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by: Summer Kelley


City of Trenton Commission met Monday night for their June meeting and approved releasing $6,815.03 in Hotel/Motel tax funds collected by the city from August 2019 to April 2020.


The money is only part of the funding the city has been holding since the Dade Chamber of Commerce/Regional Visitors Information Center (RVIC) folded. Dade Alliance, a group of business people and local residents and volunteers, have been working on rebuilding the Chamber of Commerce and RVIC through the Alliance. Their 501(c)(6) designation has been applied for, according to William Back, and once approved will be back dated to last week. Mayor Alex Case says the group has met the TPD guidelines in order to receive some of the hotel/motel tax. The state has designated a certain percentage of the hotel/motel tax when collected be used for tourism.


Case said a portion of the funds are meant to go toward the Old Courthouse since the plan is for the RVIC/Chamber to move into the courthouse once renovations are complete. Currently the RVIC is located on the square between the office of Attorney Robin Rogers and Thatcher's BBQ. To be certified through the state an RVIC has to be open so many hours a week and every day Monday through Friday. Dade Alliance is discussing what hours the RVIC will be open and considering extended hours on Friday evening when visitors are just getting into Dade and a few hours on Saturday morning as they try to find what works best for the community.


Whether or not the 1945 Dade County Fair will happen this July 4th is still up in the air as Case explained that according to the city's insurance company and attorneys there is some concern over the Executive Order for COVID-19 guidelines. Case said the Civic Center has to remain closed through July 12 currently due to the restrictions on large gatherings by the Executive Orders and that social distancing would have to be strongly policed during the Fair and that would be almost impossible. Fair co-ordinator Nathan Wooten said that he was understanding that holding the 1945 Fair on July 4 was not possible. Wooten said he would be meeting with the others on the committee planning the fair on Tuesday evening and they would be looking at three options, postponing the fair to a later date, holding just the fireworks because they were already purchased (which Lafayette had chosen to do), or cancelling it all together. Wooten said he would let the Commission know what the committee decided.


The city has received a Public Safety grant for $7,829.86. Ansel Smith presented the grant and information to the city. Smith said they had applied for the grant previously and were told the program had run out of money, but then they received money back and encouraged Trenton to apply again. Smith said he tried to get something for every department with the grant. List of publi safety items being purchased by the city through the grant includes, 50 traffic cones for use by any department, eight roll up safety signs and four foldable/collapsible stands for the Streets Department, two AED's with cabinets and pads (1 at City Hall, 1 at Civic Center), 12 boxes of high risk latex gloves for the Sewer Department, and five gunlocks for police department vehicles. Total cost of all the items is $9,311.36. The city will purchase the items, then submit receipts to be reimbursed through the grant with $1,481.40 paid by the city.


Commissioners gave their department reports beginning with Parks and Recreation/Animal Control Commissioner Terry Powell. The Parks and Recreation Department had one rental of the Civic Center which had to be cancelled due to COVID guidelines. Parks and Recreation worked on preparing the pool, ball fields, park and playground for reopening. Animal Control had 11 work order/complaints for the month of May.


Streets Commissioner Monda Wooten said the Streets Department has continued doing their normal stuff as well as continuing storm cleanup. The Department lost one employee, but Wooten said she wanted to wait and see financially if they would be able to afford to replace the employee with the economic affects of COVID-19. The Streets Department finished building a drain box on Cora Circle. Wooten said the new track hoe has helped the Streets Department a lot.


Police Commissioner Kirk Forshee reported that the Trenton Police Department in the month of May responded to 457 calls, performed 2,190 business checks, made 14 arrests, handled 10 animal control calls, took 39 incident reports, worked 10 traffic accidents, and collected fines totalling $8,429. Year-to-date fines collected total $51,032. 28. Forshee thanked Integer for 2,000 units of face shields donated to city and county emergency management services.


The Sewer Department performed 32 underground locates, 8 emergency locates, handled 20 sewer calls, and had two emergency calls last weekend in the evening. The chlorine pump is temporarily out of service due to a sink hole that developed next to the well. Sewer Department Manager Dewayne Moore said they had to dig it out and fix it.


Ansel Smith reported the City Inspectors had 11 current inspections and had been doing inspections with people looking to start construction now that the weather is nice. The Trenton Fire Department had 23 calls for service, 15 of which were dispatched and then cancelled and one medical call. The city had their yearly pump test and passed inspection.


As of May 29, the City of Trenton had $510,352 in the general fund. Year-to-date revenue collected totals $656,835.67 and year-to-date expenses total $655,609.94.


"We're staying on key with what money is coming in," Case said.


City Commissioners approved the appointment of Cindy Rich to the Historical Preservation Commission, the appointment of Reece Fauscett to the Library Board, and paving of roads not to exceed $61,970 with Kissner Paving.


An Executive Session to discuss a personnel matter was held and when Commissioners returned to the public meeting Case said they would be meeting with an employee on workers comp to offer options and once the decision was finalized would give a report.


