December 28, 2021
By: Dwayne Page
A visit from the governor and state education commissioner, a murder trial, a change of principals at DCHS, and the opening of a new police department headquarters, were among the top local headlines during 2021.
In part 2 of this week’s series, WJLE reviews the leading local news stories of 2021
*Governor Bill Lee and his wife Maria were in Smithville Friday evening, July 2 to pay a visit to the Smithville Fiddlers Jamboree and to join in the celebration of the festival’s golden anniversary. It was part of the governor’s three county tour Friday to commemorate Tennessee’s 225 years of statehood. During his remarks during the opening ceremony, Governor Lee commended the Fiddlers Jamboree on its 50-year history and also spoke of the state’s 225th birthday observance before presenting an award on behalf of the Jamboree to festival President and Coordinator Sam Stout for his dedication in keeping the Jamboree tradition alive for future generations. The Governor also presented an award on behalf of the Jamboree to Jack Barton, a former Fiddlers Jamboree President and Coordinator for his years of dedicated service. Sixth District Congressman John Rose also praised the Fiddlers Jamboree reaching this 50-year milestone and presented Stout a framed copy of his remarks on the floor of the US House of Representatives made part of the Congressional Record. Multi-GRAMMY nominated duo Dailey & Vincent, stars of the Grand Ole Opry, wowed a huge Fiddlers Jamboree crowd with an entertaining concert on Saturday, July 3 after each of them were presented prestigious honors. Jamie Dailey received the Fiddlers’ Jamboree’s 2021 Blue Blaze Award which is designed to honor an individual or group that keeps the embers of bluegrass music burning for future generations. The Blue Blaze Panel Committee for the Jamboree voted unanimously for Dailey’s nomination for the 2021 award citing his long-running contributions to bluegrass music. Darrin Vincent, who received the Jamboree’s Blue Blaze Award in 2014, was celebrated by the State of Tennessee with an unveiling of his “Tennessee Music Pathways” marker which has been placed on the square in Smithville. Vincent’s wife, children, mother and other family members joined him on stage for the unveiling.
*The City of Smithville and the DeKalb Coalition for Humane Treatment of Animals were at odds for much of 2021 fighting for control of the animal shelter and those differences eventually led to a legal battle in Chancery Court before being settled in August. In March, the Smithville Aldermen voted to terminate the city’s 99-year lease with the coalition giving the city total control of the operation. The mayor and aldermen claimed that the non-profit 501c3 group, which since 2017 has contracted with the city to manage and oversee the facility, had breached its agreement. City officials contended that the city’s own employees who worked there were actually managing the day-to-day operation of the shelter and not the Coalition itself. The coalition insisted that it had control over the shelter. In a separate move, the aldermen voted to resume allowing the shelter to accept animals from outside the city but within the county. Something the coalition had been fighting for since the aldermen issued the ban during a special meeting on October 29, 2020. However, the city would still not allow employees of the shelter to venture outside the city to pick up animals in the county due to city liability concerns. By terminating the coalition’s lease, city officials thought they were free to work out a deal directly with the county mayor and county commissioners to address remaining animal shelter issues. Later in March, Chancellor Ronald Thurman granted the coalition a temporary restraining order pending a hearing in Chancery Court to keep the city from taking over the shelter operation. The petition was filed by the coalition’s attorney Sarah Cripps. The two sides eventually went back to the bargaining table over the summer and settled their differences. An amended agreement to the original lease was drawn up and approved by all the parties clarifying more fully the original contract’s intent and purpose as well as the specific duties and obligations of the coalition and the city. While the city will have no control over the operation of the shelter under the amended lease and contract it will have some obligations to the coalition. The city will contribute (pay) to the coalition a base annual sum of $100,000 for the first full year in quarterly installments but the overall payment will increase by $1,000 per year for the next fifteen years. By the year 2037, the city will be paying $115,000 per year to the coalition. The city’s lease payment deal with the coalition may be revisited but not reduced after the first fifteen years. Other terms and conditions also apply. After approval of the new deal by both sides, the court case was dismissed.
