Freckles’ Friends Receives Two Grants For The Mobile Spay Station Program

Freckles’ Friends has received two grants to fund the mobile spay station program.
The first grant, in the amount of $4,200, came from the Tennessee Animal Friendly License Plate Program and funding began in July. The second grant, in the amount of $3,025, came from the Patricia & Edward J. McGavock Fund of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee .This grant will help fund the program through August of 2012 provided the sponsorship fee remains $550 per monthly visit.
The spay station provides spay/neuter surgery for pets in low-income families who can prove financial need through participation in a government program such as Unemployment, Disability, SSI, Families First or Food Stamps. Clients are asked only for a donation of whatever they can afford and pets who are spayed or neutered will also be examined and receive needed vaccinations.
For those who do not qualify for the spay station program, Freckles’ Friends offers Spay/Neuter Assistance Vouchers in the following amounts: $50 for female dog spays, $40 for male dog neuters, $35 for female cat spays and $25 for male cat neuters. Vouchers expire in 30 days from issue and will not be issued retroactively so please have your voucher number prior to setting your appointment. Freckles’ Friends Vouchers are accepted at the following clinics:
Animal Clinic of Smithville (Dr. Mark Burke, DVM) – (615) 597-1726
DeKalb Animal Clinic (Dr. Scott Little, DVM) – (615) 597-1950
Wheeler Veterinary Clinic (Dr. Scott Wheeler, DVM) – (615) 597-3770
The voucher program is open to anyone, regardless of income. However, those who qualify for the spay station will only be issued vouchers if the schedule is full or there are safety issues to consider such as a pet that is high risk for surgery and chances of complications are high. This is because no grant funding is available for the voucher program and funds are limited to what the hard-working volunteers raise during fundraisers such as the DeKalb County Women’s Show, the fall yard sale, organized by Bea Garrison and Sommer Deebanks and the Freckles’ Fall Fundraiser organized by Rene’ Stufano as well as donations received from the Spay Partners and other donors. Funds are available now for vouchers so please email freckles.friends@yahoo.com and let them know if you qualify for the spay station or need a voucher. They also need to know if you have a dog or cat and if your pet is male or female.
Please help reduce the number of unwanted litters of puppies and kittens in our communities. Be a responsible pet owner and set a good example for others by having your pets spayed or neutered. It is good for the health of your pet and your community and Freckles’ Friends would like to help.

Primitive Quartet and Right on Time to Sing for Toys

The third annual “Singing for Toys “will be held Saturday, December 17th at 6:00 p.m. at the DeKalb West School Gym in Liberty featuring the Primitive Quartet and Right on Time.
Sean Driver, a member of the group “Right on Time” said your admission is a donation of a small toy per person or a large toy per family. All toys donated will be given to needy children. All children served will also receive a Bible. “This is our third year to be a part of this Christmas Toy Drive. Mr. Chad Coppinger called us three years ago to ask us to be a part of this and we’re so fortunate to be involved in it this year. The date is Saturday, December 17 at 6:00 p.m. We’re glad that the Alexandria Lion’s Club is sponsoring us to use the DeKalb County West School Gym. We thank the principal for allowing this. Of course, I sing with “Right on Time” and we’re fortunate this year to be singing with the Primitive Quartet of Candler, North Carolina. They’ been singing the gospel for 38 years. There is no admission to get in as far as monetary but we ask that you bring a small unwrapped small toy per person or if you come as a family you can bring one large toy. Its not just set up for DeKalb County. Its for surrounding counties too for children in need to try to give them a great Christmas. We want them to have some sort of toy or multiple toys. We’ve already had a donation of over four hundred toys. Along with receiving the toys, we want each child to receive a Bible as well. We were able to do that last year for 350 children. We’re looking for a larger turnout this time. We’ve been asking churches to be a part of this. We want your presence there. We’ll collect those toys and then Chad has the list of all those children and he will disperse those where they need to be,” said Driver.
For more information, call Chad Coppinger at 615-563-2423

School Board Tries Again For Traffic Study

Members of the School Board are upset with city officials for turning down their request to seek a study of traffic flow patterns on highways at Northside, DeKalb Middle, and DCHS.
During Thursday night’s meeting, board members voted to try again. They will now ask the county attorney, Hilton Conger and city attorney, Vester Parsley to make contact with the County Technical Advisory Service CTAS and the Municipal Technical Advisory Service (MTAS) to request a traffic study on behalf of both city and county governments.

