Washington County News: News
Thursday, September 20, 2007
Drug dog’s death still a mysteryOfficials still don’t know what might have killed Gunner, the Damascus Police Department’s 5-year-old German shepherd drug dog who died mysteriously last month.
A 46-year-old Washington County woman was charged Wednesday afternoon with animal neglect after law enforcement officers seized seven horses and 10 dogs.
Wednesday, September 19, 2007
Fair friendsMatthew Pape rubs the knot on his forefinger then opens his palm, out from under the awning.
“Yep,” he said. “Seems like it’s raining harder.”
Discussion of financial problems dominated the Damascus Town Council meeting this month.
“I want people to realize that we do have a financial shortfall and problem,” Council member Jim Cartwright said.
At its regular meeting last week, the Washington County Board of Supervisors voted unanimously to appropriate $532,631 of leftover school money to the school system’s capital improvement fund, which is controlled by the supervisors. It’s an amount less than half of its leftover money from the 2006-20007 fiscal year.
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
Moderates work together to protect region’s biodiversityWhen people interested in environmental protection come face to face with people who extract natural resources from the environment, the scene is frequently characterized, charitably sometimes, as confrontational. Think northern spotted owl proponents facing down loggers in the old-growth Pacific Northwest and the stories about saw-foiling chains locked around targeted trees.
But in Abingdon last week, people working with endangered species spent three days with coal mining officials and while positions were clear and goals delineated, what emerged was not confrontational but largely cooperative. One speaker early in the presentations Thursday understood the dynamic that would not lead in the direction of conflict. The gathering was of the 80 percent of moderates on all sides of the issue. Absent was the 20 percent holding extreme views.
It was Gobble’s chili that won at last week’s Abingdon High School chili competition and brought the life skills class to the Washington County Fair Chili Cook-Off competition Monday night, marking the opening of the Washington County Fair held through Sept. 15 at the fairgrounds.
It’s been called “the big one.” They’ve been called “The Greatest Generation.”
The two, World War II and the men and women who lived through it, are the focus of Ken Burns’ seven-part, 15-hour long PBS special “The War.”
Abingdon Farmers Market vendors have been settling into their new quarters over the past month; however, a ribbon cutting ceremony with music and food next week will mark the official completion of the Abingdon Farmers Market and Community Pavilion.
For around four years, the dream of having a war veterans’ memorial park in Abingdon has been held back due to a lack of planning.
However, at the September Abingdon Town Council Meeting, Emmit Yeary presented the first phase of the park’s master plan.