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  • Cumberland Foundation The Cumberland Community Foundation manages more than 60 scholarship endowment funds created by local individuals, families, civic organizations and corporations who want to provide a path to higher education for future generations.

    “Right now we are getting ready to open the community scholarship cycle, and the applications will be available online starting Wednesday, Feb. 16,” said Mary Holmes, president/CEO, Cumberland Community Foundation, Inc. “Between now and then, students should complete their Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) and this is the process the foundation uses to verify financial need.”

    She added, “Most of the scholarships are based on financial need, academic achievement and community service, but we do have a few that are not need-based and are achievement-based only.”

    “So the student will go online between Wednesday, Feb. 16 and Wednesday, March 23 to fill out the application and answer questions about themselves,” said Holmes. “The questions want to know the high school you attend, which colleges you want to attend, your grade point average (GPA) and your intended major in college.”

    Holmes added the online system would present the opportunities for which the student is eligible, and the applications will pop up for the student to apply.

    Each year, Cumberland Community Foundation awards more than $900,000 in college scholarships to students from southeastern North Carolina. The Cumberland Community Foundation Scholarship Committee selects most scholarships. A few scholarships are selected by external selection committees at the individual high schools. High school students should check with their school’s guidance office to learn about scholarship opportunities.

    “A lot of scholarships are narrowed down to a specific high school, and for example, the John Thomas Gibson Memorial Scholarship is for a student going from E. E. Smith High School to North Carolina A & T University,” said Holmes. “Some of our scholarships are for students in any high school in Cumberland County going to any college, and they just have to go online and apply to be presented with all of the opportunities.”

    “We have a wonderful committee of mostly retired educators that serve as our scholarship selection committee,” said Holmes. “They read all of the applications, make the selection, and then they score all of the applications based on the priorities that the donor established.”

    She added, “For example, a donor may want 50% of the points based on financial need, 25% on academic success, and 25% on community service.”

    “We just completed the process of selecting 21 students for the Robert H. Short scholarship, and he left 10 million dollars to the Cumberland Community Foundation to help local students go to college,” said Holmes. “Those students will receive up to $30,000 payable over a 4-year period.”

    Applications are due Wednesday, Mar. 23 at 11:59 pm. Students will be asked to submit their information from their FAFSA application, their transcripts, letters of recommendation, etc.

    Visit https://www.cumberlandcf.org/scholarships/how-to-apply-.html for information on how to apply for the scholarships. For more information, visit https://www.cumberlandcf.org/scholarships/.

  • pexels julia larson 6455778 The fitness industry continually evolves with apps, exercise equipment and the latest concepts in exercise science. The newest buzzword in the industry is "functional training." If you are not in the industry, you may ask what functional training is? Ask any personal trainer or group fitness instructor what functional training is, and chances are you will get a variety of explanations.

    Functional training done correctly has a huge carry over on the way we move in everyday life with benefits for everyone regardless of age or fitness level. Fitness centers have historically modeled their floor exercise stations with sectorized equipment that uses a singular motion for specific muscle groups, emphasizing muscle development based on repetitions and weight. The bodybuilding industry had and still has a significant influence on training and gyms filled with machines designed to target muscle isolation.

    Functional training enters the arena as an added approach to overall training. Fitness centers are seeing the need for functional training and making entire additions for rooms or an area with selected equipment specifically for this purpose.

    Functional training is defined as training that relates to how we move daily. Functional training consists of five daily life patterns: bend and lift, push, pull, single-leg movement, and rotation. Our movements are multi-planar. The planes of motion incorporated with the five-movement patterns are frontal (side to side), sagittal (forward and backward movement) and transverse, which is rotation. As an example, you go to the grocery store pushing your cart, back up for something you missed, select items that are high and low on the shelves, take the items and place them on the checkout, put the items back in the cart, push the cart to the car and put the bags in. Drive home, take them out, carry groceries up the steps into the house and place them on shelves. You may not realize it, but this scenario involves all three planes of motion and all five movement patterns.

    You pushed, pulled, bent and lifted, worked in a single leg motion and rotated. How does functional training help you with this scenario? Functional training significantly impacts life outside the gym and gives an added advantage in the sports arena. Fitness centers add entire rooms or areas for training that are distinctively different in concept and flow. A room might include workstations that involve multiple movements and unconventional exercises. Types of equipment might consist of a ski machine that works you in a forward motion like the movement of cross-country skiing using the triceps, back muscles, quads, glutes and core. A sled machine that requires you to push and pull from one point to the next, which involves the entire core and leg muscles to push and pull. A punching bag works the core, rotation, leg, back, arms and pectoral muscles. TRX equipment, weighted balls, rowing machines, air dynamic cycles and treadmills. Versatile workstations and a variety of equipment that is fun and challenging. Functional training is also becoming part of group fitness classes, emphasizing compound movement patterns that include weights. If you are thinking about joining a fitness center or hiring a personal trainer, inquire about functional training. It can improve your daily activities, sports games and recreation with strength stability, performance and movement patterns. Live, love life with increased movement and strength.

  • CCSO The Cumberland County Sheriff's Office has fired a deputy following an officer-involved shooting earlier in February.

    On Feb. 8, 40-year-old Deputy Luis Hernandez responded to a call in reference to a suspicious vehicle parked in a cul-de-sac on Mercedes Drive with no headlights on around 10:45 pm. According to the Sheriff's Office, while Hernandez approached the car, he observed three people inside. Hernandez asked the occupants to show him their hands, and they complied, putting their hands out the windows. Hernandez, according to the Sheriff's Office, directed a front seat passenger to exit the car, and he did. The vehicle immediately fled the scene, and Hernandez fired seven shots at the moving vehicle. No one has reported any injuries.

    The Cumberland County Sheriff’s Office, Office of Professional Standards, investigated Hernandez’s response to the call. Following that internal personnel investigation, Hernandez’s employment was terminated on Feb. 11. Another investigation has begun into whether the former deputy engaged in criminal conduct in firing his weapon as a part of his response to the incident. That investigation is ongoing.

    Hernandez was hired by the Cumberland County Sheriff’s Office on March 18, 2019.

  • Fay City Dump Residents could see an increase in their trash collection costs as city officials are in discussions to increase the fee incrementally over the next few years.

    The current solid-waste service, which collects trash and recyclables curbside, costs $225 annually. The fee, which fully funds the operation, is included within the city’s property taxes.

    City officials are proposing a gradual increase in the coming years — $245 in 2023, $275 in 2025 and $282 in 2027, according to city documents. This would result in an overall increase of more than 25% for residents over the next five years.

    The increase would allow for the city’s solid-waste service to build up a positive balance to cover operating costs for 30 to 90 days, allowing for more sustainability during unexpected events, Fayetteville Budget Director Kelly Olivera told Carolina Public Press.

    “A modest increase in fees would create a situation where the self-supporting solid-waste fund carries a balance that could support unexpected changes like natural disasters or threats to public health, welfare and safety,” she said.

    “A positive fund balance would allow service delivery to continue uninterrupted without significant impact to other city services and programs.”

    An administrative report detailing the fee increases was presented to the City Council during a meeting Monday. The council unanimously voted to continue discussion of the possible increases at its next meeting.

