Supervisors tried to keep a lid on the hog issue caldron Tuesday
night, but it boiled over like witch's brew.
The Board steered an even course during the session, first granting
Southside Concerned Citizens permission to rally at the courthouse
on Monday prior to their march to Mary Bethune and the planning
commission's 7 p.m. hearing on hog setbacks.
Then, at the request of Tucker Watkins, the Board granted South
Central Agriculturists For the Environment permission to hold
a barbecue on the Mary Bethune grounds, also prior to the planning
commission meeting.
The public is invited to both the SAFE barbecue and the SCC rally
and march.
Angry words boiled, however, when Watkins charged the Board had
been bombarded with innuendo and given "parts of reports"
and "misquotes" about the hog issue.
"On July 12, that will stop," said the SAFE spokesman,
adding that recent research "will be enlightening to the
decision making" process.
SCC members Jack Dunavant and Clayton Garmon objected to the SAFE
spokesman's remarks.
"If Mr. Watkins has any information that is wrong, we will
correct it," said Dunavant.
Responding later, the SCC chairman told supervisors he found Mr.
Watkins "very confusing to work with" in the past.
But as tempers flared, supervisors were having no part of it,
ending the hog issue discussion and moving into closed session
on another matter.
However, heated discussion between Watkins and SCC members continued
briefly in the hall following the meeting.
Earlier in the Tuesday night meeting, Dunavant told supervisors
there were "loose ends to wrap up" and he received permission
from the Board to read a June 10 letter from SCC to them in order
to enter the letter into public record for legal reasons.
In that letter, Dunavant said there was research data establishing
two miles as the limit of hog odors, and he called on supervisors
to protect the public and establish two mile setbacks from property
lines in Halifax County.
The June 10 letter also said if the Board failed to protect the
public with at least a two mile setback from property lines, the
issue would be thrust into the legal arena.
Dunavant also entered another packet of information into public
record.
"I find it ironic that SCC is here representing the people,"
said Dunavant, adding he thought that was what supervisors were
supposed to do. "A handful of people are jerking this Board
around."
SCC member Clayton Garmon also entered comments into record regarding
the CAFO amendment proposal.
Garmon said he noticed there were no guidelines for disposal of
dead carcasses in the recommendations. He also addressed wall
deflection upward as an odor remedy, as well as the water curtain
method.
The SCC member also proposed: a five mile separation from property
lines, not structures, for CAFOs; advocated "doing something
about existing odor problems from operating CAFOs; and recommended
exhaust fans not blow over cesspools.
Garmon said, "What we should have in common is what is best
for the county." He called for consideration of "the
people, not me, not you, not those with political power or big
landowners."
IVOR, Va. (AP) - State regulators ordered a Chesapeake-based farmer
with a history of pollution problems to remove his pigs from a
farm in Southampton County.
In a settlement released this week, the Virginia Department of Environmental
Quality also told Earl Warren that he must obtain permits
and comply with anti-pollution laws before he can again raise
hogs on his farm in Ivor.
Warren kept between 200 and 1,000 hogs, officials estimate.
Since 1996, state inspectors have documented illegal discharges of
contaminated runoff from his farm on four occasions, and they have
sent repeated notices demanding that he get a state permit.
Water samples taken earlier this year showed high levels of fecal
coliform and ammonia in the runoff, according to state records.
Warren could not be reached for comment Thursday. There was no telephone
listing under his name in Chesapeake or Ivor.
By RACHEL LA CORTE
Associated Press Writer
MIAMI (AP) - Just seven months after agreeing to pay states more than
$200 billion, the tobacco industry faces another potentially massive
award - this time to hundreds of thousands of smokers suffering
from emphysema, lung cancer and other illnesses.
A jury on Wednesday held the nation's five largest tobacco companies
liable for making a defective product in the first class-action
lawsuit by smokers ever to go to trial.
Tobacco stocks were generally lower today. The verdict came after
trading had ended Wednesday on the New York Stock Exchange.
The jury found that the industry ''engaged in extreme and outrageous
conduct ... with the intent to inflict severe emotional distress,''
which could support an award of punitive damages in the trial's
next phase.
Those damages could exceed even the national settlement.
''The verdict will almost certainly be regarded as a landmark
in finally holding the tobacco industry accountable for the
damage it does in addicting children and in causing tobacco-related disease,''
said Bill Novelli, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free
Kids.
The lawsuit was filed in 1994 on behalf of as many as 500,000 sick
Florida smokers and the heirs of those who died.
