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PUBLISHED
ONLINE JANUARY
8, 2026
• VOL. 8,
NO.
2 |
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produced by WINGATE
LASSITER unless
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Architect's
rendering of the county's
government context being
planned beside US 70
Business East across from
the new Public Safety
Center. The largest building
shown is what's proposed for
the county's Department of
Social Services.
County
advances new Social
Services building
Architect
employed; construction
manager retained
The Johnston
County Board of
Commissioners took two steps
Monday morning toward
construction of a
long-awaited new home for
the Department of Social
Services, which presently
operates with cramped
quarters in five buildings:
(1) Unanimous approval of a
contract with Moseley Inc.
of Raleigh to design a
building of approximately
135,000 square feet of
office space on two floors
with an additional
third-floor "warm shell
space for future county
growth," producing a total
of 202,500 square feet.
Moseley will be paid
$6,899,293 "for the entirety
of the project" from design
through the end of
construction.
(2) Unanimous approval of a
contract with Stephenson
General Contractors for a
construction manager to
oversee the project in the
county's behalf at a cost
not to exceed $250,200.
(Stephenson's Jimmy Boykin
apparently will be in
charge.)
Both the Moseley and
Stephenson firms handled
recent construction of the
county's Public Safety and
Detention centers located
across US 70 Business from
the acreage where the Social
Services building will
stand.
County Attorney Jennifer
Slusser said the Social
Services building's total
cost (including the
architect's contract) could
reach $103 million including
"a very generous
contingency" allowance of
about 7.3%.
Regarding employment of a
construction manager by the
county, Commissioner Godwin
said construction savings
produced by that oversight
could be "tenfold of the
cost" of the contract with
the Stephenson firm.
A schedule for the project's
construction is yet to be
determined.
County
accepts grant for another
leg of Neuse River Trail
The $225,000
Great Trails Grant from the
state will be matched by an
appropriation from the
county's Open Space Fund to
acquire trail access for
almost 80 acres along the
Neuse River between Wilson's
Mills and Selma. The tract
is located downstream from a
larger acquisition by the
county two years ago for the
new Wilson's Mills High
School as well as a future
park site to include part of
the envisioned Neuse River
Trail's extension from
Clayton to Smithfield.
Commissioners voted
unanimously to accept the
state's grant.
County
OKs Wildlife Resources
contract for canoe launch
The launch is to
be built on the Neuse River
below East Clayton
Elementary School along
Castleberry Road off NC 42.
Its use will be restricted
to canoes and kayaks, and
the site will include the
county's first public
fishing pier on the Neuse,
commissioners were told.
Under the agreement
unanimously adopted by
commissioners Monday, the
N.C. Wildlife Resources
Commission will design and
construct a small ramp,
parking lot, and pier with
the county providing
$291,000 for the work and
sharing maintenance of the
facilities with the Town of
Clayton.
Commissioners
OK fire-protection
cost-sharing formula
The board
unanimously adopted a
formula for determining
shares of funding provided
by the county and Johnston's
municipalities for fire
departments with service
districts that extend beyond
the towns' jurisdictions.
The amounts will be
calculated annually based
40% on call volume, 30% on
property-tax values, 20% on
population, and 10% on
square mileage.
Commissioners asked if any
of the towns had suggested
any alternatives to the
policy as presented by the
Johnston County Fire
Commission. Ryan Parker, the
county's director of
Emergency Services, said
none had done so.
Commissioner Butch Lawter
pointed out that annual
adjustments could be made if
needed.
Clerk of
Court asks county to front
cost of 11 more staffers
Michelle Ball
told commissioners Monday
morning that her office
hasn't gotten state
allocations to cover the
cost of additions to her
staff since 2022, despite
increases in the workload
fueled by Johnston's
population growth.
Furthermore, she said,
prospects for such funding
in the near future appear
bleak (the N.C. General
Assembly still hasn't
adopted a complete state
budget for the current
fiscal year that started
last July 1).
As a result, she asked the
commissioners to put up
county funds to cover the
cost of 11 additional deputy
clerks – five to be employed
February 1, the other six
April 1 – and to budget for
maintaining those new
positions through fiscal
2026-27. "It's absolutely
necessary for timely justice
and public safety," Ms. Ball
declared.
She said the National Center
for State Courts has
standards for how much
staffing is needed based on
volume of judicial
proceedings over the past
three years, providing
justification for her
staffing request. "It's a
true acknowledgement of the
work that needs to be done,"
she said of the National
Center's assessment.
Commissioner Mike Rose asked
Ms. Ball if she had room in
her Courthouse quarters to
house 11 more deputy clerks.