    Comparison to other Cumberland municipalities
    Two other municipalities in Cumberland County, Hope Mills and Spring Lake, provide trash collection to residents.

    Both charge more than the current Fayetteville rate.

    Hope Mills bills $250.80 annually, or $20.90 a month. Spring Lake charges the most at $307 a year, well above the level Fayetteville is considering charging its solid-waste customers after the proposed series of increases.


    Photo Credit: Equipment at the Fayetteville City Dump is seen working on February 14, 2022. Melissa Sue Gerrits / Carolina Public Press

  • Spring Lake Website The Spring Lake Board of Aldermen discussed issues with the town's new website Monday evening.

    After years of development, in December, Spring Lake moved to a new website, www.townofspringlake.com. Alderman Raul Palacios addressed various issues with the website, such as grammatical errors, broken links and its not compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act Compliance – a requirement for government websites.

    The town paid around $57,673 within the past three years on a "poorly developed" website that has yielded complaints from citizens, towns officials and business owners. Palacios believes the previous board pushed through the new website without reviewing all the details. He reviewed several proposals from reputable web developers for municipal websites with around $30,000 for a website. To renovate the town's current webpage would have been about $3,000 to $6,000.

    Palacios and Alderwoman Sona Cooper suggested that the town cut its losses with Vision Quest Venture LLC, the current developer and go back to the previous website created by Biz Tools in 2006, www.spring-lake.org.

    This move will save the city around $3,600 annually.

    "The website has a lot of isses, we constantly get complaints about people not being able to pay water bills, complaints about not being able to sign up for rec events or programs," said Cooper. "I believe the best thing to do is to revert back to our old website."

    The council raised some concern about the $57,000 loss to the town.

    "In my opinion we should cut our losses and run," said Palacios. "We need a compliant website for Americans with disabilities."

    According to Attorney Catherine Bama, if the board wants to try to recoup any money, the town would have to take legal action.

  • ulysses20 taylor Fayetteville State University has named Ulysses Taylor as the new Dean of Broadwell College of Business & Economics. In his role as Dean, Taylor will be responsible for all undergraduate and graduate business programs which include approximately 1,750 students and 62 faculty and staff.

    Taylor previously was the Professor of Accounting and Chair of Accounting, Finance, Healthcare, and Information Systems at FSU. 

    Taylor is a former board member of the Greater Fayetteville Chamber of Commerce and the Fayetteville/Cumberland County Economic Development Alliance. He currently serves as chairman of the Fayetteville State University Development Corporation and board member and treasurer of The Capitol Encore Academy. Taylor has also served as a consultant, tax attorney and Certified Public Accountant for various for profit and nonprofit organizations for over 30 years, and currently serves as Financial Secretary for the Kappa Alpha Psi Middle Eastern Province Foundation.

    "Dean Taylor brings a unique combination of knowledge and practical experience to the deanship. He has proven to be strategic, entrepreneurial, and visionary. He is committed to the overall success of our students and is highly regarded in the field of business education. I am excited about the leadership and innovation that he will bring to the Broadwell College of Business and Economics." said Dr. Monica Terrell Leach, Provost and Senior Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs.

  • Amazon Facility Construction will begin soon for several sidewalks in Fayetteville as part of the City of Fayetteville's goal to improve safety and quality of life.

    Currently, Fayetteville includes 2,059,306 linear feet of sidewalk throughout the City.

    “Sidewalks provide numerous health, economic and safety benefits,” Public Services Director Sheila Thomas-Ambat said in a press release. “Pedestrians deserve spaces that are safe and accessible. Fayetteville City Council Members challenge us to offer exemplary City services. The sidewalks coming in 2022 are just one example of services we are proud to offer.”

    Since the start of 2022, two sections of sidewalk projects were finished and are now ready for pedestrians to walk on them. In January, crews completed work on 750 linear feet of new sidewalk with ADA ramps along Ramsey Street between Summerchase Drive and Andrews Road. Some 225 linear feet of sidewalk along Cliffdale Road between Skibo Road and the Freedom Center was finished earlier in February.

    Three additional sidewalk sections are scheduled to be completed this summer, totaling nearly 14,000 linear feet in various areas of the City. Those areas are:

    • Rosehill Road between Stuart Avenue and Hickory Hill Road will see 6,600 linear feet of sidewalk including ADA ramps, bus stops and a retaining wall.
    • Helen Street between Pamalee and Stansfield Drives will get 3,500 feet of sidewalk and include ADA ramps.
    • Reilly Road between Willowbrook and Cissna Drives will have 3,850 linear feet sidewalk and include ADA ramps and bus pads.
  • Paratroopers Arrive in Poland The secretary of defense has ordered an additional 3,000 soldiers from Fort Bragg to deploy to Poland, according to a senior defense official.

    President Joe Biden directed to send the remaining 3,000 soldiers of the 82nd Airborne Infantry Brigade Combat Team from Fort Bragg to Poland.

    The senior defense official said the soldiers will join the 1,700 troops already set for Poland to assist NATO allies.

    "All told, these 5,000 additional personnel comprise a highly mobile and flexible force, capable of multiple missions," the official said to major news outlets. "They are being deployed to reassure our NATO allies, deter any potential aggression against NATO’s eastern flank, train with host-nation forces, and contribute to a wide range of contingencies. They will report to Gen. Tod Wolters, Commander, U.S. European Command."

    National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan announced on Friday that the rise of a Russia invasion of Ukraine has risen. He said that they believe Russian President Vladimir Putin could order an invasion of Ukraine at any time, even before the end of the Beijing Olympics.

    Fort Bragg troops started to deploy to Europe on Feb. 3. According to U.S. officials, these are not permanent moves for the troops.


    PHOTO CREDIT: More paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne Division make their way to the terminal after arriving on a C-17 Globemaster aircraft at Rzeszów-Jasionka Airport, Poland Feb. 8. In coordination with the Polish Ministry of Defense and Polish government the nearly 2,000 Soldiers are deploying to support the United States’ decision to increase its presence and activities in the Eastern Flank as part of strong and unremitting commitment to our NATO Allies and partners. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Staff Sgt. Angel D. Martinez-Navedo)

  • Cumberland County School Board The Cumberland County Schools Board of Education voted Tuesday night to make masks optional for both students and staff.

    The school board approved the decision with a 5 to 4 vote. The decision will go into effect on Feb. 16.

    "Going mask optional doesn't take away the right of someone who wears a mask, they can double mask, the N-95s are abundant now when they haven't been before," Chair Greg West said. "I think mask optional is a prudent first step to allow those who want a choice and waited for 22 months to have a choice."

    Board Member Donna Vann said that after two-and-a-half years in a pandemic, everyone has their own personal responsibility to protect themselves.

    "That's going to be the choice of each individual," Vann said.

    However, other board members reiterated that masking is a group responsibility.

    "The mask is a public health tool. It's for you caring about me or me caring about you, to protect you," Board Member Carrie Sutton said in opposition.

    Board Members Sutton, Deanna Jones, Judy Musgrave and Charles McKellar all voted against making the masks optional.

