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PUBLISHED
ONLINE NOVEMBER
13, 2025
• VOL. 7,
NO. 46
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Content
produced by WINGATE
LASSITER unless
credited otherwise
Click on the
highlighted link to e-mail
the editor
Temporary
relief
for shutdown's
food-stamp delay
The
Johnston Health
Foundation opened a "pop
up" food-distribution
station last Thursday at
the Medical Mall when
there appeared to be no
end in sight to the
shutdown of federal
services. Among the
volunteers assisting
were Rotarians John
Scovil and Doris
Wallace. The 43-day
shutdown came to an end
with Wednesday night's
adoption by Congress of
a bill re-starting
government operations,
including a full year's
extension of the
Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program
(SNAP), the current name
for the 39-year-old
food-stamp program. It's
worth noting that Ms.
Wallace was volunteering
two days after winning
election to the
Smithfield Town Council.
(Photo from Central
Johnston Rotary
Club's Facebook
page)
Town
poised to adopt
baseball-stadium contract
Council
agenda identifies
funding for $6-million
project
The
Smithfield Town Council will
be asked next week to adopt
a 20-year contract with the
Wilson Tobs baseball
franchise for lease of a
stadium to be built by the
town at Community Park.
Sources of funding the
stadium's $6-million
construction budget are made
public for the first time in
the agenda prepared for
Tuesday's council session:
• $2,000,000 from an
"Economic Development Fund"
(Town Manager Mike Scott
said this is an addition
to the town's budget
coming from General Fund
reserves).
• $2,000,000 pledged last
month by Johnston's County
Commissioners.
• $584,187 from hotel-tax
revenue directed to the Town
of Smithfield.
• $500,000 supplemental
grant from the Johnston
County Tourism Authority.
• $365,789 from the town's
Bingham Park Fund (Mr,
Scott said this is the
balance remaining from the
town's sale of the old
recreation park for
construction of the SECU
Hospice House – money that
must be used for projects
at Community Park).
•
$300,000 from "park in lieu"
funds paid to the town by
subdivision developers.
• $250,000 from the town's
capital budget for a
possible expansion of Town
Hall (Mr. Scott said
that money was earmarked
for architectural plans
but "could be moved to the
stadium project if funds
are not received
elsewhere").
The Wilson Tobs is a
baseball franchise based at
the City of Wilson's
"historic Fleming Stadium"
since 1939. The city has
shifted its baseball
investment to construction
of a new downtown stadium
for Major League Baseball's
Carolina Mudcats "farm
club." That stadium is to be
finished in time for the
2026 season.
Since 1997, the Tobs has
fielded an NCAA-sanctioned
collegiate-level summer
baseball team that competes
in the Coastal Plain League.
Under terms of the proposed
contract for a new stadium
here, the Tobs will make
lease payments to the town
rising from $1 the first two
years to $10,000 in 2028,
$12,500 in 2029, and $25,000
for the next five years.
After that comes annual
percentage increases.
The contract stipulates that
the town will control
revenue-producing naming
rights of the stadium and
its field and will be
responsible for
construction, maintenance,
and repairs including
lights, the sound system,
and electronic scoreboard.
The Tobs will be responsible
for maintenance and supplies
for the playing surface,
bathrooms, dugouts,
clubhouse, locker room,
concession facilities, and
for security at all events
managed by the franchise.
Also on Tuesday's Town
Council agenda is a contract
with Muter Construction, LLC
of Zebulon to build the
stadium on 3.44 acres beside
Buffalo Road at Community
Park at a "guaranteed
maximum price" of
$6,000,000. "The facility
should be designed to
accommodate approximately
1,500 spectators," reads the
construction contract, which
sets next October as the
stadium's "substantial
completion date."
Realtor Susan Lassiter has
what it takes to
sell
Smithfield
•
Licensed real estate agent
since 1992
• Real estate broker since
2001
• Served on Smithfield Town
Council for 8 years
• Past president,
Smithfield-Selma Chamber of
Commerce
• Past president, Downtown
Smithfield Development Corp.
• Past president, Johnston
County Arts Council
• Past president, Rotary
Club of Smithfield
SUSAN
LASSITER • Long &
Foster Real Estate •
919-669-9235
Two
options offered for
2025-26 school calendar:
mid-term
exams before Christmas
or in January?
