Members
of Johnston County's Board
of Education heard from
enraged defenders of the
LGBTQ+ community prior to
Tuesday's monthly meeting.
As a result, a proposed
policy change deleting
"sexual orientation" from
a statement prohibiting
discrimination toward
students and school
employees was removed from
the agenda and sent back
to the board's Policy
Committee for
reconsideration.
"I assume that means there
will be no change" in
current policy, said board
member Kay Carroll. "I would
hope we wouldn't hear from
them again," he added – an
outcome that would leave in
place policy wording as it
now stands:
"The Board prohibits all
forms of unlawful
discrimination. For
purposes of this policy,
discrimination means any
act or failure to act that
unreasonably and
unfavorably differentiates
treatment of others based
solely on their membership
in a socially distinct
group or category, such as
race, ethnicity, sex,
sexual orientation,
pregnancy, religion, age,
or disability."
Lyn Andrews, the school
board's chair, forcefully
stated that "we are not
going to tolerate bullying
or harassing anyone....
Every student deserves the
right to come to school and
feel safe and feel that they
will not be bullied or
harassed, and we know that
that happens," she admitted,
but "we have punitive
measures that are taken when
that happens." At the same
time, "we're going to make
sure that we are following
state and federal law," she
declared.
Even so, numerous speakers
arose during the meeting's
Public Comment segment to
denounce the proposed policy
change. "Why would anyone
allow bullying of already
vulnerable people?" asked
Paige Stallings, one of
several parents who spoke
up. Changing present policy
"sends a clear and dangerous
message," warned Margaret
Anne Mirabella.
The school board's Policy
Committee was scheduled to
meet at 9 a.m. today
(Thursday) to revisit the
issue.
EDITOR'S NOTE: "LGBTQ+"
is commonly used by news
media nowadays in
reference to persons
identified as Lesbian,
Gay, Bisexual,
Transgender, Queer. The
plus (+) sign is added to
include other labels
related to one's sexual
identity.
Citizens
call for measures
against Ms. Antoine's
behavior
Several
who addressed the board
Tuesday denounced the
social-media behavior of
board member Michelle
Antoine and suggested her
postings – described by
one speaker as "reckless"
and "defamatory" and
another as "vile" –
violate board policy.
Most adamant in calling
out Ms. Antoine was
Bennett Jones, former
principal of Clayton High
School who sought election
to the Johnston County
Board of Commissioners
last year. He called Ms.
Antoine "a fraud" and "a
bully" and asked her to
"resign immediately."
Erida Hall implored the
board to "censure her" as
they had done regarding
ousted board member Ronald
Johnson. "She despises
public schools" and
expresses "blatant
bigotry," Ms. Hall said.
Board
hears options for
Innovation Academy,
Choice Plus
Superintendent
Eric Bracy laid out
options for the board to
consider for possibly
relocating the school
system's Choice Plus and
Innovation Academy
programs.
Choice Plus, an
alternative school for
misfits, lacks space in
the old Smithfield
Elementary building on
Rose Street to accommodate
all its students, forcing
most of them to take their
classes online. The
Innovation Academy, a
middle school for students
selected from throughout
the county, is presently
housed at East
Smithfield's South Campus.
Parents have recently
pressed the school board
to keep Innovation Academy
in place, but one of the
superintendent's options
would have the two
programs exchange
quarters. "South Campus is
more suitable as an
alternative school," said
board member Terry
Tippett.
That option would place
Innovation Academy on Rose
Street where the county's
AIG program for
academically gifted
students started out years
ago.
Another option, Dr. Bracy
said, would move
Innovation Academy into an
existing classroom
building on the Clayton
High campus which is about
to be reconstructed.
Whatever is decided, board
member April Lee said
priority should be given
to placing the 100 or so
Choice Plus students
presently in "virtual"
online classes back to
"face to face" learning.
"We have got to get these
kids back in the
building," she insisted.
