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Arrests, citations and accidents May 7-13, 2012, reported by the Cornelius Police Department. |
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May 16 Residents of Peninsula Cove Lane say Cornelius Police have arrested two people after an attempted break-in around 12:30 a.m. Wednesday. Someone tried to enter a home at 18609 Peninsula Cove by breaking glass doors on the rear of their house. The 89-year-old resident said damage amounted to about $1,000.
Separately, three SUVs were broken into on Harbor Light and items inside were stolen on May 13, according to police reports.
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Lowe's Charitable and Educational Foundation has awarded a $30,000 grant to JV Washam Elementary School for the Hawk's Nest outdoor playground and learning area. The grant will be paired with a $45,000 Jimmie Johnson Foundation grant, completing a playground area, walking track and learning area. |
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Arrests, citations and accidents April 30-May 6, 2012, reported by the Cornelius Police Department. |
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Individuals of all ages with cognitive or
neurological disabilities can experience sailing
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The Cornelius PARC Department and Huntersville Parks and Recreation Department, in conjunction with the NC Community Sailing and Rowing Center, will hold a free event this Saturday for individuals of all ages who have special needs due to cognitive/neurological disabilities. Highly qualified NC Community Sailing and Rowing Center volunteers offered 30-60 minute "Navigational Expeditions" aboard 19' Flying Scot Sailboats. Held twice a year, this is an opportunity for special needs individuals and their immediate families to experience the thrills of being out on the water. A total of 70 sail boat trips will take place, giving rides to more than 100 registered individuals. In addition, pirate-themed fun stations are available on land and families are encouraged to bring their own picnic lunch to enjoy on the park.
When: Saturday, May 19, 12-4 pm (register by Friday, May 18)
Rain Date: Sunday, May 20, 12-4 pm
Where: NC Sailing and Rowing Center, Huntersville
Fee: Free. Donations to the Sailing Center are appreciated, but not required.
Volunteers are needed for this program and for other upcoming Special Needs programs.To register or volunteer for this event, please contact Trina Roeder, Special Needs Programs Coordinator for Cornelius PARC and Huntersville Parks and Recreation: 704-892-6031 ext. 162 or email troeder@cornelius.org.
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Lake Norman Baptist Church will host guest speakers Captain Eugene McDaniel and his wife. Captain McDaniel's message, "Where is God in Our Difficulties?," will speak on finding God while a POW for six years in North Vietnam.
Lieutenant Luck Patterson from Laguna Beach, California, will participate in the ceremony commemorating his brother Kelly Patterson, Captain McDaniel's bombardier. Kelly Patterson has remained an 'unresolved MIA' for 45 years. The service will include youth presentations of "Patriot Stories", a Memorial Quartet and the Military Moms Trio.
There will be two services at 8:30 a.m. and 10:00 a.m. For more info: Bill Crawford at 704-995-0045 |
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The Ausie Rivens Foundation reports two additional students earned a GED High School equivalent degree through its evening program. Eddie Aiken completed the course work and has already enrolled in welding school. Derrick Kerns completed the course work within 3 months, attending classes on Saturdays. |
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May 7 There's been a minor dust-up in the five-way race for the N.C. Senate District 41 primary election. A direct mail piece put out by one of the apparent front runners, John Aneralla, said he was the "authentic conservative" for the newly created seat. The mail piece compared Aneralla's positions on several issues, ranging from Amendment One to eliminating government pensions for elected officials, with those of Cornelius Mayor Jeff Tarte. Tarte said the mailing contained "misleading information" about his positions. "While some candidates may choose to go negative, I will stay positive, run on my record, and tell you why I feel I deserve your vote based on my positions on these issues," Tarte said in an email to the news media. Aneralla, meanwhile, fired back with his own email, saying the points he raised were accurate.
Aneralla appears to be the winner in terms of individual donations, with $48,750 coming into his account, vs. Tarte, with $45,369 in individual donations. Tarte, however, has lent his own campaign $50,000 in personal funds, bringing his total to nearly $100,000. Troy Stafford, a Cornelius resident, was the No. 3 fundraiser with $29,793. Robby Benton, a Huntersville-based race team owner, has brought in $13,500 total, and Dr. Donald Copeland, a Cornelius resident, has $700 of his own money in his campaign. The primary election is Tuesday. If none of the candidates wins 40 percent of the vote, there will be a runoff in July. |
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| McNEILIS |
If you’ve been longing to remodel your kitchen but don’t have the funds, paint is a great way to make an impressive transformation without breaking the bank. |
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JOANNE AHERN
Seniors Columnist |
Do you love humor? I love to laugh. Good clean jokes, one liners, and funny sayings go a long way in keeping the mood light, keeping the day from becoming drudgery. One of my lifetime goals is to laugh at least once a day. It’s 12:50pm and I’ve already had a good belly laugh. How about you?? |
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Ricky Overcash: Public works director works for the public |
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| Overcash: The Wednesday night ride usually includes former Police Chief Ron McKinney and former Town Commissioner Jim Bensman |
For Ricky Overcash, the director of public works for the Town of Cornelius, each day starts at 6:30 or 7 a.m. If it happens to be snowing, he could be driving the town’s Chevy snow plow all night.
