https://www.upandcomingweekly.com/


  • cancelled The Fayetteville Woodpeckers have decided to cancel the annual “United for Veterans” event scheduled for Friday, Nov. 11 at Segra Stadium. It will not be rescheduled for 2022. This decision was made in an effort to keep staff, attendees and vendors safe during the forecasted hit of Tropical Storm Nicole in Fayetteville on Friday.

    United for Veterans was to feature a resource fair with dozens of organizations that offer services for veterans and military families. Among these were organizations providing education services, employment assistance, medical and mental health care, housing, fitness, recreational activities and more. In place of this event, a “virtual resource fair” has been created through Linktree to connect those interested to these organizations: https://linktr.ee/UnitedForVeterans.

    For more information about the Woodpeckers or upcoming events, please visit www.fayettevillewoodpeckers.com.

  • 22Corporations seek those with leadership ability because they believe these individuals bring special assets to their organization and, ultimately, improve the bottom line.
    — Peter G. Northouse, “Leadership”

    Why does leadership matter? In today’s global environment, organizations and communities want leaders who can guide them and drive positive change. Now more than ever, these same organizations and communities seek agile, creative and analytical leaders who are capable of operating in a complex and ever-changing environment.

    In other words, candidates are sought who can successfully lead businesses and organizations out of the post-pandemic period and into the emerging “meta” era. Is this you?
    Do leaders matter? Leaders at all levels assess requirements against capabilities and, in turn, leverage their personnel to attain goals. However, it is the skilled leader who visualizes, describes and directs not solely on where “we are” but rather synergizes the past and forecasts the future to positively affect “today.” Is this you?

    Leadership changes the world. We study leadership so we can be successful leaders for organizations now and in the future. The Leadership Studies program at Fayetteville Technical Community College is looking for students who have the passion, drive and commitment to confront challenges in a constantly changing global world. Are you ready to meet the challenge?
    Interested in leadership? Perhaps you should consider a degree in Leadership Studies. FTCC's Leadership Studies degree is a 5 semester/64-credit-hour program designed to provide students with the knowledge and skills necessary for employment and growth into leadership positions.

    Course work includes various subject areas related to leadership involving data-driven decision-making, change management, strategic leadership, planning, team-building, leadership capacity, motivation and effective communication.
    Graduates will earn an Associate of Applied Science (AAS) and may qualify for leadership positions in the public and private sectors. Occupations may include positions specific to the military, governmental agencies, public policy, non-governmental agencies, law enforcement and homeland security.

    How do you begin? Registration for Spring classes at FTCC is open, and Spring classes begin Jan. 9.

    The arrival of a new year brings renewed hope and excitement, a “clean slate” waiting to be filled with ideas and directions for pursuing a new career, upgrading job skills and improving overall quality
    of life.

    Your local community college is an outstanding resource for pursuing a better quality of life through education. Whether your educational interest falls in the area of Leadership Studies, or in some other field or area, FTCC has over 280 academic programs to choose from, conveniently and affordably offered to help you make the most of your career decision.

    For additional information about the Leadership Studies program, please visit https://www.faytechcc.edu/academics/business-programs/leadership-studies/ or call 910-678-8521 or email smithse@faytechcc.edu.

    You can reach an FTCC Admissions representative at admissions@faytechcc.edu to get started at FTCC.

    Your journey to a new career begins with the first step at FTCC. Let us help you find your way forward.

     

  • 18Alondria McCoy is the founder of Alon Entertainment and the writer and director of “First Lady the Stage Play” — a story of domestic violence and mental health in the church.

    Fact vs. Fiction

    This play is based on a true story. McCoy had a co-worker that detailed what happened to her as a First Lady, a title given to the wife of a church pastor. McCoy could not believe such horrendous things happened to the woman and inquired if she could turn the woman’s story into a stage play. The woman did not believe her story could be used for a stage play, but McCoy voiced she had the background in it and it could happen.

    For two and a half months, details of the woman’s story resided on sticky notes as McCoy pieced the story together. It didn’t take her long to get the story together. On opening night, her co-worker sat in the audience and watched as her experience was told through a stage play.
    After the show, her co-worker had tears in her eyes and told McCoy to have this play shown to the masses.

    “Where I grew up in the church, I would have never thought this was real,” she said. “I’ve never seen anything like this in the church. It was easy for me to make a play of it.”

    For the last six years, McCoy has done this show multiple times in different locations in the Carolinas and Virginia. To individuals who are wondering why this stage play on domestic violence is unique, this story is from a different perspective. In religious situations, when someone has a burden to bear, like domestic violence, they go to their pastor or leaders in the church.

    In this story, the First Lady does not have anyone to go to because her abuser is the pastor and well-loved by the community. The cast is full of pastors, professionals and entrepreneurs that want to bring some form of awareness to domestic violence — education in the form of entertainment. Community resources on mental health and domestic violence will be available the night of the performance. McCoy said this is done by contacting the county in advance before they perform in a city and the county informs them of the organizations and resources available.

    She said she does this because someone may never go to a church or therapist, but they might go to the stage play where the lobby has information on their different
    options.

    Mental health conversation

    “Domestic violence and mental health is an issue in every community,” McCoy said. “We focus on African Americans because we know the struggles that lie in those communities.”

    She added that domestic violence and mental illness have no color or gender and can happen to anyone.

    “We’re not just trying to help the African American community, we want to help everyone. We want everyone to know that this is a serious issue and we want to help them get out of it.”

    Over the years, attendees of the show have said “I felt that punch” or “I felt that slap.”

    “Mental illness is not talked about enough,” McCoy said.

    Cherie Porter plays “Victoria,” the First Lady of the church. Jewalle Wright plays “Linda.”
    Porter said it is a taboo topic because of the fear of admitting mental illness. People worry others will say, ”You’re crazy.” She said the best way to heal is to talk. Wright added “Discussing mental health will help us to understand that we are not alone because a mental illness is not to be fought alone. We all need each other in some way. Connecting with others is more important than one might think. It can decrease levels of anxiety and depression, it can help us navigate our emotions, and much more, which can improve our overall well-being.”

    “The resources were not available to a lot of African American communities to talk to someone,” McCoy said.

    She said that now there is a more significant opportunity for African Americans to get help and talk to someone in a clinical profession, not just a spiritual counselor like a pastor or minister.

    “Sometimes you need clinical advice more than spiritual,” she said. “Someone licensed and skillful.”

    While certain African American communities may have more resources for clinical help for counseling, McCoy said there is still a stigma on medication. She said she wants people to understand that just because they are prescribed medicine doesn’t mean they are crazy. She said there are various coping mechanisms to utilize that a licensed professional can tell them about.

    “There are options and we want people to know there are options,” she said.

    ‘What goes on in our house, stays in our house’

    This phrase may seem familiar to many individuals and McCoy and Porter gave their thoughts on it.

    “I believe it is the biggest misconception that can be used with that phrase,” McCoy said. “Sometimes you begin to function in dysfunction. When you begin to act in a certain behavior, it can become normal for you and before you know it, you don’t feel like anything is wrong with the state you are in or recognize help is needed.”

    She said there are many forms of abuse — physical, psychological, verbal or how the abuser looks at the victim.
    McCoy said this includes the men who are abused by women, but because they are taught not to hit a woman, the woman physically harms him.

    “First Lady the Stage Play” will be Nov. 12 in Seabrook Auditorium, on the Fayetteville State University campus. Doors open at 6 p.m. The pre-show starts at 6:30 p.m.

    The play begins at 7 p.m. The Seabrook Auditorium is located at 1200 Murchison Road. Ticket prices for the production range from $25 to $35.
    For more information, visit https://alon-entertainment1.ticketleap.com/first-lady-the-stage-play/.

  • 16a“Today is my third anniversary,” Chelsea Perkins exclaims as she jumps a little in her seat. “Sorry I kind of yelled that.”

    She laughs but the smile across her face does not fade. Andre, Chelsea’s husband, is the one, she says, who balances her out.

    “I can be very high-strung.”

    Chelsea sits back into the chair and relaxes a little. As she talks about Andre, her head kind of glides along. She opens her hand then quickly clasps them back together. Andre and Chelsea met at their hometown church in Whiteville when Chelsea would come back home from college. Chelsea served eight years in the Army Reserves and luckily for both her and Andre, her duty station was Fort Bragg. Andre also served ten years in the Army. Probably a more common and less answered reason for joining the service, Chelsea admits the luster was to gain financial independence for herself. She was always a number’s person, she says.

    “It was a turning point in my life,” she says. “I took some time off from school and joined the military. It was one of the greatest decisions I made.”

    Admittedly, Chelsea says, there were a lot of things that never crossed her mind about being in the service. Deployment was one of those. However, as fate would have it, Chelsea did not get a combat deployment during her eight years of service.

    “If I look back at my career, that’s an experience that I wish I kind of had. No one wishes to be deployed but the experience, you know,” she says. “It's kind of like that guilt of some people lost their lives. Some people sacrificed more than others.”

    Currently, Chelsea is a loan officer for Veterans United and she did eventually graduate with an undergraduate degree in Finance. Now, Chelsea feels great being able to help veterans afford to buy their own homes.

    “I’m honored to be able to give back to the community,” she says. “I just want to help them achieve their goals.”

    Chelsea hopes that the future will bring more opportunities to give back to the community. Her passion, she says, is figuring out how to help the homeless, specifically veterans in the community. Chelsea helps with hosting workshops, financial literacy, and partnering with organizations to give back.

    “My goal is to make Fayetteville one of the best communities to live in … ever,” she says.

    In the future, Chelsea plans to continue that goal for Fayetteville, maybe spend some time at the beach and one day have kids. For now, she laughs, she is the proud mom to two Yorkies.

  • 19 Watching Marc de la Concha and Jonathan Judge-Russo practice lines is like watching a one-two punch. A little different from the common ringside accompaniments — theirs is a match of wits, comedic lines and neurotic displays — and maybe some weird wheezing and ticks. All part of the contemporary comedy that is Neil Simon.

    De la Concha and Judge-Russo are making rounds as Felix Unger and Oscar Madison in Cape Fear Regional Theatre’s version of “The Odd Couple.” And it will be the only theatre in the country where audiences can watch one of Neil Simon’s plays currently.

    “They put a pause on Neil Simon’s works. We wrote to his widow and his estate about how beneficial it would be. They wrote back and said, ‘Oh my goodness. We’d love to grant you permission to do the show.’” Ashley Owen, CFRT marketing director said.

    The theatre’s employees were delighted. The next decision was how to honor that permission with outstanding performances of the play.
    Part of that equation, according to Director David Hemsley Caldwell, was De La Concha and Judge-Russo who were a shoe-in for the parts. Their banter and natural chemistry was undeniable.