    However, the Cumberland County mask mandate is still in place by the Cumberland County Board of Commissioners. Masks are required indoors across Cumberland County, including all municipalities - Fayetteville, Hope Mills, Spring Lake, Wade, Eastover, Falcon, Godwin, Linden and Stedman. It is unclear how the new school board policy will be impacted by the county policy.

  • sedar I previously reflected on the then-upcoming observance of Martin Luther King Day. For me, it both honors a towering American figure and serves as an annual occasion to remember his (and many others’) legacy in the continuing struggle against all forms of enmity, intolerance and inequity.

    But that weekend saw a synagogue in Colleyville, Texas, held hostage on the Jewish Sabbath. Blessedly, after many tense hours, the incident ended without any loss of innocent life when the rabbi and congregants utilized previously learned security preparedness and response training. Ironically, on that Sabbath, synagogues worldwide were reading the weekly scriptural portion about Moses and God’s miraculous deliverance of the Israelites from ancient Egyptian slavery.

    Tragically, houses of worship, schools and all manner of public and private institutions must be concerned with the potential for violent attacks rather than focusing their energies solely on the purposes for which they exist. Some faith traditions, ethnic communities and distinctly identifiable groups may be at more significant risk, but disturbingly, none of us is guaranteed complete security.

    We each receive guidance from different sources, which for me means the teachings of the Jewish tradition. The Bible records that the Israelites found themselves trapped at sea with Pharaoh’s army in pursuit when leaving Egypt. An ancient Jewish legend says that Moses prayed for deliverance, but not until a single man waded into the water up to his neck did the sea split for the Israelites to pass through safely.

    The Jewish views parallel the saying, “God helps those who help themselves.” Accordingly, Jewish tradition teaches not to rely on miracles, for they are purely gifts from God and not expectations to be ordered on demand, even though sincere prayer and devotion.

    There are different opinions regarding appropriate steps in considering possible threats, but again I am guided by my tradition. Firstly, to follow in the footsteps of Moses’ brother Aaron, who Judaism teaches always sought peace and the resolution of discord. Still, it also teaches the legitimacy of self-defense if preventive measures fail. Even deadly force may be used, but only when there is no reasonable alternative, as our tradition teaches, “How do you know your blood is redder than the blood of another?”

    And when direct defensive force cannot be avoided, I still learn from another Jewish legend. After the sea collapsed on and drowned Pharaoh’s army, the Israelites sang praises of thanksgiving for their Divine deliverance. In heaven, the angels wanted to join in the songs of praise, but God objected, asking rhetorically, “My handiwork (i.e., the Egyptians) are drowning in the sea, and you recite a song?!”

    The Israelites who were saved understandably rejoiced in their relief, but others need to recognize that even while justified, human suffering still occurred.

    So, it is customary at the Passover Seder ritual-meal to diminish the symbol of joyous redemption, wine, by removing a drop from our cups for each of the ten plagues suffered by the ancient Egyptians. All human life is always precious.

  • Valentines Day Valentine's Day is upon us and Fayetteville and Fort Bragg have some unique and fun options for everyone. Looking for a "Gal"entine's event drop in at the Fayetteville Pie Company for some music bingo. Out of love with love? Head to Bright Light Brewing Company to Axe your Ex. Want to celebrate with the whole family? Dirtbag Ales Brewery and Taproom has you covered. Looking for romance, head over to Fort Bragg's Iron Mike Conference Center for a romantic meal and music. Read on for all the fun and all of the details.

    Events in and around Fayetteville for Valentine’s Day

    Valentine’s Music Bingo
    Fayetteville Pie company is hosting a Valentine’s Day-themed music bingo on Feb. 11 from 6 to 8 p.m. The event will be held at 253 Westwood Shopping Center. Perfect for gal pals and friends or date night attendees who can expect duets, sexy hits and love ballads. Call 910-483-4097 for additional information.

    Hearts and Hops: A Family Valentine’s Celebration
    Dirtbag Ales Brewery and Taproom is hosting a family-friendly Heart Day celebration. Attendees can purchase crafts and baked goods from the Bird’s Nest Montessori School, create crafts with KidsPeace, have faces painted by Artistic Brush Face Painting and take photos in a photo booth by Raul Ruberia Photos. There will be live music. Dirtbag Ales is located at 5435 Corporation Drive. For additional information call 910-426-2537.

    Axe Your Ex
    Axes & Exes will be at Bright Light Brewing Company on Feb. 13 for the ultimate anti-Valentine’s Day event. Just bring a picture of your ex and $10 and you can throw an axe at the picture. Bring an extra $5 if you need BLBC to print your picture out for you. Baja Dogs will be serving food from 5 to 8 p.m. with a special heartbreak meal. This event begins at 3 p.m. at 444 West Russell St. Suite 102. For additional information call 910-339-0464.

    Fort Bragg Valentine’s Day Events

    Valentine's Day Dueling Pianos
    Celebrate Valentine’s Day a little early at the Iron Mike Conference Center. Cost is $80 per couple and the event promises an evening of fun, laughter, music and great food. Tickets include the show, dinner for two with a glass of champagne for each person. This event is open to the public and sponsored by the Gary Sinise Foundation. For information or to book by Feb. 9 call 910-907-2582

    Guns and Roses
    The Rod and Gun Club on Fort Bragg is hosting a Valentine’s Range Day. The cost is $40 per couple. Couples must provide own guns, ammunition, ear pieces and eye protection. Ear pieces, eye protection and additional targets are available for purchase at the range. The event will be held from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Feb 11-13. The Cost includes range time, a free shooting target, a Valentine’s Day gift box and a chance to win a one year membership at the range. This event is open to the public and organizers ask that interested parties register at McKeller’s Lodge by 1 p.m. on Feb. 10. For additional information call 910-907-5253

  • Judas Sometimes we take life a little bit too seriously. That is why we look to the arts for a reprieve. In watching a theatrical production, we become emersed in another world and forget about our unique problems for a while.

    The Gilbert Theater is presenting "The Last Days of Judas Iscariot." It is a crazy take on, as the title indicates, the last days of Judas Iscariot. Pulitzer-prize-winning playwright Stephen Adly Guirgis created the show. It debuted first Off-Broadway at The Public Theater on March 2, 2005, directed by the late Philip Seymour Hoffman.

    The show centers around a court case deciding the ultimate fate of Judas Iscariot. The resulting decision will determine Judas Iscariots goes to Heaven or Hell. During the show, the characters are in Purgatory. The bailiff is a Barney Fife-like character played by Justin Gore-Pike. Gore-Pike also plays Judas.

    "Judas is a sad, haunted person," Gore-Pike said.

    The play utilizes flashbacks to an imagined childhood and lawyers who call for such witnesses as Mother Teresa, Caiaphas, Saint Monica, Sigmund Freud and Satan.

    El Fayoumy, the lawyer, is in hell and thinks that he proves his worth that he belongs in Heaven or at least Purgatory by prosecuting this case.

    The witnesses are funny and provide comic relief. Mother Teresa cannot hear very well. El Fayoumy gets her earphones, and then she can hear, and she also comments on how attractive El Fayoumy is.
    Saint Monica is brash and uses harsh language, not something you would imagine in a play centered around Judas Iscariot.

    Sigmund Freud is as one would imagine and brings some comic relief to a serious subject.

