78 year old Martha Elizabeth Young of Smithville died Saturday at DeKalb Community Hospital. She was a Baptist and an employee at the shirt factory and Genesco. The funeral will be Monday at 1:00 p.m. at DeKalb Funeral Chapel. Donald Owens and Dave Cardin will officiate and burial will be in Whorton Springs Cemetery. Visitation will be Sunday from 10:00 a.m. until 9:00 p.m. and Monday from 9:00 a.m. until the time of the service at 1:00 p.m. She was preceded in death by her parents, Martin and Novie Yates Taylor; her first husband, Willie Hobart Owens; her second husband, W.P. “Bill” Young; a step-child, Shelia Scarsella; a sister, Carnell Keith; and a brother, Albert Taylor. Survivors include her children, Charles and his wife Beatrice Owens and Sue Martin all of Smithville. A step-son, Bruce and his wife Dawn Young of Michigan. A step-son-in-law, Silbano Scarsella of Italy. Grandchildren, Bethany and her husband Chris Tramel of Smithville and Tracy McGee of Mount Pleasant. Step-grandchildren, Brian Young, Heather Young, Stephanie Scarsella, and Danny Scarsella all of Michigan. Sisters, Jo Parton of Smithville, Patty Trustee and Barbara Fuson both of Nashville. Brothers, Solon Taylor, James Paul Taylor, and Doyle Taylor all of Smithville. Several nieces and nephews also survive. DeKalb Funeral Chapel is in charge of the arrangements.
Author Archive: Dwayne Page
Lucille Jones
82 year old Lucille Jones of McMinnville died Saturday at her home of a short illness. She was a retired employee of River Park Hospital and was preceded in death by her husband, Major A. Jones; a son, Bennie R. Jones; her parents, George and Cuba Lou Smithson Williamson; her step-mother, Myrtle Gaither Williamson and a sister, Louise Mayo. The funeral will be Monday at 2:00 p.m. at the Chapel of McMinnville Funeral Home. Mark Carrigan and Willard Ralph, Jr. will officiate and burial will be in the Mount View Cemetery. The Jones family will receive friends on Sunday from 2:00 p.m. until 9:00 p.m. and Monday from 10:00 a.m. until the time of the service at McMinnville Funeral Home. Survivors include sons and daughters-in-law, Bobby Wayne and Betty Jones of Smithville, Carl and Opal Jones of Woodbury, and Buddy and Phyllis Jones of McMinnville. A daughter and son-in-law, Carolyn (Ann) and Herman (Ace) Boren of McMinnville. Eleven grandchildren, sixteen great grandchildren, and two great great grandchildren survive. McMinnville Funeral Home is in charge of the arrangements.
DeKalb County School Registration Set For August 4th
DeKalb County Schools will reopen Friday.
Registration for all DeKalb County students will be Friday, August 4 from 7:30 a.m. until 9:30 a.m. That will be an abbreviated school day.
Monday, August 7 will be an administrative day at all schools and all teachers must attend from 8:00 a.m. until 3:00 p.m. Students will not attend.
The first full day of school for all students will be Tuesday, August 8
All teachers will report to their individual schools Wednesday and Thursday, August 2 & 3 from 8:00 a.m. until 3:00 p.m. each day.
Sixth grade registration and orientation will be held at DeKalb Middle School on Thursday night, August 3 for all 6th grade students. All 6th grade students must attend. Orientation begins at 6:00 p.m. in the school auditorium and 6th grade will not attend school on Friday, August 4th.
Over 1,800 Vote To Date During Early Voting
A total of 1,855 people have cast ballots with one more day left of early voting
The DeKalb County Election Commission reports the following daily voting breakdown: Friday, July 14th -139, Saturday, July 15th -148, Monday, July 17th-84, Tuesday, July 18th- 131, Wednesday, July 19th- 145, Thursday, July 20th- 240, Friday, July 21st- 132, Saturday, July 22nd- 114, Monday, July 24th- 120, Tuesday, July 25th- 111, Wednesday, July 26th -120, Thursday, July 27th- 224, and Friday, July 28th- 147 These numbers also include the mail ballots received.