    “We read them together. It was just magic. It just falls into place. It just makes sense with these two gentlemen,” Caldwell said.

    For Judge-Russo, Oscar is a nice break from the types he’s always been cast in TV — the murderer, the nonstop bad guy. “Yikes,” he says as he recounts his normal casting. This makes de la Concha laugh.
    De la Concha, on the other hand, is revisiting the role he played 11 years ago — the neurotic, clean-freak Felix. After finding himself on the end of a divorce, Felix finds himself in need of a home and finds a very odd placement with the laid-back, messy Oscar. This, of course, makes for some comedy.

    “The banter between the two of them... It’s almost like watching a sporting event,” Caldwell said. “If you just follow what you are given by Mr. Simon then you are three-fourths of the way there.”

    Judge-Russo agrees. For him, he says, you just have to get out of the play’s way and “let it live.” He says he tries to exist within it. While Judge-Russo and de la Concha have both been in productions at Cape Fear Regional Theatre, this is their first time working together.

    “I’m having a great time under my N95 right now because of the level where Marc is at,” Judge-Russo said. “He’s so funny. If you are not matching it, if you are not volleying his serve, you will come unglued a bit.”

    This is lucky for both actors, who seem to be having a great time, as the production is about two-thirds just Oscar and Felix bantering back and forth. And the rhythm they strike is just as important as the jokes.

    “The rhythm it counts on needs to be perfect for the jokes to land,” Caldwell said. “There’s a lot of playwrights that are not good at writing dialogue but [Simon] is. Rhythmically, the way he writes, he is a musician. It is note perfect. You owe it to him and his play to play it that way.”

    “The Odd Couple” will run until Nov. 13. For this production, this is a shorter run with only 11 performances. Tickets range from $15-28, depending on the night. Visit www.cfrt.org for more information.

  • 16bThe Combat Veterans Motorcycle Association has over 20,000 members nationally and living abroad who ride motorcycles. Local to Fayetteville, Fort Bragg and the Sandhills, the CVMA All American 15-1 Chapter has approximately 120 members.

    The mission of the CVMA is to support those who have defended their country and their freedom. Members come from all branches of the Armed Forces, and many are still serving.
    Officially formed in 2001 as a 501(c)19, nonprofit organization, the focus of the CVMA is to provide assistance and help individual veterans, veteran care facilities, as well as other veteran organizations and registered charities. Though the CVMA has their own geographical locations, the organization does not claim territory, and clearly states that this is an association not a motorcycle club. The All American Chapter 15-1 was formed in 2006.

    There are three membership classifications: Full Members, Support Members and Auxiliary Members. Full Members have verified combat services, while Support Members have non-combat military service. Auxiliary Members are the spouse, widow or widower of a member.

    The CVMA constantly supports and works with other local veteran associations and community outreach. These organizations include the Cumberland County Veteran’s Council, VFW Posts and American Legions. The organization routinely works with vendors and sponsors of events. The All American chapter proudly raises tens of thousands of dollars annually which all supports local veterans, their families and veteran charities.

    In partnership with Habitat for Humanity, the CVMA has provided the funds and volunteer services to improve the homes and lives of veterans through critical home repairs. This includes building wheelchair ramps to make homes accessible. The All American chapter even serves veterans by helping them relocate and move.
    James “Jim Dandy” Dennis serves as the Secretary of the 15-1 chapter. He says, “We have two big events annually, our Summer Bash and the Memorial Ride and Dedication in the spring. This upcoming year CVMA will be hosting the event at the Crown Complex with raffles, music, food and vendors.”

    Other CVMA chapters will be attending and participating. The events are open to the public and support local veterans.
    The All American Chapter 15-1 participated in the Veterans Day parade as part of the Heroes Homecoming events. The parade is hosted by the Cumberland County Veterans Council and the city of Fayetteville.

    Eric “EO” Olson commented, “I got my first Harley in 2016 and have been riding with the Combat Veterans All American Chapter for the past 6 years. I enjoy being able to give back to my combat veteran brothers and sisters.”

    Upcoming event information can be found on their Facebook page www.facebook.com/cvmanc15.1.

    Information about the local All-American Chapter, sponsorship opportunities, and ways to make donations can be found on their website www.cvma15-1.net. For information about membership, email the chapter secretary at sec.nccvma.15.1@gmail.com.

     

  • 4The 11th hour has become synonymous with Veterans Day, originally called Armistice Day, in recognition of the document signed at the 11th hour, of the 11th day, of the 11th month.
    In reality, the Armistice ending the war to end all wars was signed around 5 a.m. on November 11th. Over the course of the next 6 hours, nearly 3,000 men would lose their lives in the final hours of a war that had already claimed the lives of 20 million military personnel.

    The final death of WWI came at 10:59 a.m. one minute before the guns of war would fall silent.

    Private Henry Gunther was a German-American drafted in the fall of 1917. Most accounts state that his final actions were motivated by Gunther’s need to demonstrate that he was “courageous and all-American.” A chaplain from Gunther’s unit recounted, “As 11 a.m. approached, Gunther suddenly rose with his rifle and ran through thick fog. His men shouted for him to stop. So did the Germans. But Gunther kept running and firing. One machine gun blast later, he was dead. His death was recorded at 10:59 a.m.

    In every conflict, inevitably a final service member pays the ultimate sacrifice.

    In the closing days of World War II, Private Charley Havlat, the son of Czech immigrants, found himself liberating his parents’ former homeland. During a reconnaissance patrol near the town of Volary on May 7, 1945, enemy fire from a woodline hit the patrol, wounding several and killing Havlat. Word of the cease-fire reached Havlat’s position minutes after he was killed.

    Officially, the U.S. has never declared a final casualty in the Korean War. Since the armistice was signed, nearly 100 U.S. soldiers have been killed in combat on the Korean peninsula.
    On April 29, 1975, Charles McMahon and Darwin Judge were two of a small number of Marines tasked with safeguarding the U.S. Embassy in Saigon. McMahon had been in Saigon only 11 days, and was 11 days shy of his 22nd birthday. Judge, 19, had arrived in early March. They were killed in a rocket attack. The U.S. would complete the process of withdrawing from Saigon the following day. Initial reports said their bodies had been evacuated. In fact, they were left behind. McMahon and Judge were repatriated Feb. 22, 1976, following diplomatic efforts led by Senator Edward Kennedy.

    Staff Sergeant Ryan Knauss was among the last of the 2,461 service members who died in Afghanistan. Knauss and 12 of his comrades were killed when suicide bombers and gunmen attacked crowds at Hamid Karzai International Airport during the withdrawal from Kabul. Assigned to the 8th Psychological Operations Group (Airborne) at Fort Bragg, Knauss was supporting the noncombatant evacuation operation. He had previously served in Afghanistan as an infantryman in the 82nd Airborne Division.

    In every war, there is always one that must fill the dignified but dubious role in history as being the last to give the full measure of devotion. Each year on the 11th day of the 11th month as a nation we pause, not only to honor those that have given their lives, but for all those who believed so deeply in American exceptionalism that they were willing to risk their lives to defend it.

    For most Americans, talking about war is conceptual, something learned through history books, news reports and movies — those who have served do not know that luxury.
    Not only should we remember that the democratic principles we hold so dear have been defended by generations of Americans whom we honor on Veterans Day, but more importantly, we should take inspiration from that sacrifice. Our country, despite all our self-imposed differences, needs to look to our veterans and see that there are no divisions in a foxhole — there are only those who stand in defense of democracy and those who stand against it.

    While we may only celebrate Veterans Day with a few moments of silence each year, we have an opportunity to use those moments to find our own way to serve as part of our commitment to living up to the legacy of our veterans.

    When the Armistice was signed in 1918, when the Japanese surrendered, and when the last flights departed Saigon and Kabul — these were not simply endings, they were new beginnings. We honor those who serve by recommitting ourselves to making the sacrifices necessary to preserve our way of life.
    As Adlai Stevenson once stated, “Patriotism is not short, frenzied outbursts of emotion, but the tranquil and steady dedication of a lifetime.” Let this Veterans Day be a new beginning. Go forth and find a way to serve our nation, our communities and each other — we owe it to our veterans.

    Editor’s Note: Joseph Reagan served eight years as an active duty officer in the U.S. Army, including two tours to Afghanistan with the 10th Mountain Division. He is a graduate of Norwich University, the oldest private military college in the country.
    Wreaths Across America is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization founded to continue and expand the annual wreath-laying ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery begun by Maine businessman Morrill Worcester in 1992. The organization’s mission — Remember, Honor, Teach — is carried out in part each year by coordinating wreath-laying ceremonies in December at Arlington, as well as at thousands of veterans’ cemeteries and other locations in all 50 states and beyond. For more information or to sponsor a wreath please visit www.wreathsacrossamerica.org.

  • 11While there are several veteran-owned businesses in Fayetteville, and we certainly cannot fit them all here, there are some that definitely stand out. Support local veterans by supporting their local businesses.

    Boone Trail Fit Body Boot Camp: Owner Dinah Goodman has a love for fitness and helping people reach their fitness goals. Goodman joined the Army at the age of 17, where she learned she could do more than she thought she was physically capable of doing. Boone Trail Fit Body Boot Camp offers high-powered 30-minute classes. Every workout is professionally designed and led by nationally certified coaches who are driven to help you get the results you want. This fitness center has been voted as Up & Coming Weekly’s Best Veteran-Owned Business of 2022. They are located at 3039 Boone Trail #100.

    Dirtbag Ales Brewery & Taproom: The Dirtbag Ales legend began several years ago while its founders were serving in the U.S. Army. One of Dirtbag Ales’ founders, Tito, traded the promise of free beer for life in exchange for a friend’s home-brew kit. There were many long nights of stove-top brews, which led to a homemade all-grain brewing system founded in Tito’s garage. Brew after successful brew led to a new calling for Tito and the preliminary beginnings of Dirtbag Ales Brewery. This staple in Hope Mills has been named Up & Coming Weekly’s Best Venue, Club for Live Music, Bar for Craft Beers, and Best Brew House. They are located at 5435 Corporation Drive.

    Heritage Jewelers: This veteran-owned jewelry store is known for military custom jewelry, like the Special Forces Ring. They are open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and are open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturdays. They are located at 114 Westwood Shopping Center.

    Meraki Creative Agency: At Meraki Creative Agency, joy, happiness and color are their passion. This veteran-owned company dedicates their creative efforts to impact and stimulate the local community. They thrive on helping to design and develop joyful experiences for your personal celebrations, businesses and corporate events. Karoll Echeverri, veteran, and Brittany Cobb, Army spouse, are the ladies behind the business doing the best they can to find joy every day and help your celebrations, large and small, become even more beautiful. To look at their services, go to www.yourlittlejoyshop.com or visit their physical location at 1009 Marlborough Road.