    Satan, played by Matt Gore, takes a solemn subject and character and makes light of him.

    Gore-Pike describes the play as "a fun, dark comedy."

    The play is not for children as there is a lot of foul language, especially by Saint Monica, played by Deannah Robinson. It may also be offensive to religiously devout Christians and Jews.

    The stars of "The Last Days of Judas Iscariot" are Eden Kinsey, who plays Fabiana Cunningham, a lawyer in the Judas case. The other star is El Fayoumy, played by Chris Walker.

    Walker describes the show as " thought-provoking and leaves you with something to talk about... filled with many fun-loving actors who take a serious subject and flip it into something funny."

    "The biggest takeaway is to never be afraid to challenge the system when it needs to be challenged," Gore-Pike explained. "Never be afraid to ask questions."

    "It is more about self- forgiveness than God's forgiveness," said Walker. "Jesus doesn't care what Judas did. He is forgiven."

    In the end, Jesus, played by Michael Ormiston, comes to Judas, played by Gore-Pike, and washes Judas's feet, proof that Judas was forgiven.

  • 1200px Pelops and Hippodamia racing News Flash: The Winter Olympics will be in full force when this column appears. The Olympics are brought to us by that paragon of human rights, Communist China. This year’s event will be spiced up by the Rona, Chinese soldiers in HazMat suits, wall-to-wall nasal swabs, and the inscrutable sport of Curling. It’s going to be huge. Have you been pondering the historic origin of this fine event? The Olympics have been around even longer than Betty White, RIP. Mr. Google reports the ancient Greeks started the festivities around 776 BC. The Greeks ran the Olympics every four years from 776 BC to 425 A.D. That works out to about 1200 years, not a bad run. After a brief pause of 1471 years, the modern Olympics resumed in 1896 in Athens, Greece, for those of you counting.

    Let’s take a ride in Mr. Peabody’s Way Back Machine to find out how the games began. Like most events that happened over 2700 years ago, the birth of the original games is shrouded in a bit of mystery. Here are three Greek stories about how the games came to be. Uh oh, herein lies yet another column mangling Greek mythology. Beware. Beware.

    Version One says the Olympics began at Olympia when Zeus defeated his father, Cronus. Cronus was not a candidate for Dad of the Year. He ate his children to keep them from overthrowing him. Zeus’ mom substituted a rock for Baby Zeus, which Cronus ate, thinking the rock was Baby Zeus. Hence the term dumb as a rock was born.

    Version Two says Hercules gets credit for the Olympics by celebrating his victory over King Augeas. The King hired Herc to clean out his stables. Herc did his job, but then the King reneged on paying him. Troubles ensued. Herc terminated the King with extreme prejudice. Then it was Party On, Herc. The Olympics were born.

    My favorite Olympic origin story involves Prince Pelops of Ionia. The Greek King Oenomaeus decided to give the hand, and the rest, of his lovely daughter Hippodamia in marriage to anyone who could beat him in a chariot race. Pelops jumped at the chance to win Hippodamia. His love for her was as overwhelming as the love felt by Claude King for Clifton Clowers’ pretty young daughter in the classic song Wolverton Mountain. Pelops’ love for her was big as the sky. He wrote her a love poem promising: “Sure as the vine twines round the stump, you are my darling sugar lump.”

    Pelops went all out to win the chariot race. In the first documented case of Olympic cheating in sports history, Pelops came up with a nefarious plan. He got a team of magic horses from his old buddy Poseidon the God of the Sea. It is unclear if the equines were originally sea horses. No matter. If magic horses weren’t enough, Pelops bribed Myrtilus the Chariot Master to sabotage King O’s chariot. Myrtilus pulled out the linchpins holding the chariot’s wheels to their axles. He replaced the pins with wax replicas. Once the race started, the heat from the spinning chariot wheels melted the fake wax linchpins causing the wheels of King O’s chariot to fall off. King O got tangled in the reins of the chariot. He was dragged to a painful gooey death by his team of horses. Naturally, Pelops won the race and Hippodamia.

    In the case of the old double-cross switcheroo, when Myrtilus came to collect the rest of his fee for waxing the chariot, Pelops refused to pay him. Instead, Pelops threw Myrtilus off a convenient cliff to his death on the rocks far below. Pelops operated on Stalin’s theory: No Man, No Problem. Or the pirates’ theory that dead men tell no tales. But the story doesn’t end there. Myrtilus’ ghost began haunting Pelops. The haunting became such an irritation for Pelops that he realized the only way to rid himself of this meddlesome ghost was to perform the ritual Funeral Games.

    Nowadays, people stand around at funerals viewing the deceased guest of honor saying: “My, oh my, don’t he look natural? He never looked that good in life,” before retiring to the Fellowship Hall to eat fried chicken, deviled eggs and potato salad. Back in Greek mythology days, people performed the precursors of Frank Costanza’s Festivus Feats of Strength by having athletic Funeral Games like races, rassling and javelin throwing.

    To get rid of Myrtilus’ ghost, Pelops put on a giant set of Funeral Games which gave birth to the Olympics. A funeral today with javelin tossing would be much more entertaining than just eating deviled eggs and discussing why the Tar Heel basketball team is so erratic. But I digress.

    So, what have we learned today? Once again, precious little. However, we can now have an enhanced appreciation of the long history of cheating in the Olympic games. The Chinese, Russian and North Korean teams’ efforts along these lines are just following the traditional Olympic Spirit initiated by Myrtilus and his waxed linchpins. Don’t get upset. Forget it, Jake. It’s Chinatown.

  • wiz The renovations at Cape Fear Regional Theatre came just in time — just in time for the girl from Kansas in sparkling red heels. The theater's production of "The Wizard of Oz" does justice to the classic tale of Dorothy Gale and her three unlikely road companions. A new sound system, lighting and pyrotechnics bring an added measure of engagement and thrill to the audience.

    Beyond the technical aspects of the show, the quality of acting really brought the musical together. Fayetteville native Kiara Hines took the stage as that eternal optimist, the most loyal of friends, Dorothy Gale. Hines was charismatic and a great embodiment of Dorothy. She floated around the stage just like a sunny teenager who cannot be dismayed even with plenty of reason for concern presents itself. Hines nailed Dorothy's innocence and juvenile behaviors. Her mannerism and voice perfectly balanced with the three co-stars that often shared the stage.

    The first of those co-stars, Lee Jean Jr., played the sometimes timid, brain-searching scarecrow. He was a mighty force next to Harris. Lee's own ability to carry his character's happy-go-lucky, doubtless behaviors into dance-like movement on the stage was perfect for this straw-filled friend. He was what seemed like the closest of Dorothy's friends, bringing truth to one of Dorothy's last lines, "I think I'll miss you most of all." During this show, the scarecrow did feel like one of the most comforting of friends.

    Tinman, played by Michael LoBalsamo, was the next to enter the stage beside the duo. LoBalsamo and Jean's witty banter played wonderfully against

    Dorothy's child-like questions and demeanor. LoBalsamo's movements were fluid or perhaps not so fluid, as called for by his rust-challenged character. He frequently left the audience hoping for more of his lines, as he was full of heart.

