News
DeKalb West Hosts Middle School Career Day
May 13, 2019
By: Bll Conger
DeKalb West School hosted its annual Career Day for the middle school grades on Tuesday, May 7. Students heard a variety of speakers describe their job duties, education and experience needed for their professions, and what possibilities are in demand in their work world.
Mike Whitehead, D.C.H.S. Auto Mechanics teacher, popped the hood and spoke to students about the different careers available in mechanics. April Crockett in the Tennessee Tech Computer Science Department in the College of Engineering, filled in students about techie jobs in everything from artificial intelligence to food engineering. Dr. Jeremy Blair, Assistant Professor of Art Education at Tennessee Tech, clarified the myth that people can’t find jobs in the arts. He talked about the variety of opportunities that involve art including architecture, set design, and graphic and comic book artists. Thomas Groom, who worked for years in the Human Resources Department at Nissan Manufacturing, informed the 6th through 8th graders about public relations, communications and human resources. School Resource Officer Lewis Carrick spoke to students about the training needed for a job in law enforcement.
“I want students to be introduced to a variety of careers during their middle school years at DeKalb West School,” says School Counselor Bill Conger. “Many of them get to see jobs that are performed in DeKalb, but I want them also to have a glimpse into the many other jobs that are out there. Also, since there is a growing demand for jobs in the vocational professional, I want to make sure we have someone from that area represented every year.”
A career day for elementary aged students was held earlier in the year.
Benefit Scheduled for County Firefighter
May 13, 2019
By: Dwayne Page
A benefit lunch for firefighter Chris Mulford will be Sunday, May 19 at 12:30 p.m. sponsored by Brothers Keepers at the DeKalb County Fire Department Main Station at 782 King Ridge Road, Dowelltown.
The lunch will include barbeque with sides. Donations will be appreciated.
Mulford was driving a tractor trailer in Pennsylvania on March 26 when he was involved in a serious wreck. He was severely injured and has been out of work for over a month and is unsure when he will be able to return. Mulford is a volunteer firefighter on the Short Mountain Engine 62 station for DeKalb County. He is the father of 3 and needs help. Please come, enjoy lunch, and make a donation to help his family as he recovers.
Sheriff and Budget Committee Come to Terms on More Help for His Department
May 12, 2019
By: Dwayne Page
The workload of the DeKalb County Sheriff’s Department is on the rise and to keep up with it Sheriff Patrick Ray and the budget committee of the county commission have reached a compromise in providing more manpower to meet the demands of courtroom security and other needs.
During a meeting Wednesday night, the committee voted to fund in the 2019-20 budget two new officer positions solely from a proposed new litigation tax through the General Sessions Court budget. One other new deputy position would be created and funded by the county through the sheriff’s department budget. And while no new positions would be added to the jail budget, the sheriff plans to promote two existing correctional officers to the rank of corporal as jail supervisors. Each one would get a $2,000 increase in pay under the existing wage scale for sheriff’s department employees for a total of $4,000. The move keeps the sheriff’s department compliant with standards for around the clock jail supervision under standards of the Tennessee Corrections Institute.
Sheriff Ray’s original proposal for the county to fund five new positions was determined to be too costly and the committee rejected the sheriff’s department budget 3-2 at a previous meeting.
The proposed litigation tax through the court system is expected to generate around $125,000 in new revenue which is more than enough to fund the two deputy positions expected to cost $79,020 in salaries plus matching benefits.
“In that budget (General Sessions Court) we are proposing to fund two security officers for the courtrooms and they will be deputy sheriffs under the direction of Sheriff Ray. One of those will be absolutely designated as security for the courtrooms and the other will be a security/deputy where he (Sheriff) can use at his discretion. Those two employees would be funded under the General Sessions budget and they would be employed by the sheriff’s department,” said Dennis Slager, Chairman of the Budget Committee.
When court is not in session, the new officers can be used as road deputies, to cover shifts as fill-ins for other officers who are off duty or on vacation, to transport prisoners to other facilities, etc.
In his revised budget proposal, Sheriff Ray said he trimmed his request for an increase in gasoline by $10,000 and utilities by $3,000 but while projections for overtime is the same next year at $95,000 as this year, Slager asked why it should be that much with more manpower being added to the department and given that actual overtime in the department for 2018 was $66,517.
Sheriff Ray explained that while all of the budgeted funds for overtime may not be used, it is primarily for times when officers are called in to cover shifts of others in training and for officers who are scheduled to work holidays. They get double time on the holidays they work.
Slager also has concerns with sheriff’s department employee pay increases being tied to the sheriff’s raises as approved by the county commission last year. Slager asked that the budget committee consider recommending to the county commission a freeze of those wages for a year. Giving raises in this manner, Slager said not only impacts the tier system (wage scale) but isn’t fair to other county employees.
“We don’t have the money to fund those pay raises and we didn’t have it last year. We have no (new) revenue to cover it,” said Slager.
“The other county official’s employees are separate from us (sheriff’s department employees). They get raises over 20 years under a 13 tier wage scale while we have a 6 tier scale over 8 years. I don’t think it would be fair to knock us out (step pay raises) and everybody else get theirs,” said Sheriff Ray.
The sheriff also explained that other county employees had been given raises at a percentage of their employers for a while until those employers (county officials) complained that it wasn’t fair because the County Mayor’s employees were getting more money than their workers. Based on those complaints, the county commission dropped that plan and adopted the wage scale for them under which the county now operates.
The budget committee voted 4 to 1 to adopt the revised sheriff’s department/jail budget as presented with no freeze in employee wages. Committee members Jeff Barnes, Sabrina Farler, Anita Puckett, and Jerry Adock voted in favor while Chairman Dennis Slager voted no.
The sheriff’s department’s budget of $1,905,447 and the Jail budget of $1,531,067 will now be presented to the county commission for final approval later this summer.
« First ‹ Previous 1 1802 1892 1900 1901 19021903 1904 1912 2002 2492 Next › Last »