In October, the Board of Education voted to ask the Smithville Mayor and Board of Aldermen to formally request the Municipal Technical Advisory Service (MTAS) to conduct a cost free study of traffic flow patterns and to make suggestions for relieving congestion on highways at Northside Elementary as well as DCHS and DeKalb Middle School in Smithville.
Mayor Taft Hendrixson denied the request in a letter dated November 16, stating that the school board could seek the traffic study through CTAS. “I have two concerns about this request and I have consulted our attorney about my concerns,” wrote Mayor Hendrixson.
“Even though in the Smithville city limits, Northside, Middle, and High School are all located on State highways, any physical changes to those highways would be the State of Tennessee’s decision. DeKalb County has access to the sister arm of MTAS. This is CTAS which does the same for counties as does MTAS for cities. Since this is a county organization requesting this to be done it is my and our attorney’s opinion you should make this request to the county’s technical service CTAS or maybe even to the Tennessee Department of Safety,” wrote Mayor Hendrixson.
“The City of Smithville is diligent in trying to keep all streets and roadways safe. The patrol division of our Police Department put special patrols on school zones for the safety of all citizens,” wrote Mayor Hendrixson.
School Board Chairman Charles Robinson, during Thursday night’s meeting, said he has contacted CTAS since receiving Mayor Hendrixson’s letter. Robinson said it is his understanding that both CTAS and MTAS would be willing to work together to do a traffic study as long as both the city and county request it. “I contacted CTAS and talked to the assistant director Mr. Robin Roberts and he reports that he has spoken to Mr. Rex Barton, who is the one who would do the traffic study with MTAS. Their recommendation is that Mr. Barton along with Mr. Roberts, the assistant director of CTAS, along with the CTAS people who make recommendations to county law enforcement, do a traffic study with the City of Smithville and the School Board. It would be of no cost to the county government or to the city,” said Robinson.
Fifth district board member W.J. (Dub) Evins, III said he can’t understand why the city is so reluctant to work with the school board on this effort. ” I don’t understand why this is such a hot potato and no one wants to deal with it. We (school board) are not in the policing business. We should be completely out of this. There are issues between the city and county that are of much more magnitude than what we’re talking about here. We’re asking the City of Smithville to ask for a free study and they are basically refusing to do that. Is that my understanding?, ” asked Evins
Board Chairman Robinson responded, “yes”.
Evins continued, “We had a right to request it (traffic study) but we should not have to request it. That should be something that the city should be willing and eager to do especially since its free. This is nothing. Its just asking for a study for the safety of our 2,800 students in this system and the thirty five buses that are coming in and out of there and the other parents that are bringing a thousand students to school each day. Out of the 2,800 there’s approximately 1,800 to 1,900 on buses. There’s another thousand that are being brought to school by their parents or driving themselves and we’re asking for a study to determine the safety of the transportation of these students. That should be quite simple,” said Evins.
Director of Schools Mark Willoughby said this effort to get a traffic study has been underway for several months.”We made a request with MTAS. We were directed indirectly by some people from the Department of Safety to do this. We made that request and after making that request MTAS said since it was in the City of Smithville then the City of Smithville should make that request. We asked the mayor to make the request and we’re at the same place that we were. It needed to come through the city and we still don’t have our study done,” said Willoughby.
In August, Board Chairman Robinson wrote a letter to Rex Barton, Police Management Consultant for MTAS, requesting a traffic study at Northside Elementary, DCHS and DeKalb Middle School. “On behalf of the DeKalb County Board of Education, I am requesting a traffic study. We are experiencing congestion and difficulty entering and exiting three of our schools. The locations are Northside Elementary on North Congress Boulevard and DCHS and DeKalb Middle School on West Broad Street in Smithville.”
Barton responded in a letter to Robinson in September, stating that the request would have to come from the City of Smithville “An MTAS Public Works Consultant and I can review the infrastructure and traffic patterns to determine what physical or traffic flow changes might benefit the traffic issues around the schools”
“MTAS exists to provide consulting services to Tennessee cities. The schools you reference are in the city of Smithville, but the city will have to make the request for the traffic study. I am copying this letter to Mayor Taft Hendrixson to ensure he is aware of your request”, wrote Barton.
“I realize nobody wants anybody to get hurt and we want all of our children to be safe so surely we can get both entities to work together and say we want to do this study. Its going to be no cost to anyone. Now they might recommend something that’s going to cost some money and then we’ll have to decide if somebody is going to pay for it or not going to pay for it. But just getting a recommendation that’s free shouldn’t be a problem,” said Director Willoughby.
Fourth district member Billy Miller made a motion to “make a request of the attorney for the City of Smithville and the county attorney, asking that they sit down and contact CTAS to come up with such a study for the school system. I make that in the form of a motion to do so,” said Miller. The motion was amended to also request that the city and county attorneys respond to the school board within thirty days as to whether they will agree to make contact with CTAS.
In other business, Director Willoughby updated the board on personnel moves.
Those employed since the last meeting are:
Carl Malone, custodian at DCHS
Thomas Fitts, substitute bus driver
Pam Baines, cafeteria manager at Northside Elementary School
Melvin Young, teacher at DCHS will resign as of February
The board approved a request to offer new classes at DCHS for the 2012-13 school year in the Career and Technical Education area including Culinary Arts I, II, and III in the Family and Consumer Science Area; and Computer Applications, Interactive Multimedia Presentations, Web Design Essentials, Web Design Applications, and Banking and Finance under Business Technology; and Calculus 2, Linear Algebra, and Multivariable Calculus.
Lisa Bell, Data Analysis Leader for the school system, gave a presentation on the results of the state’s report card on DeKalb County Schools..
The new building trades house, which is now for sale, has drawn some interest from a couple of people, according to Director Willoughby but no one has yet committed to making the purchase.
The board will hold a special meeting on December 13 at 5:00 p.m. to act on a FEMA grant application which would provide funds for school systems affected by floods and tornadoes.
The board will have a yearly evaluation of the director of schools on January 12 at 5:30 p.m. followed by the regular meeting at 7:00 p.m.