The
Johnston County Board of
Education this week received
two options from the school
system's Calendar Committee
for the 2025-26 academic
term. Before making its
choice next month, the board
agreed to give the public at
large a chance to express a
preference for one of the
options.
Both proposals would start
the school year on August 24
in accordance with state law
that requires classes to
begin on the Monday closest
to August 26. One option
would continue the present
practice of shortening the
first semester so mid-term
exams could be conducted
before the Christmas
holidays. The other would
return to a schedule that
extended the first semester
into January.
The Board of Education
intends to adopt the new
calendar at its next
regularly scheduled meeting
on December 9.
Here's a summary of the
choices:
JCPS School Calendar Comparison Chart
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Sample
A
|
Sample
B
|
|
Total Number Student Days
|
168
|
169
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First Student Day
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August 24
|
August 24
|
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Last Student Day
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May 27
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May 26
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Number Days Semester 1
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86
|
77
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Number Days Semester 2
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82
|
92
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End of Semester
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January 15
|
December 18
|
|
Winter Break
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Dec 21-Jan 4
|
Dec 21-Jan 4
|
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Spring Break
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Mar 26-April 5
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Mar 26-April 5
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First Day Staff
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August 10
|
August 10
|
|
Last Day Staff
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June 7
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June 7
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Beginning of Year Workdays
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10
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10
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End of Year Workdays
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6
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7
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Instructional Hours
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1092
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1098.5
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High School Exams
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After WinterBreak
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Before WinterBreak
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Inclement Weather Considerations
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Approx 10 days
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Approx 11 days
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VISIT the
schools' website where you
can register your calendar
preference>
Smithfield-Selma
High School Principal's
List & Honor Roll
For the First
Quarter of the 2025-26
academic year>

Voter
turnout in Smithfield's
election unremarkable
Participation by
voters in last week's
municipal election in
Smithfield fell far short of
what we've experienced in
recent national, state, and
county elections. Here are
the numbers provided by the
Johnston County Board of
Elections:
• In the contest for mayor,
1,316 ballots were cast for
two candidates. That's just
18.5% of the Town of
Smithfield's 7,119
registered voters.
• In District 1 (East
Smithfield), 273 of 1,419
registered voters
participated in the contest
for that district's seat on
the Town Council. That's a
turnout of 19.2%.
• In District 2 (South
Smithfield), 453 of 1,859
registered voters cast
ballots for three
candidates. That's a turnout
of 24.4%.
• In District 3 (North
Smithfield), 327 of 2,177
registered voters cast
ballots. That's a turnout of
15%.
• In District 4 (West
Smithfield), 236 of 1,664
registered voters
participated. That's a
turnout of 14.2%.
In contrast to those
numbers, more than 75% of
Johnston County's registered
voters cast ballots for
President in last year's
General Election.
David
Fulcher (holding award)
is flanked by Johnston
County Public Health
Director Marilyn
Pearson, Dillon Fulcher,
Emily Fulcher,
Kevin Fulcher, and
Johnston County
Environmental Health
Director Todd
Ramsey. (Photo with
announcement from
Johnston County Public
Information Office)
He's
in N.C.'s "Water
Protection Hall of Fame"
David Fulcher,
an environmental health
specialist with Johnston
County’s Division of
Environmental Health, has
been inducted into the
Steve Steinbeck Onsite
Water Protection Hall of
Fame. Mr. Fulcher and his
staff site, design,
permit, and inspect
groundwater wells and
septic systems for the
county.
The Hall of Fame
honor recognizes Mr.
Fulcher’s “career of
exemplary service for
environmental protection
and public health in the
State of North Carolina.”
The N.C.
Onsite Water Protection
Conference presents the
award each year. It's
named for Steve Steinbeck,
who wrote the state's
first set of rules for
septic systems.
Mr.
Fulcher has been an
environmental health
specialist for 26 years,
starting his Johnston
County career right out
of college. In 2017, he
was promoted to
supervisor. In that
role, he manages the
department’s daily
wastewater and well
operations. For
the past eight years, he
has organized the annual
Johnston County Wastewater
Conference, which
typically draws hundreds
of participants.
Mr.
Fulcher lives in
Smithfield with his wife,
Emily, and their sons,
Kevin and Dillon. He
enjoys boating and is
active in his church,
Hopewell Original Free
Will Baptist.

