — a testament of the legacy that Walksler has created. His passion and singular focus coupled with hit TV shows such as “What’s In The Barn” and “American Restoration,” has helped him to expand the museum’s reach. In that time, countless others have recognized Walksler through articles, interviews and his induction to the Sturgis Motorcycle Hall of Fame. With the new name, the museum joins them in their recognition of his contribution to motorcycle history. Dale’s Wheels Through Time Museum operating hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday through Monday. For more information, visit www.wheelsthroughtime.com.
www.facebook.com/inyourearmusic April 10-16, 2019
urf Palivpe ain sS tore
0 0-3:0Orders 1:0Special
April 13 2019 Smoky Mountain News
BEST SMOKE & VAPE SHOP IN SYLVA
573 W. Main Sylva, NC 828-586-6404 28
GIVEAWAYS All DAY
UNIQUE QUALITY INSTRUMENTS FOR LESS!
OFFICIAL RETAILER
Palmetto Harmony
CBD Products Tincture • Flower Vape • Salves Edibles
POSTERS • INCENSE • HATS • T-SHIRTS • GUITAR ACCESSORIES • STICKERS • HAIRDYE • BODY JEWELRY • SUNGLASSES • LAMPS • HANDBAGS
On the wall
The Haywood County Arts Council (HCAC) latest showcase, “Inspired Art Ministry,” will run through April 27 at the HCAC Gallery & Gifts in downtown Waynesville. This exhibit features the work by Inspired Art Ministry instructor, Char Avrunin and her students. Art work in oil, acrylic, watercolor, color pencils, graphite, charcoal and ink will be featured. A variety of subject matter will be presented, from landscapes to still lifes to portraits. The “Artist Reception” will be at 5:30 p.m. Friday, April 5, at Gallery & Gifts. www.haywoodarts.org.
• • • • •
Tires Brakes Alignment Road Service Tractor Tires
M ONDAY-F RIDAY 7:30-5:00 • WAYNESVILLE P LAZA 828-456-5387 • WAYNESVILLETIRE . COM
COMPLETELASERCLINIC.COM [828] 482-5030 ASHEVILLE & MURPHY OFFICES
Smoky Mountain News
‘Inspired Art Ministry’ exhibit
Authorized Motor Fleet Management Maintenance
April 10-16, 2019
Haywood Community College’s Professional Crafts Department will host two visiting artists in April at the institution in Clyde. Artist Devon le Fae will be on campus at 4 p.m. Tuesday, April 16. Artist Jason Bige Burnette will visit at 4 p.m. Monday, April 22. Both lectures will be held in the Creative Arts Building, Room 7105. Free and open to the public. Le Fae is an internationally published model from Western Massachusetts and is currently based out of Western North Carolina. With over 10 years of experience as a fine art, runway and fashion model, she has worked in the United States and Europe. Le Fae will share a slide presentation that includes her portfolio of professional art and fashion images. She will discuss the collaborative nature of the artist-model working relationship. Burnette graduated from Western Kentucky University with bachelor’s degrees in ceramics, printmaking and graphic design. He then continued his education for two years at the Penland School of Crafts as a core fellowship student and spent a year as an artist-in-residence at Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts. Burnette has taught many ceramic surface design workshops at various locations. His ceramics have been exhibited nationally, and he has been featured in several publications. In addition, he is an author. HCC’s Professional Crafts programs offer an innovative, affordable, groundbreaking craft education with focuses in clay, fiber, jewelry and wood. Students can achieve the skills necessary to become viable independent studio artists or to become valuable, skilled employees in the expanding craft industry. For more information on the spring visiting artist series, call 828.627.4672 or email aputansu@haywood.edu. Registration for summer and fall semester is now open. For more information about registration, visit www.haywood.edu or email hcc-advising@haywood.edu.
arts & entertainment
HCC welcomes visiting artists
WAYNESVILLE TIRE, INC.
29
arts & entertainment
On the wall • The Museum of the Cherokee Indian has recently opened a major new exhibit, “People of the Clay: Contemporary Cherokee Potters.” It features more than 60 potters from the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians and Cherokee Nation, and more than one hundred works from 1900 to the present. The exhibit will run through next April. • Camp Ability along with Outdoor Mission Camp will host a one day Arts & Music Camp from 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 10, at Waynesville Community Fellowship located at 1115 Dellwood Road. This is a free event. Visit Camp Ability’s FaceBook page or contact Diane Gayer at 828.226.5572 to register. • The Macon County Art Association and the Uptown Gallery “Featured Artists Alcove” will host a special invitational exhibit by the Art League of Highlands-Cashiers. The show will be on display through April 27, with a free public reception from 4 to 6 p.m. Friday, April 12, at the Uptown Gallery in Franklin. For more information, call the Uptown Gallery at 828.349.4607.
Smoky Mountain News
April 10-16, 2019
• The Western North Carolina Woodturners Club Inc. will meet at 10 a.m. Saturday, April 13, at The Bascom in Highlands. Drive across the covered bridge into the parking lot, and come into the main entrance near the covered patio. Visitors are always welcome. The club meets in Highlands the second Saturday of every month between March and November.
30
This month’s presenter will be John Van Camp from the Brasstown Woodturners Guild. • The exhibit “Outspoken: Paintings by America Meredith” will be on display through May 3 at the Fine Art Museum Gallery B in the Bardo Arts Center at Western Carolina University in Cullowhee. This showcase draws particular attention to the importance of language in Meredith’s work, bringing together paintings that incorporate Cherokee syllabary, reference Cherokee oral histories, and pair found-object text with visual imagery. www.facebook.com/americameredithart.
ALSO:
• The Western Carolina University Fine Art Museum at Bardo Arts Center is pleased to present the School of Art and Design Faculty Biennial Exhibition 2019, which will be on display through May 3. All WCU Fine Art Museum exhibitions and receptions are free and open to the public. Visit arts.wcu.edu/biennial or call 828.227.3591. • There will several local artisans on display at the Waynesville and Canton libraries through March. Artists at the Waynesville Library will include Patty Johnson Coulter (painter), Linda Blount (painter), Jason Woodard (painter) and Mollie HarringtonWeaver (painter). Artists at the Canton Library will include Russell Wyatt (photographer) and Ashley Calhoun (painter). For more information, visit www.haywoodarts.org.
Interested in Japanese sumi-e painting? The Japanese sumi-e painting workshop will be held at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, April 13, in the Atrium of the Jackson County Public Library in Sylva. In the workshop, Allan Grant will talk about some of the techniques of the Japanese sumi-e style of painting. Participants in this workshop will have the opportunity to try their hand at grinding ink, practicing brush strokes and creating an original composition. All supplies will be provided. This program is free of charge. The workshop is limited to 14 participants. Call the library to register. For more information, call 828.586.2016. This event is co-sponsored
• A “Beginner Step-By-Step” painting class will be held at 7 p.m. on Thursdays at Frog Level Brewing in Waynesville. Cost is $25 with all supplies provided. For more information on paint dates and/or to RSVP, contact Robin Arramae at 828.400.9560 or paintnitewaynesville@gmail.com. • The Western Carolina University (Cullowhee) Campus Theme, the “Defining America” exhibit brings together artists with different perspectives on the concept of “America” and asks visitors to reflect on the
Allan Grant.
by the Friends of the Jackson County Public Library. The Jackson County Public Library is a member of Fontana Regional Library (www.fontanalib.org).
values, definitions, and assumptions attached to this concept. The exhibition will be on view through May 3 at the Bardo Arts Center. Regular museum hours at the BAC are Tuesday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Thursdays until 7 p.m. 828.227.ARTS or visit bardoartscenter.wcu.edu. • Mad Batter Food & Film (Sylva) will host a free movie night at 7:30 p.m. every Thursday, Friday and Saturday. www.madbatterfoodandfilm.com.
On the stage
THURSDAY, MAY 30TH
arts & entertainment
Do you know ‘All About Eve’?
Raffle for a Florida Play & Stay package | Hole-In-One Sponsored by Waynesville Auto Tailgate food prepared on the course by Hometown Hardware and MB Haynes
presents
The Highlands Performing Arts Center will screen the National Theatre of London’s production of “All About Eve” by Joseph L Mankiewicz at 1 p.m. Saturday, April 13. Starring Gillian Anderson (X-Files, NT Live: A Streetcar Named Desire) and Lily James (Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again.) “All About Eve” tells the story of Margo Channing. Legend. True star of the theatre. The spotlight is hers, always has been. But, now there’s Eve. Her biggest fan young, beautiful Eve. The golden girl, the girl next door. But, you know all about Eve, don’t you? Lifting the curtain on a world of jealousy and ambition, this new production, from one of the world’s most innovative theatre directors, Ivo van Hove, asks why our fascination with celebrity, youth and identity never seems to get old. “All About Eve” is adapted by Ivo van Hove from the 1950 Twentieth Century Fox film by Joseph L Mankiewicz and the play “The Wisdom of Eve” by Mary Orr. Tickets are available online at www.highlandspac.org or at the door.
• A musical, pictorial and live stage presentation of Jesus’ last days, “A Glimpse of His Last Days,” based on a cantata by Dallas
• Interested in theatre? The Macon County Public Library in Franklin is looking for experienced volunteers to help with an upcoming theatre program, “Shakespeare in the Summer.” Join them for a meeting to discuss the summer schedule, show and future of “Theatre at the Library,” which will be held at 5:30 p.m. Friday, April 12, at the library.
ALSO:
• There is free comedy improv class from 7 to 9 p.m. every Tuesday at Frog Level Brewing in Waynesville. No experience necessary, just come to watch or join in the fun. Improv teacher Wayne Porter studied at Sak Comedy Lab in Orlando, Florida, and performed improvisation with several groups. Join Improv WNC on Facebook or just call 828.316.8761.
@SmokyMtnNews
Greens at
r This ain't you lf go s ’ y d d a d d n a gr tournament! 4 PERSON CAPTAIN’S CHOICE $600/team $150/person Pre-Game/Registration
7:30 till 8:45am
Game Time/Shotgun Start
9:00am
Call the chamber to sign up or for more info (828) 456-3021
Smoky Mountain News
The Western Carolina University School of Stage and Screen will host a production of the classic tale “Beauty and the Beast” onstage at 7:30 p.m. April 11-13 and 3 p.m. April 14 at the Bardo Arts Center in Cullowhee. A young, provincial French woman, Belle, longs for something more than her little country town. When she stumbles upon an old castle, she meets the Beast, who is really a young prince trapped under the spell of an enchantress. If the Beast can learn to love and loved, the curse will end and he will be transformed in to his former self. But, if he does not learn his lesson soon, the curse will become permanent. Recommended for all ages. Tickets start at $10 per person. To purchase tickets, visit www.wcu.edu/bardo-arts-center or call 828.227.2479.
Holmes, will be held at 7 p.m. April 12-13 at the Smoky Mountain Center for the Performing Arts in Franklin. Tickets are $10 for adults, $5 for students. For more information and/or to purchase tickets, visit www.greatmountainmusic.com or call 828.524.1598.
on the
April 10-16, 2019
‘Beauty and the Beast’ live, onstage
Tailgating
31
32
Smoky Mountain News April 10-16, 2019
arts & entertainment
Books
Smoky Mountain News
Something satisfying in a good mystery food, who literally only owns the clothes on his back, who rides the bus or hitchhikes rather than owning a car, a large
Jeff Minick
Jack Reacher is back. In Past Tense (Delacorte Press, 2018, 382 pages), Lee Child, author of 21 novels about Jack Reacher, plus a collection of short stories, drops the wandering hero into the town where Reacher’s father was born and raised. Reacher has never visited Laconia, New Hampshire, and hopes to see where his deceased father came of age, believing some familiarity with the town might Writer allow him insights into his family’s history. Meanwhile, Patty Sundstorm and Shorty Fleck, a young couple from Canada, are on the run, making their way to New York to sell the valuables in the trunk of their car and then on to Florida to open a windsurfing rental business. When their car breaks down, they end up in a motel far off the beaten path. Not only do they soon realize they are the motel’s only guests, but they also slowly become aware that the owners have some special treatment in store for them. Soon, Patty and Shorty are prisoners, locked in their room, their every move, their every sound, captured on hidden cameras. Back in Laconia, Jack Reacher’s search takes him to Ryantown, a nearby village where his father had lived, abandoned 50 years earlier once the town’s tin mill had closed. During his investigation, Reacher becomes acquainted with various townspeople, including a female clerk and a police officer. One night he embeds himself deeper into the town’s affairs when he rescues a woman from sexual assault, stomps the assailant, and so faces a vendetta from the young man’s family. As the story continues — to tell much more would blow the plot — the links between Reacher and the two prisoners in the motel begin to reveal themselves. We learn the awful reason why Patty and Shorty are locked in that room, and witness their ordeal when they attempt an escape. We follow Reacher through a convoluted investigation of his father’s youth, confused by his findings, wavering back and forth as to what to believe about the past while at the same time facing thugs in the present. For Jack Reacher fans, Past Tense depicts Reacher in all his glory, the man who exists on black coffee and diner
strong drifter, a former military policeman and graduate of West Point who hates injustice and is willing to bust heads when he sees the strong hurting the weak. Like all the other Reacher novels, Past Tense has a tendency at times to stretch the reader’s credulity. (Once I was listening to one of the Reacher novels on CD — I don’t remember which one; I’ve read several and can never keep the titles straight — and the ending was so ridiculous I would have thrown the audiobook in the trash if it hadn’t belonged to the library.) Overall, however, Past Tense was right up there with the best of the Reacher books. The chase scene at the end kept me glued to the pages and awake into the early morning. Like Lee Child, David Hewson has also written acclaimed suspense novels named for one of his characters: the Nic Costa Series. In his latest, The Savage Shore (Severn House Publishers, 2018, 278 pages), Hewson sweeps Nic and the team of detectives to which he belongs —Leo Falcone, Gianni Peroni, Silvio Di Capua, Rosa Prabakaran, and Teresa Lupo — away from Rome and drops
them deep into Southern Italy, where they work undercover to nab leaders and members of the Mafia and the ‘Ndrangheta, another crime organization. Nic has the most dangerous job of the team, having to pass himself off as a distant relation of the crime boss and so infiltrate the group. The others wait in the nearby coastal town of Cardidi, acting as a communications center and ready to pounce when Nic gives them the thumb’s up. As we follow the adventures of these Roman detectives, we gain a real sense of the history of this part of Italy, its culture, the love of its people for their land, their suspicion of outsiders. Though Hewson is British, he clearly spends much time in Italy, as he writes all of these novels with authority. He recreates the harsh landscape of this part of the Italian penninsula so vividly that we can see it in our mind’s eye, and he brings into the book his usual competent working knowledge of detectives and the job they do. Through various literary devices he weaves into his story the myths of the region, ranging from Greek mythology to the origins of the ‘Ndrangheta. Between The Savage Shore and Past Tense lies one great difference. Readers can make their way through Past Tense without paying close attention, flying along through the story, driven onward by plot and fast action. The Savage Shore demands a closer reading. The unfamiliar names, the unfamiliar history and culture, the involvement of more characters: you will become quickly lost if you try to consume this novel as though you were eating a bowl of popcorn and staring at reruns of “Leave It To Beaver” on television. But here’s the thing: the payoff is worth it. You learn many things about Italy, about crime, about culture both modern and ancient. Plus, you immerse yourself in a fine story. (Jeff Minick is a writer and teacher. minick0301@gmail.com.)