The video of the Work Session, Meeting and After Executive Session can be viewed below. Due to technical issues with sound, the beginning of the work session is not included.















by: Summer Kelley




As the state, and in fact the entire country, attempts to determine the financial impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, Dade County is working on the final draft of the Fiscal Year (FY) 2021 budget.


Commissioner Robert Goff reported SPLOST collections for May of $200,082. While the collections remain over $200,000, Goff reminded everyone the numbers run two months behind, so the money was actually collected in March.


"Probably next month will tell us what, if anything, this COVID thing did," Goff said.


Goff said fuel tax would probably be down due to the lower cost of fuel and shelter in place order which reduced traffic.


The county's proposed FY 2021 budget process is winding down with a public hearing set for June 11, 2020 at 5 p.m. at the County Administration building in the county commission meeting room.


"Everyone involved in this budget, I've made it a point they be here," County Executive Ted Rumley said.


A notice of a Special Called Meeting to accept the FY 2021 budget will be published as well. The Special Called Meeting will be held on June 18, 2020 at 5 p.m. in the County Administration Building.


Further discussion of SPLOST, which is up for renewal by voters, was led by Rumley. Rumley and the commission have been sharing projects SPLOST has been used to pay for in the county. Finished recent SPLOST projects for the county include the jail fence, a van for 4-H, new Sheriff vehicles, and tornadoes and storm cleanup and repairs.


E-911/Dade Emergency Management Director Alex Case shared progress on one the county's larger SPLOST projects - updating computers, servers, software and equipment due to the phasing out of Windows 7. Case said he first spoke to the commission about the problem back in the fall. After January 14, Windows 7 would be unsupported. The county had 80 workstations to change over, which have now all been switched to the newer operating system. Case said they had been updating and replacing things as money was available in SPLOST. Case also spoke about the fact that they have been trying to work between COVID, the storm, and the other things going on. The biggest parts of the project are still left and include the Vigilon camera system for the court building and jail where the server is from 2008 and at ten end of its life; the mytel phone system used by the county which the server is past its life as well as the software; and part of a system used in dispatch that they are currently repairing using parts of an old system from Walker County.


Commissioner Phillip Hartline asked Case if the slow progress of the updating the county's IT system, computers and equipment was due to a lack of flow of money or lack of time.


Case said that the people working on the system were wearing multiple hats.


Hartline said he understands they are wearing multiple hats and that he was not saying Case and the others were not working and not doing all they can do, he just wanted to know if they needed more help. Hartline shared concerns that if the system goes completely out, before everything is updated, they will have nothing.


Case explained that they had gone through four weeks straight of training on one fix to the system. Everything is done, Case said, but the bigger items.


Hartline suggested sub-contractors, but Case said they have a couple of contractors they work with and cost of using them is an issue as well as being able to trust someone in the system.


"We are trying the best we can," Case said. "We are doing a lot in house as we can. I would love to have some more help, but it will cost us."


Dade County Library Director Marshana Sharp encouraged people to fill out their Census forms. The census is online and ten questions only. Sharp said people can come to the library and fill it out. Sharp and others are concerned because Dade is showing only 48.8% of the residents in the county have responded to the census compared to the state's more than 60% average. It is against the law for the census to share any personal information, they just need the numbers. Those numbers help with things like roads, grants, money for the library, school system, and public transportation. The numbers also help new businesses determine if there is a big enough work force or enough customers. The last census Dade had over 16,000 people and right now Dade is showing 7,000. The library is open Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Ten a.m. to 11 a.m. is for the most vulnerable in the population.


Rumley reported the EPD is back in Dade, this time they are working with federal authorities on issues at The Preserve in Rising Fawn. The EPD is also working with an issue on Sand Mountain.


Commissioners approved a proclamation declaring June 21 - 27 National Lightning Awareness Week; appointed Darlene Rogers to the Library Board; the re-appointment of Sarah Moore to the Historical Preservation Society; the re-appointment of Sandra Pullen to the DFACS Board; and the purchase of a grasshopper lawnmower for $17,185.78 if the current mower used by Parks and Rec stops working.


Hartline asked for a change in Public Input suggesting that a Public Input section be added to the end of the Work Session in order to allow no more than five people time to address any issue that will be up for approval during the regular meeting. Public Input during the regular meeting will remain as is to allow anyone to address the commission regarding anything on or off the agenda. The commission will be looking at other counties for similar policies and get the changes drawn up.


The full work session can be viewed above and the meeting viewed below.




by: Summer Kelley


An motor vehicle accident at Mile Marker 11 on I-59 Sunday night resulted in a Dade County Deputy being transported to Erlanger with injuries.


Dade County Sheriff's Deputy Trevor Newsom was parked on the inside southbound lane, with emergency lights on, while assisting a highway work crew with traffic control. A Nissan Versa struck the rear of the vehicle Newsom was in and then struck a guardrail before coming to rest in the outside southbound lane. The patrol vehicle was knocked into the center median.


The driver of the Nissan, 39 year-old Jason Phillip of Phoenix, AZ, was flown to Erlanger with serious injuries. The condition of Phillip is unknown. Newsom's injuries were non-life-threatening.


The accident is being investigated by the Georgia State Patrol.



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