    Pressed — A Creative Space: This store sells clothing, crystals and other items of interest for those who see things differently. They are a veteran-owned business in downtown Fayetteville. They are open Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. They are located at 120 Hay Street.

    The Virtual Call Center, Inc: This call center provides a wide range of professional support services to hundreds of U.S. Virtual Agents, Freelancers, Sole Proprietors, Client Support Professionals and Independent Contracting Agents, who are certified to deliver high-quality services for a wide range of growing enterprises, national brands and Fortune 500 companies. The work from home movement continues to gain momentum daily. Virtual technology has transformed the way we work. With so many work-from-home opportunities available nationwide, it's important that people decide if the opportunity is reputable and creates work-life balance for their family. This local business is owned by veteran Toya Collins-Younger. To learn more, go to www.jt-virtual.com/.

    Triangle Rock Club — Fayetteville: The Triangle Rock Club is a premiere indoor rock climbing center and gym. Their new, state-of-the-art facility offers both lead and top rope climbing, bouldering and a comprehensive fitness center. Don't dread that mundane workout at your ‘average’ fitness center, come to Triangle Rock Club to put some excitement back into your life. This gym is located at 5213 Raeford Road.

  • 17The military marching band is always 42 members, said Dr. Willie Lockett, who spent 25 years in United States Army bands all over the world. The band marches in a block five rows by eight, with a commander at the leading right corner and a first sergeant up front holding a mace.

    In 1973, 17-year-old Lockett enlisted in the United States Army. Born in Jacksonville, Florida, he knew he wanted to be a military bandsman, but finding his way to an audition wasn’t as easy as the recruiter made it seem.

    Anybody can join the band if you sign up is what the recruiter said, but “that’s not true,” he said. “I signed up for a Hercules missile crewman, so then I went to Germany.”
    In Germany, Lockett maintained a nuclear missile pointed at Russia from an isolated silo carved into the top of a hill. There was no one there but crewmen.

    “The first guy I saw that had some rank, I said, ‘Can you get me in the band’?” said Lockett. “He made some phone calls,” and after an audition he was in the Army band in Kaiserslautern before getting transferred to the 8th Infantry Division Band, still in Germany.

    Lockett was maintaining surface-to-air missiles while honing musical skills that would serve him for the rest of his life.

    “My job was a Hercules missile crewman... but I was detailed to the band,” Lockett said.

    Because the military requires every musician to play a “march-able” instrument, Lockett played percussion any time the band marched. Fortunately, he could sight-read drum music. Reading bass music was a different story: he played by ear.

    “When I got in the band, the only thing [we did] was play music,” Lockett said. “At the time, I was low rank, living in the barracks. The only thing [I was] responsible for was to practice.”

    Luckily, the barracks and practice room were on the same floor, so Lockett and his comrades jammed “from sun up to sun down.”

    “That’s all we did was practice,” Lockett said. “So, I got pretty good at reading on bass.”

    Along with the 8th Infantry Band, Lockett was Rhythm Group Leader for the 1st Cavalry Division Band in Texas, and Senior Instructor at the Army’s School of Music in Virginia.

    “As you make rank, they just give you a different title,” Lockett said. “When you first come in, you’re just a bass player, a piano player, flute player, etc. When you become E-6, then you’re a section leader. When you become E-7, you are now a group leader, and so on."

    After completing Warrant Officer school, Lockett went on to become the Commander/Bandmaster of the 82nd Airborne Division Band at Fort Bragg. He later held the same position at the 2nd Infantry Division Band at Camp Casey in Korea.
    “The majority of your gigs, band wise, here at Fort Bragg, is going to be ceremonies,” Lockett said.
    “In fact, my rookie year as a bandmaster, we did 1002 performances in one year,” he added.

    Despite being a marching band, Army musicians spend most of their time away from the parade field, entertaining service members and civilians alike in jazz and rock and roll ensembles, as well as other settings.
    The bugle player might have five burials in a day, Lockett said. There’s change of command ceremonies, civilian events like the International Folk Festival and Fayetteville State University homecoming parade.

    “The Army plays music at each one,” he added.
    Unfortunately, being an Army bandsperson isn’t music 24-hours-a-day; when there’s a conflict, musicians have military duties to fulfill. The entire time Lockett was in the military, he said Army bands assumed other duties during wartime.

    “The military band is one of the few jobs in the military where your peace time job and war time job are different,” Lockett said. “You’re not going to play music on the battlefield.”

    He said, during Desert Storm, one half of the band provided security for a general, while the other half of the band augmented the military police processing Iraqi prisoners.
    Since retiring in 1998, Lockett has pursued computer science degrees from multiple universities throughout the United States. His upwardly mobile Army career made education somewhat of a luxury.

    “When you’re in the military, you go to whatever school is servicing that military [installation],” Lockett said. “When I got to Fort Bragg, I was finally able to go to school on a regular basis.”

    In Fayetteville, Lockett got an associate degree from Fayetteville State University because at the time FSU was the only school that would give diplomas to active duty soldiers.

    “Once I got out [of the Army], I went to the University of North Carolina, Pembroke on the G.I. Bill,” he said, “and it took me a year to get a bachelor’s degree because I had accumulated credit hours.”

    Afterwards, Lockett earned his master’s degree from the University of Phoenix, and his Ph.D. from Capella University.

    “It took me three years to write my dissertation,” Lockett said.

    Today, Lockett is a professor of computer science at Fayetteville Technical Community College. He’s still playing electric bass, too, in a Carolina Beach Music band based out of Greenville named The Main Event, as well as in local churches.

    “I’m 68 right now,” Dr. Lockett said.

    “I could retire, but I like moving around and being busy.”

  • 21The Saints Constantine and Helen Greek Orthodox Church is back with its annual World’s Largest Spaghetti Dinner and Greek Pastry sale, Nov. 16 between 10 a.m. and 8 p.m.

    “Spaghetti is the perfect food for everyone of all ages,” Lia Hasapis said.

    The spaghetti dinner not only serves as a fundraiser for the church, but also a delicious lunch and dinner for the community. According to Hasapis, the sauce is a special recipe passed down from generation to generation, and the spaghetti dinner and pastry sale is a chance for the church to show the community “kefi,” which means fun, enthusiasm and a passion for life
    in Greek.

    “We provide kefi at the [spaghetti dinner],” Hasapis said.

    It takes nearly 4,000 pounds of dry spaghetti, 900 gallons of tomato sauce and over 100 volunteers to make this delicious fundraiser a reality. The volunteers at Saints Constantine and Helen Greek Orthodox Church start by preparing noodles, spaghetti sauce, cheese, bread and baking pastries days in advance.

    “With the spaghetti dinner and Greek pastry sale [called] the world’s largest, it takes a lot of prep work to [get ready] for such” a big event, Hasapis said.

    If you missed the Greek pastries Saints Constantine and Helen Greek Orthodox Church delivered back in September during the Greek Festival, this is your opportunity to right that wrong.
    Desserts include Baklava, Greece’s most famous dessert, a phyllo layered pastry filled with honey, spices and chopped nuts; Kataifi, shredded phyllo filled with nuts, dipped in honey and syrup; Finikia, a traditional Greek spice cookie that is sweet, crumbly, dipped in honey and topped with nuts, plus much more.

    The World’s Largest Spaghetti Dinner and Greek Pastry sale is takeout only, between the hours of 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., Wednesday, Nov. 16. Tickets are $10 per spaghetti plate, plus a la carte for everything else.
    The Saints Constantine and Helen Greek Orthodox Church was built in 1954, when the Parish Council and Board of Directors for the Hellenic Community Center signed the contract to build the Hellenic Center at the northern edge of Oakridge Avenue.

    The Saints Constantine and Helen Greek Orthodox Church has a chapel, classroom, fellowship hall and porch that opens into a spacious lot and stage. Since 2009, Reverend Alexander M. Papagikos has been serving the parish.

    The Saints Constantine and Helen Greek Orthodox Church is located at 614 Oakridge Avenue, at the very end if coming from Hay Street. Keep in mind Oakridge Avenue begins directly across from the Cape Fear Regional Theatre at the top of the hill in Haymount.

    The World’s Largest Spaghetti Dinner and Greek Pastry sale began in 1958, thanks to parishioner Pete Parrous. To learn more about the Saints Constantine and Helen Greek Orthodox Church, or to pre-order as many spaghetti plates as possible to be picked up during the event, please visit www.FayGreekChurch.com.

  • 23A trip to Holden Beach took us through the country with beautiful views of farms and fields. We rounded a curve and there was a field of cotton so beautiful it looked like it had been painted.
    Even in that passing moment, I could see the open blossoms a bright white against the landscape and sky. Thus, my inspiration for this week’s article.

    The word cotton comes from the Arabic word “quton”. The earliest production was in India dating back to 5,000 B.C. Arab merchants brought cotton cloth to Europe around A.D. 800, and when Columbus discovered America in 1492, he saw cotton growing in fields on the Bahama Islands and along the east coast.

    The history of cotton spans more than 7,000 years. About 3000 B.C., cotton was cultivated in the Indus River Valley, and about 2500 B.C., Chinese, South Americans and Egyptians began wearing cotton fabrics. Cotton spread west to Egypt, Turkey, Central America and the Caribbean.
    Cotton is soft and fluffy, and the United States is the largest producer of cotton as an export. The production is a lengthy and involved process from planting to picking. It is not easy to grow and prefers warm and humid climates.

    Historically, cotton was picked by hand, which took hours to process and separate. Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin in 1794, which revolutionized the process.
    Today, cotton pickers are machinery that picks the entire plant, and a cotton stripper is used for separation. After it is picked it is baled and stored before going to a gin. At the gin it is cleaned and fluffed to separate the cotton from seeds and lint, then it is compressed and ready to ship to textile mills.

    When it is cleaned and fluffed it is put into a carding machine which cleans the material again and forms short fibers into long untwisted rope for spinning and weaving
    There are four types of cotton.
    Pima is the finest because the fibers are extra soft and long. Egyptian cotton has similar qualities but is grown in the Nile River Valley in Egypt. Upland cotton makes up about 90% of the world’s total cotton production in Central America, Mexico, the Caribbean and southern Florida. Organic cotton is cotton grown without chemicals.

    Cotton is indeed the fabric of our lives, and its uses are in the hundreds. There are some traces of cotton in almost everything we wear or use daily. Cotton is used to make all types of clothing because of its versatility and comfort, and it is used in making industrial products. It is used in making fabrics such as flannel, velvet, velour and corduroy. It is used to make fishnets, book bindings and coffee filters. It can be used as food for cattle because it is edible, and cottonseed oil is in high demand as an alternative to vegetable oil. It is used in the production of cosmetic products and soaps. It is a key ingredient in beauty products such as sheet masks, makeup remover wipes and cottonseed oil to nourish the skin.

