Archive for Lynette

Health Department and Community Leader Talk About Sex Education

Abstinence isn’t cool with students, community leader Merv Mattair, founder of Boyz 2 Kings, told the school board. It’s not exactly what most parents and school officials would like to hear, but it is mostly true.
Mattair, along with Pam Robinson of the Madison County Health Department, spoke to the Madison County School Board about a sex education curriculum that not only covers the science and biology, but also puts it into a context students can readily understand…how it can effect their lives.
The first unit of the program begins by asking the student to “get to know your dreams” and look closely at their hopes and plans for the future. What do they want to do, study or be? What kind of work and effort will it require to reach that goal?
However, the consequences of sexual activity, i.e., pregnancy or sexually transmitted diseases, are not consequences teenagers are well equipped to handle. Plans for college, vocational school, or even finishing high school become difficult, if not impossible. Time, energy and resources are diverted to dealing with childcare or medical expenses. Dreams are derailed, education suffers and earning power drops.
Even if a few students are fortunate and manage to escape the pitfalls of early sexual activity, it still has a negative impact on schoolwork.
“When students are sexually active, their mind is not on the FCAT,” said Mattair. “It’s on sex.”
There is also the problem of peer pressure, even for students who might not normally become sexually active. Abstinence is seen as the deviation, not the norm, and that is a challenge the proposed curriculum will meet by making abstinence the ultimate “cool.”
Using the slogan “Abstinence is my Swag,” Mattair and Robinson hope that by getting students to see that choosing not to engage in sexual activity while they’re still in school is not only cool, it is something positive, something that they do for themselves because they understand that their dreams are important.
The program is an eight-hour course that also includes such things as role-playing and developing negotiation skills that help students say “no.”
Students can opt out of particular chapters or the entire program if they or their parents wish; the course is not mandatory.
It is, however, something that would be suitable for churches to use with their youth groups, in getting young people to look more realistically at early sex and the effect it could have on their lives. With the backing of the Health Department, which “110 percent behind this,” Mattair hopes the message reaches the young people of Madison County, especially the ones who most need to hear it.

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Madison City Commission Holds April Meeting

“We’re undoing what our foremothers did 175 years ago,” Jessica Webb, a member of the 175th Anniversary Planning Committee, told the City Commissioners at their April 9 meeting.
Webb, one of several people who addressed the Commission Tuesday night, was referring to a proposed street art project to help celebrate and promote Madison’s 175th Anniversary – putting pigs in the streets.
Actually, in the right-of-ways next to the streets.
In the 1800s, when Madison was an even smaller rural town, it was common to see livestock, especially pigs, roaming the dirt streets downtown. They can still be seen in surviving photographs from that era. One of the first projects the ladies of the town undertook was appealing to city officials to get the pigs off the streets.
Now, the pigs are coming back…as art.
Taking a cue from Chicago’s Cows-On Parade Art Exhibit (see www.chicagotraveler.com/cows_on_parade) the Planning Committee is proposing a contest for local artists to sculpt, mold, hew, whittle or otherwise create life-sized pig statues and paint or decorate them. The pigs should be able to withstand outdoor weather for roughly four months during the summer, while they are on display around town, and will need to be chained to lampposts for the duration so that they don’t “wander off.” Artists will need to install a metal grommet somewhere on the statues and provide locks. The art project will promoted as part of Madison’s 175th Anniversary and individual pigs will also be judged on artistic merit.
The City Commission voted to approve the pig art. For more information on entering the contest, contact the Chamber of Commerce at (850) 973-2788.
The Commissioners also heard from County Commissioner Ronnie Moore, who is also a member of the Transportation Disadvantaged Committee. Moore appeared on behalf of the Madison In-Town Shuttle operated by Big Bend Transit, which needs about $24,000 to fill in a yearlong gap in funding from grants and other sources. The current funding runs out this month. The city authorized $5000 to go toward keeping the shuttle in operation, contingent upon the County Commission agreeing to kick in another $5000 or greater. Moore has been asking around already, and plans to speak to the County Commission and several other groups as well about contributions to keep the shuttle going. “It doesn’t hurt to ask,” he said.
Police Chief Gary Calhoun updated the Commission on the second floor renovations of the Police Department Building, funded by a $500,000 USDA grant/loan. The department hopes to cut costs by $100,000 if the USDA approves an ADA-compliant vertical lift device instead of a far more costly elevator for reaching the second floor.
Calhoun is also checking on the cost of having a traffic engineer do a study to see where golf cart crossings could safely be put on streets around town. The second-hand golf carts would be used on the job by meter readers and other city utility employees to cut fuel consumption costs. Each crossing site must meet several criteria, and how many crossings the city can install will depend on the cost of the required study.
The city also approved some revisions to its vehicle use policy to address some concerns by the city’s insurance carrier. The new policy is more comprehensive and up-to-date and the insurance company is happy with the changes.
The City’s utility billing system has made the transition from Night Owl to Continental Utility Solutions, Inc. (CUSI). It is a major transition that “will bring us at least into the late 20th century,” said City Manager Tim Bennett. The new system is more efficient and updated, but customers still can’t pay online, at least not yet. City Clerk Lee Anne Hall explained that this would be a large expense that would have to be passed on to the consumer, and right now, the city’s priorities are providing better services while keeping rates as low as possible.
The City Commissioners also got a big “Thank You” presentation from the AKA Sorority, Nu Omega Omega Chapter, for the help they provided the organization with its South Atlantic District 4 Meeting last year.
Contributions helped the group put on a big welcome and reception at Yogi Bear Park for the gathering of AKA chapters in District 4, and the event made such an impression on the visitors, it was written up in the organization’s international sorority magazine, mentioning the town of Madison and its Yogi Bear Campground by name. Deloris Jones read the except aloud to the commission and the group serenaded the commission with “We Can’t Stop Loving You.”
They also presented Mayor Rayne Cooks, City Manager Tim Bennett, and Commissioners Ina Thompson, Judy Townsend, Jim Catron and Jim Stanley with a plaque of appreciation. Mayor Cooks accept on behalf of the commission.