Boating Officer Tommy Alexander Retires from TWRA

After twenty three years with the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency, Tommy Alexander has retired.
The former school teacher turned TWRA boating officer appeared on WJLE with his fellow TWRA officer Tony Cross Monday morning to talk about his years with the agency, why he is retiring, and what lies ahead for him. “When you reach a certain age the (TWRA) officers can’t work out in the field anymore,” said Alexander. ” I’ve reached that age so they said it was time for me to go. They didn’t have to push me out the door. I was heading that way already. Its been a pretty good ride. Its been interesting. Its been fun. There’s been some heartache but overall its been a good experience,” he said.
Asked how he got involved with the TWRA, Alexander said “I kind of fell into it really. I was teaching school next to (former school teacher)Linda Franklin (wife of former TWRA officer Ben Franklin). They were going to hire a boating officer and they were really looking for someone who wasn’t going to be moving on to somewhere else after being trained. School teachers are kind of that way. They don’t tend to move around a whole lot so I guess I was kind of what they were looking for. So I was hired as a boating officer,” he said.
Alexander said the job has been rewarding and interesting. “I’ve met a lot of people and run into a lot of characters. Our county has some very colorful people. I’ve worked things like security for a Sylvester Stallone movie. I wasn’t in the film and my name didn’t scroll across the screen in the credits but we had to do a little security work for that.” he said
“On the average during the twenty three years, Its been a very safe lake and a good place to work. There’s not been a whole lot of problems but this past year has been unbelievable with the problems we’ve had (drownings and accidents). Its so sad with so many lives lost. This is not what I was looking for on my way out,” said Alexander.
Alexander said he plans to remain active in his retirement. “I’m going to play a little golf and pittle around. I’ve got plenty to do. I ‘ve got a lot of family that can fix my schedule up for me. My wife is pretty good about this stuff,” he said
TWRA officer Cross praised Alexander for his service to the agency and this community. “Tommy has been great to work with over all these years. He actually started the same summer that I started. I started part time in 1988 and have worked with Tommy for a lot of years here on Center Hill Lake. Any time you ever called him, day or night, if you needed anything he would come to help. We’re going to miss him. He was a great officer and as dependable as anybody could ever be. But if I want to find him, I know where to go. The golf course is not far away,” said Cross.