New
contract for schools'
legal services approved
6-1
The
board approved a new
contract for legal
services provided by the
Raleigh law firm of Poyner
Spruill that eliminates a
monthly retainer fee in
favor of hourly charges
for services rendered.
Kay Carroll, who heads the
board's Legal Committee,
said Poyner Spruill
proposed raising its
monthly retainer from $300
to $1,000 but settled
instead for charges of
$235 an hour for services
provided by the firm's
partners, $200 an hour for
all other staff attorneys,
and $120 for work done by
paralegals. The firm will
also provide 20 hours of
board and staff training
annually at no extra cost,
Mr. Carroll noted.
Meanwhile, he said the
school system will
continue to pay Smithfield
attorney Gordon Woodruff
$180 an hour for his
services, which mostly
deal with collections of
fines and forfeitures and
real-estate transactions.
Michelle Antoine cast the
lone dissenting vote
against the Poyner Sprill
contract.
Board
sends its priorities to
N.C. General Assembly
A
resolution adopted at
Tuesday's meeting requests
action during this year's
legislative session on
four policy and funding
matters:
(1) Teacher
retention and benefits
– including "pay step
increases at every level
of experience,"
supplemental pay "in
high-need areas such as
teacher assistants and
Exceptional Children
teacher positions," and
funding for the state's
health-care plan to avoid
higher costs for school
employees.
(2) Student
health –
additional allotments for
school nurses, counselors,
and social workers to
replace the end of federal
ESSER aid resulting from
the COVID pandemic.
(3) Pre-K
students –
counting them in schools'
Average Daily Membership
numbers that are used to
determine annual levels of
state funding – "to ensure
adequate resources for
early childhood
education."
(4) Technology
– a request for $756,000
in additional aid to
Johnston County Public
Schools for 100 teacher
devices and 1,500 student
devices "to comply with
state testing requirements
and to support online
curriculum programming."
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Frank Holding Jr.
(second from left) with
"Triangle East Prospers"
campaign leaders Kevin
Dougherty and Marcia
Armstrong and Chamber
CEO Maureen McGuiness.
(Photo from the Triangle
East Chamber)
Triangle
East Chamber launches
"Prosperity Initiative"
Half of fund-raising goal of $1.3
million already in
hand
To
kick off the "public
phase" of the campaign,
the Chamber brought First
Citizens CEO Frank Holding
Jr. back home as keynote
speaker at a breakfast
gathering on Tuesday. "You
are doing the right
thing," he said of the
drive to raise $1.3
million this spring to
underwrite three goals of
the "Regional Economic
Prosperity Initiative":
• Goal 1: Develop, Retain
and Attract Talent.
• Goal 2: Break Down
Talent Barriers.
• Goal 3: Grow Businesses,
Jobs, and Investment.
Marcia Armstrong, one of
the campaign's leaders,
said challenges facing
Johnston County's quest
for greater prosperity
include an "inadequate
supply of talent," with
more than 2,000 job
openings currently, as
well as deficiencies in
affordable housing, child
care, and transportation.
Kevin Dougherty, another
campaign leader, said
$683,000 has already been
pledged. That's 53% of the
campaign's goal, he noted.
The campaign is being
managed by Power 10, a
national fund-raising firm
based in Atlanta. The
"Triangle East Prospers"
initiative will run
through 2028.
Mr. Holding, a present-day
resident of Raleigh where
First Citizens is
headquartered, said he has
been involved in several
initiatives there that are
similar to what Triangle
East is pursuing. He said
those campaigns produced
big community dividends.
Mr. Holding grew up in
Smithfield as the only son
of Ella Ann Holding and
the late Frank Holding Sr.
He took over as the bank's
CEO in 2008. One of his
four sisters, Hope Holding
Bryant, is second in
command at today's First
Citizens, which is the
largest family-controlled
banking enterprise in the
nation.