    When purchasing sheets 100% cotton is always a go-to for comfort and durability. Thread counts should range from 200 to 500 and anything above that is not necessarily better quality. Labels that read cotton rich are less than 100% cotton. Bamboo sheets become rayon once they are processed with chemicals that change the composition and texture. The Oeko-Tex certification on a textile signifies that all the product has been tested for toxins.

    Live, love, life and cotton.

     

  • 14“I’m the baby. I’m number 13,” says Sandra McDonald Jewel.

    “And I’m the … ” Shirley McDonald Douglas begins. She turns toward her sister Sandra.

    “Don’t look at me,” Sandra says laughing.

    Shirley turns back confidently. “I’m number 10,” Shirley says.
    They both look to the next in line. Sitting beside Shirley is Curley. He sits in a plain T-shirt and weathered blue jeans with a crease down the front from an iron. He breaks the conversation with occasional funny comments that will get a laugh from all of his other siblings. They all refer to him as the comic. His deep Southern drawl adds to each punchline without so much as a change in his facial expression.

    “I think I’m number nine,” Curley says. He stops and pulls a toothpick from his mouth. “Wait a second, I can’t be number nine.”

    Everyone in the room busts out laughing.
    Sitting arm to arm are seven of the McDonald siblings. There were 13 originally, and most of the siblings keep the order by knowing which of the other siblings they fall between.

    “You are number eight, Curley,” Shirley says laughing.

    As they count down the line, the debate about numbering continues — six, seven, five, no, maybe it’s eight. Each time one announces their number in line, another corrects with the order of the siblings’ names.

    “You in-between June. You are number six,” one counters back to Margaret. And they all laugh.

    Curley makes a joke about them trying to figure out the pecking order and being elderly. Then they’ll all stop for a second and start counting siblings out loud between the laughing.

    “I need more fingers,” says Margaret McDonald Micheaux. “It’s enough to confuse you.”

    The McDonald family members span the ages from 70 to 85. They have seen the tides of change throughout the decades in North Carolina having lived here from 1930s-1940s on and off. Growing up just a stone’s throw from Fayetteville, these kids, now mostly grandparents themselves, belonged to a family of sharecroppers in Eastover. Currently, all the siblings still living — nine in total — live in Eastover except Shirley who resides at a senior center in Fayetteville.

    The group tries to get together once a month for birthdays or celebrations, admittedly happening less frequently since “the virus,” as they term it. Among these celebrations is always an event for Veterans Day. The siblings go to breakfast and then to the Airborne Museum to place flags in honor of Oliver and Martin Jr., who both were drafted during the Vietnam War, and Harold, who died in Vietnam saving another soldier’s life.

    In Curley’s hand is a picture of a young man with a thin mustache in Army fatigues; composed next to the picture is an onslaught of awards. With just a question about Harold, the laughing suddenly stops. A stillness grows in the room, a stillness defined by heartbreak.14a

    “Everybody loved him,” Joyce says. “When we lived in Brooklyn, the kids on the block on Saturday mornings would throw pebbles at his window so he could come down. He would spend the days out there playing with them. Old people loved him and young people loved him.”

    The rest of the siblings nod their heads in slow agreement. The room is silent for the first time since they arrived.

    “He was just awesome,” Shirley says. “He was cool. He was debonaire. He could dress like nobody else. He could sing.”

    Shirley sits forward and places a hand on her knee. She retells the story of how he died in the war, pulling someone else off what she called a “booby trap.”

    “I wanted to go back but I knew I couldn’t do nothing about it,” Martin Jr. says recalling Harold’s death. “I thought about it a lot.”

    The sadness in his voice as he speaks is palpable. The death of their beloved brother has defined the McDonald family in many ways. It also brings them together every year to celebrate the life of Harold and tell the stories of how much life he lived in those 21 years. When they speak about him, a smile naturally draws across their faces.

    In the 1960s, Curley and others left for New York City. Many of the McDonald siblings traveled to parts of New York or New Jersey. Tired of the sharecropping life, they looked north to find “good jobs.” Joyce, Harold, Curley, Shirley and a few others went north for some years to find different lives than they had in North Carolina.

    “They didn’t have any rich black farmers,” Joyce says.

    “You get 20 dollars a week. That’s all you made,” Curley joins in.

    “You know, we didn’t know we were poor,” Shirley says.

    Their parents, Martin Sr. and Pearl McDonald, came from big families, too. Martin Sr. did sharecropping while Pearl cooked, worked in the school system and occasionally watched other children. Martin Sr. was fun, loved to dance but had no arm for discipline.

    “Mother did,” Joyce says. “She was loving but she was stern.”

    “Yeah, to the others that needed it,” another sibling chimes in. They all chuckle again.

    “All except me,” Margaret says, laughing. Curley rolls an eye and gives a soft laugh. Margaret ignores him.

    “I try not to talk to him,” Margaret jokes about Curley.

    “I don’t care,” he says under his breath.

    “I know you don’t,” she laughs.

    “That way I don’t have to answer questions,” Curley said.

    The siblings all grew up working out on the farm except for Sandra who recalled coming along anyway because she couldn’t be left home alone. Margaret stops the chatter for a moment to debate on whether she worked on the farm and Martin Jr. chimes in that if she had done it, “you’d have known it.” The group laughs for a moment.

    When speaking, each sibling goes back and forth between calling their siblings by their real names and nicknames. They begin to talk about the nicknames they were all given.

    Martin Jr. became just June for Junior. Curley is the comic. Oliver is the quiet one or Marshal Dillon due to his non-rushing nature. Shirely became Gal. Curley jokes that anything that happened to pop out of their mouths was what they would be called. The nicknames ran fast and loose in the family.

    “I got one word that would go with two,” Margaret says.

    “Scaredy cat,” Martin says back, laughing.

    “She sees a snake on TV and she starts running,” Curley says. The rest of the group starts laughing now. “Ah, come on now. What is that?”

    “I got another name, meanie.” Martin Jr. points to Margaret.

    “I guess I just got that voice sometimes,” Margaret answers.

    “What voice?” Martin says.

    “I dunno. That voice.” Margaret replies.

    The conversation naturally comes back to Harold and the group silences for a second, then calmly a few of them say the word that they think embodied him — “cool.” Many of the siblings say it at the same time as if the feeling about their brother is completely unspoken but mutual among them.

    “He would probably have ended up as a Motown singer if he had come back,” Joyce says. “He used to be out on a Saturday. You could hear him a block and a half away singing. You could hear windows going up and people telling him to be quiet.”

    Right before going to Vietnam, Harold wrote a letter to Motown and was accepted to come audition, Joyce recalls. Curley joins in and talks about Harold singing at the Apollo on Wednesday nights.

    Harold is buried out in Rockfish Cemetery on 301 near his mother and father. Martin Sr. died in 1994 and Pearl in 2001.

    “I was out there today,” Martin Jr. says.

    “All the time,” says Curley.

    This year they plan to host the same tradition of breakfast and then flag placement in downtown Fayetteville. They will laugh. They will share stories. They will ping off each other’s jokes as quickly as any siblings. And they will remember Harold.

    “It makes you stay appreciative,” Sandra says. They all smile and look around the room. They are as close as any siblings could be.

    Oliver, who is true to his quiet moniker, hasn’t spoken much during the talks. He then says quietly after looking around, “We all love each other.”

  • 20The Hope Mills Chamber of Commerce, in partnership with Dirtbag Ales, welcomes all to the 4th Annual Chili Cook-Off as part of the Heroes Homecoming. And, if you don’t like chili, there is lots of fun planned for the entire family.

    This year’s theme is “Heroes at Home,” and the activities recognize the contributions of service members and their families. There will be a parachute demonstration followed
    by singing the national anthem. Many nonprofit organizations that cater to the military community will have booths.

    For the kids, there will be a special area with crafts, stickers and patriotic coloring sheets. Since this is a Veterans Day event, the Chamber has partnered with 10 local photographers to take free portraits of military families. As for the chili, attendees can purchase “flight of chili” tickets to sample a variety for just $10. “Flight of chili” tickets includes 5 different chilis and the opportunity to vote on your favorite. If you want to sample all the chilis, tickets are $30.

    There will be hot chilis and mild chilis. Everything from veggie chili to alligator chili and everything in between. Participants are encouraged to name their chili and decorate their table accordingly as presentation is everything. (Hint, hint) All entries will have a number and description card displayed that will include spice level, main ingredients and other interesting facts.

    Tasting will take place between noon and 2 p.m., then votes will be tallied. The first place winner will receive $200, second place will receive $100, and third place will receive $50. All entrants are encouraged to invite their family and friends to come out to support their entries.
    Casey Farris is the president of the Hope Mills Chamber of Commerce. She said, “In 2021 we had 25 cooks enter the cook-off."

    "At the end of the day, the top three chilis will be recognized with a special award," she said. "A portion of the profits will be donated to a local veteran nonprofit.”

    Since this event is partnered with Dirtbag Ales Brewery and Taproom, guests can also sample a local beer while they enjoy chili. In addition to their standard brews, Dirtbag Ales will be featuring Heroes Homecoming lager. For each pint of Heroes Homecoming lager sold, $1 will be donated to local organizations that serve military families.

    This might be the 4th Annual Chili Cook-Off for the Hope Mills Chamber of Commerce, but the Fayetteville area has been hosting the Heroes Homecoming since 2011. This is an appreciation to all veterans for their courage, sacrifice and everything they do to defend our country’s freedom.

    Rebecca Freeman says, “As the executive director of the Hope Mills Chamber of Commerce, I am thrilled with the number of sponsors and contestants we have this year. It is such an honor for the Chamber to be participating in Heroes Homecoming and to give back to our local veterans, too.”

    Fred Cutter is a veteran, a member of the Chamber, and a sponsor for this year’s event. He mentions that “In an ideal world, the Chamber is the proxy between city government and the business community. My most significant blessing is the opportunity to serve a community of people I admire and consider friends.”

    The 4th Annual Chili Cook-Off will take place Nov. 12 at Dirtbag Ales Brewery and Taproom located at 5435 Corporation Drive in Hope Mills. The event starts at 11 a.m. and ends when the chili runs out, which is estimated to be at about 5 p.m. To purchase chili tickets, visit www.hopemillsareachamber.com.

    If you are interested in becoming a sponsor of the Chili Cook-Off, contact the Hope Mills Chamber of Commerce at 910-423-4314 or email them at HMCC@hopemillschamber.org
    For the full Heroes Homecoming schedule of events, visit heroeshomecoming.com.

  • 9Celebrating service members and their families is not confined to one day in Fayetteville and Cumberland County. Although Veterans Day is Nov. 11, events paying tribute have been on-going since the Fayetteville Parade on Nov.5. There are several events scheduled this week in the local area.