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Two Left in Madison Nine Case As Charges Against Jada Woods Williams Are Dismissed

In a Leon County Courtroom, Wednesday, April 10, Judge Augustus Aikens filed a motion to dismiss all charges against former Madison County Supervisor of Elections Jada Woods Williams.
Williams, along with eight other individuals, was arrested in November of 2011 in a voter fraud investigation stemming from a 2010 school board race with an unusually high number of absentee ballots in one precinct. The group of nine people became known as the “Madison Nine,” and Williams, as Supervisor of Elections, was charged with 17 counts of neglect of duty, a misdemeanor.
As the investigation wound its way through the legal system, charges were dismissed against several of those involved, until there were only three left: Jada Woods Williams, former school board member Abra “Tina” Johnson, and her husband.
With the dismissal of the charges against Woods, the Madison Nine has become the Madison Two.
Williams was suspended from office by Gov. Rick Scott shortly after the arrests in November 2011, and subsequently lost a re-election bid in November of 2012.
Woods’ attorney, Matt Foster, said that there was no evidence his client had committed a crime, and that she had been completely exonerated by the dismissal of the case.
“The hard part is going to be putting her life back together, and moving forward. This has been very difficult, but anyone who knows Jada will tell you she is a fighter and will find a way to get back on her feet.”
Woods is now the Dean of Students at Madison County High School.

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Lee “Old Time Days” Swap Meet/Yard Sale this Saturday

This Saturday, April 13, come on out to the Lee “Old Time Days” Swap Meet and Yard Sale from 8 a.m. until 3 p.m. at the Lee Ball Field behind Town Hall on Hwy. 255.
The event is sponsored by the Lee Volunteer Fire Department and includes a lot more than just yard sales. Like a festival day at the village square of old where people gathered to celebrate and welcome the arrival of spring, the Lee Old Time Days has something for everyone in the family.
Don’t even worry about breakfast, just take the kids and head on over to the pancake breakfast at the Lee United Methodist Church for their 7 a.m. pancake breakfast.
Over at the ball field, there will be several booths operated by area churches and service groups, with food, plants, and games for the children. With contests, live entertainment, a parade, a cake auction and a salute to veterans, there will something for everyone in the entire family.
Schedule of events includes the following:
9 –10 a.m. Jared Ragans & Reckless Reality
10 –10:30 a.m. Parade with Lee’s “Citizen of the Year”
10:30 – 11 a.m. Jared Ragans
11:00 – noon Traci Perry
11:30 a.m. Tractor Pull (for children aged 4 – 10)
Noon – 2:30 Tribute to Our Veterans by the Town of Lee
12:30 – 1 p.m. Cake Auction and Hula Hoop Contest
1–2 p.m. Greenville Singers
2–3 p.m. Elee Storey