The DeKalb County Election Commission reminds you that early voting for the August elections will be held through July 29th.
Early voting hours will be Saturday from 9:00 a.m. until noon in the basement courtroom of the courthouse next to the election commission office.
State Audit Report Released On Town of Alexandria
The Tennessee Comptroller’s office has issued an investigative audit report on the Town of Alexandria for the period of July 1st, 2002 through October 31st, 2004
John G. Morgan, Comptroller of the Treasury for the State of Tennessee, in a letter to city officials writes, “The audit was limited to the operations of the police department, the fire department, and the acquisition and disposal of surplus property acquired through state and federal programs. However, when warranted, this scope was expanded.”
“The purpose of our audit was to determine the extent of the city’s compliance with certain laws and regulations.”
“The investigative audit revealed that the former fire chief, Eddie Tubbs, had made cash withdrawals amounting to $2,612 from a fire department bank account for no legitimate municipal purpose.”
“This matter was referred to the district attorney general. In April 2006, the DeKalb County Grand Jury indicted Eddie Tubbs on one count of Theft over $1,000 and one count of Official Misconduct.”
On July 7th, Tubbs appeared before Judge Lillie Ann Sells in DeKalb County Criminal Court and was granted pre-trial diversion, a type of probation, for a period of two years in a negotiated settlement with the District Attorney General’s Office. Under terms of his probation, Tubbs must make restitution to the Alexandria city government in the amount of $1,916 and perform 100 hours of community service.
Morgan writes, “The findings and recommendations in this report also relate to those conditions that we believe warrant your attention. All responses to each of the findings and recommendations are included in the report.”
Dennis Dycus of the State Division of Municipal Audit, in the report, states that “Our examination also resulted in findings and recommendations related to the following:
1. Required procedures for confidential funds transactions not followed by police department
2. Apparent noncompliance with federal and state surplus property regulations
3. Inadequate control over fixed assets and other property
4. Confiscated drugs not adequately accounted for
5. Required court approval not obtained for use of confiscated property
6. Daily collection reports not prepared and deposit slips not itemized
7. Duplicate, prenumbered receipts not issued for each collection
The following is a summary of the audit report:
1. ISSUE: Unaccounted for cash and improper charges.
Town officials became aware that Don Eddie Tubbs, who at the time was an alderman and the town fire chief, had maintained an Alexandria Fire Department bank account that was not part of the town records. Officials determined that Mr. Tubbs had withdrawn $896 in cash from that account with no explanation. Town officials also found that Mr. Tubbs had apparently charged gasoline totaling $472 for his personal vehicle on the town account at Prichard’s Foods. Also, officials determined that a cash collection of $170 apparently made by Mr. Tubbs was never turned over to the town for deposit into a town bank account. Officials determined that Mr. Tubbs received the benefit of $1,538 in town funds that he was not entitled to. Mr. Tubbs agreed to, and did repay the town for those funds. However, when auditors obtained more complete records of the Alexandria Fire Department bank account, they discovered that there were additional questionable cash withdrawals totaling $1,716. Therefore, the total amount of Mr. Tubbs apparently unauthorized benefits was $3,254.
During an interview with auditors, Mr. Tubbs denied using town money or credit for personal gain or benefit. He indicated that the cash withdrawals were used primarily to buy four pagers at an approximate cost of $1,600. He provided auditors with the name of the vendor and salesman who sold the town the pagers. However, when contacted by auditors, the salesman indicated his company had not sold any pagers to the Town of Alexandria during the entire year in question. Auditors were unable to substantiate any legitimate use for Mr. Tubb’s cash withdrawals. Mr. Tubbs told auditors that he wanted to pay back to the town what he owed.
FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
1. FINDING: Required procedures for confidential funds transactions not followed
by police department.