Once the jury decides what, if any, damages should be awarded
to the lawsuit's nine representative class members, then
the half-million other members will be free to seek recovery.
The plaintiffs are seeking at least $200 billion.
Other verdicts against the industry have been reversed, and some analysts
predict the cigarette companies may be able to dismantle the
class-action - have it ''decertified'' on appeal - in order to fight
individual claims.
''If the industry does not get the case decertified, then this would
be a stepping stone to a very large number of awards against the
industry,'' said Martin Feldman of Salomon Smith Barney.
A class-action typically is created to avoid wasting time litigating
similar claims by numerous plaintiffs. Cigarette makers have
argued the technique isn't appropriate in smoker cases because there
are too many issues unique to each plaintiff.
David Adelman, tobacco analyst for Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, said
he expects the class will be decertified and that the case ''is
going to die.''
''Even if it is not decertified, it will break down into a lawsuit
for each and every smoker,'' Adelman said.
The industry will be allowed to raise defenses in the next phase of
the case that it wasn't able to raise in the first phase, such as
whether the individual smokers assumed the risk of smoking knowing
it was unhealthy, he said.
Juries have awarded damages in smoking liability cases only five times
- three were overturned on appeal and the two others are being
appealed.
In this case, the jury heard eight months of testimony and had thousands
of industry documents garnered over decades of tobacco litigation.
Former surgeons general, ex-tobacco industry scientists and doctors
testified about the havoc smoking can wreak on the body, the
difficulty in trying to quit and the manufacturers' refusal to cooperate
with health officials.
The industry claimed there is no scientific proof that smoking causes
any illness and that the public is well aware that smoking is
risky.
But the jury agreed with the smokers on all counts, including their
claims that the industry deceived them about the dangers of smoking,
hid research results, stopped scientific work that promised
to produce safer cigarettes and advertised to children.
Plaintiffs and family members openly wept and hugged each other as
the verdict was read in Miami-Dade County Circuit Court.
Circuit Judge Robert Kaye barred lawyers in the case from discussing
the decision.
The defendants were the nation's five biggest cigarette makers and
two industry groups: Philip Morris, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Brown
& Williamson Tobacco Corp., Lorillard Tobacco Co., Liggett Group
Inc., the Council for Tobacco Research and the Tobacco Institute.
The $206 billion national settlement reached with the tobacco industry
in November bars states from suing to recoup the costs of treating
sick smokers, but it does not prohibit lawsuits by individuals
such as this one.
At today's court session, lawyers disagreed about when the jury should
come back to consider damages. Lawyers for the smokers suggested
two weeks, but industry lawyers asked for two months to prepare.
Circuit Judge Robert Kaye will set a timetable after hearing each
side's plans when court convenes again Monday. Cigarette makers
have until July 19 to file papers in support of motions, notably
requests for a mistrial and decertification of the class, which
would disband the smokers' group.
The proposed zoning map for South Boston took another step
toward finalization as the Planning Commission voted Wednesday
to present it to the Town Council for final approval Monday night.
Following a public hearing Wednesday night during which several
residents requested their property be zoned differently than was
proposed on the new map, the Planning Commission voted unanimously
to present the map with all but one of the requested changes to
the South Boston Town Council for their final approval following
another public hearing Monday night.
Working with land use and zoning consultant Jon P. Weersing out
of Richmond and local consultant Lee Pambid, South Boston Town
Manager Ted Daniel applied the zoning ordinances adopted in June
to divide all of the property within the town's corporate limits
into various districts that define usages.
Property owners were encouraged to review the proposed zoning
map before Wednesday's public hearing and provide the town with
their input, and several came before the commission to request
alterations.
"We have worked extensively with the consultants and used
aerial studies and ground studies, looked at existing property
uses, surrounding property, and future land usages to determine
these districts." Daniel told local residents who filled
the council chambers Wednesday. "We've had real good input
from folks coming in and looking at the map."
Planning Commission members voted to adopt residents' requests
to change zoning distinctions for the following:
· William Palmer requested that T-1 Transitional district
be extended to include his property at the corner of Cole Street
and North Main Street to allow for his property to be used as
a single family residence and law office.
"T-1 is a good, ingenious classification," said Palmer,
who is a local attorney. "We have some good ideas for this
land, and assure that they would be gradual and neighborhood-related."