33
‘Coffee with the Poets and Writers’ in Hayesville April is National Poetry Month and poet Brenda Kay Ledford will read selections of her poetry during “Coffee with the Poets and Writers” at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, April 17, at Moss Memorial Library in Hayesville. This event is sponsored by North Carolina Writers’ NetworkWest, a program of the North Carolina Writers’ Network, the state literary organization. The event is free and open to the public. An open mic will follow Ledford’s reading. Bring a couple of poems or a short prose piece to participate. Ledford’s latest poetry book, Red Plank House, released by Kelsay Books, is available at Amazon.com. For more information, contact Glenda Beall at glendabeall@msn.com.
Children’s author visits Haywood Author Kerry Madden-Lunsford will host a series of events around Haywood County in celebration of her latest children’s book Ernestine’s Milky Way. The book tells the story of 5-year-old Ernestine, who sets out on a journey to help a neighbor in Maggie Valley. She learns that she can conquer her fears and be a “big girl.” The inspiration for this book came from a story told by native resident, the late Ernestine Upchurch, about her childhood. Madden-Lunsford first met Upchurch after she published Gentle’s Holler, a children’s novel that was set in Maggie Valley. They remained close friends until Upchurch’s death. The events are as follows: n 8 a.m. to noon Thursday, April 18: Book signing at Joey’s Pancake House in Maggie Valley. Free and open to the public. n 3 to 5 p.m. Friday, April 19: Afternoon tea at Nettie’s Bakery in Waynesville. Tickets must be purchased in advance through Blue Ridge Books. n 3 p.m. Saturday, April 20: Book reading and signing at Blue Ridge Books in Waynesville. Free and open to the public. Kerry will also be doing programs for three local schools. For more information, call 828.456.6000 or visit www.blueridgebooksnc.com.
Celebrate National Poetry Month City Lights Bookstore will host four poets to mark National Poetry Month at 3 p.m. Saturday, April 13, at the bookstore in Sylva. The poets that will be reading are Dee Stribling, Kim BlumHyclak, Sue Dunlap and Laurie Wilcox-Meyer. For more information, call City Lights Bookstore at 828.586.9499.
‘Campus Origins of Today’s Radical Right’ Nancy MacLean, a Duke University historian and award-winning author, will deliver her views concerning the nation’s radical right political movement, opposition to labor unions, voter suppression and increased privatization of government services at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, April 11, in the conference room of Blue Ridge Hall at Western Carolina University. Titled “The Campus Origins of Today’s Radical Right and of the Crisis of Our Democracy,” MacLean’s talk will draw from her book Democracy in Chains, which won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize in Current Interest, the Lannan Foundation Cultural Freedom Award and the Lillian Smith Book Award and was named the “Most Valuable Book of 2017” by The Nation magazine. For more information, contact Andrew Denson at 828.227.3867 or denson@wcu.edu.
34
Outdoors
Smoky Mountain News
Gardening by the square foot Method works well for mountain gardens
to be between the plants,” said Roberts. The square-foot garden has some major advantages over the row garden, even aside from space, he said. For one thing, there are few if any weeds to deal with, because the garBY HOLLY KAYS den plants themselves take up all the space, STAFF WRITER shading the soil as they grow to prevent ughes Roberts had been gardening for unwanted plants from springing up. It’s easier decades when he first encountered the to harvest, because all the plants are right concept of square-foot gardening. there, not spread out between various rows. “I happened on this book maybe 25 years And it’s cheaper, too — with the right ago, one of his first books, and it intrigued me soil mix to start out with, few if any fertilizbecause his concepts made sense,” said ers are needed. Expensive equipment like a Roberts. tiller is unnecessary, and one pack of seeds The book in question is Square Foot can go a lot further. Instead of spilling out Gardening: A New Way to Garden in Less the whole pack on a row and then returning Space with Less Work, by Mel Bartholomew. to thin out the majority of those sprouts, the Bartholomew released the first edition of this square-foot gardener drops three seeds in a now twice-revised book in 1981, laying out a hole, cuts out the extras after germination new way to think about gardens and gardenand stores the remaining seeds for a future ing. growing season. Conventional gardening — row gardening “If this seed packet cost $2 this year for a — involves tilling a patch of ground, making row garden, it costs 40 cents doing it in the rows of furrows about three feet apart, and way I’ve done it,” Roberts told the Two large raised beds at the class. Canton library grow a bounty. The key is to plant only what you need — one or two tomato plants, for example, instead of six — but also to stagger plantings. Instead of sowing 10 letThe children’s square-foot garden at the tuce seeds at once Canton Public Library grows a variety of and then being herbs, vegetables and flowers in just 9 faced with the square feet. Donated photos challenge of using up 10 heads of lettuce within the space of a week or two, plant those same 10 seeds at offset intervals throughout the season. When a plant reaches the end of its fruitbearing life, remove it, fill the hole with compost, and plant someA bean teepee at the Canton thing new in the empty square. library teems with legumes. “The approach kind of automatically moves things around so you don’t have the The Seed Library of Waynesville, located at the Waynesville Public Library, offers an opportunity to get seeds for free and pay it plants in the same forward by donating saved seeds from all manner of garden plants. place every time Anybody with a library card can check out a maximum 10 packs of seeds. Inventory changes based on donations. To donate you plant,” said seeds, drop them off at the circulation desk with your name, contact information and as much information as is available about the Roberts. seeds. And the best
H
sprinkling seeds along that length. “You’ve got that space in between your plants, and it’s a wonderful space for weeds because you’re probably going to put a sprinkler out there, and where is most of the water going? Right on your weeds,” Roberts told a group of about 20 people gathered to hear his crash course on square-foot gardening Thursday, April 4, at the Waynesville Public Library. Square-foot gardening, by contrast, eliminates that weed-friendly space. It relies on rectangular raised-bed gardens overlaid with a grid of one-foot squares. In each square, the gardener plants a different vegetable, the number of plants scaled according to their size at maturity. One square will accommodate only one tomato plant, for example, but it can hold nine Swiss chard plants, or 16 radishes. “This whole scheme helps you think through how to plan, and it all comes back to what the seed grower says the spacing needs
Get started with the seed library
Build a square-foot garden 1. Choose an area to place the garden that gets six to eight hours of sun each day, is not close to trees and shrubs and does not puddle after a heavy rain. The condition of the existing soil is not important. 2. Build a square or rectangular box able to hold at least 6 inches of soil above the existing ground level. Boxes must not be wider than 4 feet and should be able to be divided into one-foot squares. Do not use treated wood, and paint or stain the outsides only. 3. Dig out the sod or weeds, or add a weed barrier such as a landscape cloth or cardboard. Wet it down. 4. Space boxes 3 feet apart to form walking aisles. 5. Make a soil mix that is equal parts peat moss, coarse vermiculite and compost. Ensure it is at least 6 inches deep after settling. 6. Add the grid. Use wood lath, vinyl or Venetian blinds. 7. Select crops, growing a different flower, vegetable or herb in each square foot. Plant with desired harvest size in mind and stagger the harvest to prevent over-planting and waste. 8. Plant two or three seeds per hole. To thin out the extras, cut the sprouts with scissors rather than pulling them. 9. Store unused seeds in a cool, dry place for next year. 10. Water by hand with sun-warmed water. Drip irrigation, a hose or a sprinkler can also be used. 11. After harvest, add one trowel full of compost and then replant with something new.
part? According to Bartholomew, square-foot gardening provides the same harvest as row gardening, but at 50 percent of the cost, 20 percent of the space, 10 percent of the water, 5 percent of the seeds and 2 percent of the work. In the mountain communities of Western North Carolina, flat land suitable for gardening is at a premium. And that, said Roberts, makes square-foot gardening all the more important for this area. It’s worked out well for the Giving Garden at the Canton Branch Library, which was featured in this spring’s issue of the Square Foot Gardening Foundation’s newsletter, which is distributed internationally. A joint project of the Haywood County Master Gardener Association, Haywood County Library and Friends of the Library, the garden includes a certified monarch butterfly way station, a 9square foot children’s garden, a 16-square foot salad garden, a pallet demonstration garden, a strawberry pyramid garden, a raised-bed raspberry garden, a square-foot bean teepee and a compost demonstration set-up. “I think this raised-bed approach, particularly square-foot gardening, is a good approach for those of us in this part of the country,” Roberts said.
Retrace Bartram’s tracks
Paddle into spring at NOC
The property features many a dramatic view. SAHC photo
Farmland conservation project concludes in Haywood cattle grazing pasture and prime agricultural bottomlands. The state has designated both the Mark Rogers and the Terry & Fran Rogers properties as Century Farms. “I’ve worked this land all my life,” said Terry Rogers, “working with both my paternal and maternal grandparents, as well as my own parents. I’ve seen the hard work my ancestors put into being good stewards of the properties, never holding a public job, but depending on the farm and woodland to make a living for their families. Like them, I have tried to be a good steward of what God has blessed me with, and I don’t want this beautiful property turned into a housing development in the future. Now that it’s protected by the Southern Appalachian Highlands Conservancy, that won’t ever happen.” Support for the project came from the Pigeon River Fund, a grant program administered by The Community Foundation of Western North Carolina.
Anyone who’s found themselves wondering what’s involved with keeping poultry will get a leg up 10 a.m. to noon Saturday, April 13, at the Macon County Cooperative Extension Office in Franklin. Presented by the Macon County Poultry Club and Macon County 4H, the overview will include feeding, care, housing, health and showing poultry. Sign up for the free workshop by Thursday, April 11, at 828.349.2046.
Run for firefighters The inaugural HOTSHOTS 5K will raise money for Sevier County Fire Departments, 8 a.m. Saturday, May 4, in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee. Funding will support the Smoky Mountain Firefighters Foundation, which supports 11 departments. $20. Sign up at www.smokyfirefighters.org.
Clean up Forest Hills A litter pickup at 9 a.m. Saturday, April 20, in the Village of Forest Hills will aim to reduce the accumulation of litter along roadsides in the town. The group will meet behind the Forest Hills entrance sign and divvy up road areas to walk for 60 to 90 minutes. Bags, vests and gloves will be provided.
Mt. Mitchell Tour & Lunch April 15 $10 8 am to 5 pm For ages 50+ We will travel to this North Carolina Treasure to enjoy the views while discovering more about this place. All participants will enjoy a Dutch treat lunch while on this trip.
Smoky Mountain News
Get the scoop on poultry raising
near Bryson City. The weekend will kick off Friday, April 19, with freestyle open practice and boat demos. The full day of events planned for Saturday, April 20, will begin with the Live Like Maria Preliminaries and include a longboat race Ducky 8 Ball Tournament, gear and boat raffle, throw rope challenge and music by Somebody’s Child. Things will wrap up Sunday, April 21, with the Live Like Maria finals, slicey boat freestyle competition, downriver race and free demos. The event is free and open to all ages. NOC is located along U.S. 74, about 14 miles past Bryson City.
April 10-16, 2019
A 385-acre tract of productive, scenic farmland in Haywood County has now been permanently protected thanks to efforts from the Rogers family and the Southern Appalachian Highlands Conservancy. “The Rogers family has farmed this land for at least four generations and wanted to see it stay farmland forever, which is why they protected their land with SAHC through agricultural easements,” says Jess Laggis, SAHC’s farmland protection director. “Beyond all the beauty and ecosystem services this land protection provides, it also supports some of the kindest farmers you could meet in maintaining our mountain farming heritage.” The tract is located in the Crabtree community and is highly visible from scenic drives along Crabtree Mountain Road and Upper Crabtree road, as well as from hikes on Crabtree Bald. The family has farmed the cove for more than 150 years, with the land featuring a mixture of high-elevation
The Nantahala Outdoor Center Spring Fling will celebrate the coming of warmer weather with paddling events, live music and delicious food April 19-21, at NOC
outdoors
Spend William Bartram’s 280th birthday on the river that he explored in 1775 with a 7-mile canoe trip offered Saturday, April 20, from Alarka Expeditions. This gentle canoe trip on the Little Tennessee River between Emory Dam and Cowee will take participants through the landscape of the middle town Cherokees, with an emphasis on the descriptions and significance of Bartram’s visit. Botanical features and arriving songbirds will be identified as well. No experience required. Basic canoe instruction provided. Space limited. $55 per person, with boats available for $25 apiece. Register at www.alarkaexpeditions.com.
WAYNESVILLE
PARKS AND RECREATION
828.456.2030
or email tpetrea@waynesvillenc.gov
35
outdoors
It’s farmers market time armers market season is here in Western North Carolina, with all manner of growers and artisans offering their goods for sale in communities throughout the region. Visit a market near you to stock your kitchen with the freshest food and meet the people who provide WNC with homegrown veggies, jellies, honey and more.
F
HAYWOOD COUNTY Haywood Historic Farmers Market, Waynesville
April 10-16, 2019
Getting there: 8 a.m. to noon Saturdays, April 20 through the Oct. 26, at 250 Pigeon St. in the parking lot of the HART Theatre; 3:30 to 6:30 p.m. Wednesdays, and 3:30 to 6:30 p.m. Wednesdays, April 24 through Oct. 23, at the First Baptist Church overflow parking lot beside Exxon. What’s happening: Local produce; meats, eggs, honey, dairy, value-added products, heritage crafts and more for sale by 40 to 50 vendors at the height of the season, all of whom produce their wares in Haywood or an adjacent county. Live music, children’s activities and hosted events are on tap for the 2019 season. Ways to pay: Credit and debit card, SNAP/EBT benefits, cash. Contact: haywoodfarmersmarket@gmail.com. Online at www.waynesvillefarmersmarket.com or www.facebook.com/haywoodhistoricfarmersmarket.
The Original Waynesville Tailgate Market, Waynesville Getting there: 8 a.m. to noon, Wednesdays and Saturdays, May 15 to the end of October at 171 Legion Drive in Waynesville. What’s happening: Vegetables, fruits, eggs, baked goods and cut flowers sold by Haywood County growers. New vendors are wanted. Ways to pay: Cash, check, WIC and senior coupons from the Haywood County Department of Health and Human Services. Contact: Vicky Rogers, 828.456.1830 or vrogers12@att.net.