    And lastly, but by far not the least, was Nicholas Pearson as the cowardly lion. Pearson's version of this character was perfectly played with terrific voice acting and very well-timed comedic lines. He often left the audience laughing at his additions to each conversation. Children in the audience seemed to take to the lovability of his character. They appeared to look forward to each swing of his tail, a sudden exhibit of cowardice or fainting.

    The four friends were well-suited to come up against both the Wicked Witch of the West, played by Becca Vourvoulas and Glenda, the Good Witch, played by Nicki Hart. The actors succeeded in bringing their characters to life on stage. Vourvoulas nailed the voice and shrill laughter of Dorothy's green-faced foe.

    While the music in this musical was not bad, Harris herself belting out a beautiful version of "Somewhere Over the Rainbow," the lines and interactions between the characters were by far the most captivating portion of the show and an excellent reason to purchase a ticket. The four main characters stole the show more often than their counterparts. If the show had more conversations between them, the audience would not be found wanting.

    The only distraction from Oz was the use of the face shields for the actors on stage. They sometimes caught the shine of stage lights. While this addition might be the best solution in the covid-era of on-stage productions for safety, it would have been nice to watch the talent of the actors without this occasional pull back to reality. For how well-performed this production was, the audience wanted to stay in Oz, even if only for just a little while.

  • Art Embodies History Damien Mathis has a nervous energy, either from years spent as an infantryman in the Marines or from all the ideas for artwork floating around his head. He would call it an overactive imagination. Whatever it is, he talks quickly and paces back and forth in his garage. There is excitement there. He becomes impassioned when he speaks about his artwork and the dramatic influence of other Black artists on history. This space has become one of his studio areas, a setting to hone his in on purpose.

    "I have enough space in here to work, so I figured I would save money and just focus on my craft," he says as he continues down one side of his garage slash studio. "Some paintings take months; some take years."

    Mathis says art is an idea, and an idea cannot be contained. For a lot of his works, the frame itself is incomplete. As he walks around, he stops at a piece of artwork, the subject popping through the portion of the frame.

    "An idea is bigger than what you know of it," he said. "When you come into something that inspires you, that's the tip of the iceberg. That's how I think about it."

    He picks up a nine-foot piece of artwork and glances it over. He begins to talk about the importance of color and how everything real is made "piece by piece." Colors are layers. Everything has layers and dimensions, even when capturing human pigments. When he speaks about it, it's as if he's traveling down his own colorful, art-filled rabbit hole that leads to a land where knowledge transfers through art.

    "You can use color to change the perspective of the room or environment. I want to show something visually and put it together."

    He then returns to pacing and continues to talk.

    For Mathis, art is a true testament to his will and patience when researching the history of the Black artists he is embodying. He has been doing a series of paintings that capture Black artists and the importance of their work. He says this is important work, but it is hard to capture history in a visually correct way. Once he does his research, he puts the pieces together with as much thought and detail as he says the history deserves.

    "I have to work backwards. I have to look into peoples' families' lives. Most of their pictures are black and white pictures," he said. "I have to do a lot of research on my end to make sure I'm visually correct."

    Mathis set out to build a career in the military with the Marines. He was an M249 Squad Automatic Weapon (SAW) gunner in the infantry and served during three deployments, two of which were combat-related. On his second deployment, Mathis saw a lot of close calls and felt sure on the third deployment, he "wasn't going to be so lucky." Fortunately for Mathis, he returned home, and he did so with a perspective that saw him approaching his life differently than he had before.

    "At a young age, I was kind of thrown to the wolves … and from that point on, I could never not take things serious because I could see how serious life could be," he said.

    When Mathis returned, he felt he was still making adjustments for the years he spent in the military. His family took notice and stepped in. For Mathis, it was a battle he didn't know he "was going through at the time."

    "I went through day terrors. The whole nine yards," he said. "All of us try to play the strong role when you don't need to be that way. And that's why I took painting seriously."

    He continues to pace and explains the pacing is a by-product of years of carrying ammunition. His back pain is a physical reminder of his former life and a reminder to give art everything he can.

    Mathis first attended undergraduate school in Pennsylvania for art. The program was not right for him. He was "taught in a way you could see it coming." He wanted to feel challenged. He was searching for a teaching method he hadn't entirely found. He decided to transfer to Fayetteville State University, majoring in Studio Art. FSU is where he would eventually meet Soni Martin, Shane Booth and Dwight Smith — three professors he credits as impacting his view of the world and art. They let him be rebellious, he says, in his way.

    "Most school settings, you can be put into a box and never know," he said. "It was a different experience. They let you find yourself. Then they taught you how to control yourself."

    Mathis started with a love of drawing, but Smith convinced him to explore painting and taught him how to paint. Booth taught him perspective, and Martin taught him the intellectual side of art. He said she knew it so well; it felt like it was a part of her. He says that each of them brought him to a better understanding of himself and art.

    He has now been painting for seven years, showing his work in different states, including South Carolina, Florida and Kansas. No matter where it is, though, it has all become about one thing for him — visually showing that art can be knowledge. It can embody history.

    "Art has recorded our history in a way that stuck the emotion of it in there. It's visual glory. I didn't want to miss that within my work. I didn't want to miss the opportunity to teach someone while they are visually engaging in my work."

    And above all else, he asks himself, "what can I do in my lifetime that will stand the test of time?" Mathis admits it's a lot to place upon himself, but his experiences to this point have taught him it's a crucial question.

    It's a question he's obligated to ask for himself and those black artists that came before him.

    When he thinks of his future projects or where he wants to take his art, he does so in terms of four to six months from now, even longer sometimes. He is focusing on featuring artists like Jacob Lawrence and displaying the importance of their work. Lawrence's paintings focused on The Great Migration — the time between 1916 and 1970 when African Americans moved to the Northeast searching for better jobs.

    "I came across an artist that studied that time period. It showed me I should be doing for my generation what others have down for their generations," Mathis said, nodding his head. "There's a lot of things I feel that Black people didn't get to learn in the last 40 to 50 years. The lack of knowledge, discrimination … the whole nine. We all know."

    For him, this project now is a way to honor people from periods where they may not have had the resources to record their pieces of history. Mathis would like to help carry that history into the future. He wants to continue the passing down of knowledge visually. Mathis has a piece at the upcoming show at Gallery 208 at 208 Rowan Street.

    As for his future and where he plans to be, Mathis only has one answer — art.

    "It's just a part of you. You don't think it's a job. You think this is what I'm supposed to be doing. Life can be just a canvas to you."

  • 1892 Taylor R portrait Photo courtesy of MIT musuem How often do you think about your legacy? The fullness of an individual's life, including what one has accomplished and their impact on people and places, can be defined as a person's legacy.

    So, what about the legacy of Robert R. Taylor?

    Robert R. Taylor was a native of Wilmington, North Carolina, born in 1868. He was the youngest of four children born to Henry and Emily Still Taylor. His parents worked to ensure their children's education. As a boy, Taylor anticipated attending the prestigious Lincoln University near Philadelphia. However, he and his father set their sights on the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, with possibly the best program for aspiring architects. Founded in 1865, MIT's School of Architecture offered the first formal architectural curriculum in the United States and the first architecture program in the world, operating within the establishment of a university. Taylor chose MIT, and that education established him as the country's first academically trained African American architect and MIT's first Black graduate.