"We are willing to live with
our space and make it work,"
she replied. One thing that
helps that situation, she
said, is the state's new
electronic filing system
(known as "eCourts") which
she said has enabled her
office to shred and dispose
of 600 boxes of paper
records removed from
storage.
Following a recommendation
from Commissioners' Chairman
Patrick Harris, the board
took Ms. Ball's request for
additional county-funded
staff under advisement for a
decision to be made later.
Board
gets a progress report on
water and sewer projects
Kim Rineer,
engineering manager for the
county's Utilities
Department, presented a
status report on major water
and sewer projects during
Monday's evening session.
Here's a rundown of the
larger ones:
• Water-plant
expansion –
increasing treatment
capacity of the Timothy G.
Broome Water Treatment Plant
at Wilson's Mills from
14-million gallons daily
(MGD) to 18-million is
scheduled for completion by
June 30. Project's cost: $73
million.
• New sewage
plant's expansion
– doubling the capacity of
the treatment plant off NC
210 beside the landfill from
4 MGD to 8 MGD is scheduled
for completion by the end of
November. Project's cost:
$39.9 million.
• Older
sewage-plant improvements
– upgrades at the county's
plant on the Neuse River at
Smithfield should be done by
the end of this year. Cost:
$12.7 million. (This
facility was originally
built and operated by the
Town of Smithfield.)
• Sewerage upgrades
at Selma – an
enlarged pumping station on
the west side of town is
scheduled for completion by
the fall of next year. Cost:
$17.7 million. This project
will handle increased sewage
loads from Selma's massive
Eastfield development and
the Town of Pine Level.
Other county projects in the
works include a second
sewage pipeline along
Buffalo Road north of
Smithfield, upgraded
sewage-pumping capacity at
Four Oaks, and relocation of
a sewage-pumping station
where the US 301 bridge over
the Neuse is being replaced.
Ms Rineer noted that the
county's Capital
Improvements Plan for water
and sewer facilities
anticipates expenditures
approaching $500 million
through 2029. Funding for
that work will come from
fees paid by customers of
the county's systems
supplemented by state and
federal grants as they
become available.

Town
Council approves mid-year
salary raises
Property-tax
windfall more than
covers budgeted cost
The Smithfield
Town Council voted
unanimously Tuesday night to
approve selective pay raises
for town employees effective
this month after hearing
staff assurances that the
2025-26 budget adopted last
summer will cover the added
expense. Beyond that, the
council learned that the
town's overall property-tax
revenues for the year will
exceed budgeted expectations
by more than $600,000.
The council had approved 3%
pay raises effective last
July 1 for all employees,
holding off on mid-year
raises because of
uncertainties surrounding
the town's revenue picture
in light of last year's
revaluation of real estate
by the county. That picture
got brighter than
anticipated with Tuesday
night's revelation by Town
Manager Mike Scott that
final numbers from the
county's Tax Office show
Smithfield's property-tax
levy could yield $10,418,671
– an amount that is $638,671
higher than the $9,780,000
forecast in the town's
adopted budget.
While that higher number is
based on a tax-collection
rate of 100%, Johnston's Tax
Office in recent years has
consistently produced a rate
above 99%.
The salary plan approved
Tuesday has three
components:
(1) 2% increase in minimum
and maximum salaries for
numerous rank-and-file
employees under what's
commonly called a "career
ladder" system (no
adjustments in schedules for
supervisors and department
heads).
(2) Merit-pay raises up to
2% depending on results of
individual employee
evaluations conducted in
September. Human Resources
Director Shannan Parrish
told the council those
raises will average 1.68%
among the town's 171
employees.
(3) Elimination of a $5,000
signing bonus for new patrol
officers now that the Police
Department has overcome
recent staffing shortages
following $10,000 raises in
pay for officers at all
levels in 2024.
Ms. Parrish told the council
her staff checked with other
nearby local governments
before coming up with the
recommended changes in
salary schedules. "This puts
us in line with regional
compensation trends," she
said.
Mayor
announces appointments to
parking task force
Membership of a
Market Street Task Force
authorized by the council
last month is now complete.
Near the close of Tuesday's
council session, Mayor Andy
Moore announced appointment
of public representatives
who will join four council
members on the group charged
with negotiating with the
N.C. Department of
Transportation about
alternatives to the state's
announced plan to remove all
parking along Market Street
in the heart of Downtown.