Saint Thomas to Partner with DeKalb Community Hospital

Capella Healthcare and Saint Thomas Health have signed a Letter of Intent (LOI) to form a partnership that will result in the joint ownership of Capella’s four Middle Tennessee Hospitals including DeKalb Community Hospital.
According to a Monday, December 5th Capella Healthcare news release, this partnership will create an innovative venture that will improve healthcare throughout Middle Tennessee and Southern Kentucky. Based in Nashville, Saint Thomas Health includes five hospitals affiliated with Ascension Health Ministry, the largest Catholic system and the largest non-profit in the United States. Capella Healthcare, based in Franklin, operates 15 hospitals in seven states, including five in Tennessee.
The pending partnership will result in the joint ownership and operation of Capella’s four Middle Tennessee hospitals and potentially additional healthcare facilities in a 60-county area of Middle Tennessee and Southern Kentucky. Capella hospitals included in the joint venture are River Park Hospital in McMinnville, White County Community Hospital in Sparta, DeKalb Community Hospital in Smithville and Stones River Hospital in Woodbury, all in Tennessee. These hospitals will operate as part of the Saint Thomas Health Network, which will hold an equity interest. In addition, Saint Thomas Health will become the tertiary care partner for the hospitals within the new venture.
“This is a landmark partnership for us and the communities we serve,” said Mike Schatzlein, M.D. Saint Thomas Health president and chief executive officer. “We are partnering with Capella Healthcare and the outstanding physicians in the communities of their Middle Tennessee hospitals to expand and enhance services in the communities they serve. We look forward to providing support for the expansion of cardiac, neurosciences and other specialty services, as well as collaborate on strategies for the use of innovative technology and clinical integration.”
Capella will be the managing member and the majority partner in the new venture, and under the agreement, Capella will be the exclusive development partner for Saint Thomas Health across Middle Tennessee and Southern Kentucky.
Capella Healthcare CEO Dan Slipkovich stated, “Partnering with Saint Thomas Health, which is nationally recognized for its quality of care and innovative strategy, positions our Middle Tennessee hospitals for greater success as we seek to further expand services. This venture also provides a significant opportunity for Capella and Saint Thomas Health to jointly partner with additional hospitals that recognize the value of these kinds of partnerships, especially as accountable care and health reform continue to evolve. Our two organizations share a commitment to providing the highest quality of care for the individuals and communities we serve, and look forward to leveraging our strengths to expand our services.”
The LOI was formally signed today by Dr. Schatzlein and Slipkovich at the Saint Thomas Health Network Service Center. Officials expect the new partnership to begin operations on or before March 1, 2012, subject to customary closing conditions, including due diligence, further negotiations and execution of definitive agreements.
About DeKalb Community Hospital
DeKalb General Hospital was built in 1969 by Hospital Corporation of America, and saw its first patient August 6 of that year. In 1987 the Hospital was part of the HCA spinoff to HealthTrust.
In August, 1992, the hospital was purchased locally and remained under local ownership for three years. In July of 1995, it was purchased by Baptist Hospital in Nashville, and became Baptist DeKalb Hospital. Then in January of 2002, it was purchased by Ascension in St. Louis.
Finally, in July of 2006 the hospital was purchased by Cannon County LLC, a group comprised mainly of local physicians. The name was changed to and remains DeKalb Community Hospital. The hospital has enjoyed a long history of medical excellence being named one of the Top 100 Hospitals in America by Solucient for five years.
DeKalb Community Hospital, now an affiliate of Capella Healthcare, is still partly owned by some of the physicians who serve their patients
About Capella Healthcare
Capella Healthcare partners with communities to build strong local healthcare systems that are known for quality patient care. Based in Franklin, Tenn., Capella owns and/or operates 15 general acute-care hospitals in seven states. With the philosophy that all healthcare is local, Capella collaborates with each hospital’s medical staff, board and community leadership to take care to the next level. The company has access to significant leadership and financial resources, reinvesting in its family of hospitals to strengthen and expand services and facilities. For more information, visit www.CapellaHealthcare.com
About Saint Thomas Health
Saint Thomas Health is the market share leader in Middle Tennessee with 6,500 associates serving the region. Saint Thomas Health’s regional health system consists of five hospitals – Baptist and Saint Thomas Hospitals and The Hospital for Spinal Surgery in Nashville, Middle Tennessee Medical Center in Murfreesboro and Hickman Community Hospital in Centerville – and a comprehensive network of affiliated joint ventures in diagnostics, cardiac services and ambulatory surgery as well as medical practices, clinic and rehabilitation facilities. Saint Thomas Health is a member of Ascension Health, a Catholic organization that is the largest not-for-profit health system in the United States. For more information, visit www.sths.com

