|
PUBLISHED
ONLINE APRIL 9,
2026
• VOL. 8,
NO.
15 |
Content
produced by WINGATE
LASSITER unless
credited otherwise
Click on the
highlighted link to e-mail
the editor

Legion Field as it stands
today, used most recently
for recreational soccer.
Stadium
for Tobs going to Legion
Field after all
It
was town's first choice;
Legion post renegotiates
Wrapping up a
deal finalized earlier in
the day, the Smithfield Town
Council voted unanimously
after a lengthy closed
session Tuesday night to
"pause activity at Community
Park" and instead sign a
"letter of intent" with
American Legion Post 132 to
lease their former baseball
field as the site of a new
stadium for the Smithfield
Tobs baseball team. There's
a 45-day deadline to work
out details of the lease.
The town has agreed to pay
the Pou-Parrish Post $24,000
a year (plus annual
increases pegged to the
Consumer Price Index) to
lease its property at the
end of Pitchi Street off
North Bright Leaf Boulevard
and pay the post another
$140,000 up front to cover
loss of revenue from a
soccer program and other
activities that have been
paying the Legion post for
use of the ballpark.
The Legion Post sold its
7.8-acre tract in 2007 to
the Johnston Community
College Foundation, then
signed a 99-year lease to
continue using the property,
primarily because its
clubhouse is located there.
As a result, the town will
be sub-leasing the land from
the Legion post for 81 years
while allowing the
organization to continue
using its building (shown
below) for post
activities and other
gatherings.

Meanwhile, Muter
Construction of Zebulon will
continue as contractor for
building the new stadium,
Interim Town Manager Kim
Pickett told the Weekly
Sun on Wednesday. She
said Muter, which last month
presented a preliminary
stadium plan for a site
beside Buffalo Road within
the confines of the town's
Community Park, has been
paid $165,662 for the work
it has done to date. The
contract with Muter limits
total cost of the stadium
project to $6 million.
Councilor Travis Scott, who
had raised numerous concerns
about the Community Park
site next to the Bradford
Park subdivision where he
resides, made Tuesday's
motion to shift the project
to the former Legion Field
site. Doris Wallace seconded
his motion, and it carried
with affirmative votes from
all seven council members
present. (Mr. Scott credited
Ms. Wallace with arranging
recent negotiations "that
made this happen.")
Following Tuesday's meeting,
council members confirmed
that the Legion Field site
had been their first choice
for the Tobs stadium. But
negotiations with the Legion
post last summer failed to
produce an agreement,
pushing the town to consider
the Community Park site
instead.
Legion Field was
home base for the
Smithfield-Selma "Leafs," a
Class D professional baseball
team that played here for five
seasons in the late 1940s.
Later, the ballpark (which
once had a covered grandstand)
hosted Johnston County's
American Legion baseball team
for aspiring young players. For
several years after World
War II the field was the
site of a Thanksgiving Day
football game between rival
teams from Smithfield and
Selma high schools.
The Smithfield Tobs are a
successor to the Wilson
Tobs, a long-standing
professional baseball
franchise that in recent
years has morphed into a
summertime program for
college players competing in
Eastern N.C.'s Coastal Plain
League. The Tobs last year
sought a new home after it
lost its lease of an old
stadium owned by the City of
Wilson, which recently
opened a new stadium built
for the relocated Carolina
Mudcats franchise affiliated
with Major League Baseball.
Without a
stadium in place this
summer, the Tobs will skip
the 2026 season.