*A Liberty man tried Wednesday, November 16 in DeKalb County Criminal Court for second degree murder in the fatal shooting of his stepson on Halloween night two years ago was instead convicted of voluntary manslaughter, a Class C felony but a lesser crime. 51-year-old Albert Wayne Fisher, Jr. is facing a possible prison sentence of from 3-6 years as a range one offender in the death of 37-year-old Tyler Durden. The shooting occurred outside the Fisher residence on Eckles Heights in Liberty on October 31, 2019. The range of punishment for second degree murder, a Class A felony is 15-25 years had Fisher been convicted of that crime. Because of a Halloween disguise he was wearing at the time, the Fishers didn’t recognize Durden until he removed his mask after being shot and called out “Mom I have been hit”. It took the jury of eight men and four women about an hour and fifteen minutes to reach the verdict after a six-hour trial that featured six witnesses for the state and Fisher himself, who testified claiming his motive for the shooting was in self-defense. After the verdict, Judge Wesley Bray granted a motion by state prosecutors that Fisher’s bond be revoked and that he be sent to the county jail, pending the outcome of a sentencing hearing scheduled for January 11, 2022.
*Four months after an investigation into what caused a fish kill in Hickman Creek at Alexandria, the US Environmental Protection Agency wrapped up its response activities there in December concluding that “the source of the impaired conditions was a seepage of contaminated groundwater coming from the bank” but that “recent water samples show that the water quality of the groundwater flowing into the creek has significantly improved”. The EPA released a public notice on the findings Friday but may have left some questions in the minds of the public yet unanswered. Although the investigation evaluated infrastructure near the creek and a drainage line at a nearby manufacturing facility, the EPA did not identify that as the reason for the problem in the public notice nor specify the substance that caused the contamination. A concerned citizen apparently made the discovery of the dead fish in the creek on Monday, August 9 and reported it to the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency who then contacted the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. What EPA contractors found was an unknown substance seeping into the creek, believed to have contributed to the kill of around 3,500 fish, which was coming from the creek bank behind the Alexandria Senior Citizens Center. A staging area was established there with a sump well which was dug to catch and contain the substance before any more of it could get into the creek. The dingy, dark liquid substance is being pumped into five above ground mobile FRAC storage tanks at the site to be shipped off for testing.
*Penny Schwinn, the Tennessee Commissioner of Education, visited Northside Elementary School on Friday, April 16. Schwinn walked the halls and observed firsthand the learning environment of students here. She even joined in with students on bongos during a music class. Commissioner Schwinn was welcomed by Director of Schools Patrick Cripps along with Northside Elementary School Principal Karen Knowles, Assistant NES Principal Beth Pafford, and members of the central office staff including Supervisors of Instruction Dr. Kathy Bryant and Michelle Burklow and Federal Programs Supervisor Dr. Danielle Collins. “I am thrilled to be here. It’s been a wonderful visit. I want to make sure I am able to see what is actually happening in schools and talk to principals, teachers, superintendents and students to learn how we can better serve them,” said Commissioner Schwinn.
*Brittney Gulley was named the 2021 DeKalb County School District Teacher of the Year. Gulley, a chemistry and ACT prep teacher at DeKalb County High School. Gulley got a surprise visit to her classroom Apri 13l for the “John Isabell Memorial Award” presentation by Director of Schools Patrick Cripps, DCHS Principal Randy Jennings, DCHS Assistant Principal Jenny Norris, and Supervisors of Instruction Michelle Burklow and Dr. Kathy Bryant. As part of the honor, Gulley also received a school bell award, a floral arrangement, and a certificate granting her a day off from school. “I have wanted to be a teacher for a long time and it’s an honor to know that my colleagues think that much of me to have nominated and voted for me. It’s an exciting moment in my life. I love what I do every day and I love these kids. I also love the fact that I got to go to college and come back and be a part of the education system that gave so much to me when I was here,” said Gulley. In her sixth year as a teacher, Gulley was among five local educators who were recognized for being chosen by peers as “Teacher of the Year” at their schools. The others were second grade teacher Janet Trapp at Smithville Elementary School; eighth grade ELA (English Language Arts) teacher Galen Brown at DeKalb Middle School; Allison Collier, a third grade ELA and ESL (English as a Second Language) teacher at Northside Elementary School; and Martha Damron, a seventh-grade math and science teacher at DeKalb West School.
*A good crowd turned out Sunday afternoon, October 17 to take a tour of the new Smithville Police Department building during an open house hosted by city leaders and police officers. The 12,000 square foot facility (including sally port) officially opened for business weeks later after the arrival of new furnishings and some other finishing touches. Mayor Josh Miller said these new police department has been needed for a long time and is something of which the city can be proud. “I see the need because the town is growing so much. A lot of people have moved in and I think the town will continue to grow. This building will serve its purpose and meet the needs of the community for many years,” he said. Police Chief Mark Collins said he and his fellow officers could not be more happy with what the city has done for them and the community in building this new facility. “I want to thank the Mayor and Aldermen and former aldermen who approved this project along with the people who built it and everybody involved. For us this facility will be a new world. We will now have plenty of room, better security, and state of the art modern conveniences. We are extremely proud of it and it is something the citizens of Smithville can take pride in. It’s a reflection of what the city thinks of us and the job we’re doing,” said Chief Collins.The facility has a total roofed area of 12,800 square feet which includes a 1,400 square foot drive through sally port for bringing in prisoners securely. It encompasses a front lobby with bullet proof glass and wall panels, records clerk office, hallways, closet space, four holding cells, armory, conference and training rooms, offices for the chief, captain, detectives, and other officers, rooms for records, investigations, filing reports, conducting interviews, locker room, electrical room, and evidence vaults, restrooms, and break room.