Fire Destroys Home

A fire Wednesday evening destroyed a summer home belonging to Lee Neal at 344 Cooper Lane off Holmes Creek Road.
County Fire Chief Donnie Green said that a neighbor spotted the fire and reported it. The structure was fully involved in flames by the time it was discovered and could not be saved. The home and all contents were destroyed.
Firefighters contained the blaze to keep it from spreading to another home some fifty feet away.
Members of the Main Station, Cookeville Highway, Short Mountain Highway, and Tanker truck responded along with the Sheriff’s Department and DeKalb EMS. No one was home at the time of the fire and no one was injured. The cause is undetermined.

Banks Faces Two Challengers in Re-Election Bid for Assessor of Property

Three candidates will be in the race for Assessor of Property in the DeKalb County Democratic Primary on March 6.
Incumbent Assessor Timothy (Fud) Banks, Scott Cantrell, and Jonathan Bryan Keith have qualified for the race with the DeKalb County Election Commission. Noon today (December 8th) was the qualifying deadline
The only contested constable race in the March primary is in the sixth district between Richard Bullard and Carl Lee Webb. Incumbent constables Wayne Vanderpool in the third district, Paul Cantrell in the fourth district, Mark Milam in the fifth district, and Johnny King in the seventh district will be running unopposed. There will be no candidates for constable in the first or second districts
Republicans have already nominated Mason Carter to be the GOP candidate for Assessor of Property next August. There are no republican candidates for constable
Republican and Democratic nominees for Assessor of Property will face off in the August 2012 DeKalb County General Election. Constables nominated in March will be unopposed in August.

Alexandria Man Gets 10 Year Sentence for Aggravated Kidnapping and Domestic Assault

A 30 year old Alexandria man, charged with kidnapping and assaulting his ex-girl friend in March got a ten year sentence in DeKalb County Criminal Court last Wednesday.
Judge David Patterson sentenced Brian Gadbois after he entered a guilty plea to charges of aggravated kidnapping and domestic assault. Gadbois is to serve at least 85% of his ten year sentence before his release eligibility date on the kidnapping charge. He also received a sentence of 11 months and 29 days to serve in the domestic assault case. Both sentences are to run concurrently with each other and concurrently with a Rutherford County sentence against him. He was given jail credit from April 4, 2010 to November 28, 2011
Alexandria Police Chief Mark Collins told WJLE that Gadbois lived with his ex-girlfriend, who was six months pregnant at the time, and their four children, ages nine months, nineteen months, three years, and twelve years, at a residence at 143 Measles Lane.
Described as a very jealous and abusive man, Chief Collins said that on the night of March 17, Gadbois allegedly became upset when the woman arrived home from work a few minutes late. He tied her to the footboard of a bed in the home and assaulted her repeatedly throughout the night. She was kicked, punched, and slapped. The woman was made to sit on the floor at the foot of the bed, partially clothed, with her hands tied to the footboard. The couple’s four children were in the home at the time.
The next morning Gadbois gathered up all the children and left to take one of the kids to meet a school bus at an area bus stop. While he was gone the woman untied herself and escaped from the home, hiding in the woods. She later made her way to city hall and reported the incident to authorities.
When Gadbois returned home and found the woman had left, he took the children to their grandparent’s home and he fled. He was arrested a few days later in Rutherford County.
Chief Collins said his department charged Gadbois in the case. At the time, Gadbois was already facing similar offenses in Rutherford County.
The woman and her children have now moved to another county.

