News
February 20, 2019
By: Dwayne Page
A DeKalb County High School senior learned last week that she has been named a Finalist for the National Merit Scholarship Program.
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Madison Elizabeth (Madi) Cantrell, daughter of Todd and Jenny Cantrell, who qualified as one of 16,000 Semifinalists nationwide for this honor last fall is now among thousands of Finalists. The National Merit® Scholarship Program awards individual students who show exceptional academic ability and potential for success in rigorous college studies.
National Merit Scholarships worth more than $31 million will be offered this spring. About half of the Finalists will win a National Merit Scholarship, earning the Merit Scholar® title.
A variety of information is available for NMSC selectors to evaluate: the Finalist’s academic record, information about the school’s curricula and grading system, two sets of test scores, the high school official’s written recommendation, information about the student’s activities and leadership, and the Finalist’s own essay.
Beginning in March and continuing to mid-June, NMSC will notify the finalists at their home addresses if they are selected to receive a Merit Scholarship® award.
Madi is the 2018-19 Miss DCHS and she participates in various school clubs, including FBLA, Student Government, and Senior Beta Club, where she currently serves as president. She is also the treasurer of the 2019 senior class. She served as the Junior Usher for the Class of 2018, alongside Mr. DCHS, and earned the AP Scholar with Distinction award. She was voted Outstanding Underclassman during her Freshman and Sophomore years and attended Girls State in the summer of 2018. Madi has joined the prestigious 29+ club which recognizes students with an ACT score of 29 or higher. Upon graduation, Madi plans to study chemical engineering.
NMSC, a not-for-profit organization that operates without government assistance, was established in 1955 specifically to conduct the annual National Merit Scholarship Program. Scholarships are underwritten by NMSC with its own funds and by approximately 410 business organizations and higher education institutions that share NMSC’s goals of honoring the nation’s scholastic champions and encouraging the pursuit of academic excellence.
Over 1.6 million juniors in about 22,000 high schools entered the 2019 National Merit Scholarship Program by taking the 2017 Preliminary SAT/National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test (PSAT/NMSQT®), which served as an initial screen of program entrants. The nationwide pool of Semifinalists, representing less than one percent of U.S. high school seniors, included the highest scoring entrants in each state. To become a Finalist, the Semifinalist and his or her high school had to submit a detailed scholarship application, in which they provided information about the Semifinalist’s academic record, participation in school and community activities, demonstrated leadership abilities, employment, and honors and awards received. A Semifinalist must also have an outstanding academic record throughout high school, be endorsed and recommended by a high school official, write an essay, and earn SAT® scores that confirm the student’s earlier performance on the qualifying test.
Investigators Say Death of Woman Found in Backyard Last November Caused by Drugs and Hypothermia
February 20, 2019
By: Dwayne Page
Investigators have wrapped up their probe into the death of a woman whose body was found on a cold and rainy night in November in the backyard of a residence on Parkway Drive in Smithville.
According to District Attorney General Bryant Dunaway, 28 year old Jessica Whitworth Stephens of Woodbury was the victim of an accidental death caused by a combination of drug toxicity and hypothermia.
“Investigators looked into the circumstances of her death and what we have been waiting for as the missing piece of the investigation is the report of the medical examiner. The autopsy report. We just recently received that back and the medical examiner’s office has determined that the cause of death is the combination of the presence of drugs in her system as well as hypothermia. It was a rainy and cold night when she was found and she was found outdoors exposed to the elements so the manner of death ruled by the medical examiner is an accident so there will be no further investigation on our part. There appears to be no crime. It’s just an accidental death caused by a combination of drug toxicity and hypothermia,” said Dunaway in a statement to WJLE by telephone Wednesday morning.
Stephens’ body was found on Monday, November 12 in a backyard on Parkway Drive near Federal Mogul. Through fingerprints, investigators were able to identify her.
The case was investigated by the DeKalb County Sheriff’s Department, Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, and the District Attorney Generals Office.