CEO Holding noted that the
bank moved its
headquarters from its
Smithfield birthplace to
Raleigh in 1974, "but in
many ways we claim this as
the home of First
Citizens," he told his
Johnston County audience.
He and his sister are the
third generation of
Holdings to lead the bank,
which started out in 1898
as the Bank of Smithfield
and went through several
ownership and name changes
until it emerged as First
Citizens Bank & Trust
Company in 1929.

Smithfield's newest hotel
– Home2Suites by Hilton –
is now open beside the
Hilton chain's Hampton Inn
on Town Centre Place near
the I-95 Market Street
interchange.
Tourism
spending in Johnston
showed 4.9% gain
Smithfield's
hotel-room tax brought
slightly less revenue
The
Johnston County Visitors
Bureau in its latest
annual report says $298.95
million was spent by
tourists here in 2023 – an
annual increase of 4.9% –
while statewide spending
by visitors reached a
record $35.6 billion – a
gain of 6.9%. Johnston's
ranking is 28th among the
state's 100 counties.
"As
anticipated, the mild
recession we were told was
coming did impact travel
to some degree," notes the
Johnston bureau's CEO
Donna Bailey-Taylor. "It
was not a terrible year
for our tourism industry
partners," she said, "but
hotel occupancy was down
4%." She blamed the
downturn on "terrible
weather" and inflation
along with road
construction and
"legislative issues facing
our restaurants and
hotels."
The bureau's report says
visitors to the county
spend $819,041 a day in
local businesses. The
breakdown of the 298.95
million spent here in 2023
shows $103.42 million went
for food and beverages, $
69.86 million for
transportation, $61.68
million for lodging, $40.1
million for recreation,
and $23.81 million for
retail purchases.
All that produced $12.4
million in state tax
revenues and $9.2 million
in local tax receipts.
That came from state and
local sales taxes and
local hotel-occupancy
taxes.
"More than 2,000 people
are employed in the
tourism sector, with labor
income more than $72
million," states the
Johnston bureau's report.
The Visitors Bureau and
its marketing campaigns
are funded by a countywide
3% room-occupancy tax that
brought in $1,282,625 in
fiscal 2023-244. In
addition, a 2% hotel-room
tax is collected within
four municipalities to pay
for marketing and
tourism-related projects
within each jurisdiction.
Smithfield's tax produced
$399,293 last fiscal year
– down from $413,629 the
year before. Selma's 2%
tax brought in $83,198,
Benson's $75,457, and
Kenly's $30,117 in
2023-24.
Smithfield had a Fund
Balance reserve of
$919,547 in its tourism
account as of last June
30, the bureau's report
shows.
Ms. Bailey-Taylor remains
bullish about the future of
Johnston County tourism: "The
most promising aspect on
the horizon is the
anticipated growth over
the next 12-36 months,"
she notes in the annual
report. "The amenities
sought after by both
residents and visitors –
including new retail
mixed-use developments,
hiking and biking trails,
public parks, new
nightlife, and
entertainment options –
are aligning with the
growth in our residential
communities, which is not
slowing down."
Ms. Bailey-Taylor recently
announced she is retiring
April 30 after more than
28 years directing the
Johnston County Visitors
Bureau.
VIEW the
bureau's annual report
including details about
its marketing
campaigns>
2.4
acres for sale at 1558
W. Market St.
in West
Smithfield
Located
across from Rose Manor
Shopping Center close to
intersection with M.
Durwood Stephenson
Parkway. Just west of
Downtown Smithfield. Zoned
B-3 (Highway Business).
$498,000
MLS# 10021671
WHAT'S COMING UP
Listed
here are community
events open to the
public free of admission
charge:

A new event, "Celebrate Smithfield,"
this Saturday
Billed
as an "International
Culture Fair," the
inaugural event begins at
11 a.m. and continues
until 4 p.m. this Saturday
at 14 locations in
Downtown Smithfield, which
"will come alive with the
sights, sounds, and
flavors of the world,"
explains Downtown
Development's Executive
Director Heidi Gilmond.