The vacant former DAV
hut stands in the middle
of the discarded stadium
site beside Buffalo Road
at Community Park. The DAV
chapter has relocated to
Selma.
What
happens to Community Park
land without stadium?
Anticipating the
change in stadium sites for
the Tobs, the Town Council
removed from Tuesday's
agenda approval of a
contract for demolition of
the old house that has been
used in recent years by
Disabled American Veterans.
Interim Manager Pickett
confirmed this week that the
DAV chapter has vacated the
premises, which stood in the
way of the proposed stadium.
Despite the change in
stadium plans, she said the
town has decided the
structure's deteriorating
condition calls for its
removal nonetheless.
The town recently purchased
1.7 acres along Buffalo Road
between the DAV hut and the
Bradford Park subdivision,
presumably for amenities
related to the proposed
stadium. Ms. Pickett said it
now serves as "a buffer"
between the park and the
subdivision. "There
is not a current plan for the
property at this time," she
added.
That property was purchased by
the town March 5 following
closed-session discussions by
the Town Council in January.
Approval of the sale wasn't
ratified in an open council
session as required by state
law before the purchase was
recorded with the Register of
Deeds Office. The council
Tuesday night made the sale
official with a "resolution to
disclose property purchase"
that was approved without
discussion as part of the
evening's Consent Agenda.
Council
clears way for "upscale"
bars Downtown
The
Downtown Development
Corporation requested a change
in the town's zoning rules to
add "private clubs" and bars
to the B-1 central business
district – with restrictions
recommended by the town's
Planning Board and staff: the
establishments can be no
larger than 2,500 square feet,
no more than two per street
block, no closer than 200 feet
from places of worship,
day-care facilities, and
residences, and be located
only along streets within
Downtown's "social district."
Micah Woodard of the town's
planning staff said those
limitations make the 100 block
of South Third Street the only
likely location for such
establishments.
During a public hearing on the
zoning change, residents of
neighborhoods close to
Downtown voiced mixed
opinions: some opposed more
purveyors of alcoholic
beverages near their
residences; others welcomed
the opportunity to recruit
more after-hours options for
entertainment Downtown.
DSDC Director Heidi Gilmond
said she has been in touch
with two bar operators with
"proven track records" who are
interested in vacant building
space on South Third. Both she
and Planner Woodard referred
to such businesses as
"upscale."
The council approved the
zoning change 6-1. Councilor
Scott voted no.
Council
orders video recordings of
Planning Board
In response to a
request from Councilor Doris
Wallace, the council voted
without dissent to instruct
staff to begin video
recording monthly meetings
of the Smithfield Planning
Board. She said questions
have arisen lately "about
minutes not recorded
accurately" of the Planning
Board's proceedings. She did
not elaborate.
School-zone
camera proposal to get a
second bidder
Pulled
from the agenda for
Tuesday's council session
was a recommendation from
Police Chief Pete Hedrick
to approve "automated
school-zone
speed-enforcement cameras"
at Smithfield-Selma High,
Smithfield Middle, and
West Smithfield
Elementary. It was
announced that a second
vendor wants to make its
pitch.
Meeting recessed
till April 16 for work on
new budget
The
council recessed Tuesday
night's meeting until 6:30
p.m. next Thursday to begin
working on the town's
2026-27 budget, which must
be adopted before July 1,
the start of a new fiscal
year for local government.

County
board urged to pursue 2nd
water plant
"Worst
case" estimate of impact
on water bills shown
Kim Rineer,
engineering manager for the
County of Johnston's Public
Utilities Department, warned
the County Commissioners
Monday that Johnston's
unprecedented residential
growth is raising the
urgency for construction of
a second water-treatment
plant to serve the county's
customers.
What's proposed is a new
treatment plant near
Princeton that will draw
water from the Neuse River
at Richardson's Bridge south
of the town and pump it to
an abandoned rock quarry the
county has purchased for a
reservoir.
Elements of the project add
up to about $605 million,
Ms. Rineer noted. She
emphasized that the county's
water customers, not its
property taxpayers, will
cover that cost – with help
from potential federal and
state grants and
low-interest loans. She told
commissioners customers'
bills could go up 5-9.5%
annually over eight years
under a "worst case
scenario" that assumes
inflation will continue
unabated, state and federal
aid will be limited, and
county water revenues and
development fees will level
off.
For a residential customer
using 4,000 gallons, the
monthly bill would increase
from $45.80 now to $63.16 by
2031, Ms. Rineer figured.
The county is pursuing
negotiations with
neighboring water providers
to take care of supplies
until the new treatment
plant is on line, but the
longevity of those
arrangements are uncertain,
Mr. Rineer said. For
instance, the county is
hopeful the City of Raleigh
will increase what it's
agreed to sell to Johnston
from 2.5-million gallons per
day now to 4.5-million in
the near future, she said,
but that agreement is
temporary and may not
continue for long since Wake
County is also experiencing
rapid residential growth.
Other nearby sources of
water for Johnston include
Harnett County/City of Dunn,
City of Wilson, and perhaps
Goldsboro and Sampson
County, Ms. Rineer noted.
In sum, she said the Public
Utilities staff is
recommending commissioners
"move forward" with
contracts to design the new
water plant along with the
"raw water" intake on the
Neuse and a pipeline from
there to the plant site.
Commissioners' Chairman
Patrick Harris said the
request would be placed on
the agenda for the board's
next scheduled meeting on
April 20 for a decision.
Ms. Rineer noted that the
county currently has almost
50,000 customers outside the
jurisdictions of Johnston's
municipalities that operate
their own water systems.
Several of the towns depend
on the county's system for
their supplies and would be
directly affected by higher
charges for the water they
purchase. (Smithfield has
its own plant and actually
sells some of its treated
water to the county.)
Johnston's
"busiest" airport
continues to "make money"
Ken Starling,
chairman of the county's
Airport Authority, reported
to commissioners that
Johnston Regional Airport
(JNX) continues to be
"self-supporting" requiring
"no tax money" from the
county to cover the cost of
operations.
"We get a lot of grants" for
capital improvements, Mr.
Starling noted, and those
usually require matching
funds of 5-10% from the
county. The latest example
of such projects is
completion of a
17,000-square-foot hangar
and office building that
provides new quarters for
the county's Economic
Development Office (shown
here).