And during 19 days in December, when leaf season is over for most homeowners, it was still in full swing for public works. Overcash and his department picked up 126 loads of leaves, each load filling a 20-yard dump truck.
With spring less than two months away, the department of seven people and one secretary is playing catch up with maintenance on street paving. The department handles most paving jobs, buying hot asphalt at $60 a ton, hauling it back up to Cornelius and spreading it as needed — by hand.
Garbage, recycling, sidewalks and street maintenance also come under public works. Overcash helped negotiate the multimillion-dollar contract with Republic Industries, the town’s new waste contractor. When a street light goes out, that’s public works, too — but be sure to tie a ribbon around the light that’s out because the crew will visit during the day when all the street lights are off.
“The best part of my job is the people I work with and getting out and helping people,” Overcash said. Town officials call it “The Cornelius Way,” where employees go above and beyond their job descriptions to help citizens. “The goal is we like to feel like we will help anybody do anything,” he said. This, after some 19 years on the job.
Overcash is also a fireman, volunteering and working for pay two nights a week. He drove the first truck on the scene at the first fire on Meadow Crossing Lane where an arsonist went on to set a string of fires in 2011.
He took his post facing the truck and running the equipment with his back to the fire. Five minutes earlier he was asleep in bed. Now firemen are running all around him; there is organized chaos. “You go into automatic mode. There are things you have to do so you don’t even think about it. It’s stuff you’ve done so much; it’s everybody knowing what they know to do,” Overcash said.
Regarding movies about firemen, like “Backdraft,” Overcash said there’s a lot of extra drama in a film version of a fire. “You just have to take them with a drink of water and go on,” he said. At age 52, he lets younger firefighters kick down doors.
For his 50th birthday Overcash treated himself to a Harley Davidson Electra Glide Classic motorcycle. It already has 40,000 miles on it.
With his wife Debbie, Overcash enjoys riding the bike on rural roads like Blacksnake Road toward Stanley, Highway 421 from Boone to Bristol and Carrigan Farms Road in Iredell County.
On the weekend of Sept. 11, 2011, the 10th anniversary of the 911 attacks, Overcash rode about 1,800 miles to visit the site of the plane crashes in Pennsylvania, New York and Northern Virginia.
And most Wednesday nights, Overcash leads a group of motorcycle enthusiasts that includes former Cornelius Chief of Police Ron McKinney and former Cornelius Town Commissioner Jim Bensman.
They meet at Mac’s Speed Shop on Liverpool at 5 p.m. and talk about where to go for dinner, then set off on a 60- or 90-minute ride. On one recent trip they took back roads to Salisbury where they ate at Uncle Buck’s on Main Street.
“Ricky is the consummate motorcycle rider. He knows every back road in the state and takes on a new trip every week,” Bensman said. |
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Cornelius Parks and Recreation will kick off its Concerts in the Park Series May 19 with an "80's Night in the Park" at Bailey Road Park. Guests are encouraged to dress in bell bottoms and big hair for a performance by Joystick. The event is free and the entire family is invited. The Charlotte Symphony Orchestra will perform June 30. There will be a Beach Bash in the Park July 28 and Country in the Park August 18. Bruster's Ice Cream and Nathan's Hot Dog will provide concessions for the events. Parking and admission are free. |
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In recognition of “Small Business Week,” the Lake Norman Chamber of Commerce has planned a week-long series of events, seminars, and activities May 21-25. |
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Cornelius Town Commissioner John Bradford will hold office hours Monday, May 21 at 9:30 a.m at the Acropolis Restaurant. Open to all Cornelius residents. Mayor Jeff Tarte and Town Manager Anthony Roberts will attend. |
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The Cornelius Branch of the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library will host the Global Cafe on Fridays in May, at 10 a.m. The series teaches America's history and culture and improves English skills. Note: Cornelius Branch will also be closed May 28. Info: www.cmlibrary.org |
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Registering is easy: Just login — creating a username and password to access this month's New Corporation filings. |
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Login to access residential transactions through Mar. 30 in Cornelius, Davidson and Huntersville recorded by the Mecklenburg Register of Deeds. |
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| TRAVIS |
On the Cornelius Town Board, Chuck Travis is known for his dry sense of humor, keen sense of aesthetics — he’s one of the architects behind Birkdale Village — and his talents behind the grill.
“If I’m cooking there is usually a grill involved,” says Travis, whose wife Janice may intoduce herself as “Mrs. Commish.” |
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| The Davidson-Cornelius Child Development Center was established in 1969 |
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The Davidson-Cornelius Child Development Center’s annual breakfast fundraiser draws around 150 guests who support safe, affordable childcare in a community-based setting.
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Full PDF versions of Cornelius Today are available to be read online...
Current issue available now, archived issues coming soon
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