Confidential funds transactions were not always properly documented through the use of prescribed forms. Records of undercover drug fund usage were disorganized and incomplete. Auditors were unable to account for $1,392 in excess cash left over after undercover drug purchases. In addition, cash from undercover funds were used to make non-confidential purchases, including the purchase of an assault rifle, travel, and training expenses. Undercover cash should be used only for those transactions for which confidentiality is required. All non-confidential expenses should be made consistent with statutes, policies, and procedures governing the payment of normal operating expenses.
RECOMMENDATION:
To properly account for confidential funds, such funds should be handled in accordance with the “Procedures for Handling Cash Transactions Related to Undercover Investigative Operations of County and Municipal Drug Enforcement Programs.”
MANAGEMENT’S RESPONSE:
Mayor and Members of the Board of Aldermen:
We concur. We understand the procedures for handling cash transactions related to undercover operations and drug enforcement programs and those procedures are being followed.
Police Chief:
I agree. All confidential fund transactions will be properly documented on the appropriate forms as prescribed by Tennessee Code Annotated. Any and ALL transactions will be documented on the appropriate forms as well as keeping proper receipts with names, addresses, phone numbers, etc.
2. FINDING: Apparent noncompliance with federal and state surplus property
regulations.
The town obtained a utility boat as surplus property from the State of Tennessee, Property Utilization Division, pursuant to Section 1033 of the National Defense Authorization Act, as amended. When the state auditor observed the boat on town property during the course of this audit, there were no registration numbers or other tags or marks to identify ownership of the boat. Although the former mayor and the former police chief both offered to auditors anticipated uses for the boat, those uses did not serve a present need for law enforcement activities at the time it was obtained. After it was determined that the boat had not been used for law enforcement activities, the boat was returned to the state Property Utilization Division. An agreement between the town and the State of Tennessee, Property Utilization Division, dated June 12, 2003, spells out the conditions the town must meet when obtaining surplus property. The contract states, in part: Property available under this agreement is for the use of authorized program participants; not for speculative or possible future use. Property may not be obtained for the purpose of sale, lease, rent, exchange, barter, to secure a loan or to otherwise supplement
normal budgets. It appears that the town obtained property through this program for which it had no immediate need.
RECOMMENDATION:
In order to remain eligible to participate in the surplus property program, the town should comply with all provisions of their agreement with the Property Utilization Division.
MANAGEMENT’S RESPONSE:
Mayor and Members of the Board of Aldermen:
We concur with the recommendation above.
Police Chief:
I agree. The Alexandria Police Department will only obtain vehicles and/or property for which there is an immediate need.
3. FINDING: Inadequate control over fixed assets and other property.
Officials did not require adequate internal control over the municipality’s fixed assets and high-risk, moveable property. The municipality obtained items such as vehicles, cameras, bayonets, a telescope, and refrigerator-freezers from federal and state surplus property
programs. However, the former recorder did not maintain complete, updated records of such items. The municipality did sell items at auction, including vehicles. However, accounting records were often not available to determine which vehicles were sold, to whom those vehicles were sold, and the selling price of the individual item. Many of these items were not permanently marked to indicate the municipality’s ownership. Because some items purchased from state and federal surplus property programs lacked serial numbers or other unique identifying characteristics, auditors were unable to conclude that all such property was accounted for. In addition, the municipality’s files did not include documentation of an annual physical inventory.
RECOMMENDATION:
To better control and account for individual fixed assets and high-risk, moveable property, the recorder should maintain complete, updated records of those items in accordance with the Internal Control and Compliance Manual for Tennessee Municipalities. Officials should require that each of the items is permanently marked or tagged to indicate the municipality’s ownership. When surplus property is disposed of, complete, accurate records documenting that disposal should be maintained. In addition, officials should require that an annual physical inventory of the fixed assets and of the high-risk, moveable property is performed and documented.
