Smoky Mountain News | April 29, 2020

Page 13

H

Online library resources available

Macon EDC offers help to businesses Macon County Economic Development Commission (EDC) and Macon County Public Health (MCPH) are committed to helping the citizens of Macon County during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Through the Macon County EDC, businesses can locate resources and news related

Complete COVID-19 business impact survey The Southwestern Commission (Region A) has joined with regional economic development partners to release a SWNC COVID19 Business Impact Survey. The data from the survey will be essential in developing mitigation strategies to assist businesses and communities during the pandemic and in the transition to a post COVID19 economy. Take a few minutes to complete the survey at www.surveymonkey.com/r/YBYYXG5.

Smoky Mountain News

All Fontana Regional Library locations in Macon, Jackson and Swain counties remain closed per Gov. Roy Cooper’s order and public health advice, but eBooks, eAudiobooks, streaming video, and other electronic resources remain available at all times, as does public wi-fi outside library buildings. Library staff are busy planning how best to extend services to the public once it is safe to re-open. Look for future announcements of when and how libraries will open their doors. For information on how to access online resources for children and adults, and for information about COVID-19, visit www.fontanalib.org.

to economic relief for hardships caused by COVID-19, including information regarding the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), Golden LEAF’s Rapid Recovery Loan Program, Unemployment, as well as many other programs meant to help business owners and their employees during this hardship. For those who need assistance, or would like to find out more information regarding relief programs, contact EDC directly at EDC@maconnc.org or by phone at 828.369.2306. Stay up-to-date by following them on Facebook as Macon County Economic Development Commission.

EXPIRES: MAY 15 2020

April 29-May 5, 2020

BY HANNAH MCLEOD CONTRIBUTING WRITER aywood County Board of Elections recently voted on a plan addressing COVID-19 concerns to present to the North Carolina State Board of Elections for approval. The State Board of Elections is requiring counties with a second primary to submit plans on how they will administer elections while adhering to guidelines for social distancing and sanitation during the Coronavirus Pandemic. As part of the 11th congressional district, Haywood County will have a second primary held June 23 for the runoff between Republican candidates for House of Representatives Lynda Bennett and Madison Cawthorn. That is the only contest on the ballot for June 23. During a April 21 meeting, the board of elections addressed concerns about the availability of precinct officials, polling locations, and the safety of voters and precinct officials. According to their data, 37.5 percent of precinct officials self-identified as high risk, and the average age of precinct judges is 62 years. Of all precinct officials, 92.5 percent are willing to serve, as long as social distancing protocols are in place. Several polling locations are presenting problems for being available on June 23. The second Fines Creek location (Panther Creek Voting House), as well as the White Oak loca-

tion (White Oak Community House) are public buildings that currently have no running water or restrooms. The first Beaverdam Location (30th Signal Armory Center) has a possible scheduling conflict with June 23, and the Center Pigeon Fire Department wants the Board of Elections to sanitize the location following the election. The board presented a diagram as part of its plan that demonstrated how social distancing guidelines would be followed at polling locations. Things most people are familiar with these days — tape on the floor marking six feet distance between folks in line, a glove center close to the single entrance and oneway traffic to keep people from getting close together. The board discussed how precinct officials would sanitize all surfaces and writing utensils after each use. The plan includes consolidating the 29 original precincts into 11. The North Carolina State Board of Elections has emergency power to approve precinct consolidation requests in response to the Coronavirus Pandemic. If the plan is approved by the state board it would only be effective for the June 23 election and each affected voter would be notified by mail. Additionally, signage would be posted at precincts not in use, with information about where voters should be voting on June 23. The plan had to be submitted to the state board by May 1 for approval. However, the plan is for this emergency case only. If the county can secure enough precinct officials, volunteers, location availability and personal protection/sanitation equipment all precincts could be open and running. The board made clear these changes are not in response to funding issues but are simply the emergency plan to keep voters and workers safe during the June 23 election.

news

Haywood precincts could consolidate for June primary

13


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.