JACKSON COUNTY Jackson County Farmers Market, Sylva Getting there: Market held year-round at Bridge Park, 110 Railroad Road in Sylva. Saturdays, 9 a.m. to noon, and Wednesdays, 4 to 7 p.m. April 6 through Oct. 26; Saturdays, 10 a.m. to noon Nov. 2 through March 28. What’s happening: A variety of locally produced vegetables, meats, honey, plants and crafts. Plant starts, native plants, mushrooms, greens and other in-season veggies, spices, eggs, baked goods, occasional brick-oven fired pizza, goat cheese, flowers and local crafts such as pottery, soaps, jewelry, journals, toys, candles, bird feeders, note cards and more for sale by 30-35 vendors. A Taste the Market fundraiser
Magggie Valley Club & Resort April 21st | 11am - 2 pm BREAKFAST ITEMS Breakfast Meats, Eggs Benedict, Caramelized Sweet Potato-Sausage Hash, Stewed Apples, Chocolate Chip Pancakes and Maple Syrup, Cheesy Stone Ground Grits, Biscuits, House Baked Breads, Jellies
SALADS
Smoky Mountain News
Spring Green Salad, Caesar Salad, Dressings and Condiments, Ambrosia Salad, New Potato Salad, Shrimp Salad, Baby Green Bean Salad, Deviled Eggs, Fruits and Cheeses
VEGETABLES Broccoli Casserole, MV Herb Roasted Baby Spring Vegetables, Buttermilk New Potato Mash
ENTREES MVC Fried Chicken Grilled Whole Salmon Sides, Charred Scallions and Mustard
CARVING STATION Maple and Brown Sugar Glazed Spiral Ham, Prime Rib Au Jus, Beefeaters Sauce, Rosemary Leg of Lamb, Mint Jelly
DESSERT Blackberry Crumble, Oreo Cheesecake, Banana Pudding, Eclairs, Cakes, Cookies and More!
$32.95 adults | $12.95 kids, 12 & under. Reservations are required, please call to RSVP 828.926.4900 36
occurs on the second Saturday of each month. Ways to pay: Cash, credit, debit and SNAP benefits accepted. Double Up Food Bucks for SNAP recipients available. Contact: Lisa McBride, 828.393.5236 or jacksoncountyfarmersmarket@gmail.com. Online at www.facebook.com/thegloriousjacksoncountyfarmersmarket/, or www.jacksoncountyfarmersmarket.org.
The ‘Whee Farmers Market, Cullowhee Getting there: 3 to 6 p.m., Tuesdays through the end of October, at the entrance to the Village of Forest Hills off of North Country Club Drive. What’s happening: Meats, eggs, cheeses, vegetables, cut flowers, milk, ice cream, foraged forest products, locally sourced meals from Brew Dawgz and value-added products and crafts sold by an average of eight vendors. New vendors welcome. Ways to pay: Cash/check, with some vendors accepting credit and debit cards. Contact: Curt Collins, 828.476.0334. www.thewheemarket.org.
Locally Grown on the Green, Cashiers Getting there: 3 to 6 p.m. Wednesdays, May 22 through Sept. 4, at The Village Green Commons. What’s happening: Fresh fruits, vegetables, meat, fish, baked goods and more sold by 10 to 15 local vendors. Ways to pay: Cash, with some vendors accepting credit cards. Contact: Ann Self, 828.743.3434 or info@villagegreencashiersnc.com.
MACON COUNTY Franklin Farmers Tailgate Market, Franklin Getting there: 10 a.m. to noon, Saturdays during April, and then 8 a.m. to noon Saturdays May through the end of October, on East Palmer Street across from Drake Software. What’s happening: Variety of homegrown products, including fruits and vegetables, cheese, plants, eggs, trout, preserves, honey and artisan breads sold by an average of 25-30 vendors. Ways to pay: Cash/check. Contact: Alan Durden, 828.349.2049 or alan_durden@ncsu.edu. www.facebook.com/franklinncfarmersmarket.
SWAIN COUNTY Swain County Farmer Market, Bryson City Getting there: 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Fridays May 3 through Oct. 25, at the barn on Island Street in Bryson City. What’s happening: Local produce, nursery plants, herbs, trout, eggs, honey and artisan crafts such as jewelry, wood carvings and gourds sold by anywhere from eight to 15 vendors. Ways to pay: Cash/check. Contact: Christine Bredenkamp, 828.488.3848 or christine_bredenkamp@ncsu.edu. www.facebook.com/swaincountyfarmersmarket.
outdoors
The trail includes at least seven species of trillium. Donated photo
New wildflower trail to open Nodding Trillium Garden, the Pittillo Family Nature Preserve, will hold a grand opening of its wildflower garden trail on Wednesday, April 17, in Cullowhee. Botanist Dan Pittillo, Ph.D., will lead guided walks along the trail at 10:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m., with each hike taking about an hour. Nodding Trillium has one of the finest and most extensive collections of native spring wildflowers in the area, with more than 50 species of native wildflowers
including seven trillium species. Pittillo put many of the plants there himself, collecting them on travels throughout the Southern Appalachians. The garden is conserved through the Highlands-Cashiers Land Trust. Pittillo preserved it several years ago in loving memory of his late wife Jean, and over the past several years HCLT and volunteers have helped expand the trail, which is open to the public. www.hicashlt.org.
We are pleased to announce the opening of our third location in Haywood County at 33 Bennett Street in Waynesville. We are located just off Brown Ave below Hazelwood Tire and beside Pioneer Supply. Thanks to our customers, we are the largest self storage provider in Haywood County.
We offer the same Clean, Safe and Secure facility as our sites in Canton and Clyde.
• NEW CLEAN, DRY UNITS • TEMPERATURE CONTROLLED • SECURITY CAMERAS • KEYPAD ACCESS 33 Bennett Street, Waynesville 7066 Old Clyde Road, Canton • 565 Jones Cove Road, Clyde
828-648-0147 • HAYWOODSECURE.COM
Celebrate Easter on the A.T.
Trail workdays planned in the Smokies
Cannabinoids are a group of closely related compunds that act on cannbinoid receptors in the body, unique to cannabis (or hemp). The body creates compounds called endocannabinoids, while hemp produces phytocannabinoids, notably cannabidiol. Cannabinoids is traditionally used for pain, sleep, and fibermyalgia. Alzheimer’s Migraines Asthma Breast Cancer
Volunteers work to clear trails and improve drainage. NPS photo clothing, as well as food and water. Instruction, tools and safety gear will be provided. Sign up with Adam Monroe at 828.497.1949 or adam_monroe@nps.gov.
Hobnob with hikers The Carolina Mountain Club will hold its annual Spring Social and Barbeque 2:30 to 8:30 p.m. Saturday, April 20, at the N.C. Arboretum in Asheville. The afternoon will begin with a casual 5-mile hike around Lake Powhatan, and a 3-4-mile wildflower hike on Arboretum trails will be offered at 3 p.m. A dry social hour will commence at 5 p.m., with dinner at 6 p.m. Musician Brew Davis will present a program of songs and stories beginning at 7 p.m. Membership is not required to attend. $23 per ticket. Mail checks by April 15 to CMC PO Box 68 Asheville, NC 28802 or pay online at www.carolinamountainclub.org.
Diabetes Crohn’s Disease
Prostate Cancer Menstrual Cancer
CBD has traditionally been used for: Anxiety/Depression Seizures Pain/Fibromyalgia Nausea/Vomiting Sleep Tremors PTSD ADHD/ADD Autism
The Endocannabinoid System is perhaps the most important physiologic systerm involved in establishing and maintaining human health. Although the endocannabinoid system affects a wide variety of biological processes, experts believe that its overall function is to regulate homeostasis.
Smoky Mountain News
Volunteer workdays are planned throughout April in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park to help the park prepare for the summer season ahead. Workdays will be held from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in North Carolina on April 20 and April 22 and in Tennessee on April 19. Volunteers must be able to hike up to 4 miles while carrying tools and be prepared to perform strenuous manual labor. They must be at least 16 years old or 18 years old if unaccompanied, and will need sturdy closed-toed shoes, long pants and layers of
What Are Cannabinoids?
April 10-16, 2019
The Nantahala Hiking Club will once again bring Easter to Appalachian Trail thru-hikers, starting at 8:30 a.m. Friday, April 20. The group will gather at the clubhouse, located in Franklin, to prepare bags of goodies before heading out to the trail to distribute them. Distribution areas will be assigned based on personal preferences and ability to hike or travel. Those who want to help but can’t distribute can drop off food items for distribution that morning. RSVP to Elena Marsh, 828.369.8915 or marsh67@frontier.com.
366 RUSS AVE, WAYNESVILLE | 828.452.0911
BiLo Shopping Center | facebook.com/kimspharmacy
37
outdoors
SCC’s outdoor leader gets recognized months, he is a thrice-published author, Paul Wolf, who heads up Southwestern most recently helping to produce the third Community College’s outdoor leadership edition of Administrative Practices of AEE program, received recognition at the 2019 Accredited Organizations. His students’ Southeast Regional Conference of the Association for Experiential Education. Paul Wolf. Donated photo Wolf received the Rebecca L. Carver ABC’s Award, which is given to a member recognized for being a passionate and exemplary professional educator. The award was created in memory of the late Rebecca L. Carver, a dedicated and passionate experiential educator. The “ABCs” are Agency, Belonging and Competence. In order to earn the award, the recipient must inspire these traits in his or her students. “It is clear that Paul creates a great deal of opportunities for others to learn, grow and develop these ABCs for themselves,” said Renee Roark, a member of the AEE. wide range of classes prepare them for Wolf has repeatedly been recognized as careers in wilderness therapy, government an industry pioneer after starting SCC’s program more than 18 years ago. In the last four service and outdoor adventure education.
Smoky Mountain News
April 10-16, 2019
Celebrate the stars
38
A pair of astronomical activities will be offered this week as part of the 2019 North Carolina Science Festival’s Statewide Star Party. n Beginning 7:30 p.m. Friday, April 12, a moon viewing party will be held at the Jackson County Airport. Geology and astronomy faculty from Western Carolina University will be on hand with telescopes to show the moon, star clusters and galaxies. Attendees will learn how to identify spring constellations and hear historical context for the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing coming up in July. Children’s activi-
ties will be provided. The viewing will be postponed to April 13 in case of inclement weather or overcast skies. Amy Fagan, 828.227.3820 or alfagan@wcu.edu. n A star party will be held 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday, April 13, at the Macon County Public Library in Franklin. The event will include Stellar Story Time, Sizing up the Moon, Craters on the Moon, plus opportunities to observe the moon with our telescopes and binoculars, make a solar system necklace, create structures like an astronaut, and enjoy some moon snacks. There will be a variety of other moon and space related activities and fun for all. 828.524.3600.
Merge computer games and science Get involved with scientific research from 1 to 3:30 p.m. Friday, April 12, at the Macon County Library in Franklin. A citizen science day in the computer lab will give ages 10 and up a chance to play Stall Catchers, an online video game used to help detect Alzheimer’s in mice, 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. This interactive game is designed to help scientists achieve over a year’s worth of research in one day. A brief tutorial will be offered at 1 p.m.
Wildlife and auto collisions to be discussed in panel A panel exploring the issue of increasing mammal-vehicle collisions will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday, April 20, at The Strand at 38 North Main Street in Waynesville. Jeff Hunter, senior program manager for the National Parks Conservation Association, will lead the discussion, which will include as panelists Steve Goodman, NPCA’s Volgenau wildlife research fellow; National Park Service biologist Bill Stiver; Liz Hilliard, a wildlife scientist with the nonprofit Wildlands Network; and Dave McHenry of N.C. Department of Transportation.
Vehicles collide with large mammals as many as 2 million times per year in the U.S., costing $12 billion as well as loss of life. The issue has reached a tipping point in East Tennessee and Western North Carolina, with vehicles having killed at least 35 bears in the Pigeon River Gorge in the last 10 months. Increasing populations and tourism are only expected to exacerbate the problem. The I-40 Pigeon River Gorge corridor is a key focus area for a group of agencies and stakeholders working to find solutions in what is known as the Pigeon River Gorge Wildlife Connectivity Project. The project aims to make it easier for wildlife to cross I40 in this area and is expected to grant insight into the highway’s effect on wildlife. Free and organized by the Great Smoky Mountains Association. Space limited. Register at www.smokiesinformation.org.
WNC Calendar COMMUNITY EVENTS & ANNOUNCEMENTS • The Town of Waynesville will hold several community meetings in April to get input in the 2035 Comprehensive Land Use Plan. Meetings are from 5:306:30 p.m. on April 11 at Waynesville Recreation Center; 5:30-6:30 p.m. on April 16 at Waynesville Fire Station 1; and 4:30-5:30 p.m. on April 25 at Folkmoot Center. • The World Series of Poker circuit event is April 10-22 at Harrah’s Cherokee Casino Resort Event Center. WSOP.com. • Weather permitting, the burn date for Long’s Chapel church office building (the old parsonage) is set for 8 a.m.-6 p.m. on Saturday, April 13. Smaller burns early; full burn begins around 3 p.m. • An All-Community Meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. on Tuesday, April 16, at The Creative Thought Center, 449 Pigeon St., Suite D, in Waynesville. • An event calendar has been launched to announce various events and volunteer days inspired by and leading up to Earth Day 2019 (April 22): http://WNCfortheplanet.org. • Connectivity: Broadband in Western North Carolina – a community sharing event about what it will take to get affordable broadband – is scheduled for 3:30-5 p.m. on April 22 at Marianna Black Library in Bryson City. • The Fines Creek Community Association will hold its annual Ramp Dinner from 5-8 p.m. on Saturday, April 27, at the Fines Creek Community Center, 190 Fines Creek Road in Clyde. Cost: $8 for adults; children 6under free with paying adult. 593.7042. • April 27 is Safe Kids Macon County’s Safety town event, featuring Operation Medicine Drop (10 a.m-2 p.m.), baby car seat check (10 a.m.-1 p.m.) and bicycle rodeo (11 a.m.-1 p.m.) at the Robert C. Carpenter Community Building in Franklin. • Reservations are being accepted for a six-night package, Nov. 23-29, to join Western Carolina University’s Pride of the Mountains Marching Band as it participates in the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade on Nov. 28 in New York City. Cost: $2,199 (based on double occupancy), includes roundtrip airfare, transportation to the hotel, six nights lodging at Marriott Marquis in Times Square, two Broadway shows, admission to the Radio City Christmas Spectacular, a two-day hop-on, hop-off sightseeing ticket on a double-decker bus and Thanksgiving dinner with the band. Bmarkle@superholiday.com. Donate to help the band make the trip: givemacys.wcu.edu.