Because "we're the busiest
general-aviation airport in
the state of North
Carolina," Mr. Starling said
the airport's top priority
need is a manned control
tower – scheduled to be in
operation by 2030 pending
federal approval and
funding.
In the meantime, added
Airport Director Dave
Harris, there's a move to
get a "mobile tower" on site
until a permanent structure
is built. A quicker-to-get,
less expensive long-term
option under consideration
is a remote digital device
with traffic controllers
housed inside an existing
building, Mr. Harris said.
The airport's director said
JNX this past year recorded
a 5.53% net return on $2.9
million in revenue. That
"cash reserve" has enabled
JNX to attract more business
as "the lowest cost fuel
provider in the region," he
said.
Mr. Harris said JNX has a
nearly 100% occupancy rate
for its 151 "lease-able
spaces" for aircraft, with a
total of 170 planes now
based at JNX.
Nursing
Home Advisory Committee's
annual report
James Coleman,
chairman of the county's
Nursing Home/Adult Care Home
Community Advisory Council,
presented the group's annual
report which showed the
group spent 444 volunteer
hours visiting five nursing
homes, 11 adult care-care
homes, and 19 family-care
homes in Johnston.
"Certainly, there are
improvements to be made, but
for the most part our senior
citizens are being cared for
by dedicated, committed,
compassionate fellow
citizens," Mr. Coleman
reported.
April a
popular month for
observances, recognition
Commissioners
approved the following
proclamations Monday:
• Johnston named a "Hidden
Heroes Community,"
the second county in the
state to gain the
designation from the
Elizabeth Dole Foundation
that advocates for the care
of military veterans.
• April 12-18 proclaimed Public
Safety Telecommunicator's
Week honoring
employees in Johnston's 911
emergency communications
center.
• This week proclaimed Public
Health Week
honoring the 152 employees
of the Johnston County
Public Health Department.
• April proclaimed Child
Abuse Prevention Month.
• April 18 proclaimed Line
Worker Appreciation Day
honoring electrical linemen
in accord with a national
observance set by Congress
for that date. (The
Smithfield Town Council
adopted a similar
proclamation at its meeting
on Tuesday, designating
April 13 as "Electrical
Lineman Appreciation Day" in
the town.)
Also on Monday, the county
board proclaimed May Older
Americans Month.
Several
contested appointments
made with ballots
Commissioners
filled the following
positions on various boards
which had more applicants
than openings:
• Airport Authority – Ken
Starling, Edwin L. Aldridge
Jr., Tim Stevens, John H.
Bullock reappointed.
• Board of Health – Jordan
Troxel of Packhouse Court,
Angier newly appointed.
• Economic Development
Advisory Board – Dale Moore
for Kenly, Donnie Lassiter
for Micro, Carolyn Dobbin
for Wilson's Mills, Adam
Caldwell at-large, all
reappointed.
• Johnston-Lee-Harnett
Community Action Board –
Alexia Walker reappointed.

"Trusted
by families since 1977"
840 S.
Bright Leaf Blvd.
• 919-934-7164
• www.carrollpharmacy.com
LARGE SELECTION
OF JEWELRY, GIFTS,
CARDS & MUCH MORE!

Four
SSS students selected
for N.C. Governor's
School
Selected
because of their
outstanding academic
success at
Smithfield-Selma High
School, they are (left
to right) Karmen
Cyrus, Yastelin Portillo,
Luis Diaz Coyt, and Alexander
Dobek. The oldest
statewide program of its
kind in the nation –
established in 1963 – the
N.C. Governor's School is
a four-week summer
residential program for
about 800 "gifted and
talented" high-school
students each year.
Publicly funded through
the N.C. Department of
Public Instruction, the
program integrates
academic disciplines, the
arts, and "unique courses"
without tests or credits
at two sites: Meredith
College in Raleigh and
Greensboro College. (SSS
photo)