All participants in the tractor pull and hula-hoop contest will receive a coupon for a free slushy, and tractor pull contestants will receive ribbons.
For Vendor/Yard Sale/Swappers applications, contact Carol Bynum at (850) 971-7246, call Lee Town Hall at (850) 971-5867 or contact any member of the Lee Volunteer Fire Department.
All proceeds go to the Lee Volunteer Fire Department.

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Madison Stands In For Miami In Movie

It sounds strange, but movie magic can make a lot of things happen.
Actually, the only Madison sets used were Police Chief Gary Calhoun’s office, with the alley beside the police station doubling as the “crime scene.”
Carl Graddy, a friend of Chief Calhoun’s from Central Florida, is a consultant on the movie, the one who suggested Madison for some of the location work and asked Calhoun about the possibility.
The movie, Hidden Agenda, concerns a legendary Miami Detective named Matthews, a talented crime-solver who can usually crack a case right from his office. However, when an aggressive serial killer comes to town, it isn’t just another case in the dockets. The threat brings Matthews out of his office, even out of his precinct as he desperately tries to find a kidnap victim before it’s too late, while his world begin to unravel around him. It’s a crime drama that is as much a psychological thriller as it is a serial-murder mystery.
When Hidden Agenda is completed, it will have scenes filmed in Orlando, Madison and Oviedo, Fl. The City of Madison will receive thanks in the movie credits, but there won’t be anything identifying the Madison Police Department, since the movie supposedly takes place in Miami.
Aaron Warren is the producer/director, Hans Hernke of Los Angeles is Detective Matthews, Adam Barnett of New York is Captain Howard and Cameron Bigelow of Orlando is Detective Davis. Local talent and Rat Pact Theater member Tim Dunn plays a homeless man who finds the dead body in the alley. Additionally, look for Calhoun and other members of the Madison Police Department in cameo roles.
Hidden Agenda…coming soon to a theater near you.

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Lee Town Council Discusses Sewer System

At the March 5 Lee Town Council meeting, council members discussed amending the contract with Jordan and Associates, to add a five-month time extension to the CDBG grant for extending sewer hookups to residences in Lee. The contract was set to expire in April, but will now run until September 2013.
Without the extension, the grant money would have to be sent back to the state, and the state would have to figure out how to reallocate the money from the 2009 grant.
Mayor Eddie Bell had asked how many more residents could be persuaded to jump on board during the extra five months. Upon learning that the state would rather have the town of Lee use the money than deal with the headache of deciding what to do with it if it were returned, council members discussed sit-down visits with residents to answer questions and explain the situation more thoroughly, and agreed that the extra five months would give them more time to canvass residents. Currently, about 27 have already agreed to the hook-ups.
“Seems like a no-brainer to me,” said Doug McNicol of the time extension, agreeing that the extra time was needed to go knock on doors. “Sooner or later that septic tank will go bad, and the health department is going to say ‘You can’t fix it.’”
The council voted unanimously in favor of the five-month extension.
Next up, the Council considered a request from the Florida League of Cities that the town sign a proclamation April 17 for “Military Family and Community Covenant Day.”
Since April 17 falls on a Wednesday, when many people would be working and involved in church activities after work, there were questions as to what kind of event a community the size of Lee could stage in midweek, as well as whether it would be better to do the signing during Lee Day, which falls on the previous Saturday (April 13). Doug McNicol also pointed out that Lee already did a pretty good job showing support to veterans and military families without having to sign anything. The Council voted 4-1 in favor of the signing in conjunction with Lee Day, when a lot of people would be in town. The Council also approved a funding request from the Lee Volunteer Fire Department for extra expenses related to Lee Day.
A request from the Tax Doctor to hold a customer appreciation event in Lee was tabled until the next meeting, because the business owner, Meshalene Love-Taylor, was not present.
The Council voted to adopt a resolution supporting the Consultants Competitive Resolution Act, and City Manager Sarah Anderson announced that since the Dept. of Children and Families had closed its Madison office, there was now a dedicated laptop that local residents who needed food stamps and other assistance could use at Lee Town Hall. Since these families often lacked transportation to out of county location, Anderson said it was a needed service for Lee residents, and expects it to be used by about five people a month, which would not impose a great burden on the town hall. The rest of the time, the laptop would be safely locked away.
In other items, the town of Lee has put in a request with the postal service to have the Annett Bus Line address located in Lee. The business was assigned a Madison post office address, even though it operates mainly in Lee.
By Friday, March 8, broadband capability will be coming to Lee, and Thursday, April 11, the town will be hosting the Suwannee River Water Management District meeting at Divine Events.
Finally, in order to comply with a new regulation that requires town water be tested every day for chlorine level rather than Monday through Friday, the Council approved a new work schedule for the Public Works department that would accommodate the requirement without incurring overtime expense for city employees.
The council then adjourned the meeting.