MANAGEMENT’S RESPONSE:
Mayor and Members of the Board of Aldermen:
We concur with the recommendation and since we have a different person in the office and also a city recorder, we’re sure the recommendation will be followed.
Recorder:
I concur with the recommendation. It will be followed.
4. FINDING: Confiscated drugs not adequately accounted for.
The police department maintained custody of drugs and drug paraphernalia seized
pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated. However, the Department did not follow the procedures set forth in state statutes for the disposal of those items. In addition, the police department did not follow procedures required by Tennessee Rules of Evidence. Our investigative audit revealed that the former police chief did not maintain a complete, updated inventory of evidence. Evidence was not adequately labeled. Auditors found that several items of controlled drug evidence were kept in a file cabinet in the former police chief’s office and that records were insufficient to determine the disposition of several drug items seized as evidence. Finally, applicable seized drugs and drug paraphernalia were not destroyed annually as required by state law.
RECOMMENDATION:
To comply with state statutes and to alleviate the responsibility for safeguarding property not needed as evidence, the police chief should ensure the annual inventory and destruction of applicable seized drugs and drug paraphernalia. Procedures set forth in Section 53-11-451, Tennessee Code Annotated, should be followed for the disposal of such property. All drug evidence should be adequately tagged or marked and stored in a secure place with restricted access.
MANAGEMENT’S RESPONSE:
Mayor and Members of the Board of Aldermen:
We agree with the above recommendation. Since the city has a new police chief, things of this matter have been taken care of. The police chief keeps accurate records.
Police Chief:
I agree. All evidence shall be properly tagged and a chain of custody will be kept. All evidence will be secured in a double-locked closet and locker whereas I have the only keys. Evidence will be disposed of in accordance with the state laws.
5. FINDING: Required court approval not obtained for use of confiscated property.
Auditors noted that the former police chief apparently combined confiscated marijuana from several drug seizures into one large, unlabeled bag of marijuana. The police chief stated that the marijuana was to be used in a controlled drug sale. However, auditors could not locate any documentation to support this assertion. Auditors were also unable to determine that all this marijuana was accounted for. In addition, the police department failed to obtain the required court order prior to using seized property in the drug
enforcement program. Tennessee Code Annotated, requires that the police department obtain permission from the court of jurisdiction to use seized property in the drug enforcement program.
Findings and Recommendations
RECOMMENDATION:
The police chief should ensure that all confiscated drugs are adequately accounted for. In addition, the police department should obtain court approval prior to using any confiscated property.
MANAGEMENT’S RESPONSE:
Mayor and Members of the Board of Aldermen:
We concur. We understand the police chief we have now is doing everything according to the books. He seems to have everything in order to the best of our knowledge.
Police Chief:
I agree. All confiscated drugs will be accounted for and drugs used for any police department activities will only be done with prior court approval and be well documented.
6. FINDING: Daily collection reports not prepared and deposit slips not itemized.
The former recorder did not prepare daily collection reports summarizing the amount and source of all cash collected each day. In addition, deposit slips did not always list each check included in the deposit.
RECOMMENDATION:
To better account for collections, each day the cashier should prepare a detailed report of that day’s total collections and the source of those collections. To help document that all collections are deposited intact, the totals of each daily collection report, corresponding Town of Alexandria
prenumbered receipts, and related bank deposit should agree. Municipal personnel should itemize deposit slips and list each check separately.
MANAGEMENT’S RESPONSE:
Mayor and Members of the Board of Aldermen:
We concur. The city clerk is doing everything correctly now with daily collection reports, prenumbered receipts, and bank deposits that all agree. She’s doing a great job trying her best to do everything correctly.
Recorder:
I concur. Daily collection reports, prenumbered receipts, and itemized deposit slips are now being used.
7. FINDING: Duplicate, prenumbered receipts not issued for each collection.
Municipal employees or officials who received collections for the municipality did not issue a duplicate, prenumbered receipt for each source of revenue including collections for the drug fund.