County Resolves Legal Dispute with Landowner Over Gated Road
February 20, 2019
By: Dwayne Page
A legal dispute between the county and a landowner over a road and whether he can keep a gate across it has been resolved with a settlement in Chancery Court.
A hearing had been scheduled for Monday, February 18 to determine whether Robert Grant Manning should be permanently enjoined from keeping a gate across Sunset Drive off Allen Bend Road in the Belk Community. Sunset Drive branches off to Hidden Hollow Way, both of which dead end on property formerly owned totally by Manning. Bart Lay later bought a portion of the property in October, 2015.
The case had been lingering in Chancery Court since 2016 but a settlement between the parties was reached in the days leading up to the hearing. Chancellor Ronald Thurman approved and signed the agreed order on Monday.
The county claimed Sunset Drive had been on the county road map and county road list since the late 1990’s and that Manning could not legally keep a gate across it but Manning denied the county’s claim asserting that Sunset Drive, a nine foot wide gravel road, was a private drive which ran through his property and belonged to him.
Following a two and a half hour hearing in August, 2016, Chancellor Thurman granted the county’s petition and issued a temporary injunction to enjoin Manning from obstructing Sunset Drive with a gate. During that hearing, Mr. Lay, the adjoining property owner testified that the gate had forced him to access his property through a field off Allen Bend Road and that it had hampered his efforts to rent a trailer on the property and farm land.
In the settlement approved by the Chancellor on Monday, the county will abandon the portion of Sunset Drive currently traversing 1.841 acres of property owned by Manning and reroute it off Allen Bend Road onto Bart Lay’s property. Mr. Lay is dedicating to the county a strip of land to allow for the new section of Sunset which will join the existing road past Manning’s property. Meanwhile a portion of Hidden Hollow Way extending fifteen one hundredths of a mile east of the intersection of Sunset Drive will also become a county road while the remainder of it will continue to be a private driveway belonging to Lay, the property owner. Manning and Lay will be permitted to erect gates at designated points where the respective roads become private driveways to protect easements and access to their properties. With the approval of this agreement, the temporary injunction against Manning has been set aside.
During the 2016 hearing, Chancellor Thurman sided with County Attorney Hilton Conger who contended that Sunset Drive was a county road based in part on a subdivision plat signed by Manning on July 21, 2004 dedicating all streets and alleys on his property to the county. In 2006 Manning also signed a deed of transfer conveying a portion of the subdivided property to his ex-wife which referenced Sunset Drive as being a county road. She sold her property to Mr. Lay in October, 2015.
Manning’s attorneys, Sarah Cripps and Brandon Cox disputed Conger’s claim stating that Manning had made no public dedication to the county of Sunset Drive nor any right of way dedication and that the DeKalb County Regional Planning Commission approved Manning’s subdivision plat on July 12, 2004 with full knowledge that Sunset Drive was nothing more than a private gravel driveway.
Cripps and Cox asserted that deeds also revealed that Manning reserved an easement unto himself so he could have access to the rear of his property after it was subdivided. They claimed no easement would have been necessary if Sunset Drive were already a county road. They also pointed to the fact that Sunset Drive served no other property owners, other than Lay, and that there were no school bus or mail routes on the driveway, which consisted largely of two strips of gravel with grass growing in between.
Manning testified in 2016 that he and his former wife purchased the 120 acre site in the Belk community in 1990 and that he later developed the driveways now known as Sunset Drive and Hidden Hollow Way but had never sought making them county roads. Manning said he named the driveways himself at the request of the DeKalb County E-911 Board in 1992 and erected road signs as a joke since the driveways only traverse a cow pasture. Manning said he has always maintained the driveways himself and had never asked the county highway department for any gravel or road work on them.
Manning said he erected the gate on Sunset Drive in May, 2011 to keep drunks and ATV’s off his property and had not before been challenged by the county to remove the gate. When the county commission became aware of it in the fall of 2015, they voted to instruct then Road Supervisor Butch Agee to take the necessary action to have the gate removed. It was taken down in January, 2016 but Manning later erected it again and locked it with a log chain. The gate was again removed in August 2016 but Manning put it back where it remained although it was opened and did not block the road.
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