Aldermen Reluctantly Vote to Make Final Payment to Pool Company

The Smithville aldermen Monday night reluctantly voted to pay the Langley and Taylor Pool Corporation of Nashville the remaining $13,649 the city owes for repairs made to the city swimming pool over the summer.
City officials have been withholding final payment claiming Langley and Taylor has failed to respond to city demands to fix problems with the pool regarding drains and lights since they finished their work replacing the fiberglass coating of the pool with ceramic tile. Last February, the aldermen awarded a bid to Langley and Taylor in the amount of $83,649 to do the job.
During Monday night’s city council meeting, city attorney Vester Parsley said the city should make that final payment to Langley and Taylor or risk a lawsuit in which the city might be forced to pay for the work anyway, plus the company’s attorneys fees.
Parsley said he believes the company has met it’s obligations under the contract and can’t be held accountable to fix problems with the pool that may have been pre-existing. However, he pointed out that there is a three year warranty and the company could be held responsible for work called for under the contract which was warrantied but not done properly. “On September 6th I received a correspondence from their attorney asking about why we hadn’t paid. I wrote a letter about the things that needed repair and explained to him that we wouldn’t be paying anything until those repairs were done. I got an email last Thursday from the attorney for Langley and Taylor asking what the city intended to do. He wrote that the company had someone come up and do those repairs. I called Hunter (Hendrixson) and he said that he (Hunter) and Kevin (Robinson) had been over there (pool) and everything looked okay. There were cracks in some tile. We do have a three year warranty that says they will warranty their work for that period of time. Based upon what Hunter said and the communication I had with the attorney for Langley and Taylor, I would recommend that the board go ahead and pay that balance. I think they are in compliance with their contract. There might have been some things that slipped by us but if they’re not in the contract then we can’t hold them to it. My recommendation would be to go ahead and pay them. They do have a provision in there (contract) that if they have to seek collection they could collect their attorneys fees,” said Parsley.
Alderman Steve White said he is not pleased with this company and their apparent unwillingness to fix problems that persist with the pool which they may have caused while doing other repairs. The pool apparently has been continually overflowing the gutters on the deep end since the new tile has been put down and the lights in the pool have not worked properly since they were removed during the renovation and later re-installed after completion of the project. “I was actually over there when they were shooting the grade on the drain. I asked him how it was. He told me that it was an eighth of an inch off which is about as perfect as you can get for an area that big. But after we filled the pool back up, its off by like an inch and a half on that one corner which would consist of pulling the tile back off and taking a layer of mud concrete and building up that one corner and then laying the tile back down. They took out what was there and now what they put back isn’t working properly. This has never been an issue before. With the actual drain covers, they pulled them off and when they put them back they didn’t put all the screws in them or in some cases they put screws in them and broke the screws off and left the broken off screws,” said White.
Tony Poss, golf course tenant and pool operator, said the pool lights have not been working properly since Langley and Taylor finished their work. “All the electrical lights that go in the sides of the pool have all quit working. The pool company did pull the lights out and installed them back. I’ve been told they’re supposed to have a sealed beam in there to keep the lights on so they will work. They’re shorting out a GFI box and that’s kicking them breakers off. I just want them or whoever to fix it,” said Poss.
Acting on the advice of the city attorney, Alderman Danny Washer made a motion to make that final payment to Langley and Taylor to avoid a possible lawsuit. Aldermen White and Shawn Jacobs also voted to pay for the same reason but said they felt the company had not fulfilled its obligations to the city. Aldermen Gayla Hendrix and Cecil Burger were absent Monday night.
Meanwhile, Alderman White asked that cost estimates be obtained for making the pool handicapped accessible to comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act. The city must comply with ADA requirements at the pool by next spring. The options are to purchase portable chairlifts or going to the zero entry concept, which would require removing the kiddie pool and constructing a zero grade ramp which gradually slopes into the pool.
Alderman White also asked for cost estimates to install more restroom facilities at the swimming pool to accommodate the larger crowds that are now coming to the pool during the summer.
Alderman White further made a motion, which was approved, to keep the pool filled and circulating year round to possibly keep algae from forming and leaves from gathering and staining the sides of the pool. Mayor Taft Hendrixson favors keeping the pool filled but questions the need for continual circulation and the higher electric costs which the city will have to bear.
In other business, the aldermen approved on second and final reading an ordinance amendment to the city code to give full time employees three new paid holidays including Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, the day after Thanksgiving, and the Friday of the Fiddlers Jamboree. The action followed a public hearing. There was no opposition.
Kevin Robinson, public works director, in his monthly update to the board reported that “we went over to the golf course on Friday and worked on the irrigation and got it winterized. We also got our sixteen inch water main fixed. Its back in service. We found a mini track hoe over in Cookeville. The guy there let us use it for a day. He was wanting $15,500 for it and I talked him down to $14,500. It’s a good machine, I haven’t seen one like it. It’s a Kubota. I just wonder what you want to do about purchasing it. Its got 1950 hours on it,” said Robinson.
The city has budgeted funds to make the purchase
Todd Bowman, water plant operator, gave a report on water loss for the month. “We had 49.7 million gallons of water that left the plant in October. We used 396,000 for backwash and 300,000 for re-wash. We metered 380,000 at the plant. The DeKalb Fire Department used 500 gallons which left the total amount of finished water leaving the plant at 49.2 million gallons. We sold 37.5 million gallons which left a total unaccounted for at 10.6 million which comes up to a 22% loss which is still a rather good loss. The floor people are supposed to be at (the water plant) December 19. W&O or whoever has hired some different people to come in to re-do the floor. These people have said they can get the floor right and make it look like we want it to look,” he said.
Police Chief Randy Caplinger reported that “we had a real good result with our grand jury sealed indictments. I want to give credit to these officers. They’ve been out working and I appreciate their efforts and ask them to continue doing what they’re doing. They seem to be motivated to do it. We had a prisoner who recently got out of her handcuffs and got away. We picked her up within just a few minutes. So we do now have a new holding cell for anyone (prisoner) who comes in. Its been approved and you’re welcome to come and look at it,” said Chief Caplinger.
Fire Chief Charlie Parker reported that “we had a total of six fire calls for November, two motor vehicle accidents, and three alarm calls. We had both engines pump tested last week so both of them did pass the annual pump test. We’ve got a little work to do with them catching things back up but they did at least pass the tests. Our old air compressor that we use for filling out SCBA breathing air packs. Since we got a new one this year, we pulled our old one out of service. I’ve had another fire department contact me about trying to purchase that. Its not a lot of money, probably somewhere around one thousand dollars for that. I’d talked to Hunter (Hendrixson) about getting some independent group to give us some kind of appraisal on what they thought it would be worth to see if we could sell it to this other department so they could get a little bit of use out of it,” said Chief Parker.
Airport manager Wesley Nokes reported that “we recently talked about our upcoming runway overlay project. That’s going to be approximately a two million dollar project. We put in a grant for it. I went to TDOT the other day to present the grant application but TDOT has capped funding right now for everybody. Nobody got awarded their full amount. TDOT made a recommendation that we just do the engineering aspect of this project first. The asphalt has to be engineered for weight tolerances. We have one spot that’s never had any asphalt on it whatsoever. It’ll take more engineering work as far as that goes. The grant is going to be $150,000. We were awarded that the other day. It’s a 90/10% matching grant. This grant just pays the engineers and consultants. They have to survey and do all that stuff. (The city’s matching grant portion is $15,000).