    Heroes Homecoming Week

    Through Nov. 12, the 10th annual Heroes Homecoming Week brings several programs and activities to salute veterans. For a complete schedule of events visit www.heroeshomecoming.com/events/list/.
    On Nov. 10, the John E. Pechmann Fishing Education Center, in partnership with the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission, will host a Family Fishing Workshop from 1 to 5 p.m. The workshop teaches families with children the basic skills needed to go fishing, including setting up and casting a fishing rod, catch and release methods, and how to handle a fish. The workshop is open for all experience levels from first-timers to expert anglers. It is a hands-on learning experience with fishing on the center’s stocked ponds. The Pechmann Fishing Education Center is located at 7489 Raeford Road in Fayetteville.

    Field of Flags will be placed throughout Hope Mills Veterans Memorial Park beginning at 9 a.m. Nov. 11. The event is in partnership with the Town of Hope Mills Veterans Affairs Committee, VFW Post 10630.
    The Fayetteville Woodpeckers will also host their annual United for Veterans event on Nov. 11 from 2 to 6 p.m. at Segra Stadium.
    Fayetteville Technical Community College will host a Veterans Day Ceremony at 11 a.m. Nov. 11 at the campus gazebo.

    Cumberland County Headquarters Library is hosting a history presentation titled “The Defense Capital of the State: Wilmington During WWII” on Nov. 12 at 10 a.m. How did the North Carolina railroad industry, the city of Wilmington, and the Royal Navy team up to defeat Hitler? Find out in the presentation by nationally known military historian and Wilmington native Wilbur Jones. After the presentation, Jones will discuss how he helped Wilmington become America’s first World War Heritage City. The event will take place in the Pate Room. This presentation is in partnership with the Museum of the Cape Fear.

    The Steven A. Cohen Military Family Clinic’s second annual Children’s Gala for children of military families will be from 6 to 8 p.m. Nov. 12 at Smith Lake Recreation Area. The gala is for children ages 4 to 12 and their families and will include a formal evening with food, music and games. Formal attire is required, and service members are asked to wear their dress uniforms. Space is limited to 150 guests, and admission is limited to military families with children. Call Sharjuan Burgos at the Steven A. Cohen Military Family Clinic to reserve a spot.

    DistiNCtly Fayetteville, formerly known as the Fayetteville-Cumberland County Convention & Visitors Bureau, will continue its partnership with Rolling Thunder North Carolina Chapter 1 with the Missing Man Table through the month of November. Table kits are provided to local businesses and organizations to pay tribute to the more than 85,000 American service men and women who remain unaccounted for. The reserved tables and chairs sit unoccupied to represent soldiers who are or have been prisoners of war or missing in action. More information is at rollingthunder-nc1.com.

    A special exhibit, “Heroes Homecoming: On the Homefront,” will be on display on the second floor of the Museum of the Cape Fear through November. Hours are 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and 1-5 p.m. Sunday. The museum is located at 801 Arsenal Ave.

    Field of Honor

    The Airborne & Special Operations Museum continues its Field of Honor through Nov. 13. Each flag on display has a tag identifying the veteran it honors and the person who sponsored it. Flags are on display on the parade field of the museum from dawn until dusk at 100 Bragg Blvd. downtown.

    On Nov. 10, the museum will show the documentary “The Last of the 357th Infantry” and host author Mark Hager to discuss his book, “The Last of the 357th Infantry: Harold Frank’s WWII Story of Faith and Courage.” Harold Frank will be a special guest at the program, which is scheduled from 6 to 8 p.m.

    The museum is hosting two exhibits related to World War II through Nov. 13. “Courage and Compassion: The Legacy of the Bielski Brothers” tells of the heroic efforts of three brothers who helped save more than 1,200 people while living in the forest during the war. “Operation HALYARD,” on display in the museum’s lobby, highlights the mission to rescue downed U.S. airmen from Nazi-occupied Serbia near the end of the war.

    For more information on events at the ASOM visit www.asomf.org/.

  • 13 Despite growing up in San Antonio — an Air Force Town — Kristopher Vargas never thought about joining the military. He instead wanted to gig around the country with his trumpet. However, when the coronavirus pandemic hit in 2020, gigs dried up, and Vargas needed work.

    “I actually ended up doing construction for a year once COVID hit and didn’t play at all for about a year,” Vargas said. “I was like, ‘Okay, something’s got to give.’ And then there was a band liaison — that’s kind of a band recruiter — who reached out to me and talked about auditioning.”
    In late 2020, Vargas auditioned and enlisted in the Army. Last year, right out of Basic Combat Training and Advanced Individual Training, Vargas was assigned to the 82nd Airborne Division All-American Band.

    The 82nd Airborne Division All-American Band and Chorus provide music to Fort Bragg and the local area telling the Army story in support of soldiers and their families, community and recruiting initiatives, and music education programs. Since 2016, the band has included several ensembles: Ceremonial Band, Brass Quintet, Woodwind Quintet, Jazz Ensemble, Rock Ensemble, Concert Band and the All-American Chorus.

    His experience working with the band in the Army has been moving. Some of the missions of the musicians are to play for ceremonies, special events and presidential visits. Spc. Vargas was selected to play for President Joe Biden’s visit last year during Thanksgiving Week.

    “I had been here maybe four or five months, and they selected a brass quintet — five of us to go and play for President Biden. And, you know, he rolled up at Pope Field and it was just like, ‘okay, woah,’ that was a cool experience,” Vargas said. “That was my first introduction to the Army and Fayetteville and Fort Bragg.”

    Despite the big welcome at Fort Bragg by playing for the president, Vargas says he is always humbled by the other missions he and the entire band is tasked to do.

    “Everything that you do in the Army bands, every little mission you do, whether it is playing for a retirement home, playing for the president or something like playing at a school for kids — everything has a deeper meaning to it,” he said.

    Some occasions offer something special, he said, like playing for retirements.

    “We played two retirements yesterday for people who were really special,” Vargas said. “The biggest honor of it all is memorials and funerals. That is a part of the job that unfortunately does accompany the bands,” he said.
    Vargas is one out of seven at Fort Bragg who is approved to play the bugle at funerals and memorials. For many funerals, a pre-recorded “Taps” is played.

    “It’s an incredible experience. It’s humbling. It’s something that is heavy, but it’s reserved for buglers. So there’s a lot of people in our band field who don’t get to do it, only the trumpet players do it, and there’s an etiquette to it when you play,” Vargas said.

    “I played ‘Taps’ for the Gold Star ceremony for the JFK Special Forces School... they were adding these names [to the Memorial Wall] and the Gold Star families were there. So it never gets lost on me.”

    Vargas said band members are not necessarily at the front lines, like “our colleagues that we admire so much... this is the way that we chose to serve and that we are fortunate enough to serve. It’s what we learned how to do. And if this is the only way that we can help and serve then we’re all for it.”
    When he arrived to the Fayetteville area, Vargas was busy with the band, and his wife got a job at a local high school. He initially didn’t want to do gigs out in town.

    “I actually was pretty adamant about not gigging before, and my wife was totally on board with it because, I mean, we never had a dinner together,” Vargas said. “I worked every single night, like every major holiday was spent at some venue or club or something.”

    His first encounter with the Fayetteville Symphony Orchestra was at one of their Symphony on Taps performances at the District House of Taps. The Jazz Trio from the symphony was playing and Vargas struck up a conversation with them.

    “They asked me if I wanted to sit in with them and play, and I said ‘no’ because I didn’t even have a horn. So I was leaving and I went, I got in my car, I realized that I did have it. So I grabbed my horn and I went back,” Vargas said. “I played with them and they were like, ‘who are you and where did you come from?’”

    That stroke of luck of having his trumpet with him brought him into the musical arena of Fayetteville. He, at first, started to be a substitute trumpet player with the FSO. By getting more involved, he found out about the Cape Fear Regional Theatre. He played during the production of “The Color Purple,” is currently in “The Odd Couple,” and is getting ready for “Matilda: the Musical” in a few months.

    “I really enjoyed bringing whatever experience it was that I had from having worked in a big city and bringing that. And a lot of people who live here in Fayetteville, like, seemed really appreciative of it. And so I just kept doing that, started with that. And then my wife wanted to also continue playing. So we started volunteering with the Fayetteville Community Band.”

    Vargas is now leading the Jazz Group with the symphony.
    But as usual with the military, once you start getting into the flow of things, buying a house and start putting down roots, a military PCS move is right around the corner.

    “And just as soon as we’re kind of getting going, we’re going to be leaving here pretty soon. So it’s kind of a bummer, but I’ve really enjoyed my time here in Fayetteville. Everybody’s really appreciative and hospitable, and everybody has some type of tie to Fort Bragg or the Army,” Vargas said. “They understand the complexities of this life and why sometimes you can’t commit to something, but it’s been great.”

    That PCS move may be to Mons, Belgium. Vargas recently applied for a position in the SHAPE International Band. This band is part of NATO and is made up of 18 professional musicians from the United States Armed Forces as well as musicians from other allied countries.

    The now 29-year-old is looking forward to the future playing in military bands across the world.

    “Heading to Belgium is kind of a dream come true and we’ll see where we go after that. We’re in it for the long haul, and I’m looking forward to doing whatever it is that I can do to make an impact and support the preservation of Army bands and also helping drive whatever it is that I can do as one, you know, one individual.”

  • COunty COurthouse As the Veterans Day holiday approaches, the Judge E. Maurice Braswell Cumberland County Courthouse is bathed in green light as part of a national show of support for America’s veterans.
    Counties across the country are participating in Operation Green Light, a national collaborative effort to show appreciation to America’s veterans for their service to the country, according to the National Association of Counties (NACO).

    Veterans Day is a federal holiday that will be observed on Friday, Nov. 11. The United States officially observes Veterans Day on Nov. 11, regardless of the day of the week on which it occurs. In November 1919, President Woodrow Wilson honored World War I veterans in a national message to them. He declared Nov. 11 as the first commemoration of Armistice Day. After World War II, the observance was expanded to all veterans in all wars.

    Counties are demonstrating their support of veterans by illuminating county buildings in green. Cumberland County is no exception. The courthouse will be bathed in green light from Nov. 7 through Nov. 13 as part of the upcoming Veterans Day observance.

    At Monday’s Board of Commissioners meeting, the board adopted a proclamation in support of Operation Green Light for Veterans. The proclamation had been requested by board Chairman Glenn Adams.
    The proclamation in part reads “the Cumberland County Board of Commissioners hereby declares from October through Veterans Day, November 11, 2022 a time to salute and honor the service and sacrifice of our men and women in uniform transitioning from Active Service; and... that in observance of Operation Green Light, Cumberland County encourages its citizens in patriotic tradition to recognize the importance of honoring all those who made immeasurable sacrifices to preserve freedom by displaying a green light in a window of their place of business or residence.’’