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Greenville Town Council Approves Broadband Lease

The Greenville Town Council devoted several minutes to discussing the proposed broadband lease agreement with the North Florida Broadband Association, with NFBA General Manager Richelle Sucara at the podium, summing up what was in the contract and answering questions.
Sucara explained that the NFBA, a company/association that encompasses 14 counties in rural North Florida, had formed in 2009 to bring enhanced, affordable broadband and Internet access to underserved and unserved areas of the state. By leasing sites on government “vertical infrastructure” (for example, water towers) for its antennae and equipment, the NFBA will be able to send at least a five mile signal, or even a nine- or ten- mile signal, depending on the town’s topography in different areas.
The next step would be the hookups for customers, with emergency management, hospitals, jails, police stations, government buildings, libraries and schools first on the priority list, followed by business and commercial entities, then residents.
Broadband capability will provide such services as live streaming of Internet instruction and online testing for schools and transmittal of x-rays, CAT scans and other diagnostic imaging between local hospitals and distant medical specialists.
The contract for the tower leases would not be exclusive, meaning that other entities could also place their equipment on the same tower, as long as the two signals didn’t interfere with each other. Also, when the contract expires in five years, Greenville would be free to choose another service provider, if another one came in with a lower bid. In a few instances, the NFBA has attracted such competition from other carriers.
The Council voted unanimously to approve the contract.
In the public works department, Supervisor J.C. Fead reported that there have been several episodes of the new well failing to communicate with the computer signal that controls it. The well was kicking off and then failing to alert the computer that it had shut down; someone then had to drive out to the well site and manually restart it. Fead added that he had called the company that installed the well, but they had been reluctant to travel out to Greenville and look at the problem – more or less “blowing off” Fead’s complaint, as one council member put it.
The problem, as Fead saw it, was that the signal between the well, computer and water plant was simply failing to get through at times; perhaps the antenna needed to be higher, but whatever it was, it needed to be rectified while the well was still under warranty. The Council members agreed with Fead, and decided that they would officially contact the engineering and plumbing company the next day. The warranty on the well expires in August of 2013.
Visiting County Commissioner Ronnie Moore, who was seated in the audience, told the council members that the County Commission perhaps could work with the city of Greenville to help with some of the roads that were in bad shape, perhaps by piggy-backing some Greenville roadwork with county roadwork to help lower the cost, or assisting the town with getting money it might be eligible for from the gas tax. He suggested, if the Council members were interested, meetings and workshops to help prioritize some of the roads and figure out which roads might be eligible, based on whether they were state, county or city maintained.
Town Consultant Jim Parrish sounded the cautionary note that Greenville had “many more needs than these small grants could pay for,” a situation that was not unique among small, rural communities in the current economy. State funds that had paid for improvements in years past had disappeared when the legislature stopped funding them.
As one example, Parrish cited the city’s wastewater plant that was breaking down, a health and safety issue that outranked road repair on the priority list. The people running it were “doing a great job with duct tape and baling wire, making small repairs here and there,” he said. The Florida DEP, which inspects the facility once a year, has said that, “‘we don’t know how you guys keep it running.’”
The plant itself is starting to crack along the walls; it will cost about one million dollars to replace it, and one of the community development grants that Greenville might be eligible for is capped at $600,000. It would take two grant cycles to pay for replacing the aging wastewater plant.
In other items of business, the Council approved a request from the Jefferson County Veterans of Foreign Wars and Ladies Auxiliary for permission to hold monthly fundraisers in Haffye Hayes Park, cooking and selling dinners. The events would take up only a small area of the park every third Friday of each month, from March 15 through October 18. Since the fundraisers have been held there before with no problem and the money goes to pay for the Veteran’s Day Parade (held in Greenville as well as Jefferson), and because there is a lot of Greenville citizen participation, the council approved the request.
The Council also approved Tri-County Health Center’s request to use the park Friday, March 29, from noon until 4 p.m. for its annual Easter Egg Hunt, and agreed to make a $25 donation toward prizes for drawings and contests.
Discussion on hiring a new town attorney was tabled until the next meeting, as was a decision on whether or not to elect on of their number to join the Madison County Chamber of Commerce as a representative of the town of Greenville. Cindy Vees, Executive Director of the Chamber, put the proposal before the council, and said that she would be glad to talk to anyone interested in the position and explain what responsibilities were involved. The decision on who will take it will likely be made at the next meeting.

