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Sullivan Charged with Assaulting Correctional Officer

May 16, 2023
By: Dwayne Page

A man will be facing a judge this week after he allegedly assaulted a correctional officer twice last Tuesday.

28-year-old Dustin Allen Sullivan of Parsley Road, Smithville is charged with aggravated assault and assault on a first responder.

Sheriff Patrick Ray said that on May 9 while trying to detain Sullivan after being hit in the head with a closed fist, a correctional officer at the jail was also bitten by Sullivan on the right side off his forearm breaking the skin barrier and bringing blood. Bond for Sullivan is $10,000 and his court date is May 18.

48-year-old Ginger Elaine Moore of McMinnville Highway, Smithville is charged with violating an order of protection. Her bond is $3,500 and she will be in court on May 25.

Sheriff Ray said that on May 8 a deputy was summoned to a home on McMinnville Highway and upon arrival spoke with a woman who said that her daughter, Moore was at her residence. After speaking with Moore and doing a background check through central dispatch, the officer learned that an active order of protection was put in place two days earlier (May 6) against Moore to keep away from her mother.

22-year-old Elijah Knite Bass of Midway Road, Smithville is charged with domestic assault. His bond is $3,500 and he will be in court May 25.

Sheriff Ray said that on May 9 a deputy was summoned to the sheriff’s department. Upon arrival, the officer spoke with a woman who came to the jail to report that she and her boyfriend, Bass had gotten into an argument which became physical after coming home from Murfreesboro. The woman said Bass hit her on the face with a closed fist, bit her, and then pushed her out the door and onto the ground. According to the deputy, the woman had a bloody red spot where she had been bitten, a busted lip, blood on her shirt, and dirt marks on her leg.

33-year-old Aaron Mitchell Washer of Juniper Lane, Smithville is charged with domestic assault, vandalism, and violation of an order of protection. His bond is $7,000 and he will make a court appearance May 18.

Sheriff Ray said on April 30 a deputy was summoned to the jail where a woman had arrived to file a report about a domestic assault. According to the woman, Washer broke the driver side window out of her son’s car that she was in at Four Seasons Marina and then hit her in the face resulting in swelling around her right eye. The officer went to the scene and found shards of glass in the area of the parking lot of the marina where the woman said the attack occurred. Washer was also found in the same area. According to Sheriff Ray, Washer is under an active order of protection to keep away from this woman.

53-year-old Andy Dale Shelton of Shiloh Lane, Smithville is charged with aggravated assault (2 counts), vandalism under $1,000, and possession of a prohibited weapon.  His bond is $12,000 and he will be in court May 18.

Sheriff Ray said that on May 1 a deputy was called to Shiloh Lane due to an altercation between neighbors.  Upon arrival, the officer spoke with two people who said their neighbor, Shelton had come onto their property and pulled up marker stakes that had been placed there the day before by a surveyor company which cost them $300. They claim Shelton assaulted one of them with his fist and a property stake and that he threatened them while brandishing a set of brass knuckles and claiming he would burn their house down with them inside. The victims video recorded the incident with their mobile phones.

42-year-old Eddy Deloyed Farris of Andrew Street, Smithville is charged with evading arrest, driving on a suspended license, and reckless endangerment. His bond is $16,000.

Sheriff Ray said that on April 25 a deputy spotted a black GMC truck driven by Farris run a stop sign and speed down Jacobs Pillar Road. The officer got behind the truck and activated his emergency lights and sirens but Farris initially failed to stop. During the pursuit, Farris crossed the center line several times traveling at a high rate of speed on the wrong side of the road putting the public at risk of imminent danger.  He was subsequently pulled over. The officer learned through central dispatch that Farris’ driver license was suspended.

47-year-old Michael Lorimer Edwards of Pine Grove Road, Smithville is charged with driving under the influence. His bond is $3,500 and he will be in court May 25.