    During Taylor's studies at MIT, he corresponded on more than one occasion with Booker T. Washington, the prominent Black educator, race leader and founder of Tuskegee University. As a Black architect, his contributions and sacrifices led him to serve as Tuskegee Institute's (now Tuskegee University) campus architect, planner, and construction supervisor. He designed and oversaw the built environment of 45 campus buildings and illustrated blueprints for other structures. He also formed a pre-architecture preparatory program for students and created technical drafting courses for all the young men enrolled in the Boy's Industries Department.

    The spirit of Robert R. Taylor's impact remains significant. He was a visionary, involved in projects far beyond Tuskegee. These ventures included large and small schools, houses, a lodge, an office building and libraries.

    Booker T. Washington encouraged Andrew Carnegie to support the construction of Carnegie libraries for several black schools, which included three designed by Robert R. Taylor. Among these is the imposing, neoclassical Carnegie Library he designed for Livingstone College in Salisbury, North Carolina.

    Washington also included Taylor in the Rosenwald schools — a program by Booker T. Washington and Julius Rosenwald, president of Sears Roebuck & Co. — to build schools for Black children in the segregated South in the 1920s. Taylor designed Rosenwald schools with sizeable windows to let in masses of light. Many of the old schoolhouses did not originally have electricity. The schools contained cloakrooms, so dirty outer garments could be kept separate from the education spaces. Schools also had room dividers so that the schoolhouses could serve as community centers after hours.

    The Rosenwald school models exhibit Taylor's sense of community in learning from the past, living in the present, and building for the future. Taylor retired from Tuskegee in 1932 and returned to Wilmington, where he was active in civic affairs. He devoted more time to civic work, publishing pieces on social justice issues in various newspapers. In 1935, the governor of North Carolina appointed him to the board of trustees of Fayetteville State Teachers College (now Fayetteville State University) - the first Black member of the Board of Trustees.

    The Taylor Science Building was constructed in 1939 and named in honor of Robert R. Taylor. The Taylor Social Science Annex was built in 1968.

    The good works that a person does throughout their life can establish a legacy of compassion, charity and social responsibility. From helping others who are less fortunate or underserved populations, building a positive culture helps make life better for others. Robert R. Taylor's work connected people across space, time and differences. From his early years as an architect, Taylor wanted to do just that. His commitment to engaging the community through a dialogue of architecture encourages us all to share our talents for the good of others.

  • Market House The Department of Justice has held two meetings with the Fayetteville-Cumberland Human Relations Commission over the future of the Market House. These private meetings are part of the Justice Department’s City-SPRIT program, bringing together diverse community stakeholders such as community groups, faith‐based organizations, civil rights organizations, and law enforcement. They wish to develop collaborative solutions to reduce conflict, improve communication, and minimize the potential for future conflict.

    The Department of Justice will be compiling a report summarizing the results of the two meetings from October and January. According to city officials, that report will be presented to the Fayetteville City Council in March or April.

    Previously city council members have heard about the costs of possibly relocating the Market House to Lamon Park, Arsenal Park, or the Cape Fear River Park site. However, relocation would cost the city more than 2 million dollars.

    Other options presented to City Council last year included making art exhibits in the Market House highlighting the history, having a monthly market with an emphasis for people of color vendors, having themed events for the educational community, and making a structural modification to the building.

    All moves to repurpose the Market House from the city were put on hold by the council until after the City-SPIRIT meetings.

  • Fay Bakery In mid-April of 2021, Fayetteville Bakery and Café opened. Owners Franco Webb and Tiffany Ketchum, his fiancé, saw a need in the community. Ketchum, a Pilates instructor who has severe dairy allergies, saw a need for a place to go for a baked treat to go with her coffee. Fayetteville Bakery and Café offers an abundance of bakery items that are dairy-free and gluten-free. Ketchum bakes these treats from scratch.

    The most in-demand treat at Fayetteville Bakery and Café is their cheesecakes. Ketchum crafts New York-style cheesecakes. Favorite flavors include turtle -- a cheesecake topped with chocolate caramel and nuts, and praline -- a butter pecan flavor. Her biscotti and chocolate chip, peanut butter and espresso chocolate cookies are also big sellers. But a true favorite for bakery visitors is Hummingbird cake; it is one of the most popular bakery items.

    The crafted beverage menus are also comprehensive. Fayetteville Bakery and Café serves an abundance of teas and frappes. These drinks are flavorful, and the ingredients are organic. The syrup they use to flavor drinks is organic. There is no artificial flavoring. The coffee beans are organic.
    The café also offers Puerto Rican fresh bread called Pan de Mallorca, a sweet bread and Danishes made with guava fruit. They out-source these items from a local Puerto Rican bakery.

    Webb has worked in many different job roles before opening the coffee shop. He is an Army veteran and spent 33 years as a firefighter. In addition to running the bakery, Webb is currently a commissioner for Fayetteville Cumberland Human Relations and previously served as chairman of the Military Affairs Council. He also broadcasts sports in Fayetteville. Currently, it is soccer; next will be arena football.

    “I chose the location on Boone Trail because it had already been an existing coffee shop bakery,” Webb said, “The equipment stayed with the place, which was great.”

    The coffee shop is large and has meeting space and cozy spots to enjoy your coffee. Antique couches and a fireplace lend themselves to the relaxed vibe. When the weather is nice, patrons can sit outside at one of the tables.

    The décor at the Fayetteville Bakery and Café is patriotic. Some regulars come and sit for hours; others stop in to get coffee while they study. First responders enjoy half off of their coffee, including specialty drinks.

    Every Tuesday night, the bakery hosts an open mic night. The open mic night runs from 6:30 to approximately 9 p.m. Performances include musical songs, poetry, spoken word and comedy. It is a clean, family-friendly event.

    “Every third Friday, we host ‘Songwriters in the Round,’” said Webb. “Three local songwriters are on stage together, and they go in a circle singing original songs, no covers. They play for five or six rounds.”

    These events also run from 7 to 9 p.m. If you are interested in performing at Fayetteville Bakery and Café, contact the café at (910) 568-5312. Songwriters are booked a couple of months in advance.

    “Coming soon are jazz nights. We will be introducing wine and beer, ” Webb said.

    The Fayetteville Bakery and Café is located at 3037a Boone Trail. The hours of operation are Monday, Wednesday and Thursday from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Tuesday, 6 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Saturday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. The café is closed on Sunday for baking.

  • Downtown Alliance Well, it's big news in North Carolina when the Fayetteville/Cumberland County CEO of the Economic Development Corporation announces industry giant Amazon is bringing 500 new jobs into our community with its 1.3 million square foot distribution center. That's precisely what Robert Van Geons reported last week. This announcement marks the second Amazon facility to grace our community. An Amazon delivery center will open on Dunn Road soon. These announcements are excellent news and are a pretty good indication that Van Geons has additional positive economic news forthcoming.