    During the board meeting, Adams recognized Commissioners Jimmy Keefe and Charles Evans, both of whom served in the military. Adams’ wife, Superior Court Judge Gale M. Adams, served in the Navy.

    “The board values our veterans,” Adams said after the vote.

  • METRO WashingtonDollarHC1102 source “It’s the economy, stupid.”

    This famous tagline, coined by then-Governor Bill Clinton-advisor James Carville, defined the 1992 election. Now, 30 years later, we face another election that is a referendum on the economic policies of the party in power.

    You can feel it. Biden-Inflation has had the effect of cutting your pay equal to a month’s salary. Too many families are digging into their savings, delaying retirement, and cutting back to try to make ends meet. Just over the last year, fuel prices are up 58% and energy is up 20%. Food at home costs 13% more, as essentials like gallons of milk are up 15.2% and eggs are up 30.5%. In North Carolina, inflation is costing families an additional $660 every single month, or nearly $8,000 per year. Even Halloween couldn’t escape, as parents were paying exponentially more for candy this year compared to last.

    Washington Democrats’ reckless spending has damaged our economy across the board. But rather than taking real steps to address these issues, Washington Democrats have doubled-down on their inflation-worsening, progressive agenda. This includes measures like their so-called “Inflation Reduction Act.” This $740 billion bill will raise your taxes, grow federal bureaucracy, and make inflation worse. Additionally, President Biden's reckless student loan plan will unfairly force you to pay others' debts.

    Worse still, Washington Democrats have failed to strengthen America’s supply chains or energy production. In addition to gas prices, this winter folks can expect home heating costs to be the highest they have been in years. Furthermore, people across the country continue to reel from shortages, including of critical products like baby formula. Despite this, Washington Democrats continue to stifle domestic energy production and neglect efforts to shore up our supply chain. Instead, President Biden has moved to drain our Strategic Petroleum Reserve and turn to foreign, often hostile, entities like Communist China, Venezuela, and Saudi Arabia for fuel and critical materials.

    You and your family will continue to suffer from the economic missteps coming out of Washington. The Left doesn’t have a plan to fix them. Yet House Republicans have a plan to change our nation’s trajectory and create an economy that’s strong.

    To get our economy back on track, Republicans will lower reckless, inflation-causing spending and build an economic environment that fosters growth and reduces costs. Additionally, we will unleash energy independence by utilizing an all-of-the-above approach to energy development and maximizing production of American-made energy. Giving producers confidence for the future will immediately help drive down prices. We will also end our dangerous reliance on foreign nations for critical supplies by moving supply chains away from places like China and creating manufacturing jobs here in the U.S.

    I know our country’s economic situation is dire right now. But it doesn’t have to be this way. You should not have to pay the price for Washington Democrats’ economic mismanagement. That’s why our plan, the “Commitment to America,” offers you a new direction to create an environment that nourishes growth, prosperity, and the pursuit of the American Dream. Fixing the economy is the number one issue I’m focused on as your Congressman because that’s what families tell me they are concerned about most. You and James Carville get it.

  • Cumberlan Co logo With two members of the Cumberland County Board of Commissioners departing at the end of this term, the seven-member board will have two new faces. But they will likely be familiar faces to local voters.

    Four candidates are vying to fill the two at-large seats. Two other seats representing District 1 are uncontested.
    Unlike municipal races, the county contest is a partisan election. Voters will choose two candidates from among Democrats Marshall Faircloth and Veronica Jones and Republicans Ron Ross and John Szoka.

    Faircloth is a former county commissioner and former member of the Cumberland County Board of Education. Jones is the founder and CEO of the Jones Global Foundation, a nonprofit organization that works with families on health, education and social issues. She also has been involved in several political campaigns.
    Szoka served five terms in the N.C. State House beginning in 2013. He announced a bid for a seat in Congress in 2020 but dropped out of the race because of redistricting. Ross ran unsuccessfully for the Cumberland County school board in 2016.

    Faircloth and Jones edged out incumbent county Commissioner Ken Lancaster in the May 17 Democratic primary. Lancaster has been a commissioner since 2014 and previously served as chairman. The other at-large seat is being vacated by Commissioner Charles Evans, who ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. House to represent District 7. He lost in the Democratic primary.

    Faircloth received 7,233 votes, or 20.57%, and Jones received 10,976 votes, or 31.2%, in the May Democratic primary. Ross and Szoka were the only Republicans running in the Republican primary in May.

    Running unopposed for commissioner representing District 1 are Commissioners Jeannette Council, a retired educator, and Glenn Adams, an attorney.
    County commissioners serve four-year terms that are staggered. Elections to represent the three-seat District 2 will be held in 2024.

    There is no lack of challenges facing Cumberland County, giving candidates an array of issues and causes on which to hinge their campaigns. From contaminated drinking water in the Gray’s Creek community and elsewhere in the county and the resulting lawsuit against the Chemours chemical company to spending millions on a new events center, some important decisions await the winners.

    CityView asked the candidates a series of questions about issues in the race. Candidates’ answers are in alphabetical order; some lengthy responses were shortened for clarity and space.
    What makes you uniquely qualified over the other candidates?

    Marshall Faircloth: “As a certified public accountant with over 20 years of local government accounting and auditing experience, I would be the go-to commissioner on most financial matters coming before the board. I also have 16 years of actual county commissioner service, while all other candidates have none.”

    Veronica Jones: “I’m the only candidate that possesses and has experience in all — not one, not two — but has combined professional experiences in all important areas of working directly with a variety of families — hands-on — for well-established nonprofits on an executive level. I'm also the only candidate that has worked directly with a variety of families in mental health and family services and served on boards, all executive-level positions, for the Cumberland County school system. I'm the only candidate that owns both a nonprofit that provides family services and (who) owns a business consulting company. This has allowed me to develop a strong strength in budgeting, financial management and, most importantly, the strongest skill I have developed, working in family services and mental health. And by being a business owner, I have been afforded … the opportunity to do professional work and serve families holding a variety of positions, such as case management coordinator; family advocate director; family services executive director; mental health professional and mental health educator; communications director.

    “The combination of my professional work experience and active engagement and investment in our community provides me with a positive connection and exposure to a variety of families and individuals, and I understand the needs of all families, regardless of their ZIP code, gender, religion or financial status.”
    Ron Ross: Ross points to his 54 years working with a nonprofit agency, the Boys & Girls Club. “Donations are just like tax dollars,” he said. He touts his ability to stick to a budget, unlike some local governments, and to remember whose money is being spent. “It’s not our money. The key is to always put the people first,” he said.

    John Szoka: “I am an experienced leader with a proven record of saving taxpayers money, helping to bring good-paying jobs to our community and working in a bipartisan manner to arrive at common-sense solutions to complicated issues. Just a few highlights of my accomplishments as evidence: I led legislative efforts to bring over $412 million to Cumberland County in the last state budget cycle, which affected every citizen in the county; in 2017, I was the primary sponsor of H589, which has saved electric ratepayers across the state over $350 million in electricity costs by changing the way solar energy is integrated into the grid; I worked for years to build the consensus needed to pass the law that makes military retired pay exempt from N.C. state income tax; in 2020, after the murder of George Floyd, I initiated and led a bipartisan committee on justice reform that changed state laws to protect the public, help good officers do their jobs better and hold bad officers accountable.”

    The county is set to unveil a $16 million 911 emergency dispatch center later this month, and the city is asking voters to approve a $98 million bond package of which about $33 million is for a new 911 facility. In 2019, the county and city negotiated to combine their 911 centers, but last-minute disagreements scuttled the plan. Do you favor negotiating with the city for future consolidated or merged services?

    Faircloth: “Yes, if the city wants to. They passed up an opportunity to at least co-locate the 911 service with a view of possibly merging some of it in the future.”

    Jones: “I favor always keeping the best interest of the people of our community first. Therefore, yes, moving forward with a positive attitude as a potential county commissioner, I favor possible negotiating on certain projects with the city. Although the 911 center project was an opportunity for city and county relations, the county had to move forward with what was a necessary project for the greater good of service of safety and providing service for the people as soon as possible.

    … Unfortunately, the city and county on that project did not get on the same page. However, when the city and county do come together, there is positive evidence from projects that have come together well for the greater good of our community. … The city and county merger of parks and recreation has been an unqualified success and is one of the best examples of the advantages of consolidation. The county also pitched in with the investment in the new baseball stadium downtown by approving a special tax district. In addition, both the city and county governing bodies pledged millions to the N.C. Civil War &

    Reconstruction center, a key plus in a project expected to bring more money and more jobs to our Fayetteville and Cumberland County community.”

    Ross: “911 should have been consolidated,” Ross said, adding that any merger with the city should require a written agreement to “stick to a budget.” He noted that the city spent millions of dollars above its budget for the baseball stadium. He said politics should not play a part in merging services. “It’s never about me, it’s about the people, even if it costs you an election,” he said.

    Szoka: “Elected officials always need to remember that money being spent is taxpayer money. Wasting taxpayer money on needless duplication of facilities and services is something that I won’t do. While not every government service is a candidate for consolidation or merger, the 911 center is an example of a service that should have been, at a minimum, co-located in the same facility and probably merged. I will always work for opportunities to save taxpayers money while providing a higher level of service.”

    During the public comment period at Board of Commissioner meetings, residents of the Gray’s Creek area often ask about safe drinking water. County Manager Amy Cannon recently told commissioners that her staff is in the process of identifying water sources for the area and that the county is working to provide water service to the Shaw Road area. But getting Public Works Commission services to that area would require that its residents agree to be annexed by the city. What do you believe are the county’s options to provide safe water to county residents in areas not now served by PWC?

    Faircloth: “PWC is still the best option, and it's a viable option as a water wholesaler. It was originally chartered as a countywide authority, but it has never managed to operate anywhere near its potential. Bladen County has said they are unable to supply the required volume. As to Shaw Road, the county is not nor has it ever been an obstacle to the annexation by Fayetteville. As I understand it, they only need property owners to agree.”

    Jones: “These are the best course of actions to take: (1) The Board of Commissioners should consider creating two new water and sewer districts to combat contamination of private wells due to Gen-X and other forever PFAS chemicals in portions of … the county; (2) consider creating Cedar Creek and the East Central water and sewer districts; (3) conduct a community education campaign before scheduling a public hearing … in addition to providing educational town halls regarding helpful resources and solutions for community residents affected …; (4) apply for state and federal monies and resources such as USDA and EPA grants … for the Gray’s creek area, Shaw Road, and the Vander Water and Sewer District; (5) the county commissioners should continue to seek and stay updated with suggestions and recommendations from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency; and (6) board members should become knowledgeable about the … (Clean Water Act) and provide education for the community through campaign and special town hall meetings.”