"Each location will
display a flag
representing that
experience. Our guests are
invited to pick up a
passport and a map at the
library," she advised.
Here's the schedule for
musical performances:
11:30 and 2:00 – Mickey
Mills, Reggae, at Boutique
12/20.
12:00 and 2:00 – Russell
Johnson, Bluegrass, at
Sodosopa.
12:00 and 2:30 – Mariachi
Los Galleros, at Good
Vibes.
1:00 to 4:00 – Spoken
Word, Lawrence Davis, at
Boutique Social.
All day – WEJ, Classic
Rock, at Gotham's Deli.
The Johnston County Museum
at 329 E. Market Street
will host singers,
dancers, and storytellers
from North Carolina's
Tuscarora Nation. A dance
troupe will perform
between 1:30 and 2:30,
storytelling and informal
discussions throughout the
day.
Other sites for activities
and exhibitions include
The Little Brown Jug,
Tandoori Trail, Ava
Gardner Museum, Lady Bug
Designers, Oak City
Collections, The Gilded
Pear, Down to Earth, and
Sunset Slush.
County
Commissioners scheduled
to meet this Monday
It's
the regular third-Monday
session of the Johnston
County Board of
Commissioners, scheduled
for 6 p.m. at the
Courthouse in Smithfield.
VIEW the
agenda once it's posted
on the county's
website>
Town
Council to consider
plans for two
residential projects
The
Smithfield Town Council
will hold public hearings
on plans for a couple of
large residential
subdivisions previously
approved during its
meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday
at Town Hall. Developers
of Buffalo Ridge, a
210-lot subdivision on 140
acres at 1041 Buffalo
Road, seek the council's
approval of a preliminary
plat. Developers of Finley
Landing, located across
from the Amazon warehouse
on US 70 Business West,
want to replace plans for
a 360-unit apartment phase
with a 160-lot layout,
mostly for townhouses. A
similar request was
rejected by the council
last October.
VIEW the
complete agenda for
Tuesday's council
session>
Town schedules series of neighborhood
budget forums
The
Town of Smithfield will
host a series of
"Government In-Touch"
meetings to gather public
input on the 2025-2026
budget to be adopted by
the Town Council before
the start of the next
fiscal year July 1. Here's
the schedule:
• Thursday, March 20 –
Sarah Yard Center at 909
E. Lee Street.
• Thursday, April 3 – Fire
Station #2 at 1200 W.
Market Street.
• Tuesday, April 8 – South
Smithfield Elementary
School at 201 W. Sanders
Street.
• Thursday, April 10 –
Recreation and Aquatics
Center at 600 M. Durwood
Stephenson Parkway. All
four sessions will begin
at 6 p.m.
“These meetings provide an
opportunity for residents
to have a direct impact on
how resources are
allocated in the upcoming
budget,” said Town Manager
Mike Scott. “We want to
hear from the community
and ensure that our budget
and goals reflect the
priorities of our
residents.”


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A
WORD (OR TWO) FROM
THE EDITOR
Are
teachers worth less than
police officers?
Good
news from the N.C. General
Assembly: A bill has been
introduced by four members
of the Republican Party
majority in the House of
Representatives to raise
base pay for North
Carolina's first-year
public-school teachers to
$50,000. Currently,
starting pay for teachers
is $41,000 (before local
supplements are added).
But does that $50,000 look
so good when you consider
that the Town of
Smithfield last year
bumped starting pay for
its police officers to
$60,000.
As a result of the
Smithfield Town Council's
action, the Police
Department is now "fully
staffed." A couple of
years ago, before last
year's pay raise,
Smithfield had a dozen
police vacancies.
If
the General Assembly
doesn't step up and fund
significantly higher pay
for teachers, we will
continue to see a shortage
of well-qualified leaders
in our classrooms. It's as
simple as that.
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