    What makes the Fayetteville community so attractive, you may ask? Well, many things, but I would think the two biggest influencers are our location with easy access to the I-95 North-South corridor and a young and abundant labor force of thousands of men and women exiting Ft. Bragg each year. So, what's not to like about creating hundreds of jobs and bringing thousands of new residents into our community? With this being the case, you would think the City of Fayetteville would be doing everything possible to welcome these new arrivals by showcasing our unique local amenities that create and enhance our quality of life. Indeed, we would want to welcome these newcomers, introduce them to our diverse resources, invite them to engage in our abundant cultural activities, explore our historic Downtown, shop in our stores and eat in our restaurants. At best, you would think city leadership would not intentionally create barriers for this kind of introduction and indoctrination. You would think.

    Well, I was surprised to learn that the Downtown Alliance Vice-President C. John Malzone announced that they would be introducing and circulating petitions asking the City to eliminate evening parking fees Downtown because the Alliance feels these fees are stifling the growth and development of local downtown businesses. The Alliance is a non-profit 501(c)(6) entity of people, organizations, and businesses in downtown Fayetteville. Over the last decade, the Alliance has invested in and nurtured a hospitable, consumer-friendly downtown business district. They have facilitated many changes that have allowed businesses to grow, expand and prosper by implementing suggestions and improvements that have made the Fayetteville Historic downtown experience more inviting, exciting, and enjoyable. Outdoor merchandising, better signage and sidewalk dining options are just a few of their many accomplishments. These business and property owners are located in a Municipal Service District. The MSD requires that they pay an additional self-imposed property tax. This allows Alliance members to have a voice on how these tax dollars are spent and weigh in on policies and ordinances that directly and indirectly affect their businesses and livelihoods.

    Specifically, the Downtown Alliance will distribute petitions to downtown businesses, make them available online, and ask all residents to sign on and support the demand to end nighttime paid parking and charges for event parking during ball games. The petition also supports limiting the number of event paid-parking locations and hours. Free evening weekend parking supports downtown businesses, restaurants, museums and entertainment venues that visitors and residents love and support. This action comes 18 months after enforced paid parking went into effect. During this period, it has become evident that people avoid coming downtown in the evenings to enjoy movies, dining, shopping, fitness and even just walking to enjoy the city's ambiance. Alliance members are adamant that there should be no on-street parking enforcement after 5 p.m. at any time. Without a doubt, paid parking and evening enforcement drives away visitors and customers. It's a complaint heard repeatedly and is becoming too hard to ignore. Paid parking after 5 p.m. and during events on weekends has harmed downtown businesses' cultural and economic vitality. We agree. This practice hinders patrons and investors and penalizes visitors who readily support downtown Fayetteville, art venues, restaurants or cultural events. We don't agree with or understand why the Downtown Alliance organization carries this initiative forward by itself? The evening and event parking fees are a problem that affects the members and operations of several organizations. Is there support from the Fayetteville Chamber of Commerce? The Cool Spring Downtown District? Fayetteville Convention & Visitors Bureau? And, the Arts Council? These are questions that need to be answered.

    The Downtown Alliance is made up of business people. Entrepreneurs operate bottom-line, profit and loss operations that become a reality and "hard truth" of their success or failure. These are not agencies that depend on government funding, specialized community grants or donations through the generosity of others. These folks have their livelihoods on the line every day. These small to medium-size local companies are the lifeblood of a prosperous city center. Up & Coming Weekly supports this petition and feels the City of Fayetteville should be doing everything within its power to encourage, support and nurture these businesses rather than continually imposing barriers and hardships impeding their success. The organizations mentioned above, all relevant in their own right, need to step up and support those who have readily and unselfishly invested in Fayetteville's Historic Downtown community. I end with this reality and insight: Every prosperous City has a thriving downtown community. It's time to dismantle all the organizational silos, count the empty storefronts and the businesses that have come and gone out of business trying to support the downtown community, and start working as a dynamic coalition in support of a city we love.

    To support this initiative, contact the Downtown Alliance at shopdowntownfaync@gmail.com, www.faydta.com, Facebook/fayDTA. To sign the petition, contact any Downtown Alliance downtown merchant or sign online at www.change.org/freeparkingdowntownfaync. For more information or questions about the petition, contact C. John Malzone 910-813-7378. And, as always, thank you for reading Up & Coming Weekly.

  • Amazon Facility Online retail powerhouse Amazon confirmed a new 1.3 million-square-foot facility in Cumberland County last week, bringing with it hundreds of jobs and hundreds of thousands in property tax revenue.

    The “fulfillment center,” where Amazon workers pack and ship online orders, is currently under construction at the Military Business Park in Fayetteville on Bragg Boulevard.

    In an incentive package unanimously approved in November by both the Fayetteville City Council and the Cumberland County Board of Commissioners, the city and county will each grant Amazon $1.25 million toward construction costs, totaling $2.5 million.

    This is if Amazon spends more than $5 million on the necessary relocation of a flare site, which is used when maintenance on a gas line is required. The company said it wanted the site relocated due to safety concerns about its close proximity to the facility, according to county documents.

    After that $5 million spending mark, the city and county grants kick in at 50% of additional costs with the maximum at the $2.5 million mark.

    To keep the grant money, Amazon will be required to create and maintain at least 500 jobs with an average annual wage at just under $33,000.

    “It mitigates the additional costs the company may face regarding certain infrastructure improvements that are needed,” Robert Van Geons, president and CEO of Fayetteville Cumberland County Economic Development Corp., said in a phone interview Monday.

    “In our case, because our incentives are paid based on performance, it mitigates risk for the community.”

    The company will also be required to invest more than $100 million in real estate improvements.

    The company would bring in more than $800,000 in annual property tax revenue for Cumberland County and up to $650,000 for Fayetteville, according to city and county documents.

    Operations at the Amazon facility are set to begin in 2023.

    How Amazon wages compare to other jobs in Cumberland
    The 500 new jobs at Amazon will pay an average of $33,000 per year, and none of the jobs will pay below the company’s minimum of $15 an hour, which calculates to just over $31,000 annually.

    “That in itself is positive,” Van Geons said. “That is above the average for a warehouse worker and a higher wage than many of our service-industry folks, which is a very large segment of our economy here in Cumberland County.”

    According to the latest wage data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics in May 2020, package handlers in freight warehouses in Fayetteville are paid an annual average of just over $27,000, among over 1,300 workers.

    Among the nearly 13,000 employees who work in food preparation, the annual average is about $22,500.

    Retail workers make an average of just under $27,000.

    Amazon’s average is even higher than that for laborers in Fayetteville’s construction industry, which is just below $32,000 in the latest BLS report.

    And Van Geons said that the initial total of 500 jobs is a minimum. The county expects to see more job growth at Amazon going forward.

    But Amazon’s average wage is still lower than the county’s average annual wage overall, which is around $45,500.

    The company’s wages are also under what is needed to afford a two-bedroom apartment in Cumberland County. In its 2021 housing need report, the N.C. Housing Coalition estimates that just over $34,750 in annual income would be needed to afford a unit of that size in the county.

    The N.C. Housing Coalition, along with most other affordable housing advocacy organizations, considers a home to be affordable if it takes up 30% or less of the resident’s income.

    According to the organization’s report, nearly half of all renters, who are disproportionately low-wage service workers, pay more than 30% of their income on housing costs.

    Even with the shortcomings of Amazon’s average wage, Van Geons said the increase in hourly wage would still increase many people’s incomes.