The mayor's appointees
include Market Street
merchants Daniel Evans of
Evans Jewelers (he's a
former mayor), Larry Holt of
The Diner, and Scott
Gandolph of Gotham's Deli,
Downtown Smithfield
Development's current
director Heidi Gilmond and
former DSDC director Chris
Johnson, and Erin Keller, a
Smithfield resident who
operates a fitness gym on
Market Street in West
Smithfield.
Council members appointed
earlier to serve on the task
force: John Dunn, Steve
Rabil, Doris Wallace, and
the mayor.
Annexation
of rejected subdivision's
site moves forward
Without
discussion, the council
approved under its Consent
Agenda the next step toward
voluntarily requested
annexation of about 500
acres off Wilson's Mills
Road north of town. That's
the site of a proposed
1,147-unit residential
subdivision that was
rejected by a 5-2 vote by
the Town Council following a
rezoning hearing in October
that drew considerable
public opposition.
In accordance with state
law, the council on Tuesday
authorized the town clerk
"to investigate the
sufficiency of the petition"
for annexation submitted by
E&F Properties Inc. for
the acreage adjacent to
Lee-Youngblood Road. The
next step toward annexation
will require a public
hearing before the council.
Updated
Hazard Mitigation Plan
focuses on flooding here
The council
approved a revised regional
plan for dealing with
natural disasters that
includes a specific "Action
Plan" for Smithfield. Listed
among its "high" priorities:
• Completion of a GIS
mapping project with
elevations showing where
deficiencies exist in the
town's storm-water system.
• Installation of power
generators at two or three
"critical" sewer lift
stations and backup power at
other unspecified "critical
facilities."
• Replacement of the Spring
Branch culvert under South
Second Street.
• Installation of larger
drainage piping under the
CSX railroad and I-95 east
of South Bright Leaf
Boulevard.
Smithfield's participation
in periodic updates to the
Cape Fear Hazard Mitigation
Plan is required for the
town's eligibility for
federal disaster grants, the
council was told. This
particular regional plan
covers five counties:
Johnston, Harnett, Lee,
Chatham, and Moore.
Johnston's
retail sales up 12.8% in
third quarter
The N.C.
Department of Revenue
reports retail sales in
Johnston County during the
months of July, August, and
September totaled
$934,155,968 – an increase
of 12.8% over sales
amounting to $828,218,793
during the third quarter of
2024. That follows a 10.55%
increase in sales during the
second quarter of this year.
WHAT'S COMING UP
Board of
Education's monthly
meeting next Tuesday
The Johnston
County Board of Education is
scheduled to meet at 4 p.m.
Tuesday in the schools'
administrative headquarters
on US 70 Business East.
VIEW the
agenda once it's posted
online>
Public
reception planned for
retiring town manager
A retirement
party for Town Manager Mike
Scott is scheduled for
Friday, January 23 at Town
Hall. The public is invited
to attend between the hours
of 2 and 5 p.m. Mr. Scott
has announced his retirement
effective at the end of this
month.
DEATHS AND FUNERALS
Click on the
name to read an obituary,
usually posted by the
funeral home:
A WORD (OR TWO) FROM THE
EDITOR
Having
fun with my miraculous
I-phone camera!
This "old
school" newspaper
photographer has advanced
from Polaroids used by The
Smithfield Herald
years ago to Nikon digital
cameras in recent times and
now to a mobile-phone device
that makes it easier than
ever to capture moments and
scenes in all sorts of
circumstances.
I'll give credit for making
the move to my son Frank, a
high-school history teacher
who's also an accomplished
photographer. He and wife
Kristin took a trip Out West
this past summer which gave
him a chance to substitute
an Apple I-phone for his
trusty Nikon. The results
were astounding! And that
sold me on joining the
crowd.
The first test for this
publication came during the
Christmas season when I
found out how simple it is
to photograph nighttime
front-yard displays. The
other big deal for this
journalist is the phone
camera's ability to capture
indoor shots of persons
without using a flash that
often distorts the lighting.
Not to mention the
convenience of carrying the
I-phone in my pocket rather
than strapped over my
shoulder!
What's next? A drone camera
would be nice. But that can
wait till I've had a lot
more fun with this digital
phone thing.
Meanwhile, here's a shot
taken this week on Downtown
Smithfield's South Third
Street featuring the lighted
snowflakes that will stay up
through January....

What
turned off the lights last
weekend?
Speaking
of lighting, Town Manager Mike
Scott said the brief power
blip that apparently affected
most of the town Sunday night
was caused by Duke Energy,
which feeds the town's
electrical grid. "They
acknowledged that they
experienced the 30-second or
so outage but did not report
on its cause," he noted.
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