FOCUS ON OUR HISTORY
West
Smithfield's
African-American
neighborhood
Today it's
identified by a newly
installed sign as
"Greytown." Or should it be
"Graytown" as the plat
delineating the 54 original
lots was labeled in 1891?
The spelling has gone back
and forth in published items
over the years, and
archivist Ben Chapman at the
Johnston County Heritage
Center has found nothing (so
far) explaining the origin
of the name.
The new sign also says what
a 1929 Smithfield
Herald item called "a
suburb of Smithfield" was
established in 1898. Todd
Johnson at the Heritage
Center says that's the year
the first lots were sold –
on December 24, 1898 by
James H. Pou and wife to
Mary Morgan and William R.
Holt. (Attorney James H. Pou
was the brother of
Smithfield's long-serving
Congressman Edward W. Pou.)
What
has given Greytown extra
prominence was the founding
in 1943 of Burning Bush
Holiness Tabernacle, housed
today in a brick church
house beside the highway
facing Sunset Memorial Park.
Speaking of bricks, once
located in the floodplain
east of the Greytown
neighborhood was Riverside
Brick Company – an
enterprise of the mid-20th
Century. That floodplain was
inundated by one of
Smithfield largest Neuse
River floods in September of
1944 that forced 44
residents out of their
homes, according to the Smithfield
Herald. The National
Weather Service lists it as
the 7th worst flood recorded
here as the river rose to
25.9 feet (the all-time
record is 29.09 feet
registered after Hurricane
Matthew came through in
October 2016).
Greytown was outside the
town's borders until it was
included with the annexation
of West Smithfield in 1993.
It remains a viable
neighborhood today, as
evidenced by the turnout of
residents old and young
shown in the photo above
from last week's official
unveiling of the new sign.
Below is the 1981 plat of
"Graytown" that was recorded
by the Johnston County
Register of Deeds.
Curiously, the roadway at
the top, which follows the
course of present-day US 70
Business, was "Ellington
Avenue" at the time while
the names "Hill Street" and
"Campbell Street" remain in
place today.


WHAT'S COMING UP
Fund-raiser
for Town Councilman Roger
Wood Saturday
He has been
diagnosed with non-alcoholic
cirrhosis and needs a liver
transplant and also a kidney
transplant because of
chronic kidney disease. "BBQ
for a Cause" is scheduled by
his fellow Coca-Cola
Consolidated employees from
11 a.m. till 4 p.m. in the
parking lot at Smithfield
Town Hall. Plates with
pulled pork, beans, and slaw
will be available for
pick-up only at $12 a plate.
School
board's monthly meeting
next Tuesday evening
The Johnston
County Board of Education
will convene at 4 p.m.
Tuesday at the school
system's headquarters on US
70 Business East. Meetings
usually begin with a closed
session lasting about an
hour followed by the open
business session.
VIEW the
agenda once it's posted
(usually on Friday) on the
schools' website>
DEATHS AND FUNERALS
Click on the
name to read an obituary,
usually posted by the
funeral home:
A WORD (OR TWO) FROM THE EDITOR
Flowers
Plantation doesn't want
"Clayton" identity
Ryan Jordan is
community relations director
for Flowers Plantation, that
massive residential
development on what we've
long known as the Percy
Flowers lands around the
intersection of Buffalo Road
and NC 42 north of
Smithfield. He appeared
before the County
Commissioners this week to
object to what he termed a
"continued pattern of
Clayton extending its
identity, influence, and
branding into areas that are
not within its jurisdiction"
– Flowers Plantation in
particular.
He was speaking specifically
about the kayak boat launch
about to be built on the
east side of the Neuse River
beside NC 42 on property
formerly owned by the
Flowers family but now by
the County of Johnston. He
asked that "Clayton" be
removed from the boat
launch's identity since it's
outside the town's limits
and is on the edge of what
Flowers Plantation considers
its territory.
Such naming, he said,
"creates confusion for
residents, visitors, and
future development."
That could be said for a
number of fast-growing
suburban areas throughout
Johnston County. When
someone says they reside "in
Clayton" you have to ask a
follow-up question about
where they actually live.
Having a Clayton postal
address doesn't mean one
lives "in Clayton."
The same thing could be
applied to residents of the
Old Drug Store area where
Cleveland Road meets I-40
(it's in neither Garner nor
Clayton as postal addresses
indicate) or the McGee's
Crossroads community (with
addresses linked to Benson
or Angier). And then there
are less populous rural
communities like Bentonville
which is often misleadingly
identified as being "in Four
Oaks."
These places deserve more
accurate identities that
what they're given by
outmoded postal districts.
How can we fix that?
Incorporating them as
municipalities is one way,
but in most cases that ain't
gonna happen. Giving them
names as sub-districts of
existing postal zones is a
simpler way, as was recently
done for territory around
Wilson's Mills previously
with RFD Smithfield
addresses.
Meanwhile, in response to
Mr. Jordan's request, the
County Commissioners agreed
not to change the kayak
launch's identity since a
contract is already in place
for the Town of Clayton to
maintain the facility for
the county.
|