· Several individuals with land located across Route 501
from the Taco Bell Restaurant requested that their properties
be zoned B-2 General Business rather than R-1 Residential so that
it is consistent with adjacent properties.
· After final review by the Planning Commission, the AR
Adaptive Reuse District was reduced to approximately the same
size and location of the town's tobacco warehouse district in
the town's comprehensive plan.
· The Planning Commission voted unanimously to present
the property located on Jeffress Street as R-4 Multi Family Residential.
The only motion that did not carry involved a request from Dean
Jones to extend the B-1 Neighborhood Commercial District to include
his corner property on North Main Street and Halifax Boulevard,
which is zoned R-1 Residential on the proposed zoning map.
Jones, who owns a number of commercially zoned lots adjacent to
this corner property, told the Planning Commission that he would
like to move the existing residence from this corner lot and build
a commercial project on the 10 lots previously owned by Leslie
Puryear, which adjoins this corner property.
"As shown on the official South Boston Zoning maps, these
lots, as well as all the property north, including Virginia Power,
are currently zoned C-1 Neighborhood Commercial, and have been
since 1952," he said. "Several months ago I purchased
the adjoining property at the intersection of Hamilton Boulevard
and North Main Street. This property is currently zoned R-1. This
situation occurred when Cavalier Boulevard, now known as Hamilton
Boulevard, was built back in the 1980's.
"We will build a commercial project on the Puryear property
in the near future. We will also be relocating the existing residence
that is located on the corner of North Main Street and Hamilton
Boulevard, and we need this property zoned business to allow for
visibility, access and parking," he continued.
Several local residents spoke in opposition to this proposition
saying the intersection was already too busy and a commercial
project would destroy the quiet atmosphere of the neighborhood.
The fact that Jones has not elaborated on the exact nature of
his planned commercial project also bothered local residents.
"I'm being squeezed by the town dump on the back of my property
and commercial on either side," said Charlie Rice, who lives
on North Main Street. "We never have learned exactly what
is going in on that corner, and we'd like to know what Mr. Jones
has in mind. It is already a busy corner, and we don't need more.
We don't need a convenience store to make it worse."
Tom Leggett Jr. and several others also spoke against Jones' commercial
project.
"I drive through this intersection (North Main Street and
Hamilton Boulevard) at least four times a day and see lots of
cars and trucks that run yellow lights and see people actually
gain speed as they approach," Leggett said. "I have
nothing against commerce, but this is being proposed in a major
congested area where there is already heavy traffic from students
and people driving to and from work. This will only compound the
back-up that already exists."
But Jones argued that this area has been commerical for nearly
50 years, that residents purchased their own property knowing
this, and that a wide variety of properties such as a telecommunications
station, the town shop, a bread store and warehouse, Hupps Mill
Plaza, a funeral home, an industrial park and even a beef cattle
farm, currently exist within a "very short vicinity"
to his corner property.
A short distance further are Lowes, WalMart Super Store, restaurants
and other businesses, he added.
"There is a tremendous mix in this one area and has been
for years," Jones said. "Someone stated that rezoning
this property would increase noise, traffic, congestion, and crime.
These things are already here and everyone deals with these issues
on an everyday basis, this is nothing new. The town's comprehensive
plan for land use and transportation shows this property zoned
general commercial and North Main Street in the future will be
four lanes north to the stop lights. Change is occurring now and
will continue in the future."
Another resident, Carroll Thaxton, who said he would very much
like to know just what sort of commercial project Jones was planning,
pointed out that while the area may have been zoned commercial
for 47 years, that back then there was no WalMart or high school
adding to the traffic flow.
"These generate tremendous traffic," he said. "There
will be tremendous opposition if special use is granted. It would
be a mistake to do that. This is a dangerous intersection."
A motion by Daniel to extend the B-1 Neighborhood Residential
to include the corner property and present this to council for
final approval died on the floor for lack of a second.
No alternative motion was recommended, and Jones will have the
opportunity to present his case to the South Boston Town Council
during the 7 p.m. public hearing Monday in the Yancey Street Council
Chambers.
In other business, the Planning Commission also voted to recommend
that council grant a special use permit to Hill Felton Jr. and
Sr. of Felton Brothers Transit Mix. Inc. to upgrade and modernize
their facility on Edmonds Street and Railroad Avenue.
The night air will be filled with magic, love, imagination,
fantasy and mischief when the Richmond-based Encore Theatre Company
comes to Halifax County to perform Shakespeare's "A Midsummer
Night's Dream.