Sheriff Ray said that on April 27 while parked at the First Assembly of God Church on Highway 56 north, a deputy spotted the operator of a white GMC Yukon who appeared to be passed out behind the wheel while failing to maintain his lane of travel, swerving into the median and then back into oncoming traffic. The officer pulled over the vehicle and confronted the driver, Edwards who appeared to be under the influence. Edwards’ speech was slurred and although he submitted to field sobriety tasks, Edwards performed poorly. He also submitted to the implied consent law by giving a blood sample.




Smithville Work Camp June 12-15

May 15, 2023
By: Dwayne Page

Members of the Smithville Church of Christ will be rolling up their sleeves and pitching in to help show their Christian love for others during the congregation’s annual Work Camp scheduled for June 12-15.

The Work Camp is an annual home rehabilitation/beautification project organized by the Smithville Church of Christ. The church began the Work Camp as a means of helping less fortunate residents of the county do some fix up and cleanup projects around their homes.

“We are not professionals, but we have a few people really skilled at carpentry. We can’t come in and remodel your house but if something is wrong, we are glad to look at it to see if we can do something. We have fixed holes in floors and ceilings. We build a lot of wheelchair ramps for folks. We do brush cutting, tree trimming, gutter cleaning, pressure washing, mowing, weed eating, and other things to improve the outside of your property,” said spokesperson Casey Midgett.

The Smithville Work Camp concentrates its efforts in the Smithville-DeKalb County area. If you would like to have your home considered for the project, contact the church at 615-597-4159 by Friday, June 2 to acquire an application and release form. The church is located at 520 Dry Creek Road, Smithville. Applications are also available at local banks.




Could County Garbage Collection Convenience Sites Have to Close Two Days Per Week?

May 15, 2023
By: Dwayne Page

Two days per week!

According to County Mayor Matt Adcock, the county’s garbage collection convenience sites, already closed on Sundays, may soon have to be closed another day during the week (probably Wednesdays) after action taken by the budget committee last week. That is if the county commission adopts the solid waste department budget as recommended by the budget committee.

If the convenience sites were to be closed on Wednesdays, County Mayor Adcock said the transfer station would remain open on Wednesdays. The transfer station is closed on Saturdays and Sundays.

In a move to bring higher costs of labor at the convenience sites under control, the budget committee last Tuesday night voted to cut proposed funding in the line item of the 2023-24 solid waste department budget to pay laborers from $394,176 as County Mayor Adcock had requested to $355,000.

The motion, made by committee member Beth Pafford and seconded by member Larry Green, was adopted on a voice vote. The only member voting no was committee chairman Jeff Barnes. Other members of the committee signaling approval of the move were Daniel Cripps, Susannah Cripps Daughtry, and Greg Matthews. Committee member Sabrina Farler was absent.

“I think you’re going to hear a bunch of grief (from public) over it being cut in my opinion,” said Chairman Barnes.

Pafford raised the issue during the meeting expressing concerns about the growing costs of labor at the convenience sites within the last two years and she inquired whether all the sites need to be open every day or whether the daily operation of some could be staggered.

“In 2022 (fiscal year) the audited number was $263,000 for laborers and this year it is estimated to be $352,000 and for 2024 its $394,000,” said Pafford.

“We have added (budgeted) a lot to our laborers, a significant amount and I’m just wondering if we need to have all of them (convenience sites) open Monday-Saturday for the extended period of time they are now open and knowing where our convenience sites are most trafficked, having those open more often and having some of the less trafficked sites open part of the time. They don’t all have to be open Monday-Saturday. The county could stagger days for some of them, to have some of the sites not open every day. As long as there is a place open you have somewhere to take your trash,” said Pafford.

The county has nine manned convenience sites and three locations with open containers (green boxes) that are not fenced in or manned.

The manned sites are staffed by 24 part time employees Mondays through Saturdays from 9 a.m. until 6 p.m. Each of the employees is scheduled to work 27 hours per week. Last year the county budgeted a $3.00 per hour pay raise for the part time laborers with their wages going from $9.00 to $12.00 per hour.