Two Cited for Shoplifting

Smithville Police issued citations for shoplifting against two people last week.
34 year old Bridget Nicole Vientos is cited for shoplifting and public intoxication.
Chief Randy Caplinger said an officer was called to Rite Aid Pharmacy on Friday afternoon, December 2. Vientos was observed by an employee leaving the store with items she had not purchased.. When confronted, Vientos allegedly claimed she had simply forgot to pay for them. She was cited for shoplifting, Several hours later on the same day Vientos got into more trouble as she was cited for public intoxication. An officer was called to check out a public disturbance on Meadowbrook Drive. Vientos and her boyfriend were together in their automobile. She got out of the car on Meadowbrook Drive, climbed onto the hood, and began screaming. Police were notified. Upon arrival, The officer found Vientos agitated, belligerent, and unsteady on her feet. She was cited for public intoxication. Vientos will be in court on December 22.
Meanwhile 27 year old Daniel R. Wilson is cited for shoplifting and charged with resisting arrest. His bond is $1,500 and he will be in court on December 15
Chief Caplinger reports that an off duty Smithville Police Officer saw Wilson in Walmart on Sunday, December 4 and noticed that he was acting suspiciously. Wilson was seen leaving the store with a camouflaged jacket he had not purchased. An on duty officer was notified and saw Wilson running from the store upon his arrival. Wilson was chased down in the parking lot. Again, he was cited for shoplifting and charged with resisting arrest.