RECOMMENDATION:
To better account for all revenue, the employee or official who receives collections should issue a duplicate, prenumbered receipt for each source of revenue. The duplicate receipt should provide adequate details to identify the revenue.
Findings and Recommendations
MANAGEMENT’S RESPONSE:
Mayor and Members of the Board of Aldermen:
We concur and this is being taken care of. All money coming into the municipality is being issued a duplicate prenumbered receipt for each source of revenue. All record from what source.
Recorder:
I concur. We have prenumbered receipts that are issued for all money coming into the municipality and also for each source of revenue.
Galen Bruce Roll
62 year old Galen Bruce Roll of Dowelltown died Wednesday at University Medical Center in Lebanon. He was a Methodist and a computer programmer. A memorial service will be held at a later date. He was preceded in death by his parents, Marion E. and Jacqueline Morrison Roll and a half brother, Earl C. Smith. Survivors include sisters, Barbara Powell of Dowelltown and Karen Elling of Texas. Brothers, Ernest Roll of Louisiana and Allan Roll of Virginia. Nieces, Holly Frazier of Liberty and Nancy Craig of Texas. Nephews, Erin and Shelly Gibson of Dowelltown and Dale and Melanie Craig of Virginia. Seven great nieces and nephews also survive. Mr. Roll’s remains have been cremated.
Berlie Randolph Hendrix
94 year old Berlie Randolph Hendrix of Dowelltown died Thursday at DeKalb Community Hospital. He was retired from the DeKalb County School System and was a member of the Mount Herman Baptist Church. The funeral will be Sunday at 2:00 p.m. at the Chapel of Love-Cantrell Funeral Home. Chuck Olson and David Carden will officiate and burial will be in DeKalb Memorial Gardens. He was preceded in death by his wife, Ruby Lee Kilgore Hendrix; parents, William Thomas and Nora Wilkins Hendrix; two sons, John Tolbert Hendrix and Erie Randolph Hendrix; three sisters, Dorothy Ervin, Elisha Martin, and Louise Vanatta; three brothers, John T. Hendrix, Charlie Hendrix, and Robert Hendrix; and two half-sisters, Ollie Jones and Mary Bain. Survivors include a daughter, Mildred Pauline Hendrix Suffridge and her husband James of Smithville. Five sons, Orvil Earl Hendrix and his wife Wanda of Dowelltown, Roger Allen (Ricky) Hendrix and his wife Kathy of Dowelltown, Willie Doyle Hendrix and his wife Faye of Smithville, Farron Lee Hendrix and his wife Gayla of Smithville, and Wallace Tucker Hendrix and his wife Carol. Fifteen grandchildren, sixteen great grandchildren, one great great grandchild, eleven step-grandchildren, four step great grandchildren, one step great great grandchild, and one brother, Lonnie Hendrix of Nashville. Visitation will be Friday from 5:00 p.m. until 9:00 p.m.; Saturday from 8:00 a.m. until 9:00 p.m.; and Sunday from 8:00 a.m. until the time of the service at 2:00 p.m. Love-Cantrell Funeral Home is in charge of the arrangemments. The family requests that donations be made to the Mount Herman Baptist Church Building Fund, in lieu of flowers.
Sluice Gate Releases Planned at Center Hill Dam
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers plans to take measures starting on Monday at Center Hill Dam to increase the dissolved oxygen content of releases to the Caney Fork River. This action will benefit aquatic life downstream.
Sluice gate releases will be made concurrent with generation of electricity in the hydropower plant beginning on July 24. By scheduling sluice releases during periods of power generation, the Corps will be able to meet downstream water-quality objectives and minimize impacts to fishermen and power interests. The measures are considered the best way to maintain the State water quality standard.