BUSINESS & EDUCATION • The Small Business Center at Southwestern Community College will offer a wide variety of seminars for aspiring and existing entrepreneurs throughout Jackson, Macon, Swain Counties and the Qualla Boundary through May. For a complete listing: tinyurl.com/y46uqeo9. • The BizWeek Banquet is scheduled for 6 p.m. on Thursday, April 11, at Bloemsma Barn in Franklin. Featuring Richard G. Sneed, Principal Chief of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians. www.maconedc.com/bizweek-banquet.html. • Registration is underway for a seminar entitled “How To Find Your Customers” that will be offered by Haywood Community College’s Small Business Center from 5:30-8:30 p.m. on Tuesday, April 16, at HCC’s Regional High Technology Center in Waynesville. Part of the “Are You Ready to Start a Business series. Room 3021. Register or get more info: SBC.Haywood.edu or 627.4512.
All phone numbers area code 828 unless otherwise noted. • Haywood Community College’s Professional Crafts Department will host lectures by visiting artists Devon le Fae (4 p.m. on April 16) and Jason Bige (4 p.m. on April 22) in the Creative Arts Building Room 7105, in Clyde. • “The Archaeology of the Nikwasi Mound” will be presented by Dr. Ben Steere at 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday, April 16, at the Cowee School Heritage Center off NC 28N in Franklin. Dr. Steere is director of the Cherokee Studies program and assistant professor of anthropology at Western Carolina University. • Tickets are on sale for the Swain County Chamber of Commerce’s Membership Banquet, which is set for 6-9 p.m. on Thursday, April 18, at the Fryemont Inn in Bryson City. Tickets: $35 per person at the Chamber office or by calling 488.3681. • Registration is underway for a seminar entitled “Financing Your Business” that will be offered by Haywood Community College’s Small Business Center from 5:30-7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, April 23, at HCC’s Regional High Technology Center in Waynesville. Part of the “Are You Ready to Start a Business series. Room 3021. Register or get more info: SBC.Haywood.edu or 627.4512. • Registration is underway for Six Sigma Yellow Belt training, which will be offered through Western Carolina University’s Office of Professional Growth and Enrichment from April 23-26 at WCU Biltmore Park in Asheville. Workshops are 8 a.m.-4 p.m. on Tuesday through Thursday and 9 a.m.-1 p.m. on Friday. Led by Dr. Todd Creasy, DM, MBA, MSc and Juran Institute Certified Master Black Belt in Six Sigma. Registration fee: $899. Ideas and tools for immediate use at your workplace. Register and get info: pdp.wcu.edu or 227.7397. • Registration is underway for a “Jump-Start Series” offered by Haywood Community College’s Small Business Center from 4:30-6:30 p.m. on Tuesdays, April 30-May 14. SBC.Haywood.edu or 627.4512.
Smoky Mountain News
• Fundraisers to combat child abuse will be held from 5-9 p.m. on April 16 at El Patron Restaurant in Sylva and at 7 p.m. on April 17 at Mad Batter Food & Film in Sylva. 10 percent of sales go to SEASCAT, a supportive environment for adult survivors of child abuse and trauma. Mad Batter will show movie “Sybil;” raffle drawing at 6:30 p.m. • Richie’s Alliance for Autism will hold three events from April 22-24 to observe National Autism Awareness Month in Haywood County: “Casino Royale” Autism Awareness Golf Tournament at 9:30 a.m. on April 22 at Laurel Ridge Country Club in Waynesville (sign up: www.richiesalliance.org/event/autism-awareness-golftournament or 421.2408); Dine Out/Shop Out Day on April 23, when local restaurants, shops and breweries donate a portion of their revenue (participating businesses listed at www.richiesalliance.org/event/dineout-for-autism); and “Taste” – an opportunity to sample signature dishes from local restaurants – on April 24 at Laurel Ridge (order tickets and view participating restaurants, wineries and breweries: www.richiesalliance.org/event/taste.). • Registration is underway for the third annual disc golf fundraiser for Green Built Alliance. Event is Saturday, May 4, at Lake Julian Park in Arden. http://tinyurl.com/yykl6buo. • REACH is seeking donations of gently used accessories for its silent auction at the “Sprint into Fashion” Social and Luncheon, which is on Thursday, May 9, at Laurel Ridge Country Club. Donations accepted through Friday, April 15, at 627 N. Main St. in Waynesville. 456.7898. • Ticket reservations are being accepted for two fundraisers that will benefit the Cashiers-Highlands Humane Society this summer: Bark, Beer & Barbeque on Thursday, June 20, at The Farm at Old Edwards; and Pawsitively Purrfect Part on Monday, Aug. 19, at Country Club of Sapphire Valley. Cost for each event: , $195 per person, $390 per couple or $1,800 for a table of 10. To request an alert once tickets are available, call 743.5769 or write shannon@CHhumanesociety.org.
VOLUNTEERS & VENDORS
• Registration is underway for an “Intro to Content Marketing” course that will be offered by Western Carolina University’s Office of Professional Growth and on Friday, May 3, at WCU Biltmore Park in Asheville. Instructor is Scott Rader, Ph.D., associate professor of Marketing and Entrepreneurship. Cost: $119. Register: pdp.wcu.edu or 227.7397.
• Interested in theatre? The Macon County Public Library in Franklin is looking for experienced volunteers to help with an upcoming theatre program, “Shakespeare in the Summer.” Join them for a meeting to discuss the summer schedule, show and future of "Theatre at the Library,” which will be held at 5:30 p.m. Friday, April 12, at the library.
• Registration is underway for Boating Safety Courses that will be offered from 6-9 p.m. on May 15-16 at Haywood Community College, Building 3300, Room 3322, in Clyde. Preregistration is required: www.ncwildlife.org. Additional offerings: June 26-27.
• Table applications are being accepted for the Jackson County Senior Center’s annual yard sale, which is set for 8 a.m.-1 p.m. on Saturday, April 13, at the Department on Aging Building at 100 County Services Park in Sylva. Rent: $10 for one or two for $15. Reservations and info: 586.5494.
• Reservations are being accepted for a non-credit travel course that will take students to Valencia, Spain, from June 23-July 2. Price: $1,969 for single occupancy or $1,859 for double occupancy. Includes: three-star hotel, meals, transportation within Spain, admission to sites, a Spanish cooking class and all excursions. Price does not include airfare. 227.2769 or lfoxford@wcu.edu.
FUNDRAISERS AND BENEFITS • Tickets are on sale now for the “Wet Your Whiskers” fundraiser for Feline Urgent Rescue of WNC. Scheduled for 5:30-7:30 p.m. on Saturday, April 13 at the Fangmeyer Theatre at HART in Waynesville. Wine/craft beer tasting. Tickets: $35. Sponsorships: $125. Cat photo contest. Info: www.furofwnc.org, www.facebook.com/furofwnc, 844.888.CATS (2287) or furofwnc1@gmail.com.
HEALTH MATTERS • NAMI Appalachian South, local affiliate of National Alliance on Mental Illness, will offer a Peer-to-Peer education course on recovery and wellness for adults challenged with mental illness starting on Saturdays in April. Register or get more info: 200.3000, 507.8789 or happydonita3@gmail.com. • The Macon County Cancer Support Group meets at 7 p.m. on Thursday, April 11, in the cafeteria of Angel Medical Center in Franklin. • “I’m Finally Free” – substance abuse awareness march and benefit concert - will be held starting at 5:30 p.m. on Thursday, April 11, starting at the fountain at Western Carolina University in Cullowhee. • The American Red Cross will hold a blood drive from
39
Visit www.smokymountainnews.com and click on Calendar for: ■ Complete listings of local music scene ■ Regional festivals ■ Art gallery events and openings ■ Complete listings of recreational offerings at regional health and fitness centers ■ Civic and social club gatherings 10 a.m.-2:30 p.m. on Friday, April 12, at the Marianna Black Library in Bryson City. Appointments: 488.3030 or redcrossblood.org. • Citizen-Science Day featuring an online video game used to help detect Alzheimer’s in mice will be held from 1:30-3:30 p.m. on Saturday, April 13, at the Macon County Public Library in Franklin. Open to ages 10-up. 524.3600. • “Breastfeeding A-Z” class will be offered from 7-9 p.m. on April 11, July 18, Sept. 12 and Nov. 14 at Haywood Regional Medical Center in Waynesville. Focusing on techniques for proper latching and comfortable positions for a baby and mom to get started. Pre-registration required: MyHaywoodRegional.com/ParentClasses or 452.8440. • An educational event on running and how to ensure athletes of all ages perform at their potential is scheduled for noon-1 p.m. on April 22 in the Harris Regional Hospital first-floor boardroom in Sylva. Led by Jared Sonnier, PT. RSVP: 844.414.DOCS (3627). • A Town Hall on Medicaid Expansion will be held by members of We Are Down Home from 6-8 p.m. on Monday, April 22, at Folkmoot in Waynesville. • HOPEful Living: Women’s Cancer Support Group, will meet from 4-5:30 p.m. on Tuesday, April 16 in the Haywood Regional Medical Center, Fitness Center, Health Educ. Room, Waynesville. Featured speaker is Oncology Nurse Navigator Elizabeth Campbell. Info: 627.9666 or riggs_sandi@msn.com or 627.0227. • David-Dorian Ross will offer an in-person meet-andgreet and interactive talk on Tai Chi and Healthy Aging at 6 p.m. on Friday, April 26, at Haywood Regional Health & Fitness Center in Clyde. 904.377.1527 or mattjeffs@comcast.net.
RECREATION AND FITNESS • Warm Power Flow Yoga will be offered from 5:45-7 p.m. on Friday, April 19, at Waynesville Yoga Center. $14. Register: 246.6570 or WaynesvilleYogaCenter.com. • Power Core Yoga will be offered from 12:30-1:45 p.m. on Saturday, April 20, at Waynesville Yoga Center. $14. Register: 246.6570 or WaynesvilleYogaCenter.com. • The Lake Junaluska Golf Course 100th Anniversary Kickoff Tournament is set for 1 p.m. on April 24. Cost: $35 per player. 456.5777 or golf@lakejunaluska.com. • Registration is underway for the fifth annual Battle at the Creek Golf Tournament, which will be held at 10 a.m. on April 27, at Mill Creek in Franklin. Two-person scramble. $75 per player, includes mulligan and lunch. Sign up or get info: 524.4653, 342.7491, fefesha@gmail.com, 371.1141 or ryan.raby@macon.k12.nc.us.
SPIRITUAL • St. Andrews Episcopal Church will host Evening Lenten programs at 6 p.m. on April 10, with supper at 5:30 p.m.
wnc calendar
• St. Andrews Episcopal Church will host Palm Sunday at 8 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. on April 14 at 99 Academy Street in Canton.
for 1 p.m. on Saturday, April 13, at Pisgah High School. Registration opens at 10:30 a.m. http://tinyurl.com/y54zztqd.
• Maundy Thursday is scheduled for noon on April 18 at St. Andrews Episcopal Church, 99 Academy Street in Canton.
• The Macon County Democratic Men’s and Women’s Clubs will have a joint meeting at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, April 16, at the Macon County Public Library in Franklin. Guest speaker is Melanie Thibault, Director of the Macon County Board of Elections.
• During Holy Week, First United Methodist Church of Sylva will hold Maundy Thursday (6 p.m. on April 18), Easter Sunrise Service (8:15 a.m. on April 21) and a combined Easter Service (10 a.m. on April 21). Info: 586.2358. • “The Living Last Supper” – a dramatization of da Vinci’s famous painting – will be presented as part of Maundy Thursday evening worship service at 7 p.m. on April 18 at Waynesville’s First Presbyterian Church. • St. Andrews Episcopal Church will host Easter ceremonies on the weekend of Friday through Sunday, April 19-21, at 99 Academy Street in Canton. Good Friday festivities are at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.; Holy Saturday events are at 10 a.m. and 7 p.m., and Easter Day will be celebrated at 8:30 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. on Sunday.
April 10-16, 2019
• Registration is underway for Guided Personal Retreats, on July 22-24, Sept. 16-18 and Oct. 21-23 at Lake Junaluska. Lakejunaluska.com/retreats or 800.222.4930.
• The Jackson County Democratic Party will meet at 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday, April 16, at party headquarters at 500 Mill Street in Sylva. • An Easter Sunrise Service will be held at 6:30 p.m. on April 21 in the Maggie Valley Pavilion next to Town Hall on Soco Road.
AUTHORS AND BOOKS
• City Lights Bookstore will host four poets, Dee Stribling, Kim Blum-Hyclak, Sue Dunlap, and Laurie Wilcox-Meyer to mark National Poetry Month at 3 p.m. Saturday, April 13, at the bookstore in Sylva. To reserve copies of these books, please call City Lights Bookstore at 586.9499.
• The Haywood County Arts Council will hold a JAM (Junior Appalachian Musicians) for fourth through sixth graders from 3:30-5 p.m. on Tuesdays through May at Shining Rock Classical Academy. Cost: $85. 452.0593 or bmk.morgan@yahoo.com. • Registration is underway for a summer volleyball camp that will be offered to rising third-through-12th graders from 9 a.m.-noon on June 17-20 at the Waynesville Recreation Center. Cost: $85 before June 1 or $100 after. Register or get more info: amymull@bellsouth.net.
• Registration is underway for Lake Junaluska’s Summer Youth Events, which run from June 15-July 14. Morning and evening sessions with worship, guest preachers and workshops for sixth-through-12th graders. www.lakejunaluska.com/summeryouth or 800.222.4930.
• April is National Poetry Month and poet Brenda Kay Ledford will read selections of her poetry during “Coffee with the Poets and Writers” at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, April 17, at Moss Memorial Library in Hayesville. glendabeall@msn.com.
• Registration is underway for Music & Worship Arts Week, which is from June 23-28 at Lake Junaluska. Multi-generational educational event including arts, praise and renewal. For ministry leaders or those who want to sing, dance or act all week. Musicartsweek2019.wordpress.com.
• Author Kerry Madden-Lunsford will host a book signing of her book Ernestine's Milky Way at Joey’s Pancake House in Maggie Valley from 8 to noon on April 18.
• “Dumbo”, will be shown at 7 p.m. on April 10-11 at The Strain on Main in Waynesville. See website for times & tickets. 283.0079.
• Registration is underway for Native American Summer Conference, which is June 28-30, at Lake Junaluska. Speakers, Bible study and workshops. Lakejunaluska.com/sejanam or 800.222.4930.
POLITICAL • Duke University Historian Dr. Nancy MacLean will deliver a lecture titled: “The Campus Origins of Today’s Radical Right – and of the Crisis of Our Democracy” at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, April 11, the Blue Ridge Conference Center on the campus of Western Carolina University in Cullowhee.