    “It’s a step in the right direction for our community, that entry-level wage,” he said.

    “Being able to come in and get a position that in some cases is five, six, seven dollars higher than what was available prior. … It will help people afford housing and all their expenses better than if it were not here.”

    Cumberland’s high unemployment rate
    In 2020, Cumberland County’s unemployment rate averaged 9.5%, according to BLS.

    The rate is higher than the state average of 7.3% and the eighth-highest among all counties in North Carolina.

    Even before the pandemic derailed the economy, Cumberland’s rate trended high. In 2019, the average was 5%, the 13th-highest county. North Carolina’s average unemployment rate that year was 3.8%.

    Van Geons said Amazon’s arrival could start to change that.

    “We do have higher-than-average unemployment here in North Carolina, compared to some of our peers,” he said. “This project is so welcomed in that way. It’ll provide jobs for those that haven’t been able to get back into the economy post-COVID.”

    Correction: The $5 million that Amazon will receive and spend from Cumberland County and the city of Fayetteville will be used to relocate a flare site on a gas line. An earlier version of the article described the purpose of the funds incorrectly.


    Photo Credit: Construction on a new Amazon facility in Fayetteville continues in late December. Photo courtesy of the Fayetteville Cumberland County Economic Development Corporation

  • Trenton Powell WEB Fayetteville Police have arrested a 23-year-old man for allegedly murdering his 10-month-old son.

    On Feb. 3, officers with the Fayetteville Police Department responded to reports of an unresponsive ten-month-old along the 1800 block of Gola Drive around 3:59 p.m. The child was transported to Cape Fear Valley Medical Center but succumbed to his injuries.

    The autopsy determined the manner of death to be a homicide.

    Trenton Terrell Powell was arrested on Feb. 7 and is being charged with First Degree Murder and Felony Child Abuse Inflicting Serious Physical Injury. Powell is at the Cumberland County Detention Center under no bond.

  • Fayetteville City Council has decided to not look further into the allegations that former Councilwoman Tisha Wadell made in her resignation letter.

    Wadell asked the Fayetteville City Council to investigate the following:

    • The allegation that Mayor Mitch Colvin destroyed public records by having his cell phone wiped clean (phone number 910.987.0590) and any involvement of any member of City Staff
    • The involvement of Johnathan Charleston regarding any business with Bernhard Capital Partners or their representatives
    • The involvement of Mayor Mitch Colvin regarding any business with Bernhard Capital Partners or any of their representatives - to include Mayor Steve Benjamin
    • Members of Council contacted by or having discussions with Attorney Johnathan Charleston or any of his representatives regarding Dismass Charities before, during, or after the initial Special Use Permit was brought to us for consideration? If this happened, it would be a direct violation of the law/policy regarding Special Use Permits.

    In November, Councilwoman Yvonne Kinston asked the Audit Committee to review the allegations and to, as a group, ask the whole of City Council to discuss whether or not to do an independent investigation into the Mayor. The Council voted 4-0 and the motion was going to be presented to City Council at the beginning of December.

    However, the Chair of the Audit Committee, Johnny Dawkins, pulled the item last minute - despite voting on it.

    Dawkins told Up & Coming Weekly that he voted on it initially because it would just be a discussion item, not a recommendation for the council to go one way or another.

    “In the two weeks or so between the Audit Committee Meeting and the Work Session, I reviewed the bylaws of the Audit Committee, and it appeared to me that the issue is not something in our purview,” Dawkins said.

    According to the City’s website, the Audit Committee’s “primary purpose is to assist the City Council in fulfilling its oversight responsibilities for the overall stewardship of the City’s financial affairs.”

    Dawkins told Up & Coming Weekly that he believes these allegations should go to the Ethics Committee and not the Audit Committee since no city funds, or misuse of city funds was brought up in the allegations.

    “There’s never been a time when I was chairman, where I pulled an item like this. I went to enough law school to know that this is not in the purview of the Audit Committee, but the city attorney wouldn’t give me a definite answer on that,” Dawkins said.

    On Jan. 28, Kinston brought up the issue in the Audit Committee. She asked Dawkins why he pulled the unanimous voted-on item from the December work session and he said that he did not feel like it should have been up to the Audit Committee to bring this topic forward.

    However, when the two other committee members backed Kinston up, Dawkins conceded and said he was fine putting it up, as long as Kinston presented it and it had her name on it.

    This all cumulated Monday night when City Council’s Work Session officially discussed a possible investigation. Colvin recused himself from the conversation immediately and did not vote on it.

    The biggest argument against the investigation, coming from Councilman Larry Wright, is that external organizations already conducted investigations into the allegations.

    This is referring to the investigation made by CityView TODAY’s investigative reporter Greg Barnes. He found that there were no signs of corruption regarding Bernhard Capital Partners’ efforts to take over the PWC, however, he did find a lack of transparency by people trying to broker a deal with the equity firm.

    The allegations that Barnes did not yet look into in a published article includes Colvin allegedly destroying public records when he had his cell phone “wiped clean” during an investigation that led to the resignation of former City Councilman Tyrone Williams in 2018, that some council members may have improperly or illegally discussed a special use permit for Dismas Charities, which wants to build a halfway house for federal prisoners on land along Cain Road, or whether building permits and certificates of appropriateness were handled properly for a downtown building that Colvin has an interest in.

    The council denied the motion for an external investigation 5 to 4. The people who voted against the investigation were Christopher Davis, Kathy Jensen, D.J. Haire, Wright and Dawkins. The people who voted in favor of the investigation were councilmembers Antonio Jones, Shakeyla Ingram, Courtney Banks-Mclaughlin and Kinston.

  • Plan C Crypto, a California-based data mining company, will open a Regional Headquarters facility in Fayetteville. The Fayetteville site will be the company's fourth mining facility in North Carolina, one being in Wilson.

    According to the Fayetteville Cumberland County Economic Development Corporation, Plan C Crypto expects to create 19 jobs by the end of the year, with more to follow. They are looking for skilled professionals in the electrical, security and information technology fields. The company is targeting military veterans and spouses as potential employees for the positions.

     “Attracting high-tech jobs and new investments to Cumberland County and Fayetteville is a major priority for our community, and this announcement is an indication that we are achieving results,” said Robert Van Geons, FCEDC President & CEO. “Our region is an ideal location for innovative companies focused on business growth. By opening its regional headquarters here, this cryptocurrency facility shows we are a competitive location for technology-driven operations. We are grateful for the support of Elaina Ball, CEO and General Manager of Fayetteville Public Works Commission and her team, and for the hard work of FCEDC Vice President Rob Patton, whose efforts were critical in bringing this project to our community. Announcements like these would not be possible without the support we receive from the City of Fayetteville and Cumberland County.”

    Plan C Crypto is expected to go online in the fall of 2022, however, the location of the site was not announced.

    Plan C Crypto’s CEO Antonio Bestard stated that the company is excited to invest in the area.

    “Fayetteville has everything we want to see for a world-class facility, including a business-friendly climate, strong existing infrastructure, and talented workforce," Bestard said. “We will use demand response proof of work mining to bring zonal grid stability at the substation level and bring high-paying jobs to the region.”

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