*Construction began in June on the Highway 70 project from Liberty to Alexandria after the Tennessee Department of Transportation awarded a bid to Twin K. Contractors, Inc. at $30,875,122 which included the grading, drainage, construction of retaining walls and paving on US 70 (State Route 26) from near State Route 53 at Alexandria to near State Route 96 at Liberty. The project is 4.1 miles long and the completion date is on or before June 30, 2024.
*Two new members joined the county commission in 2021. During the regular monthly meeting on January 25, Shaee Flatt of Alexandria was appointed by the commission to fill the unexpired term of First District Commissioner Dennis Slager who resigned in November 2020. Flatt edged out Tom Chandler by a vote of 7 to 6 for the position. A third candidate, Waylon Kyle received no support from the commission. Flatt is a former Mt. Juliet resident and former managing editor of the Chronicle of Mt Juliet. He now serves as a special education teacher and football coach at Mt Juliet High School. Flatt and his wife and children have lived in Alexandria for more than three years. Meanwhile local pharmacist Susannah Cripps Daughtry was appointed by the commission Monday night, April 26 to fill the remaining sixteen months of Third District Commissioner Bobby Johnson’s unexpired term which ends August 31, 2022. Johnson resigned his position in March. Daughtry, who received eight votes to get the appointment, was one of three persons seeking to fill the vacancy. The others were former Third District Commissioner Jack Barton; and Anthony Scott.
*Justin Branum claimed the Grand Champion Fiddling Title at the 50th edition of the Smithville Fiddlers Jamboree and Crafts Festival. The Murfreesboro resident, who also won the Junior Fiddling contest here Saturday night, July 3 beat out the Senior Fiddling Champion Gail Johnson of Lavergne in the showdown for the Berry C. Williams Memorial Award. Branum was the Grand Champion Fiddler of the 2020 Virtual Jamboree. This was the 10th year in a row (not counting last year’s virtual jamboree) that a Junior Fiddler has beaten the Senior Fiddler for the Grand Championship of the Festival. Meanwhile an Elkton, Kentucky boy won the top Jamboree award as the best fiddler in the National Championship for Country Musician Beginners. Noah Goebel took the coveted James G. “Bobo” Driver Memorial Award, named for the man who started the children’s competition during the 1980’s as part of the annual Fiddler’s Jamboree and Crafts Festival. Members of Mr. Driver’s family presented the award to Goebel.
*Hundreds of runners participated in the 23rd annual Fiddler 5K and One Mile Fun Run on July 3. The overall winner was David Pautienus who ran the course in 17:07 seconds. Meanwhile Cari Pautienus won the race among females. She ran the course in 21:46 seconds.
*After more than 35 years as an insurance agent for State Farm Jackie Smith retired February 28. “I just felt like it was a good time to get out and do some other things while my health and my husband’s health are still pretty good,” said Smith. Both Jackie and her husband Wade Smith were born and raised in DeKalb County, and they have two grown sons, Chris and Brandon. Before her career in the insurance business, Jackie spent 14 years as an educator in the DeKalb County School System. On Monday, March 1. Mallory Sullivan Pfingstler took over from Smith as the new State Farm Insurance agent in Smithville and the office location moved from the public square to 126 West Main Street.
*DeKalb County Farm Bureau announced the retirement of two long time employees in December. Agency Manager Bart Lay and Customer Service Representative Gloria Pinegar stepped down after a combined 81 years of service to the Farm Bureau. Lay was a 36-year veteran with the company including 21 years in Smithville and Pinegar is completed 45 years of service here.
*Two local dental practices announced big changes in June. Longtime dentist Dr. Cliff Duke, who had been in practice since 1979, announced his retirement completing 42 years of service to this community while Dr. Mitch Tatum of DeKalb Dental Center welcomed Dr. Duke’s patients as well as a new dentist to his practice, Dr. Alex Hayes. “After 42 years providing dental services to the best people on earth, I am announcing my retirement,” said Dr. Duke in a joint appearance with Dr. Tatum and Dr. Hayes. Although Dr. Duke’s office on South Congress Boulevard has closed, he made arrangements with Dr. Tatum to care for his patients going forward.