• The N.C. GOP District 11 Convention is scheduled
www.ThePrintHaus.com
• Nettie’s Bakery in Waynesville will host an Afternoon tea with author Kerry Madden-Lunsford as she shares her children’s book Ernestine’s Milky Way from 3 to 5 on Friday, April 19. Purchase an afternoon tea ticket prior to the event at Blue Ridge Books. 456.6000. • Blue Ridge Books in Waynesville will have author Kerry Madden-Lunsford sharing her most recent children’s book Ernestine’s Milky Way on April 20 at 3 p.m.
KIDS & FAMILIES • A Nature Nuts: Raising Trout program for ages 4-7 will be offered from 9-11 a.m. on April 15 and April 29 at the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission’s Pisgah Center for Wildlife Education in Brevard. Registration required: http://tinyurl.com/yb28fpz8. • An Eco Explorers: Mountain Habitats program will be offered to ages 8-13 from 1-3 p.m. on April 15 and April 29 at the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission’s Pisgah Center for Wildlife Education in Brevard. Registration required: http://tinyurl.com/yb28fpz8.
New Epson 64” Color Wide Format, #1 choice for Reproduction Be Ready to say
WOW! Offset Printing • Low Prices Forms • Flyers • Brochures • Newsletters Business Cards • Letterhead • Envelopes • Labels Complete Bindery • Mounting • Laminating • Coil Binding Addressing • Direct Mail • Complete Digital Imaging Center
• “Aquaman”, will be shown at 6:30 p.m. on April 12 at Mad Batter Food & Film in Sylva. Free. 586.3555. • “Bumblebee”, will be shown at 6:30 p.m. on April 19 & 26 at Mad Batter Food & Film in Sylva. Free. 586.3555.
• Nantahala Outdoor Center Spring Fling is April 1921 near Bryson City. Freestyle open practice and boat demos on Friday; prelims and longboat race, raffle, throw rope challenge and music by Somebody’s Child on Saturday; more racing and demos on Sunday. www.noc.com. • The 25th annual Southeastern Mini Truckin’ Nationals will be held April 26-28, at the Maggie Valley Festival Grounds. Open car and truck show. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. on Friday and Saturday; 8 a.m.-2 p.m. on Sunday. Part vendors, food vendors, DJ. 865.742.7403, minitruckinnats@gmail.com or www.minitruckinnats.com. • Tickets are on sale now for Thunder in the Smokies Rally, which is May 3-5 in Maggie Valley. Handlebarcorral.com.
EASTER • The Fines Creek Community Center will hold an egg hunt and ham dinner with the fixings from 1-3 p.m. on Saturday, April 13. Cost: $8; children under four eat free. • The Annual Town of Canton’s Easter Egg Hunt is set for 10 a.m. on April 20 at Canton Recreation Park. For ages 1-12. Info: 648.2376. • The Lake Junaluska Easter Celebration, featuring Easter egg hunts and a sunrise service at the amphitheater below the cross, is set for April 20-21. Full schedule of events: Lakejunaluska.com/easter. Info: 800.222.4930.
FOOD & DRINK • Fines Creek Community Center will host an evening of food, music and dance at 6 p.m. on Saturday, April 20. Featuring “Running Wolf and The Renegades.” Music and dance: $5.
ON STAGE & IN CONCERT
A&E SPECIAL EVENTS & FESTIVALS • Western Carolina University’s 17th annual Jazz Festival will be held Saturday, April 13, on the campus in Cullowhee. The festival will feature a free public concert at 7:30 p.m. in the recital hall of the Coulter
• Sonic World Fusion, a world music concert, will be held at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, April 11, in the Coulter building at Western Carolina University in Cullowhee. Performances by the WCU Concert Choir, WCU Inspirational Gospel Choir and MUS 303 Class. Part of WCU’s 40th International Festival. http://tinyurl.com/y42zznfy. • The Western Carolina University School of Stage and Screen will host a production of the classic tale “Beauty and the Beast” onstage at 7:30 p.m. April 11-13 and 3 p.m. April 14 at the Bardo Arts Center in Cullowhee. Recommended for all ages. Tickets start at $10 per person. To purchase tickets, click on www.wcu.edu/bardo-arts-center or call 227.2479.
These are only the answers. THE PRINT HAUS INC. GROUP Since 1982
R
Authorized ShipCenter
641 North Main Street, WAYNESVILLE, NC
509 Asheville Hwy., Suite B, SYLVA, NC
828-456-HAUS (4287)
828-586-HAUS (4287)
(3/10 (3/10 Mile Mile North North of of the the Courthouse) Courthouse)
KIDS FILMS
Building, masterclasses with professional musicians for students and a general daylong celebration of the distinctive music genre from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. 227.3261 or pwlosok@wcu.edu.
Puzzles can be found on page 46
YOUR HOMETOWN PRINT, COPY, DIRECT MAIL, SHIPPING & SIGN SHOP
40
• Registration is now open for a new PGA Junior League golf team forming at Lake Junaluska Golf Course for ages 17-under. Season runs from through July 31. Registration fee: $190. Includes team practice sessions, matches, merchandise. Register: pgajrleague.com/sign-up. Info: www.lakejunaluska.com/golf, 456.5777 or ctcarswell@lakejunaluska.com.
• Registration is underway for two basketball shooting and dribbling camps that will be offered from 9 a.m.-1 p.m. on June 24-27 and July 15-18 at the Waynesville Recreation Center. Led by former Appalachian State University coach Kevin Cantwell. Cost: $150 per person; deposit of $25 required. Register or get info: 456.2030 or academy7@live.com.
• The Haywood County Republican Party will have precinct training at 5 p.m. and an executive committee board meeting at 6 p.m. on Thursday, April 11, at party headquarters, 279 N. Haywood St., in Waynesville.
Smoky Mountain News
• The Swain County Democratic Party Meeting will be held at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, April 16, at the Untied Community Bank in Bryson City. 488.1118.
• Youth Musicians open call is underway for the Mountain Youth Talent Contest being held during Greening Up the Mountains Festival on April 27. Deadline is April 17. jackson.ces.ncsu.edu, jackson4H.blogspot.com, 586.4009 or heather_gordon@ncsu.edu. www.greeningupthemountains.com.
(Located (Located in in the the NAPA NAPA Auto Auto Parts Parts Center) Center)
• Haywood County Arts Council will present A Night of Music with the N.C. School of the Arts Faculty at 7 p.m. on April 16 at HART Theatre in Waynesville. Tickets are $25 plus tax and fees; available at the Arts Council, 86 N. Main Street in Waynesville or via EventBrite. Info: 452.0593 or www.HaywoodArts.org.
CLASSES AND PROGRAMS • One Heart Singing’s winter term is through April 10 at 89 Sierra Lane in Franklin. No audition or need to read music. Try two sessions before committing. Meets from 6:30-8 p.m. on Wednesdays. Info: 524.3691 or 360.1920. • Dogwood Crafters Coop will offer a class on making a Rug-Hooked Sunflower Pincushion from 10 a.m.-1 p.m. on Thursday, April 11, at the Dillsboro Masonic Lodge. Cost: $20; all materials included. Led by Claudia Lampley. Register by April 4: 586.2248. • Learn how to make custom gift tags or ornaments using simple ingredients commonly found in the kitchen from 2-3 p.m. on Thursday, April 11, in the Waynesville Library Auditorium. All materials provided. Registration required: 356.2507 or Kathleen.olsen@haywoodcountync.gov. • Lamar Marshall will talk about the Trail of Tears route in Macon County at 6 p.m. on Thursday, April 11, at the Macon County Public Library in Franklin. • Appalachian Trail section hikers Bill and Sharon Van Horn will present “Walking with Spring – Reflections on our Appalachian Trail Journey” at 10:30 a.m. on Friday, April 12, at the Macon County Public Library in Franklin.
• The Western North Carolina Woodturners Club meets at 10 a.m. on Saturday, April 13, at the Bascom in Highlands. John Van Camp from the Brasstown Guild is this month’s presenter. • Registration is underway for a Viking Axe Making Class that will be offered from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday, April 13-14, at Green Energy Park in Dillsboro. With Brock Martin of WarFire Forge. Cost: $380; materials included. Preregistration required: 631.0271. Info: www.JCGEP.org. • The Haywood County Arts Council will present a class entitled: “Springtime Tulips in Oil” from 1-3 p.m. on Monday, April 15. Cost: $40 for members; $45 for nonmembers. Instructor: Sun Sohovich. All supplies provided. Reservations required: 452.0593.
• Registration is underway for a “Women’s Conceal Carry Class” that will be offered from 8 a.m.-5 p.m. on Saturday, April 27, at the Waynesville Police Department, 9 South Main Street in Waynesville. Cost: $50. RSVP by April 15: 246.3538 or thundercaldwell@gmail.com. • Registration is underway for a Bladesmithing Basics class that will be taught by Brock Martin of WarFire Forge from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. on April 28 at Green Energy Park in Dillsboro. Cost: $200 (includes materials). Preregistration required: 631.0271. • Registration is underway for entries for the Appalachian Women’s Museum’s second annual
• Registration is underway for “Bladesmithing: Forging a Kukri” class that will be offered from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. on May 18-19 at the Jackson County Green Energy Park in Dillsboro. Cost: $380; includes materials. Pregistration required: 631.0271 or www.JCGEP.org. • Haywood Community College’s Workforce Continuing Education Creative Arts Department is offering a series of clay courses through May in Clyde. For a complete listing and details, visit creativearts.haywood.edu, call 565.4240 or write clschulte@haywood.edu. • The Dave Drake Studio Barn offers a variety of ceramic and raku classes by appointment as well as weekly drawing, writers and community knitters groups. Info: 787.2865. • Second Saturday Markets take place from 6-8 p.m. at Folkmoot in Waynesville. A gathering place for friends of all ages, markets feature vendors, live music, ballroom dance lessons for $5, and a homemade meal for $10. Beer and wine are available for purchase and tables will be set up for participants to play board and card games that they bring from home. Info: 452.2997 or info@folkmoot.org. • A comedy improvisation class will be offered from 7-9 p.m. on Tuesdays at Frog Level Brewing in Haywood County. Led by improv teacher Wayne Porter, who studied at Sak Comedy Lab in Orlando and performed improv with several groups. To RSVP and get directions, call 316.8761.
ART SHOWINGS AND GALLERIES • The Haywood County Arts Council (HCAC) latest showcase, “Inspired Art Ministry,” will run through April 27 at the HCAC Gallery & Gifts in downtown Waynesville. www.haywoodarts.org. • Haywood Community College is currently hosting a Professional Crafts Faculty Exhibition in the Mary Cornwell Gallery on campus in Clyde. Through April, the public is invited to view the exhibition 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Friday and 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday. 565.4240 or clschulte@haywood.edu. • "Compose | Decompose” – a new exhibition at Penland Gallery is on display through May 12. near Spruce Pine. Combines mixed-media sculpture and sound installations in one space. Musical performance by Make Noise artists Walker Farrell, Meg Mulhearn and Jake Pugh. 765.6211 or penland.org/gallery. • The exhibit “Outspoken: Paintings by America Meredith” will be on display through May 3 at the Fine Art Museum Gallery B in the Bardo Arts Center at Western Carolina University. The WCU Fine Art Museum is free and open to the public from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Friday and and 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Thursday. Free parking is available on site. www.facebook.com/americameredithart. • The Western Carolina University Fine Art Museum at Bardo Arts Center is pleased to present the School of Art and Design Faculty Biennial Exhibition 2019, on display through May 3. All WCU Fine Art Museum exhibitions and receptions are free and open to the public. For further information, visit arts.wcu.edu/biennial or 227.3591.
Smoky Mountain News
• The UNC Asheville Visiting Writers Series will present students sharing their own works as part of the Senior Seminar in Creative Writing at 4 p.m. on April 27, in Karpen Hall, Laurel Forum. english.unca.edu.
• Registration is underway for an Intro to Blacksmithing Class that will be led by Brock Martin of WarFire Forge from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. on Sunday, May 5, at Jackson County Green Energy Park in Dillsboro. Cost: $225 (materials included). Preregistration required: 631.0271. Info: www.JCGEP.org.
April 10-16, 2019
• The monthly Creating Community Workshop is set for 10:30 a.m. on Saturday, April 13, in the Atrium of the Jackson County Public Library in Sylva. Allan Grant will show techniques, strokes and shadings of Japanese sumi-e then encourage attendees in exploring this method of expressing talent. For info or to sign up: 586.2016.
“Airing of the Quilts” that will be on display from 11 a.m.-5 p.m. on Saturday, May 4, at 100 W. Hometown Place between Sylva and Dillsboro. $10 suggested donation per quilt. Online registration: www.appwomen.org/quilts. Info: 421.3820 or cabeck@ncsu.edu.
wnc calendar
• The Western Carolina Civic Orchestra will present their annual spring concert at 7:30 p.m. Monday, April 15, in the School of Music Recital Hall (Coulter building) on the campus of Western Carolina University. 227.7242.
41
wnc calendar
• The Western Carolina University Fine Art Museum at Bardo Arts Center will have a yearlong exhibition on “Defining America” through May 3 in Cullowhee. Info: 227.ARTS or bardoartscenter.wcu.edu. • Through April 26, Western Carolina University’s Mountain Heritage Center is hosting an exhibit to commemorate World War I and the centennial of the end of hostilities. “I Want You! How World War I Transformed Western North Carolina” is on display in the museum’s first floor gallery in Cullowhee. 227.7129.
FILM & SCREEN
• “Free Solo”, will be shown at 7:30 p.m. on April 11 at Mad Batter Food & Film in Sylva. Free. 586.3555. • “On the Basis of Sex”, will be shown at 7:00 p.m. on April 13 at Mad Batter Food & Film in Sylva. Free. 586.3555. • “Sybil”, will be shown at 6 p.m. on April 17 at Mad Batter Food & Film in Sylva. Free. 10% Fundraiser Event for SEASCAT with raffle. 586.3555. • “VICE”, will be shown at 7:30 p.m. on April 18 at Mad Batter Food & Film in Sylva. Free. 586.3555. • “Glass”, will be shown at 7:30 p.m. on May 2 & 4 at Mad Batter Food & Film in Sylva. Free. 586.3555. • “Hidden Rivers of Southern Appalachia”, will be shown at 6:30 p.m. on May 3 at Mad Batter Food & Film in Sylva. Free. MAINSPRING Fundraiser. 586.3555.