“Our objective,” said Bob Sneed, chief of the Nashville District Water Management Section, “is to maintain beneficial dissolved oxygen levels and ultimately improve the aquatic life in the Caney Fork River. This operation was very successful last year. We were able to mix the highly aerated sluice release with turbine discharge that was, at times, quite low in dissolved oxygen, to produce a blended project release that met our goal of 6.0 milligrams per liter. We are trying to meet the State water quality standard which is 6.0 milligrams per liter for a cold-water environment like the Caney Fork below Center Hill Dam.”
In 2005 this reach of the Caney Fork experienced the best oxygen conditions it had seen since the impoundment of Center Hill Lake. As a result, more aquatic life, including stocked brown and rainbow trout, were able to thrive during this critical period.
Officials plan to schedule discharges between the hours of 7 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through Thursday, and to only two hours on Fridays, weekends and holidays. However, power needs or weather conditions could dictate a change to this plan.
Corps representatives will periodically monitor the dissolved oxygen concentration in the river below the dam to determine the success of the sluice gate releases.
The sluice gate measures four feet by six feet and releases approximately 1600 cubic feet per second into the tailwater. The Corps has added turbine venting features to three hydropower turbines at Center Hill resulting in an increase to the dissolved oxygen level of hydropower releases. The sluice gate release is simply another practice employed by the Corps to improve water quality conditions in the Caney Fork River. These actions are consistent with the Corps’ Environmental Operating Principles.
These Principles are to maintain an environment in a healthy, diverse and sustainable condition necessary to support life, proactively consider the consequences of Corps programs, accept responsibility for activities under our control that impact the health of natural systems, seek ways to mitigate such impacts, and seek solutions to the nation’s problems that enhance the environment.
Corps officials will work closely with the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation, TWRA, and SEPA which benefits from power generated. Fishermen and boaters should avoid the turbulent water created by the sluice gate below the dam. Turbulence could actually pull small craft in toward the dam and submerge them.
For more information, contact Bob Sneed, Nashville District Corps of Engineers, at 615-736-5675.
Motorcycle Rider Airlifted After Accident
A 27 year old man, operating a motorcycle, was injured around 5:18 p.m. Thursday afternoon after he rear-ended an SUV at the intersection of Highway 56 and Big Hurricane Road.
Trooper Greg Tramel of the Tennessee Highway Patrol says Anthony King of Illinois was taken by DeKalb EMS to the Smithville Airport where he was airlifted by a Life Flight Helicopter Ambulance and flown to Vanderbilt Hospital.
According to Trooper Tramel, King was north on Highway 56 on a 2003 Buell Motorcycle when he ran into a 1985 Isuzu Trooper driven by Jeremy A. Scruggs of Smithville, who was stopped on Highway 56 north waiting for the traffic to clear before making a left turn onto Big Hurricane Road. King was thrown from the motorcycle upon impact.
Scruggs was not injured.
Joe Robert Anderson
76 year old Joe Robert Anderson of Alexandria died Wednesday morning at Centennial Medical Center in Nashville. He was a member of the Prosperity Baptist Church and an employee of Kingston Timer. The funeral will be Friday at 2:00 p.m. at DeKalb Funeral Chapel. Michael Hale will officiate and burial will be in Prosperity Cemetery. Visitation will be Thursday from 11:00 a.m. until 9:00 p.m. and Friday from 10:00 a.m. until the time of the service at 2:00 p.m. He was preceded in death by his wife Sarah Anderson; his parents, Jim and Annette Corley Anderson; a grandchild, Tyler Lee; a son-in-law, Chris Lee, and a brother, James Anderson. Survivors include his wife, Inez Anderson of Alexandria. Four daughters, Pam and her husband James Hale of Sparta, Karen and her husband Steve Martin of Lascassas, Angelia Anderson of Murfreesboro, and Kim Lee of Murfreesboro. Two step-sons, Billy Malone and Howard and his wife Gail Malone of Alexandria. One brother, Tommy and his wife Terri Anderson of Liberty. Nine grandchildren and seven great grandchildren. Special friends, Donnie Estes, Sherri Greene, and Gary Baines. DeKalb Funeral Chapel is in charge of the arrangements.