Pushing back on Pafford’s suggestion, County Mayor Adcock said he changed the daily operating schedule of the convenience sites last fall so that all laborers would work the same number of hours each week and so that residents would know the exact times when the convenience sites in their community would be open. Changing the schedule now, Adcock said would be a step backward and create more problems.

“The point of my changing the schedule last fall was to be more consistent across the board so that no matter what end of the county you still know that the dumpsters are open from 9-6 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Also, some of the laborers made more money than others before but now they all work an equal number of hours,” said County Mayor Adcock.

“If you close down some of the sites (during the week) then the other ones will have more traffic which means we will be going back to having more of the overfilling problem we just saw by changing the hours,” Adcock said.

In response, Pafford said “Or they would know what days they would have to take their trash. Right now, people know they can’t take their trash before 9 am. Before, a lot of people took trash before 9 a.m. but they have had to readjust their schedules. The same thing with Sunday. You have to readjust your schedule to take the trash,” she said.

The proposed new 2023-24 budget for the solid waste department projects revenues at almost $2.2 million with expenditures nearly $2.7 million meaning that if all funds are spent as budgeted the department would have to dip into its cash (reserves) by just under $500,000 to balance the budget. However, those numbers can be deceiving according to County Mayor Adcock because the solid waste fund typically does not spend more than it takes in during the year and in most cases has money left over each year.

“We have never dipped into cash on this. We have always returned more money in than what we spent. In 2021 we brought in (revenue) almost half a million dollars at $428,000 (over budget) and in 2022 we brought in $310,000. We are budgeting to go into cash at $431,000 (this year) but won’t so we are not really having a problem here in salaries, or maintenance costs or anything,” said County Mayor Adcock.

The proposed budget cut by the committee will be included as part of the overall solid waste budget to be presented to the full county commission for final approval this summer.

Although the county commission controls the purse strings, it apparently can’t dictate the daily operation of the solid waste department. County Mayor Adcock said if he doesn’t have sufficient funds to staff laborers at the convenience sites six days a week, his plan will most likely be to close them weekly on Wednesdays, along with Sundays.

Other portions of the solid waste budget were approved by the budget committee.

Solid Waste Director James Goff said increased costs are projected with the renewal of a contract between the county and the Capital Waste Company which hauls to a landfill in Dayton all the county’s garbage collected at the transfer station. Goff said the increase in volume of the county’s garbage has resulted in an increase in the haul bill.

“We entered into conversations with getting that contract renewed. We have had no price increase since the 2017 contract. The average cost per ton had come back (bid) at $64.50 per ton and we are running at $55 per ton right now so we are increasing that line in the budget (contracted services) to $1.5 million. That should give me the ability to process about 23,500 tons. Last year we were at 19,600 tons,” said Goff.

The budget for tipping fees (audited at $375,000 last year) will be budgeted next year at $385,000.

The amount the county charges for tipping fees is expected to increase to help cover higher costs for contracted services. “Right now, we are charging $70 per ton, and we are talking about going to $75 or $80 dollars per ton to make up for the expense,” said County Mayor Adcock.

The county is also anticipating more revenue from recycled materials such as scrap metal and tires.

“We budget $15,000 annually (revenue) for recycled materials and we can increase that projection to $25,000 next year. Our audited number (revenue for recycled material) was $27,000 in 2022,” said County Mayor Adcock.

“We are also bringing in $10,000 for waste tire disposal and have been budgeting only $7,000 so we can raise the projection on that. As for our residential waste collection charges, in 2021 we brought in $18,000 and $19,000 in 2022 so I think we can make that projection next year at $20,000. We have only been budgeting revenue from that category at $12,000”, said County Mayor Adcock.

DeKalb County’s Solid Waste Department receives no local property tax dollars. The entire department is funded from a variety of other taxes including the county’s share of the state beer tax, wholesale beer tax, bank excise tax, state revenue sharing-TVA funds, a portion of the county’s local option sales tax, payments-in-lieu of taxes, and alcoholic beverage tax.




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