Smoky Mountain News
April 10-16, 2019
• Tickets are on sale now for “Great Art on Screen” – a series of 90-minute documentaries featuring some of the worlds’ greatest artists presented by The Highlands Performing Arts Center and The Bascom: A Center for the Visual Arts. Upcoming topics: Klimt & Schiele on Friday, May 10; and Monet on June 7. All shows at 5:30 p.m. at Highlands PAC, 507 Chestnut Street in Highlands. Tickets: $16; available at www.highlandspac.org or at the door.
Outdoors
• Submissions are being accepted through May 10 for the sixth annual “Birdhouse Bash” that will be auctioned by silent bids during the Whole Bloomin’ Thing festival on May 11 in the Frog Level area of Waynesville. Birdhouse creations can be delivered to Second Blessing Thrift Store in Waynesville. Proceeds benefit Daydreamz’ community art projects and the Open Door ARTS program. Info on DayDreamz: 476.4231; info on Open Door Community Garden: 734.1570.
• Registration is underway for the “Spring Wildflowers of Southern Appalachia” classes, which will be offered by Adam Bigelow from 9 a.m.-1 p.m. on Fridays from through April 26. Learn how to identify wildflowers while walking among them. Single day rates are $40, or $150 for the entire series. bigelownc@gmail.com. • The Highlands Nature Center is open from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. through late May. www.highlandsbiological.org or 526.2623. • Wildflower expert Adam Bigelow will lead “A Tale of Two Creeks: Wildflowers and their Stories” – a wilderness walk – on Thursday, April 11, starting on Fisher Creek near Sylva. $55 per person. Register: www.alarkaexpeditions.com.
• Southwestern Community College and the Smoky Mountains STEM Collaborative will host a Star Party from 5-9 p.m. on Thursday, April 11, in downtown Sylva, in celebration of the 50th anniversary of Apollo 11 and the first moon landing. Downtown solar system walk, scavenger hunt, lunar and stellar observation with telescope and more activities. r_neff@south42 westerncc.edu.
• Western Carolina University’s Department of Geosciences and Natural Resources is hosting a free moon-viewing party at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, April 12, at the Jackson County Airport in Cullowhee. 227.3820 or alfagan@wcu.edu. • Heritage Life Skills VIII - a weekend full of varies and hands-on survival classes - will be offered from April 12-14 at the Folkmoot Center in Waynesville. Everything from canning techniques to knot-tying and kidnapping prevention and escape. Featured speaker is Arthur Bradley, Ph.D., and author of “The Disaster Preparedness Guide to Assessing Safeguarding and Evacuating Shelter.” He’ll speak at 8 a.m. on Saturday, April 13. Tickets for his talk: $10. Overall, registration is $150 for the weekend or $65 for one day. For info or to register: carolinareadiness.com or 456.5310. • The Lake Junaluska Cleanup Day is scheduled for April 13. www.lakejunaluska.com. • A Star Party will be held from 2-4 p.m. on April 13, at the Macon County Public Library in Franklin. Activities and opportunity to observe the moon through telescopes. 524.3600. • Franklin’s AT110 HikerFest is set for 6 p.m. on Saturday, April 13, at Rathskeller Coffee Haus in Franklin. Hiker Haus Party with live band followed by bonfire/music at 8 p.m. Info: 369.6796. • Haywood Waterways Association will host a Big Creek Spring Wildflower Hike” on April 13 and April 15 in the Big Creek Watershed of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Led by Donna Machen and Terri Garrou. Free for members; $5 donation for nonmembers. Reservations due two days before each hike: Christine.haywoodwaterways@gmail.com or 476.4667, ext. 11. • The 35th annual Tuck River Cleanup is set for Saturday, April 13, in Cullowhee. Rafting registration is from 8-9 a.m. and noon-1 p.m., and walking route registration is from 10-11 a.m. Civic and community groups can sign up by writing cawhite6@wcu.edu. Info: kjtufts@wcu.edu or 227.8804. • Great Smoky Mountains Association will have a Birding Basics program from 8 a.m.-5 p.m. on Sunday, April 14, at Oconaluftee Visitor Center near Cherokee. • Friends of DuPont Forest will hold their annual meeting at 5:30 p.m. on April 16 in the Transylvania County Public Library. https://dupontforest.wildapricot.org/event-3203705. • On the Water: Tuckasegee will be offered to ages 12-up from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. on April 17 at the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission’s Pisgah Center for Wildlife Education in Brevard. Registration required: http://tinyurl.com/yb28fpz8. • The Franklin Bird Club will hold a Greenway walk at 9 a.m. on April 17. Meet at Salali Lane. Info: 524.5234. • Nodding Trillium Garden, the Pittillo Family Nature Preserve, will hold a grand opening of its wildflower garden trail from 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. on Wednesday, April 17, in Cullowhee. Guided walks. www.hicashlt.org. • A “Casting for Beginners: Level I” program will be offered to ages 12-up from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. on April 18 at the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission’s Pisgah Center for Wildlife Education in Brevard. Registration required: http://tinyurl.com/yb28fpz8. • Great Smoky Mountains Association will have a “History and Wildflowers” program from 9:30 a.m.-3 p.m. on Friday, April 19, along Kanati Fork and Thomas Divide Trails. https://tinyurl.com/yyy8pqjy. • Alarka Expeditions will observe William Bartram’s 280th birthday with a seven-mile canoe trip on the river he explored in 1775 on Saturday, April 20. Cost: $55 per person. Boats $25 each. Register: www.alarkaexpeditions.com. • Great Smoky Mountains Association will have a Wildlife Connectivity Project Presentation and Panel
Discussion from 10 a.m.-noon on Saturday, April 20, at The Strand, 38 Main in Waynesville. https://tinyurl.com/yxs6gvam. • Jackson County will host its inaugural Household Hazardous Waste Collection Day from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. on April 20 at the Cullowhee Rec Center Parking Lot. Paint, aerosols and flammables accepted.
90 minutes on the trail each time. Organized by the Nantahala Area Southern Off-Road Bicycle Association, with an event page at www.facebook.com/NantahalaAreaSORBA/. nantahala.area.sorba@gmail.com
COMPETITIVE EDGE
• Tickets are on sale now for the April 20 Spring Social at the N.C. Arboretum in Asheville. Fun, fellowship, food, hikes and more. $24 per person. www.carolinamountainclub.org or hikingtech@gmail.com.
• Registration is underway for Friends of the Lake 5K Race, Walk & Kids Fun Run, which will be held at 9 a.m. on April 20 at Lake Junaluska. Lakejunaluska.com/run or 800.454.6680.
• The Outdoor Music Jam and Gear Exchange is set for 6 p.m. on Saturday, April 20, at the Lazy Hiker Brewing Company in Franklin. Live music. www.lazyhikerbrewing.com or www.facebook.com/lazyhikerbrewingco.
• Registration is underway for the annual Greening Up the Mountains 5K Run, which is set for 9 a.m. on Saturday, April 27, at Mark Watson Park in Sylva. www.greeningupthemountains.com. Registration ends April 24. Info: 293.3053, ext. 7 or jeniferpressley@jacksonnc.org.
• Community Roadside Litter Pickup is at 9 a.m. on Saturday, April 20, starting at the Forest Hills entrance sign. • Jeff Hunter, senior program manager for the National Parks Conservation Association, will present and lead a panel discussion at 10 a.m. on Saturday, April 20, at The Strand at 38 N. main Street in Waynesville on the issue of vehicle collisions with large mammals – an issue that results in roughly $12 billion in costs plus loss of life annually. • Great Smoky Mountain National Park officials will host volunteer workdays from 9 a.m.-3 p.m. on April 20 and 22 to work on trails. Info: www.nps.gov/grsm/getinvolved/volunteer.htm. • Outdoor Skills Series: Map and Compass will be offered to ages 12-up from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. on April 22 at the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission’s Pisgah Center for Wildlife Education in Brevard. Registration required: http://tinyurl.com/yb28fpz8. • The Franklin Bird Club will hold a Greenway walk at 8 a.m. on April 24. Meet at the Macon County Public Library parking area. Info: 524.5234. • Fly-Tying for the Beginner will be offered to ages 12up from 9 a.m.-2noon on April 24 at the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission’s Pisgah Center for Wildlife Education in Brevard. Registration required: http://tinyurl.com/yb28fpz8.
• Registration is underway for the inaugural Hotshots 5K, which is May 4 in Pigeon Forge, Tenn. http://tinyurl.com/y426mud4.
FARM AND GARDEN • The N.C. Cooperative Extension Service will hold a seminar on Gardening Basics 101 from 6-8 p.m. on Thursday, April 11, at the Swain Extension Center on 60 Almond School Road in Bryson City. Site selection, preparation, proper soil, plant fertility needs and more. Register or get more info: 488.3848 or clbreden@ncsu.edu. • Applications are being accepted for the N.C. Cooperative Extension’s Master Food Volunteer program. Deadline is April 25; training starts May 9. Designed to provide volunteers the opportunity to support Family and Consumer Sciences agents with foodrelated programming. $30. To apply: go.ncsu.edu/emfv or Julie_sawyer@ncsu.edu. • Applications are being accepted for garden space in the Macon County Community Garden in Franklin. Fee: $25. To apply: 349.2046. Available for use by May 1.
FARMERS MARKETS
• A Tackle Rigging for Fly Fishing program will be offered for ages 12-up from 9 a.m.-noon on April 27 at the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission’s Pisgah Center for Wildlife Education in Brevard. Registration required: http://tinyurl.com/yb28fpz8.
• The Swain County Farmer’s Market is held from 9 a.m.-1 p.m. every Friday starting May 3 through October at the barn on Island Street in downtown Bryson City. 488.3848 or www.facebook.com/SwainCountyFarmersMarket.
• The National Park Service will hold its second-annual Project Parkway for potential volunteers on Saturday, April 27, at a variety of campgrounds – including Mount Pisgah, Milepost 408.8. If interested, write to BLRI_Volunteers@nps.gov.
• Jackson County Farmers Market starts on April 6, runs from 9 a.m. to noon on Saturdays and 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. on Wednesdays at Bridge Park in downtown Sylva. jacksoncountyfarmersmarket@gmail.com or www.jacksoncoutyfarmersmarket.org.
• Great Smoky Mountains Association will hold a “Birding Cataloochee by Bus” program on Monday, April 29. Info: dana@gsmassoc.org.
• The ‘Whee Farmers Market is held from 3-6 p.m. on Tuesdays through the end of October at the entrance to the village of Forest Hills off North Country Club Drive in Cullowhee. 476.0334 or www.thewheemarket.org.
• Registration is underway for a “Leave No Trace Master Educator course, which will be offered by Landmark Learning later this year in Cullowhee. Frontcountry/basecamp training is set for April 29May 3 while Backpacking will be from June 24-28, Aug. 12-16 and Oct. 21-25. www.landmarklearning.org. • A cycling ride exploring the Fire Mountain Trail System in Cherokee will be offered at 6 p.m. every other Thursday, rides started on April 12. Participants will divide into a beginner group and a non-beginner group, with 60 to 90 minutes on the trail each time. Organized by the Nantahala Area Southern Off-Road Bicycle Association, with an event page at www.facebook.com/NantahalaAreaSORBA/. nantahala.area.sorba@gmail.com. • A cycling ride exploring the Western Carolina University mountain bike trails will be offered at 6 p.m. every other Thursday, begin on April 19 in Cullowhee. Participants will meet at the N.C. Center for the Advancement of Teaching and divide into a beginner group and a non-beginner group, with 60 to
• Haywood Historic Farmers Market will start April 20, on Saturdays from 8 a.m. to noon at the HART Theater parking lot and Wednesdays from 3:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. at the First Baptist Church overflow parking lot beside Exxon. waynesvillefarmersmarket.com or haywoodfarmersmarket@gmail.com,
HIKING CLUBS • Nantahala Hiking Club will hold its annual spaghetti dinner at 6 p.m. on Friday, April 12, at First Presbyterian Church in Franklin. • The Nantahala Hiking Club will take a moderate 5.5-mile hike with an elevation change of 600 feet on Saturday, April 13, to Glassmine Gap on the Appalachian Trail. Info and reservations: 524.5298. • Carolina Mountain Club will have a 5.8-mile hike with a 1,635-foot ascent on Saturday, April 13 on Wildcat Rock Trail. Info and reservations: 684.8656, 606.7297 or bjdworley@gmail.com.
PRIME REAL ESTATE Advertise in The Smoky Mountain News
MarketPlace information: The Smoky Mountain News Marketplace has a distribution of 16,000 every week to over 500 locations across in Haywood, Jackson, Macon, and Swain counties along with the Qualla Boundary and west Buncombe County. For a link to our MarketPlace Web site, which also contains a link to all of our MarketPlace display advertisers’ Web sites, visit www.smokymountainnews.com.
Rates:
■ Free — Lost or found pet ads. ■ $5 — Residential yard sale ads, ■ $5 — Non-business items that sell for less than $150. ■ $15 — Classified ads that are 50 words or less; each additional line is $2. If your ad is 10 words or less, it will be displayed with a larger type. ■ $3 — Border around ad and $5 — Picture with ad or colored background. ■ $50 — Non-business items, 25 words or less. 3 month or till sold. ■ $375 — Statewide classifieds run in 170 participating newspapers with 1.1+ million circulation. Up to 25 words. ■ All classified ads must be pre-paid.
Classified Advertising: Scott Collier, phone 828.452.4251; fax 828.452.3585 classads@smokymountainnews.com
Diane E. Sherrill, Attorney
Is a Will Enough? FREE LUNCHEON SEMINAR
11:30 A.M. -1 P.M. April 24 at Best Western May 29 at SCC Reservations Suggested
828.586.4051
nctrustlawyer.com
559 W. Main St. • Sylva
LEGAL NOTICES THE CROSS ROAD HILL WATER Association will meet on April 23, 2019 at 7:00 p.m. at the North Canton United Volunteer Fire Dept. (1685 N. Canton Rd.) for its Annual Meeting. The purpose of the meeting is to vote on the Plan for Dissolution of said Association. All members are encouraged to attend.
AUCTION
ACREAGE TRACTS In Cumberland & Harnett Counties, NC. Online w/Bid Center, Begins Closing 4/24 at 3pm for Real Estate, Dump Truck, Track Loader, Bayliner, Tractor & More, Online Only, Begins Closing 4/25 at 10am, ironhorseauction.com, 800.997.2248, NCAL 3936 BANKRUPTCY AUCTION Of Remaining Lots & Acreage Tracts of Haven Heights Subdivision in Marion, NC, Online w/Live Bid Center, Begins Closing 4/11 at 6pm, Bid Center at Marion Community Building, ironhorseauction.com, 800.997.2248, NCAL 3936 CATTLE AUCTION Cattle and JD 6140D Tractor and Equipment near Ellerbe, NC, Online Only. Visit our website for more information, ironhorseauction.com, 800.997.2248, NCAL 3936
AUCTION
RECEIVERSHIP AUCTION Of Brushy Mountain Bee Farm in Wilkes County, NC, Bee Farm Equip., Tools and More, Online Only, Begins Closing 4/23 at 12pm, ironhorseauction.com, 800.997.2248, NCAL 3936 SURPLUS AUCTION Auction of Surplus Vehicles & Equipment! 75+ Vehicles, Heavy Equipment, more!Auction: Saturday April 13th. Registration: 8AM. Start: 10:00AM. Preview: Friday, April 12; 9:00AM 115 McDonough Rd. Fayetteville, Georgia 30215 Visit: auctionsinternational.com Call 800.536.1401.