*Two long time county public officials announced in June that they would not be seeking re-election in 2022. Jeff McMillen, he longest serving DeKalb County public official in history, announced his retirement plans in June bringing to an end his nine-term 36-year tenure as Register of Deeds. “I have considered it for some time, but I think it’s time for me to retire and to pass the torch on to someone else. I am very humbled to have been able to stay here for 36 years and will be thankful until the day I die to the people of DeKalb County for what they have allowed me to do. The people have been wonderful to me. Folks from both sides of the aisle,” said McMillen. Meanwhile after almost 24 years serving as DeKalb County’s General Sessions and Juvenile Court Judge, Bratten Cook, II has announced that he will be leaving office when his term ends August 31, 2022. “The voters of DeKalb County have honored me three different times with election, but like the old saying goes “every dog has its day” and mine has come,” said Judge Cook. Although he will be stepping down from the bench next year, Judge Cook stresses that he is not retiring as an attorney.
*DeKalb Telephone Cooperative, Inc. d/b/a DTC Communications board of directors appointed Kathy Pugh in January to fill the unexpired term of her late husband, Roy Pugh, continuing her husband’s dedication and commitment to the members and DTC Communications. She joined the 10-member board responsible for overseeing the cooperative, serving the Auburntown exchange. Kathy Pugh retired in 2012 from State Farm’s regional office after 43 1/2 years. Roy Pugh passed away in December, having served DTC for 37 years. In September during the annual meeting of DTC Communications, CEO Chris Townson, on behalf of the Board of Directors, paid tribute to Mr. Pugh and presented a to Mrs. Pugh which read “In loving memory of Roy Nelson Pugh who served as director of DeKalb Telephone Cooperative Incorporated from 1983 until 2020. Roy left a legacy of dedication to family, friends, community, and this cooperative. He truly made a difference in the lives of those he served,”
*DeKalb County High School saw a change in administration in 2021 as both DCHS principal Randy Jennings and Assistant Principal David Gash stepped down from their positions at the end of the school year. Jennings, a veteran educator of 26 years, said while he had enjoyed his four years as head of the high school, the time had come to turn the reigns over to someone else. “I have prayed a lot about it and the Lord has given me a lot of indication that it’s time for me to move on and do something a little different. DCHS needs somebody who can go forward and be 100% invested in DCHS. I don’t think I am the right person for the job any longer,” said Jennings. Although he is leaving DCHS, Jennings later went to work for the Smith County School District. Gash, who had devoted his career to working with youth in the DeKalb County School System, first as guidance counselor and in more recent years as assistant high school principal, said while it had been a great experience. “It’s time to move on and let someone else come in who may be younger with a little more energy,” he said.
*In June, Director of Schools Patrick Cripps announced that he had filled the vacancies at DCHS. After 27 years as an educator in four different counties, Bruce Curtis came home to work for the school district where it all began for him. Starting July 1, Curtis officially became the next principal at DeKalb County High School. Although it was a coming home for him career wise, Curtis had actually never left DeKalb County as a resident. He was born and raised here and educated in the local school system. But for 21 years Curtis had worked for the Metro Nashville Public Schools, including the last 11 years as Director of Discipline, making the weekday 130-mile round trip from Smithville to Davidson County. While he had enjoyed his job, Curtis longed for a chance to work closer to home and for him that opportunity came after Randy Jennings stepped down as Principal at DeKalb County High School. Curtis applied and was interviewed for the job and later got the call from Director of Schools Patrick Cripps naming him principal. Director Cripps also didn’t have to look far to find a successor to Assistant DCHS Principal David Gash. Thomas Cagle, DCHS History teacher and assistant football coach, officially stepped into the position July 1. “I am very excited to get started and go to work in this new role. I feel really good about that and am looking forward to it,” said Cagle. For the last five years, Cagle had been a member of the faculty at DCHS. “I started in 2016. I have taught US History, contemporary issues, AP US History, and recently the dual credit US History that we have now. I had also been an assistant football coach serving the last three years as defensive coordinator,” said Cagle.
*The 147 members of the DCHS Class of 2021 graduated in May completing their high school years by receiving diplomas for which they had worked so hard. Three members of the class were singled out for special recognition during the commencement. This year’s White Rose Awards went to Jasper Kleparek and Carly Vance and the Citizenship Award was presented to Levi Driver.