    Ross: Ross lives in the Gray’s Creek community and is adamant that Chemours should pay for all water extensions in the contaminated areas of the county for which it is responsible. Ross said this issue is important to him. His grandson attends Alderman Road Elementary School in Gray’s Creek. “He can’t even drink from the school’s water fountain,” Ross said. If the county cannot convince PWC to extend water lines in the Gray’s Creek area, the county needs to negotiate for water service with Robeson County, he said. Otherwise, Chemours should pay for “every penny of the cost to run water lines and for the connection fees,” he said. “I don’t know why the state and county didn’t sue (Chemours) sooner,” Ross said. He also said the county should cut the property tax rate by one-half for people living in the affected area. “It should be a top priority. It’s the biggest mess we’ve had in a long time,” Ross said.

    Szoka: “In the 2015-16 legislative session, I was a primary sponsor of HB392, Fayetteville Charter/PWC Changes. The bill was a huge policy change and clearly gives the PWC authority to extend water service anywhere in the county without requiring annexation into the city of Fayetteville. I personally wrote that part of the legislation to ensure that rural areas of the county would not be ‘held hostage’ to an annexation requirement. The answer for Gray’s Creek is to extend PWC water lines and provide water service. Period. The county and the PWC need to sit down and negotiate the agreement to make this happen. For the rest of the county, the PWC has the authority to extend its water lines today. For those areas where it is not economical for the PWC to extend its water lines, the county needs to conduct a study and determine how best to achieve the goal of safe drinking water for all citizens and then take action to make it happen.”

    What do you hope to accomplish either by yourself or with the Board of Commissioners in the first 90 days of your term?

    Faircloth: “The first 90 days will be spent either searching for the best possible county manager candidate or learning to work with this person depending on how far along the task will have come. Other than that, I would likely be working to build a solid working relationship with all board members, getting updated on all current and upcoming projects, and reviewing the activity of the past two years.”

    Jones: “I realize the importance of goal-setting and long-range planning. County policies will have an impact on the lives of our Cumberland County families and individuals, and for that reason I believe that our community residents will expect myself and the other county commissioners to influence the direction of county government for the greater good of the people in a positive manner. Policymaking is far more art than science. The key to good policymaking is to see the forest for the trees. … I will provide quality services to our Cumberland County citizens while being fiscally responsible. … I will maintain core values, serving … with PRIDE: Professionalism, respect, integrity with accountability, diversity, and excellent customer service. … I know that it's important to understand (and) recognize policy and procedures and the overall budget process thoroughly within the first 90 days. This is important to effectively represent our citizens. Families can trust that I will have no problems in this area.”

    Jones said she also will prioritize these issues: (1) Speed up the pace of planning for the new events center, noting that a location has not been selected despite a target date of August 2022 to do so; (2) Set goals to address affordable housing and homelessness; (3) Reevaluate funding for the county school system; (5) address issues related to mental health, Gray’s Creek public water access, government communication, economic development, and an asset inventory and audit skills.

    Ross: Ross said he does not have a single priority for the first 90 days but rather a “wish list” of items he would like to see happen. First, he would like the commissioners to hold meetings every three months in different areas of the county. Unlike the current public comment rules, speakers should not have to sign up or provide a topic before speaking. The program could provide a mediator to keep the program on point. Second, Ross wants to see an “open meeting” with senior citizens to consider what additional senor-centric programs the county should create. Third, construction of “working” homeless shelters to put the homeless to work and providing them with treatment should become a greater priority, he said.

    Szoka: “Among my top priorities is clean water countywide. In the first 90 days, I will work for an approved, funded plan for the first loop of PWC water extension into Gray’s Creek that will provide safe water to the two elementary schools currently still using bottled water and to the surrounding neighborhoods.

  • CCB blue and gold circle The Cumberland County Board of Commissioners’ Crown Event Committee on Tuesday, Nov. 1, took another step toward construction on the proposed $80 million facility that will replace the aging Crown Theatre and Crown Arena.

    The committee, chaired by Commissioner Jeannette Council, unanimously agreed on one of three methods of moving forward in the contracting process with an as-yet-to-be-determined builder.

    The three-member committee, which also includes Commissioners Glenn Adams and Jimmy Keefe, voted in favor of a most-commonly used contracting method referred to as construction management-at-risk (CMAR). The committee’s recommendation now goes to the full Board of Commissioners.

    In an agenda memo to the commissioners, Jermaine Walker, county Engineering and Infrastructure director, recommended this option.
    County Manager Amy Cannon called it the “next big step” in deciding how the county’s owner representative will move the project forward.
    Matt DeSilver of MBP Carolinas presented the three contracting methods to the committee. MBP Carolinas is an engineering consulting firm hired by the county as its owner’s representative for the project.

    Design-bid-build process is the most common method used in North Carolina, according to DeSilver. This method procures an architect, completes the design to 100%, and then procures the construction contractor.
    DeSilver said this method, however, is the longest process. It does allow for competition but the county cannot base its selection on qualifications. DeSilver said this process also is problematic if bids are over budget. Finally, this method results in additional costs if there are problems with the design and the project requires a change order.

    The second method is Construction Management-at-Risk (CMAR) and is commonly used at the state level in North Carolina. It allows the county to choose its contractor based on qualifications; however, it comes at a higher cost, according to DeSilver. This method also allows the contractor to be part of the design process. This method also allows for a shorter construction schedule.

    The third method is design-build and is not a common means of constructing public facilities in North Carolina, DeSilver said. In this method, the architect actually works for the contractor, rather than the county. Also, DeSilver warned, under this method the design of the facility is “locked at 60 percent,” thus not allowing the owner to tweak designs if last-minute issues arise.

    Walker, in his memo, stated, “In order to adhere to the restrictive timeline required to deliver the new Crown Event Center as a complete and useable facility by October 2025, it is important to finalize discussions regarding the construction delivery methods available to the County for this project. Over the years, changes in North Carolina legislation have provided local governments with more options for construction of public facilities.”

    The committee also went into a closed session to discuss real property acquisition. Under state law, commissioners can discuss property and real estate acquisition but must take any formal action in an open session.

    The commissioners did not take action other than to adjourn after the closed session. Employees of MBP Carolinas have attended the last several closed sessions of the Crown Event Center Committee.

  • cumberland co schools The Cumberland County Board of Education on Tuesday, Nov. 1, voted unanimously to offer retention bonuses of $1,000 to all staff members who complete their employment contracts during the 2021-22 school year.

    Approval of the bonus plan came with a 9-0 vote on a list of consensus items that had been approved unanimously last week by a board’s personnel committee.
    The committee had recommended that the retention bonuses be paid to those who are eligible.

    “Custodians all the way up to teachers,” said Greg West, chairman of the school board, during the committee meeting. “That’s going to be good news.”
    Certified or classified employees who were hired as of Oct. 1 and who remain with the school system on Dec. 1 will receive $500 sign-on bonuses.

    The bonuses will be paid on Dec. 16.
    Also, bonuses of $1,500, culled from federal Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief funds, are available to kindergarten through fifth-grade instructors who complete training units by June 30 with a score of 80% or above.

    Likewise, all pre-kindergarten teachers who complete Units 1-2 by June 30 with a score of 80% or above will be eligible for a $500 completion bonus.
    Administrators will receive a $500 bonus if they finish LETRS Units 1-2 by June 30 with a score of 80% or above.

    Overall, the school system has received $150 million in EESER funding

  • Val Applewhite Val Applewhite and Wesley Meredith served together on the Fayetteville City Council for three years beginning in 2007.

    A dozen years later, they are competing in the Nov. 8 general election for a seat in the North Carolina Senate representing District 19.
    What many see as an intriguing matchup has another connection: Both candidates have faced off with state Sen. Kirk deViere at the ballot box.

    DeViere defeated Meredith, the Republican incumbent, to win his first term in the Senate in 2018. And Applewhite defeated deViere in this year’s Democratic primary, in which deViere was seeking reelection.
    Without an incumbent in the race, this contest has become one to watch.

    Meredith is eager to return to the legislature. Applewhite twice ran unsuccessfully to be mayor of Fayetteville. So both are well-known in local political circles, and both are military veterans.
    The race is further in the spotlight because Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper endorsed Applewhite in the primary, a move that was highly unusual because the incumbent, deViere, is also a Democrat.

    Despite their similar backgrounds, Meredith and Applewhite have very different views on government and public policy.
    George Breece, a former member of the N.C. House of Representatives, has followed local politics for years and is a radio news analyst during election cycles.

    Wesley Meredith "The Senate race between Applewhite and Meredith will be the most watched local race in Cumberland County,” Breece said. “Two seasoned candidates — one a former city councilman and senator trying to return to Raleigh, and the other a former city councilwoman and political activist with the very strong support of our governor and coming off an impressive Democratic primary victory. These are two fine candidates who are opposites when it comes to political philosophies....

    “This Senate District 19 race is going to be a great one to watch and will be the ‘thriller in the ’Ville in this 2022 election,” Breece added.
    Meredith, who served in the Army, served four terms in the state Senate beginning in 2010 but lost reelection to deViere in 2018 and 2020.

    Applewhite: ‘A life of service’

    An Air Force veteran, Applewhite served on the Fayetteville City Council for three terms beginning in 2007.

    “I’ve lived a life of service — a total of 25 years active-duty and as a civilian in the Air Force, six years on the Fayetteville City Council and several years with nonprofit organizations. This race is a part of my life of public service,” she said in response to emailed questions. “There are many reasons I decided to run, and the decision was not an easy one to make. However, if there was one specific issue, I would say it was to be an advocate for health care and do my best to pass Medicaid expansion for the nearly 600,000 people in this state.

    “Another reason is education,” Applewhite said. “I believe we are failing our children and our educators. In a broader sense, we have to begin to address the reasons why Cumberland County remains a high-distressed and low-wealth community. As a county and as an region, poverty is the underlying issue for so many of our social and economic problems: homelessness, lack of affordable housing, underfunded and deteriorating schools, failing infrastructure, struggling businesses, etc.”

    Other issues close to her heart include the right of women to make their own decisions about abortion.

    “There is only enough space in an examination room for a woman, a doctor and a family member,” she said. “I don't believe any woman has ever invited a politician into her examination room.”

    Senate District 19 encompasses most of Cumberland County, including rural areas on the northern, southern and eastern sides, plus Hope Mills and parts of Fayetteville.

    Applewhite said she is thankful for Gov. Cooper’s endorsement.