CARS -
A-1 DONATE YOUR CAR For Breast Cancer! Help United Breast Foundation Education, Prevention, & Support Programs. Fast Free Pickup - 24 Hr Response Tax Deduction 855.701.6346 AUTO INSURANCE Starting At $49/ Month! Call for your fee rate comparison to see how much you can save! Call: 855.970.1224 CARS/TRUCKS WANTED!!! Top Dollar Offer! Free Towing From Home, Office or Body Shop. All Makes & Models 2000-2016. Same Day Pick-Up Available! Call Now: 1.800.761.9396 SAPA
FROG POND ESTATE SALES HELPING IN HARD TIMES
DOWNSIZING ESTATE SALES CLEAN OUT SERVICE • COMPANY TRANSFER • DIVORCE • LOST LOVED ONE
WE ARE KNOWN FOR HONESTY & INTEGRITY
828-734-3874 - UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT WWW.FROGLEVELDOWNSIZING.COM
CARS DONATE YOUR CAR TO CHARITY. Receive maximum value of write off for your taxes. Running or not! All conditions accepted. Free pick-up. Call Now for details. 855.972.0354 SAPA GOT AN OLDER CAR, Van or SUV? Do the humane thing. Donate it to the Humane Society. Call 1.888.342.9355 SAPA
BUILDING MATERIALS HAYWOOD BUILDERS Garage Doors, New Installations Service & Repairs, 828.456.6051 100 Charles St. Waynesville Employee Owned.
CONSTRUCTION/ REMODELING
ALL THINGS BASEMENTY! Basement Systems Inc. Call us for all of your basement needs! Waterproofing, Finishing,Structural Repairs, Humidity and Mold Control Free Estimates! Call 1.855.404.6455 BATHROOM RENOVATIONS. Easy, One Day Updates! We specialize in safe bathing. Grab bars, no slip flooring & seated showers. Call for a free in-home consultation: 877.661.6587 SAPA DAVE’S CUSTOM HOMES OF WNC, Free Estimates & Competitive rates. References avail. upon request. Specializing in: Log Homes, remodeling, decks, new construction, repairs & additions. Owner/Builder: Dave Donaldson. Licensed/Insured. 828.631.0747 or 828.508.0316 ROOFING: REPLACE OR REPAIR. All types of materials available. Flat roofs too. www.highlandroofingnc.com From the Crystal coast, Wilmington, Fayetteville, Triad, and the Triangle. 252.726.2600, 252.758.0076, 910.777.8988, 919.676.5969, 910.483.3530, and 704.332.0555. Highland Residential Roofing.
WNC MarketPlace
CONSTRUCTION/ REMODELING
PETS
AFFORDABLE NEW SIDING! Beautify your home! Save on monthly energy bills with beautiful New Siding from 1800Remodel! Up to 18 months no interest. Restrictions Apply 877.731.0014
USE VITATABS Once a day as a dietary supplement to promote general health and restore nutrients stripped by worming. N.C. Clampitt Hardware 828.488.2782, or visit us online at: www.kennelvax.com
ENERGY SAVING NEW WINDOWS! Beautify your home! Save on monthly energy bills with New Windows from 1800Remodel! Up to 18 months no interest. Restrictions apply 888.676.0813.
USE SKIN BALM & TONEKOTE On Dogs and Cats to stop Scratching and Gnawing and Restore Luxurious Coat without Steroids. At Tractor Supply, or visit us at: www.kennelvax.com
PETS
LAWN & GARDEN
HAYWOOD SPAY/NEUTER 828.452.1329
Prevent Unwanted Litters! The Heat Is On! Spay/Neuter For Haywood Pets As Low As $10. Operation Pit is in Effect! Free Spay/Neuter, Microchip & Vaccines For Haywood Pitbull Types & Mixes! Hours:
Tuesday-Friday, 10:30 am - 4:30 pm 182 Richland Street, Waynesville
LIVESTOCK
April 10-16, 2019
ZACH - A LONG AND LOW DACHSHUND MIX MALE ABOUT THREE YEARS OLD. HE'S A SWEET, FRIENDLY LITTLE GUY, VERY SOCIABLE, AND APPEARS TO DO WELL WITH OTHER DOGS. HE IS QUITE ADEPT AT GETTING OUT OF FENCES, MOSTLY BECAUSE HE JUST WANTS TO BE WITH PEOPLE. ZACH WEIGHS ABOUT A VERY PORTABLE 13 LBS., AND ENJOYS LAP SITTING AND LEASH WALKING.
ZORA - A PETITE SILVER GRAY TABBY GIRL ABOUT FOUR YEARS OLD. SHE'S SWEET AND FRIENDLY, JUST A LITTLE SHY AT FIRST MEETING. ZORA DOES NOT LIKE DOGS, SO WE'RE LOOKING FOR A HOME FOR HER THAT CAN ACCOMMODATE HER NEEDS.
STOCK YOUR POND! Grass Carp, Coppernose Bluegill, Shellcracker, Redbreast, Hybrid BG, Channel Catfish, Mosquitofish, Coming to a store near you in March. Must Pre-Order Now! Southland Fisheries 803.776.4923 CATTLE AUCTION Cattle and JD 6140D Tractor and Equipment near Ellerbe, NC, Online Only. Visit our website for more information, ironhorseauction.com, 800.997.2248, NCAL 3936
LAWN & GARDEN HEMLOCK HEALERS, INC. Dedicated to Saving Our Hemlocks. Owner/Operator Frank Varvoutis, NC Pesticide Applicator’s License #22864. 48 Spruce St. Maggie Valley, NC 828.734.7819 828.926.7883, Email: hemlockhealers@yahoo.com
LAKE OR POND! Aeration - Your 1st step toward improved water quality! 1hp Cascade 5000 Floating Pond Fountain Aerator - Beautiful! $798.95 $ave Hundreds! www.fishpondaerator.com 608.254.2735, 7-Days/Week!
REAL ESTATE ANNOUNCEMENT AFFORDABLE Condos/homes/lots mid-$50s $700,000+! Gated, OF cabana, golf, amenities, low HOAs, the higher ground of luxurious, safe Tidewater Plantation, North Myrtle Beach. New Way Properties: 843.424.9013.
PUBLISHER’S NOTICE All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination” Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18 This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All dwellings advertised on equal opportunity basis.
COMPLETE HOME INSPECTION SERVICES
www.smokymountainnews.com
Moving or Buying? Let Us Help You.
HAYWOOD
HOME INSPECTIONS
828.734.3609 | haywoodhomeinsp@gmail.com
Brian Noland RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL PROFESSIONAL
bknoland@beverly-hanks.com
828.734.5201 74 North Main Street Waynesville, NC 28786
828.452.5809 44
REAL ESTATE ANNOUNCEMENT
HOMES FOR SALE BEHIND ON YOUR MORTGAGE? Denied a Loan Modification? Bank threatening foreclosure? CALL Homeowner Protection Services now! New laws are in effect that may help. Call Us Now 1.866.214.4534 SAPA
LEASE TO OWN 1/2 Acre Lots with Mobile Homes & Empty 1/2 Acre + Lots! Located Next to Cherokee Indian Reservation, 2.5 Miles from Harrah’s Cherokee Casino. For More Information Please Call 828.506.0578
BRUCE MCGOVERN A Full Service Realtor, Locally Owned and Operated mcgovernpropertymgt@gmail.com McGovern Property Management 828.283.2112.
SAVE YOUR HOME! Are you behind paying your Mortgage? Denied a Loan Modification? Is the bank threatening foreclosure? CALL Homeowner’s Relief Line now! Free Consultation 844.359.4330 SAPA
STORAGE SPACE FOR RENT
GATED, LEVEL, ALL WOODED, 5+acre building lots, utilities available in S.E. Tennessee, between Chattanooga and Nashville. www.timber-wood.com Call now to schedule tour 423.802.0296. SAPA
GREAT SMOKIES STORAGE Conveniently located off 19/23 by Thad Woods Auction. Available for lease now: 10’x10’ units for $55, 20’x20’ units for $160. Get one month FREE with 12 month contract. Call 828.507.8828 or 828.506.4112 for more information.
THREATENING FORECLOSURE? Call Homeowner's Relief Line now! Free Consultation 844.359.4330 SAPA
CAVALIER ARMS APARTMENTS MOVE IN TODAY
Offering 1, 2 & 3 Bedroom Apartments, Starting From $445.00 Section 8 Accepted - Rental Assistance Available Handicapped Accessible Units Available
OFFICE HOURS: Tuesday & Thursday 8:00a.m. - 5:00p.m. 50 Duckett Cove Road, Waynesville, NC 28786
Phone# 1.828.456.6776 TDD# 1.800.725.2962 Equal Housing Opportunity
Climate Control
Storage 48 SECURITY CAMERAS AND MANAGEMENT ON SITE
Sizes from 5’x5’ to 10’x20’
Climate Controlled
1106 Soco Road (Hwy 19), Maggie Valley, NC 28751
Call:
828-476-8999
MaggieValleySelfStorage.com torry@torry1.com Torry Pinter, Sr. 828-734-6500
Find Us One mile past State Rd. 276 and Hwy-19 on the right side, across from Frankie’s Italian Restaurant
Steve Mauldin
828.734.4864
smauldin@beverly-hanks.com
74 N. Main St.,Waynesville
828.452.5809
beverly-hanks.com
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
AVON - EARN EXTRA $$. Sell online or in person from home or work. Free website included. No inventory required. For more info, Call: 844.613.2230 SAPA NEW AUTHORS WANTED! Page Publishing will help you self-publish your own book. FREE author submission kit! Limited offer! Why wait? Call us now: 844.660.6943
EMPLOYMENT MAD BATTER In Beautiful Downtown Sylva is hiring for Front-of-House, Backof-House & Franklin Food Truck. Please apply in Person Mon. - Fri. Between 2 - 4p.m. AIRLINES ARE HIRING Get FAA approved hands on Aviation training. Financial aid for qualified students - Career placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 866.441.6890
LAND SURVEYING POSITION Morehead City, NC - Crew Chief or S.I.T. Pay $15-$21 per hour depending upon experience. Email: Chase Cullipher: chase@tcgpa.com or Call 252.773.0090
CELL
828.734.4822
Carolyn@BHGHeritage.com
1986 SOCO ROAD HIGHWAY 19 MAGGIE VALLEY, NC
828.558.0607 CarolynLauter.com
Rob Roland
828-400-1923
Looking to sell or buy a home
RobRolandRealty.com Residential · Land · Commercial
• Carolyn Lauter - carolyn@bhgheritage.com Beverly Hanks & Associates- beverly-hanks.com • Ann Eavenson - anneavenson@beverly-hanks.com • Billie Green - bgreen@beverly-hanks.com • Michelle McElroy- michellemcelroy@beverly-hanks.com • Steve Mauldin - smauldin@beverly-hanks.com • Brian K. Noland - brianknoland.com • Anne Page - apage@beverly-hanks.com • Brooke Parrott - bparrott@beverly-hanks.com • Jerry Powell - jpowell@beverly-hanks.com • Catherine Proben - cproben@beverly-hanks.com • Ellen Sither - ellensither@beverly-hanks.com • Mike Stamey - mikestamey@beverly-hanks.com • Karen Hollingsed- khollingsed@beverly-hanks.com • Billy Case- billycase@beverly-hanks.com • Laura Thomas - lthomas@beverly-hanks.com • Lourdes Lanio - llanio@beverly-hanks.com • George Escaravage - george@IJBProperties.com ERA Sunburst Realty - sunburstrealty.com • Amy Spivey - amyspivey.com • Rick Border - sunburstrealty.com • Pam James - pjames@sunburstrealty.com
Jerry Lee Mountain Realty Jerry Lee Hatley- jerryhatley@bellsouth.net Keller Williams Realty - kellerwilliamswaynesville.com • The Morris Team - www.themorristeamnc.com • Julie Lapkoff - julielapkoff@kw.com
Lakeshore Realty • Phyllis Robinson - lakeshore@lakejunaluska.com
Mountain Dreams Realty- maggievalleyhomesales.com Mountain Home Properties mountaindream.com
Laura Thomas
BROKER ASSOCIATE —————————————
(828) 734-8478 lthomas@beverly-hanks.com
• Cindy Dubose - cdubose@mountaindream.com
McGovern Real Estate & Property Management • Bruce McGovern - shamrock13.com RE/MAX Executive - remax-waynesvillenc.com remax-maggievalleync.com • Holly Fletcher - hollyfletcher1975@gmail.com • The Real Team - TheRealTeamNC.com • Ron Breese - ronbreese.com • Landen Stevenson- Landen@landenstevenson.com • Dan Womack - womackdan@aol.com • Mary & Roger Hansen - mwhansen@charter.net • Judy Meyers - jameyers@charter.net • David Rogers - davidr@remax-waynesvillenc.com • Marsha Block- marshablockestates@gmail.com Rob Roland Realty - robrolandrealty.com
• Rob Roland - rroland33@gmail.com
The Smoky Mountain Retreat at Eagles Nest
• Tom Johnson - tomsj7@gmail.com • Sherell Johnson - sherellwj@aol.com
DO YOU HAVE A CAR, VALID LICENSE & WEDNESDAYS FREE?
jobs.smokymountainnews.com
Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices/Great Smokys Realty - www.4Smokys.com Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate- Heritage
Christie’s Ivester Jackson Blackstream
BROWN TRUCKING Is looking for COMPANY DRIVERS and OWNER OPERATORS. Brown requires: CDL-A, 2 years of tractor trailer experience OTR or Regional in the last 3 years, good MVR and PSP. Apply at: driveforbrown.com. Or Call Brandon by Dialing 919.291.7416.
The Smoky Mountain News is Hiring Two Dependable Newspaper Delivery People for Our Macon County and Jackson County (Including Cashiers & Highlands areas) Routes. These Positions are Considered Contract and are Year Round. A Perfect Opportunity for Local Retirees or for Those Seeking Additional Work on Wednesdays. No Phone Calls Please. For More Information on these Opportunities, Please Visit:
Haywood Co. Real Estate Agents
Ellen Sither esither@beverly-hanks.com (828) 734-8305
Weichart Realtors Unlimited
smokymountainnews.com
FTCC Fayetteville Technical Community College is now accepting applications for the following positions: Data Management Technician, Institutional Effectiveness Simulation & Game Development/Digital Media Instructor (10-month contract) For detailed information and to apply, please visit our employment portal at: faytechcc.peopleadmin.com An Equal Opportunity Employer.