IF IT'S REALLY
CLEAN,
IT'S PARRISH
CLEAN!
919-934-5898
www.parrishclean.com
HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL REPORT
Last
Friday's playoff results
for Johnston County's
teams:
(season's records in
parenthesis)
NORTH JOHNSTON 42 (6-5),
WASHINGTON 35
North Johnston advances
to second round of 4-A
state playoffs
PRINCETON 54 (7-4),
BEDDINGFIELD 18
Princeton advances to
second round of 3-A state
playoffs
SOUTH JOHNSTON 47 (8-3),
VANCE COUNTY 7
South Johnston advances
to second round of 6-A
state playoffs
ROSEWOOD 52, AMERICAN
LEADERSHIP ACADEMY 26 (4-7)
WEST BRUNSWICK 35, WEST
JOHNSTON 6 (4-7)
CLAYTON (8-2) &
CLEVELAND (9-1) HAD
FIRST-ROUND PLAYOFF BYES
For game
summaries and schedules,
visit JoCoSports.com>

What a
classic scene this is from
a recent Story Time
session for youngsters and
parents at the Public
Library in Downtown
Smithfield. (PLJCS photo)
WHAT'S COMING UP
Fall
Book Sale at Public
Library now through
Saturday
Friends of the
Public Library of Johnston
County and Smithfield are
conducting the sale this
week in the library's
second-floor meeting room
till 7 p.m. today, 9 a.m. to
5 p.m. Friday, and 9 a.m. to
3 p.m. Saturday. For sale is
"a wide selection of gently
used books," with all
proceeds going for the
library's various programs
and services. On Saturday,
buyers may fill a single bag
with any books of their
choosing and pay just $15
for the contents.
Smithfield-Selma
High School's Craft Fair
Saturday
The annual event
at SSS is a fund-raiser to
help support students who
plan to attend the Educators
Rising National Conference.
"Handmade crafts and
delicious treats" will be
sold from 10 a.m. till 2
p.m. Saturday inside the
school's main gymnasium.
Admission is free of charge.
County
Commissioners revisit
Clayton High loan Monday
Johnston's
County Commissioners will
consider approval of a loan
mechanism for rebuilding
Clayton High School during
the board's meeting at 6
p.m. Monday at the
Courthouse. Also on the
agenda is a "feasibility
study" for the Johnston
County Livestock Arena. VIEW the
complete agenda>
Town
Council gets contracts
Tuesday for stadium,
streets
Tuesday's agenda
for the Smithfield Town
Council includes approval of
contracts for construction
of the baseball stadium at
Community Park and for
resurfacing portions of more
than 20 streets throughout
town. The meeting begins at
7 p.m. at Town Hall beside
South Fourth Street. VIEW the
complete agenda>
DEATHS AND FUNERALS
Click on the
name to read an obituary,
usually posted by the
funeral home:
PAUL DEVON
DORMAN JR., 62 –
died November 8
LOUIS CHATMAN,
78 – died November 6
JILL DARE
BRYAN GONZALEZ, 69 –
died November 5
WINFRED
VINCENT MITCHENER, 62 –
died November 4
A WORD (OR TWO) FROM THE
EDITOR
Can
town afford to finance
the baseball stadium?
The
Town of Smithfield's
commitment to raise $6
million for a new
baseball stadium comes
on top of a bold move to
take up to $3 million
out of General Fund
reserves to resurface
more of our
deteriorating streets.
Can we afford to do both
at once?
With this week's
disclosure of potential
funding sources for the
stadium, it appears the
town's staff is saying
"Yes, we can."
A $2-million pledge from
the County Commissioners
will surely help.
Another million dollars
or so is coming from a
combination of town and
county allocations from
local room-occupancy
taxes collected by our
hotels. Other sources of
funding restricted to
park development leave a
gap of $2 million, which
the town manager says
will come from General
Fund reserves.
Fortunately, the town in
recent years has built
up far more than what
the state requires to be
held in reserve and can
therefore absorb the
one-time capital outlays
to fix our streets and
build the stadium. Let's
hope the anticipated
economic benefits from
the baseball deal turn
out to make it a
worthwhile investment.
Subscribers
to this edition: 1,635
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PREVIOUS EDITION?
You'll find
it in the Weekly
Sun archives>
the SMITHFIELD
WEEKLY SUN
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