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Flood-Related Issues Dominate County Commission Meeting

By Lynette Norris
Greene Publishing, Inc.

Most of the County Commissioner’s March 6 meeting dealt with the flood situation, either directly or indirectly, as various county employees and constitutional officers reported on the last few days.

Sheriff Ben Stewart told the board that his department now had four deputies certified as divers. The four went through a program of very intense training in every aspect of diving except cave diving, and could now be deployed to recover bodies from the water. To Read More

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School Board Meeting, an Occasion for Goodbyes

The Feb. 19 school board meeting, it was business as usual, approving overnight trips for the Madison County High School Softball Team to participate in the Florida – Alabama Challenge in Panama City, and for a group of 25 High School High Tech students to travel to Tampa.Read more

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Six Cowboy Athletes Sign Scholarships

Cowboys signMCHS Head Coach Mike Coe (standing, center) offers praise and congratulations to six of the senior Cowboys headed for college in the fall on athletic scholarships. Seated, left to right are: Sheddrick Williams, Javarus Jones, D.J. McKnight, Gerard Brown, Brandon Crawford and Ira Denson. To see which colleges the athletes signed to play football and baseball at, check out Friday’s Madison Enterprise-Recorder or our e-edition.

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Corrections to Grave Markers Removed From Fellowship Cemetery

Regarding the Fellowship Cemetery story that appeared in the Carrier on Jan. 30, Mrs. JoAnn Wilson does not have any future burial plots reserved.
Also, the rule changes as to how the plots could be marked out were in reference to a letter her cousin Coretha Russell received. While there have been rule changes, Mrs. Wilson did not receive any letters from the board of trustees for the cemetery; she was relating an incident that happened to her cousin Coretha who received the letter. This reporter misunderstood and thought she meant that both she and her cousin received a letter, but only Mrs. Russell received a letter.
Mrs. Wilson’s photographs were taken near a major holiday, but it might have been closer to Christmas than Thanksgiving. It was after her cousin had received the letter about mid-December from the board of trustees asking her to remove some of the markers from her family member’s gravesites, and Mrs. Wilson then went to the cemetery to try to document some of what was happening.
Apologies to Mrs. Wilson for the mistakes.