REALTOR/BROKER
April 10-16, 2019
PART-TIME HOSPITALITY Coordinator Wanted - Must be ‘People Person’, Proficient with MS Office, Good Phone and Communication Etiquette. Go to: FoundationForEvangelism.org/ about/employment
CAROLINA MOUNTAIN CABLEVISION, Inc. Located in Waynesville, NC, is a privately-owned telecommunications company and is currently seeking resumes for an Installer Technician. We are looking for experienced cable TV or FTTP Installer or Cable Technician to help us grow our network and subscriber base. The applicant must: • Have experience installing TV, phone, and internet services for residential and commercial accounts • Have experience with hand tools, power tools, hydraulic equipment, ladders, etc. • Have a good driving record • Be self-motivated and dependable with the ability to work independently • Be quality and service focused • Be able to deal with difficult customers and members of the public in a professional, courteous manner • Be available for "On Call" Duty on weekends and overtime as needed with little notice • Live in the Waynesville area of Haywood County, NC • Be able to pass a drug test and background check This person will be responsible for the installation of telephone, cable, and internet service from the utility pole into a customer's home, will install and set up modems, digital equipment, etc. in a customer's home, and be able to detect, troubleshoot, and fix problems as they occur with the services offered to a customer. We will be accepting resumes until May 3, 2019. Salary range is $24,500 to $35,000 per year but dependent on level of experience. Anyone interested should e-mail their resume to: sanders@ccvn.com or fax it to: 828.536.4510. We are an Equal Opportunity Employer and encourage veterans to apply.
Carolyn Lauter
WNC MarketPlace
20 PEOPLE NEEDED!! Ground Floor Opportunity! Experience History In The Making!! Free 3 Minute Recording Tells It All! 1.800.763.8168 or visit us at: www.healthyprosper.org
EMPLOYMENT
• Marsha Block - marsha@weichertunlimited.com
WNC Real Estate Store
• Jeff Baldwin - jeff@WNCforMe.com
TO ADVERTISE IN THE NEXT ISSUE 828.452.4251 | ads@smokymountainnews.com 45
WNC MarketPlace April 10-16, 2019 www.smokymountainnews.com 46
SUPER
CROSSWORD
HALF WIT ACROSS 1 Busy bugs 5 As a matter of routine 13 Take for granted 20 Snoozefest 21 Mogadishu native 22 Replaced the inner layer of 23 Lego bit, e.g. 25 Witty adage 26 -- -Saxon 27 Coral reef 29 -- acids 30 Single-named male model 35 Totally tidy 38 Lamb serving 44 Russian autocrat 45 Lentil, e.g. 46 Free speech org. 47 Tiny neighbor of France 49 -- as it is 51 Son of Poseidon 53 Totally evil 59 -- Bubba (bubble gum brand) 60 Stadium cheers 63 "-- gratia artis" (MGM motto) 64 Comic actor Seth 65 Melodic, musically 67 -- -Caps (candy) 68 Won gold or silver 70 Jacuzzi sites 73 New England soup 76 Crimson or ruby 77 Gas station fill-up amount 79 Water, to Yvette 80 Little chore 82 Mink relative 83 -- gestae (deeds)
84 With 120-Down, like Siamese cats or Frank Sinatra 85 Nasty whales 89 Like a scary ride in a vehicle 93 Moe, for one 94 Tesla CEO Musk 95 African plain 99 Cajun cooking pod 100 Delighted 104 Lustful god 106 Not-quite-identifiable cafeteria food 108 Quality of 2% milk, say 111 Agitate 112 Athenian marketplace 113 Air traveler 116 Singer Cleo 121 Dodge SUV 124 Apt occasion for this puzzle's theme 129 Touched up, as text 130 Home of St. Louis 131 Give up, as territory 132 Give a new look to 133 Essential 134 Word that can follow the ends of 23-, 35-, 38-, 53, 73-, 89-, 106- and 108Across DOWN 1 "Waterloo" pop group 2 Gerund, e.g. 3 Calc prereq 4 Hawk 5 It follows chi 6 Actor Glass 7 "No way!," in a text 8 Marvy 9 Cantina pot 10 Major melee
11 Georgia city 12 Kind of sock 13 Lead-in to fix 14 D.C. VIP 15 Inventor Howe 16 They follow rhos 17 Like green bananas 18 Bully 19 "D.O.A." star O'Brien 24 Tip, as a hat 28 Range ropes 31 "-- for All Seasons" 32 Frank holder 33 "-- be a real shame if ..." 34 Siouan speaker 36 Drawn tight 37 Brow shape 38 Trellis strip 39 Light beige 40 Insincerely eloquent 41 Desk tray for to-besent documents 42 Space balls 43 Pro-gun gp. 48 "A Bell for --" (1944 novel) 50 Ranch group 52 Rowing tool 54 Garden tool 55 Where a company's leaders meet 56 Eye lustfully 57 Essential 58 Winds down 60 Bialy, e.g. 61 Actor Butterfield 62 Class whose students might cook 66 Post-op site 67 Mu -- beef 68 Paltry 69 Mesozoic --
70 71 72 74 75 78 81 83 84 86 87 88 90 91 92 93 96 97 98 100 e.g. 101 102 103 105 107 109 110 114 115 117 118 119 120 122 123 125 126 127 128
Put in a hold Maze route "Nay" sayer Wine holders Joanne of "Red River" On the house Part of n/a Flee hastily Quail flock Pepsi rival Taj Mahal's city Pew or sofa Artist Paul Direction opposite sud Flee hastily Cutty -- (clipper ship) Equine beast of burden High degree School org. Test-marking teacher, Lentil, e.g. Holds dear NBAer Kevin Hoagie ingredient Holler Sweet treats Easy two-pointer Word before while Go upward Writer Sholem Notion, to Pierre Zip See 84-Across Styling goo Shelley work Ship's record Canine coat "... Mac -- PC?" Iraq export
ANSWERS ON PAGE 40
FURNITURE CRAFTMATIC ADJUSTABLE BEDS For less! Up to 50% Off Leading Competitors. #1 Rated Adjustable Bed. Trusted Over 40 Years. All Mattress Types Available. Shop by Phone and SAVE! CALL 1.855.993.4302 HAYWOOD BEDDING, INC. The best bedding at the best price! 533 Hazelwood Ave. Waynesville 828.456.4240 COMPARE QUALITY & PRICE Shop Tupelo’s, 828.926.8778.
FOR SALE BORING/CARPENTER BEE TRAPS No Chemicals, Poisons or Anything to Harm the Environment. Handmade in Haywood County. 1 for $20, 2 or More for $15 each. 828.593.8321 RECIPE Unique Jerk Chicken Pizza Recipe! Mouth Watering Simply Delicious Pizza Recipe You’ll Love. Send $1.00 To: Your Easy Recipe Source, P.O. Box 11272, Merrillville, IN 46411 SCENTSY PRODUCTS Your Local Independent Consultant to Handle All Your Scentsy Wants & Needs. Amanda P. Collier 828.246.8468 Amandacollier.scentsy.us apcollier1978@gmail.com Start Own Business for Only $99
WANTED TO BUY FREON R12 WANTED: Certified Buyer Will Pay Ca$H For R12 Cylinders Or Cases Of Cans. www.refrigerantfinders.com, 312.291.9169
MEDICAL WELLNESS ADVOCATE mydoterra.com/blueridge wellness APPLYING FOR Social Security Disability or Appealing a Denied Claim? Call Bill Gordon & Assoc., Social Security Disability Attorneys, 1.888.989.4947! FREE Consults. Local Attorneys Nationwide [Mail: 2420 N St NW, Washington DC. Office: Broward County FL. TX/NM Bar. FREE QUOTES Health Insurance Quotes from Allied Insurance Partners. Act Fast! Open Enrollment Ends December 15th. Do Not Miss Out on 2019 Coverage! Compare Quotes From Top Companies. No Obligation Call for more info 866.347.0123
SAVE ON YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS! World Health Link. Price Match Guarantee! Prescriptions Required. CIPA Certified. Over 1500 medications available. CALL US Today For A Free Price Quote. 1.855.972.7324
SUDOKU
Here’s How It Works: Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken down into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, Answers on 40 the easier it gets to solve the puzzle!
MEDICAL DENTAL INSURANCE. Call Physicians Mutual Insurance Company for details. NOT just a discount plan, REAL coverage for 350 procedures. 844.496.8601 or http://www.dental50plus.com/ Ad# 6118 FINANCIAL BENEFITS For those facing serious illness. You may qualify for a Living Benefit Loan today (up to 50 percent of your Life Insurance Policy Death Benefit.) Free Info. CALL 1.855.402.5487
SERVICES EXPIRES SOON: Switch to DISH + get $50 gift card (Courtesy of Satellite Deals)! Plus get Free Premium Channels for 3 mos. & Free Installation (up to 6 rooms)! Call 888.753.3635 SAPA YOUR AD COULD REACH 1.6 MILLION HOMES ACROSS NC! Your classified ad could be reaching over 1.6 Million Homes across North Carolina! Place your ad with The Smoky Mountain News on the NC Statewide Classified Ad Network- 118 NC newspapers for a low cost of $330 for 25-word ad to appear in each paper! Additional words are $10 each. The whole state at your fingertips! It's a smart advertising buy! Call Scott Collier at 828.452.4251 or for more information visit the N.C. Press Association's website at www.ncpress.com
The naturalist’s corner BY DON H ENDERSHOT
The PR of Pittman-Robertson an across this little gem of a blurb on U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s (FWS) Facebook page: “Sports men and women are funding $1 billion in conservation projects across the country this year. That means better habitat for moose, elk, turtles, birds, and many other species! The funds are collected from an excise tax placed on archery and fishing gear and firearms an (sic) ammunition through the Pittman-Robertson and Dingell-Johnson Acts and distributed to states by our Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program. To see projects in your state, head to https://go.usa.gov/xmrgd.” It seems FWS is being a bit coy here — using sports men and women rather than sportsman (defined by Merriam Webster online as “a person who engages in sports (such as hunting or fishing).” And if you clicked on the link at the bottom of the blurb you would find even more ambiguous phrasing — “Outdoor recreationists who hunt, shoot, fish and boat are
R
providing more than $1 billion this year to support increased outdoor access and wildlife habitat conservation across the United States. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is distributing the funds to all 50 states and U.S. territories today. The funds are generated through excise taxes on hunting, shooting and fishing equipment and boat fuel.” Emphasis mine. I assume it’s because FWS knows the truth about Pittman-Robertson but still wants to preach to the choir. PittmanRobertson and/or Dingell-Johnson doesn’t distinguish between a sportsman or a shooter; a fisherman or a boater — when certain items are purchased like firearms, ammunition and/or boat fuel the money goes into the funds created by these laws and is distributed to states through the Wildlife and Sports Fish Restoration Program. The conservative CNSNews.com pointed it out well in 2011 using FWS and National Rifle Association figures: A December 2011 FWS report found 12.7 million hunters used firearms while hunting and the NRA estimated between 70 and 80 million gun owners in the U.S. in 2011. And the excise tax generated by the purchase of firearms and ammunition by non-
hunters goes to the same place as excise tax generated by the purchase of firearms and ammunition by hunters. It’s not hard to see where the majority of that money comes from. And according to a January 2017 article in “Outside” throw a little Obama’s coming to git yer guns in there and PittmanRobertson monies shot through the roof.
years are significantly higher than any other years in history,” in terms of supplying the fund, says Gavin Shire, chief of public affairs for the FWS. “And all years between 2008 and 2016, except 2010, appear to be higher than all years prior to 2008.” No one here is knocking any monies sportsmen and sportswomen contribute to conservation projects. But it should be
Houston gun show. creative commons photo
Again FWS’ own numbers point out “handgun sales grew by 287 percent annually from 2006 to 2013, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), while rifle and shotgun sales rose 166 percent.” According to Outside, “The last four
abundantly clear when it comes to PittmanRobertson sportsmen and women are clearly in the minority. (Don Hendershot is a naturalist and a writer who lives in Haywood County. He can be reached at ddihen1@bellsouth.net
April 10-16, 2019 Smoky Mountain News 47
2019 MODELS ARE HERE
2019 FORD EDGE SEL & TITANIUM 0% APR for 60 mos. w/Ford Credit Financing +$1,500 Bonus Cash
0% APR for 72 mos. w/Ford Credit Financing Not all buyers will qualify for Ford Credit financing. 0% APR financing for 72 months at $13.89 per month per $1,000 financed regardless of down payment (PGM #21024). Not available on Raptor. Residency restrictions apply. Take new retail delivery from an authorized Ford dealer’s stock by 4/30/19. See dealer for qualifications and complete details.
April 10-16, 2019
$1,500 Bonus Cash (PGM #13488). Not all buyers will qualify for Ford Credit financing. 0% APR financing for 60 months at $16.67 per month per $1,000 financed regardless of down payment (PGM #21010). Vehicle must have arrived at dealership at least 61 days prior to sale date. Residency restrictions apply. For all offers, take new retail delivery from an authorized Ford dealer’s stock by 7/1/19. See dealer for qualifications and complete details.
2019 FORD F-150
2019 FORD EXPLORER
Smoky Mountain News
2019 FORD ESCAPE 0% APR for 60 mos. w/Ford Credit Financing + $1,000 Bonus Cash
0% APR for 60 mos. w/Ford Credit Financing + $1,000 Bonus Cash
$1,000 Bonus Cash (PGM #13488). Not all buyers will qualify for Ford Credit financing. 0% APR financing for 60 months at $16.67 per month per $1,000 financed regardless of down payment (PGM #21010). Vehicle must have arrived at dealership at least 61 days prior to sale date. Residency restrictions apply. For all offers, take new retail delivery from an authorized Ford dealer’s stock by 4/30/19. See dealer for qualifications and complete details.
$1,000 Bonus Cash (PGM #13488). Not all buyers will qualify for Ford Credit financing. 0% APR financing for 60 months at $16.67 per month per $1,000 financed regardless of down payment (PGM #21010). Vehicle must have arrived at dealership at least 61 days prior to sale date. Residency restrictions apply. For all offers, take new retail delivery from an authorized Ford dealer’s stock by 7/1/19. See dealer for qualifications and complete details
I-40 EXIT 31, CANTON, NC
828-648-2313 1-800-532-4631
www.kwford.com kenwilsonford@kwford.com
48