    “… It demonstrates his confidence in my leadership and my commitment to serve the citizens of North Carolina,” she said. “We share many of the same priorities: Medicaid expansion, paying teachers more, increasing opportunities to create jobs that can support families and pay the bills. I look forward to working with him.”
    Applewhite said voters can have confidence in her.

    “... I believe our citizens want someone that is committed to improving the quality of life of their families and willing to support their businesses,” she said. “I’ve demonstrated this commitment while serving on the Fayetteville City Council. My advocacy for improved transportation and infrastructure, public safety, support of local businesses through Hire Fayetteville First, translation of critical city services into other languages to embrace our diverse population and more.

    “Perhaps most importantly, I am absolutely committed to addressing the issue of poverty and beginning to form a strategic plan to create wealth and diversify our tax base. Cumberland County has been a Tier 1 for far too long, …” she said. “The pandemic exposed the challenges in our county, but it also highlighted what we must improve. I am ready, willing and able to represent the amazing and deserving citizens of Cumberland County.”

    Meredith: ‘Back to prosperity’

    Meredith describes himself online as being “from a working-class family who grew up with the core values of hard work, perseverance, and serving God and country.”
    On his website, he says that North Carolinians are facing a public health and economic catastrophe.

    “I know that North Carolinians will rise above this challenge,” he says. “Unfortunately, my opponent believes that we can tax our way back. You and I know that jobs, not tax hikes, are the path back to prosperity.”

    He lists his top three legislative priorities as lowering taxes to help people with inflation, stopping violent crime and school choice.
    If he is returned to the state Senate, Meredith says on his website, he will work tirelessly to keep the public safe from the coronavirus and ensure that first responders and health care providers have the personal protection equipment they need. He commits to funding vaccine research, testing and contact tracing “so that we can get back to work safely.” He also said he would “get people and small businesses hit hard by COVID-19 the help they need.”

    Other important issues Meredith cites include education. He says he supports giving dedicated teachers the support they need. A first-class education, he says, starts with excellent teachers.

    “That’s why I voted for five consecutive teacher pay raises, increased salaries by 15% to $54,000 per year, increased education spending by $2 billion, and support school choice reforms that give parents more freedom to choose where their child goes to school,” he says.

    Meredith says some states have moved to put more restrictions on school curriculum, what teachers can say in the classroom and the types of books available in public schools and libraries.

    In a CityView questionnaire, Meredith was asked whether such rules are needed.

    “Schools are for learning. They are not for indoctrinating our children,” he said. “Most teachers and school administrators agree with this, but in the rare cases where inappropriate books or subject matter is being taught — such as gender identity ideology and sexual education that is not age-appropriate — then elected leaders should stand up on behalf of students and parents to put guidelines into place. There should be full transparency with what our children are being taught. Parents have the right to know what their children are learning. Frankly, parents have the responsibility to know what their kids are learning at school.”

    Meredith says he strongly believes in the Second Amendment right to bear arms.
    Meredith also said in response to the questionnaire that all life is sacred. He went on to say that he supports policies that protect and respect the lives of unborn babies and pregnant mothers.

    “I adamantly oppose late-term and partial-birth abortion and would work to restrict those barbaric practices,” he said. “I would only support new regulations on abortion that include clear exceptions for rape, incest, protecting the life of the mother, and compassionately caring for fetuses with catastrophic deformities who cannot survive outside the womb or have already died.”

    Eight years ago, Democratic rival and state Rep. Billy Richardson alleged that Meredith “actively or knowingly allowed" his son with his first wife to go on Medicaid in the late 1990s when he was reportedly making a six-figure annual salary. Allegations also surfaced that Meredith financially abandoned his wife and child.

    Meredith later said that the Department of Social Services had completed and closed its investigation of those allegations of welfare fraud.

    “The case has been thoroughly investigated and the case is closed with no further action necessary," he said in an interview with WTVD of Durham.

    Local issues

    Applewhite declined to weigh in on the $97 million bond referendum that Fayetteville city voters will decide in the general election. She did say that the bond package “takes us back to the issue of not having a diverse tax base. Unless we are able to attract businesses here, local and county governments have very few options to generate revenue for critical services. It is a difficult decision, but ultimately the citizens get to decide.”

    As for the referendum on changing the way districts are drawn for the City Council, Applewhite said she was asked to support that change but declined. She said she challenged the initiative organizers with the belief that the initiative is based on the fact that eight of 10 seats on the current City Council are held by African Americans.

    “Although they said it was not based on race, I was not convinced,” she said. “Perhaps it is not based on race alone, but surely a combination of race, power and control.”

    Supporters of the council election plan say it is not based on racial issues but would convert four of the nine seats from district to citywide to give voters more representation.

    Meredith did not respond to a question about the bond referendum.

  • Chemours sign Gray’s Creek residents who participated in a North Carolina State University chemical exposure study were told Wednesday, Nov. 2 they had a higher-than-average amount of chemicals in their system.

    Researchers from N.C. State’s Center for Human Health and Environment met with approximately 30 area residents at the Gray’s Creek Community Center on School Road. Researchers Nadine Kotlarz, Jane Hoppin and Detlef Knappe reviewed the information provided to participants in a letter they received earlier and answered questions about the results.

    Participants in the GenX exposure study are part of a long-term health study to understand the health effects of PFAS. Blood sampling from residents is an element of the study. PFAS stands for per- and polyflouroalkyl substances. They are human-made chemicals used in a variety of commercial products and produced by the Chemours Fayetteville plant off N.C. 87 at the Cumberland and Bladen County line.

    The GenX exposure study is measuring GenX and PFAS exposure in people living in the Cape Fear River Basin, the source of drinking water for many communities. The study began in November 2017 after Wilmington discovered GenX and PFAS contamination in its drinking water.
    The letters that were sent to blood donor participants contained a summary of the study and the findings, including their individual results. The study area is in the proximity of the Chemours Fayetteville Works plant.

    To participate in the 2021 blood sampling, residents could be new or previous participants in the study, be at least 6 years old, limited to four people in one household, lived at their current address for at least a year, and if living in the Fayetteville area, must be on private wells.
    The blood PFAS results from 2020-21 found four PFAS types (PFOS, PFOA, PFHxS and PFNA) in almost everyone, according to the presentation. The amounts were higher levels than the U.S. national average. The sampling also found “Nafion byproduct 2” and PFOSDoA in some people in the Fayetteville area. The study did not find GenX in any blood samples, according to the presentation.

    Hoppin said the point of the presentation was to make residents aware that they are above the U.S. average for PFAS in their system and to get them to understand the health effects of those findings.
    Community activist Mike Watters, who is a community advisor for the research team, was more poignant.

    “Our blood is contaminated, and they (residents) need to share that information with their doctors and come up with a plan,” he said.

    The sampling consisted of 1,020 people. Of those, 99.6% had PFOS; 99% had PFOA; 99% had PFHxS; and 96% had PFNA in their blood.
    The N.C. State research team is holding a series of meetings. The next presentation will be on Nov. 10 at the Cedar Creek Baptist Church. Another is scheduled for Dec. 7 at Cape Fear Community College in Wilmington. Each of the two-hour meetings starts at 6 p.m.

    The research team determined that residents living nearby or downstream from the Chemours Fayetteville Works plant were exposed to PFAS from the facility, but that the blood levels of these PFAS decline over time.
    The health effects from PFAS include decreased antibody response in both children and adults, dyslipidemia in adults and children, decreased infant and fetal growth, and an increased risk of kidney cancer in adults.

    More limited evidence of association to PFAS shows it may cause an increased risk of breast cancer in adults, increased risk of testicular cancer in adults, liver enzyme alterations in adults and children, increased risk of pregnancy-induced hypertension and preeclampsia, thyroid disease and dysfunction, and an increased risk of ulcerative colitis in adults.

    Some residents expressed frustration over the length of time the research team takes to come up with study results. Hoppin said the small research team is still analyzing historical data. She said among her questions is how some individuals living in like conditions have higher amounts of PFAS in their systems compared to others.

    “We are just now at the cusp of learning the impact of PFAS,” Watters said.

  • vecteezy 3d rendering 3d illustration right and wrong button check 7426547 763 Their reaction to the City Charter referendum looks like the Fayetteville City Council is scared of this vote. For those who need help understanding, some people want to change the City Council's structure by converting four council seats from district seats to citywide seats. Currently, the 10-person council has nine district seats plus the Mayor, who is elected citywide. "Citywide" means "at-large." So, the citizens of Fayetteville would get a total of six votes. One for Mayor, one for their district, and four additional representatives who can live anywhere within the city.

    The Mayor's position is an "at-large" position, and if that works for the Mayor, then why wouldn't it work for City Council? Wait, are we saying that the Mayor's position does not or cannot represent the whole city? I don't think we are, but if you interpret this one way, then you have to ask that question to the other. If memory serves, someone gathered a petition of 5,000 signatures which was required to put it on the November ballot. However, the City Council voted not to allow it on the ballot. It went to court, and a judge ordered it on the ballot.

    Ask yourself why the Council would refuse it. I have heard this is a Democrat and Republican thing, but that cannot be because the City Council members are supposed to be nonpartisan representatives. The talk on the street is that this is a matter of race. Has anyone looked at the makeup of the City Council? There are representatives of multiple races. Now, let us look at the last Mayoral and City Council election in July. In a city of 210,000 people, only 14,800 voted, with 4,000+ done by mail-in or early voting. Here are a few statistics from a Spectrum News 1 article on July 27 about the City Council election. "The District 7 race between Brenda McNair and incumbent Larry Wright was very close. McNair has 679 votes, 23 more than Wright. The margin in District 3 is even closer. Mario Benavente has 1,012 votes, just six more than incumbent Antonio Jones." In two seats, the total count difference was 29 votes.

    For those who can vote and are not happy with the direction of Fayetteville, then change the rules because you have nothing to lose if you want more choices. Change the rules; you have nothing to lose. If you want more representation, then change the rules. You have nothing to lose.

    If the City Council had a record of doing good - ensuring low crime, providing a safer place city, better job opportunities, fewer taxes and lowering the homeless rate - then why should they worry about their positions? If the City Council made it their priority to make it easy to make a living, start a business, or keep a business going, then why should they worry about a referendum? If the city focused on making Fayetteville a city with a great reputation, then why should the City Council worry about the referendum?

    What is important to you is why you should Vote Yes or Vote No.

Latest Articles

  • Dirtbag Ales and Heckler Brewing celebrate beer May 3 to 5
  • “Bandancing”: Experience the enchanting melodies of Fayetteville Symphonic Band's latest concert
  • State gets a pleasant April surprise
  • The real story of Snow White
  • Grays Creek: Clean drinking water on the way
  • Fayetteville Chamber to host Peter Marksteiner for speaker series
Up & Coming Weekly Calendar
  

Advertise Your Event:

 

Login/Subscribe