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Town of Greenville Busy With New Faces in Town Hall

Two new Town Council members will soon be representing Greenville: Calvin Malone will fill the Group 4 seat being vacated by Martin Lee, while Barbara Dansey will take over the Group 3 seat for Michael Halley. Both incumbents decided not to seek re-election, and Malone and Dansey ran unopposed. Read the rest of the story

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Some Grave Markers Removed From Fellowship Cemetery

Until a few years ago, there was no charge for a plot in the Fellowship Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery near Sirmans, because, like small, rural church cemeteries everywhere, everyone who was eventually buried there was a church member, a relative of a church member, or someone somehow connected with the church or a church member. The cemetery itself, with some graves dating back to the 1800’s, was kept up mainly on donations.
“That little church used to have many members,” said Jimmy Holden, who lives across from Fellowship Primitive Baptist Church, where he has been a member since he was ten. He has also served on the Church’s Board of Trustees for the last 12 or 15 years. His father, Bert Holden, is the pastor. Read more

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Earnest Rains, Benjamin Crump Address Gathering Outside School Board Office

Shortly after the Madison County School Board meeting adjourned, Earnest Rains of Madison and Benjamin Crump, an attorney from Tallahassee, spoke to a small gathering from the county’s African-American community, speaking on behalf of former School Board member Abra “Tina” Johnson and others still charged with absentee voter fraud in a case that has become known as the “Madison Nine.” Read more

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Clyde Alexander Joins County Commission For First Meeting of 2013

By Lynette Norris
Greene Publishing, Inc.
Appointed by Gov. Rick Scott to represent District 4 (replacing Alfred Martin), new County Commissioner Clyde Alexander took his seat on the Board of County Commissioners for their first meeting of 2013. Commission Chair Wayne Vickers took a moment to formally welcome Alexander to the board, and the latter replied that he was glad to be there and glad to be able to serve Madison County once more. Previously, he was a long-time member of the Madison County School Board. Read more

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MCHS Student Clay Sapp Honored by County Commission

By Lynette Norris
Greene Publishing, Inc.
Since the FFA’s beginning in 1928, only five other people from the entire state of Florida, including long-time Commissioner of Agriculture Doyle Conner (served 1961-91, under seven state governors) have ever been elected as the organization’s national president. Madison County High School graduate and class salutatorian Clay Sapp, son of Ed and Gina Sapp, brings that number to six. Read more

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Doug Brown And Karen Pickles Take Part In First School Board Meeting

By Lynette Norris
Greene Publishing, Inc.
Newly elected School Superintendent Doug Brown presided over the Madison County School Board’s annual organizational meeting Nov. 20, where the board members chose Bart Alford to serve as chair for the coming year, and Fain Poppell to serve as vice chair. The board also tapped newly elected member Karen Pickles to serve as the school district’s legislative liaison. Kenny Hall agreed to serve as alternate liaison. Read more

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Princess Roebuck Addresses School Board

By Lynette Norris
Greene Publishing, Inc.
When Princess Roebuck addressed the school a month ago, it was to bring to their attention an incident at Madison County Central School’s Homecoming Coronation event, where a recorded song with inappropriate material was played during part of the proceedings. She was assured that the board was aware of the incident and was looking into it.
At the Nov. 20 meeting, she again appeared before the board regarding the same incident. Read more

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Hospital Groundbreaking Ceremony Set For Nov. 18

According to Hospital Administrator David Abercrombie, the hospital groundbreaking ceremony is set for 3 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 18, at the site of the new hospital (the old Madison High property near NFCC). Everyone is invited to attend. It was changed from the Nov. 4 date due to schedule conflicts.

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Greenville Donates Old Fire Truck To American Legion

By Lynette Norris
Greene Publishing, Inc.
A ’78 fire truck’s in the big parade, with American Legionnaires close at hand…they were followed by rows and rows of the finest virtuosos, the cream of all our high school bands (with apologies to composer Meredith Willson).
Aside from a really snazzy decked-out float, a fire truck is the most awesome ride there is in a town parade.
Now, the American Legion Post 131 of Greenville will have its very own fire truck to ride in parades and use for other public displays.
The 1978 Ford F700 is no longer reliable enough to operate in emergency conditions, and was no longer being actively used by the fire department. The local American Legion had asked for the 35-year-old vehicle at a Greenville Town Council meeting, and the Town Council voted to transfer the vehicle free of charge to American Legion Post 131, in honor of the Legion and the local veterans they represent.
Post Commander Roy Scott hopes to have the vehicle ready to go for Greenville’s Veteran’s Day Parade, if possible.

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