Archive for Around Greenville

Becky’s Dance Step Studios To Hold Annual Recital This Weekend

It’s that time of year again; time for the community to show their support to the talented students of Becky’s Dance Step Studios during their annual recital. This year’s recital will be held this Saturday, May 18. The first show will begin at 1 p.m. the evening performance will begin at 7 p.m. The recital will be held at North Florida Community College’s Van H. Priest Auditorium.
This year’s theme is “Coast to Coast” with the dancers performing their way across the United States. Price of admission is $6 for adults and $4 for children under the age of 12. There will be no reserved seating, however, tickets will be available at the dance studio as well as at the auditorium one hour prior to the show.
During the show there will be no flash photography or video taping of any kind. If you are interested in taking pictures of the performances, please feel free to stop by the dress rehearsal performances, which will be held on Thursday and Friday at 4 p.m.

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Internet Cafés Now Illegal

FRAN HUNT
ECB Publishing
Staff Writer

Internet cafes have been springing up all over the state for the past couple of years, but that is now a thing of the past.
Internet cafés are now illegal in Florida.
Governor Rick Scott signed a bill Wednesday that bans up to 1,000 storefront operations across the state.
The new law took effect immediately after Scott signed the bill.
Legislators voted overwhelmingly last week to approve the ban. It was a quick response to a recent scandal that led to dozens of arrests and the lieutenant governor’s resignation.
It’s up to local law enforcement to enforce the new law, however, their hands will be practically tied to do so, for at least a day or so.
Monticello Police Department Chief Fred Mosley said, “We will comply with what the Governor says. I really don’t think we will have a problem here with shutting them down. I have officers out patrolling, and the cafés are closed. They were cashing people’s tickets out. They anticipated that the Governor was going to sign it. They are already getting ready to be in compliance with it, and shutting down their operations.”
Jefferson County Sheriff David Hobbs said that he did receive notification that Governor Scott had signed the bill, and that it went into effect immediately after he signed it.
“I have to wait and see what the law officially says,” said Sheriff Hobbs. “And then I will do anything I can to enforce the law.” He explained that the wording for the new law is in the Capitol building, and that law enforcement agencies will get a copy of the new law so they can begin enforcing it. “I’m assuming that nothing will go into effect until after the Legislative session,” he added. “We will be waiting.”
There were approximately four Internet cafes in the city of Madison, one of them just opening as little as one week ago. There are no Internet cafes in the county.
Madison Police Department Chief Gary Calhoun said there are currently two that are operational in the city. “They have come and gone. One of them closed when law enforcement did that big seep, which resulted in multiple arrests and the resignation of the State’s Lieutenant Governor.
Madison County Sheriff Ben Stewart said, “We have to receive notification, and receive a copy of the actual wording of the law, so we know what we can and cannot do..
“I will do all I can to shut them down. They are nothing more than fronts for illegal gambling. A lot of grocery money, children’s clothing money, and people’s money for bills, is thrown away in those places. I have been against them from the start.
“Once we see the law, and it is clear, if it gives me the authority to shut the Internet cafés down, then that’s what I’ll do,” he concluded.

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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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