Sponsored by d-scan Outlet Store in South Boston this year's Shakespeare
in the Park festival will be held at 7:30 p.m. July 30 and 31
at the Staunton River State Park Amphitheater.
""This is a very economical opportunity for our community
to see a professional company out of Richmond," said d-scan
President David Nelson. "(A Midsummer Night's Dream) is a
good theme for this time of year, and this will be a benefit for
the entire community."
Tickets are available at the d-scan Outlet Store on First Street
in South Boston and at Staunton River State Park at $5 for adults,
$3 children 6-12 years old. Children five and under will be admitted
free.
The d-scan Outlet Store will also give away a free ticket with
each $100 purchase.
Parking will be $1 Friday and $2 Saturday.
The Amphitheater seats about 80 people, and visitors are invited
to bring lawn chairs, blankets, and coolers with drinks and snacks.
No alcoholic beverages will be allowed.
The performances begin at 7:30 and will run for approximately
one and a half hours without an intermission.
County officials and Halifax Town Council may began annexation
talks next week.
A Wednesday, July 14, meeting was suggested by county officials
in a letter received by Halifax Town Manager Robert Greene yesterday.
Following a closed session Tuesday night, supervisors asked that
a meeting be sought to work towards a negotiated settlement on
the annexation issue as soon as possible.
Halifax Town Council unanimously voted to begin annexation proceedings
during its June 1 meeting, asking that the county respond by mid-August
since the Town anticipates a September public hearing on the issue.
During the June session, Council members also said they hoped
to complete boundary action by the close of the year.
The Town's boundary proposal would extend its line to the South
Boston line in the Centerville area, incorporate Salishan and
Golf Course Road communities, include the Burlington plant and
extend its reach up Highway 360 (Mountain Road).
The town is seeking land for residential, commercial and industrial
use and to expand its tax resources, according to the Resolution
adopted in June.
The areas proposed for annexation were described in the town's
Resolution as having an increasing need for urban services with
the town better able to meet the urban service needs of the area.
Town utility and other services already are tapped by some living
in areas surrounding the town, noted town officials last month.
Greene said yesterday the town has developed statistical data
on population figures, revenue, county losses and services to
be provided in the proposed boundary area. But Greene declined
to elaborate prior to the town's meeting with supervisors.
In other Board business Tuesday night, following a public hearing
supervisors adopted amendments recommended by the planning commission
dealing with elderly housing in B-I Zoning Districts, which was
described as a limited business zone with small businesses, and
B-2. Sites in B-2 will carry a conditional use permit.
However, supervisors decided to postpone action on a specific
request by Daniel J. McDuffie of Golden Age Care Center to establish
a housing for the elderly facility and an adult daycare center
south of the Town of Halifax in the former Spencer Building.
Supervisors said they wanted to hear the planning commission's
recommendation on the McDuffie application before taking action.
Supervisors also heard an update on the Continuing Education Project
by Chris Lumsden of the Halifax Education Foundation.
The master plan includes a five-acre site with an approximately
75,000 square foot brick warehouse building valued at $1.7 million
located in downtown South Boston next to the Prizery.
CEC project costs based on the master plan reveal total capital
costs estimated at $3.5 million, including $2.7 million for construction
costs, $200,000 for site work and architectural and engineering
services, and a remaining 10-15 percent contingency cost.
In addition to those funds, the community approved a $1.75 million
bond referendum for the project last November. The Foundation
plans to raise $1.75 to match the referendum.
Lumsden said yesterday that HEF is still assuming the project
cost will be at or under $3.5 million and at "this time the
numbers look very favorable based on the cost estimates prepared
by our architects."
That price includes upgrade of the total exterior facade, the
replacement of the building's roof system, site grading for parking
with about 160 spaces, lighting and landscaping, said Lumsden
yesterday.
During this first construction phase, Lumsden estimated approximately
10,000 sq. ft. would be prepared downstairs for use by administration,
a library and student center.
Upstairs approximately 18,000 to 19,000 sq. ft. will be prepared
for academic use. This space will include four computer labs,
a chemistry and biology lab, according to Lumsden.
Of the total 75,000 sq. ft., CEC will be using about 30,000 sq.
ft. with the remaining 45,000 sq. ft. still available for rental
and as an incubator building for businesses.
"The beauty of this is we can expand the CEC relatively quickly
to meet needs," said Lumsden.
Lumsden told supervisors that construction would begin "as
soon as HEF raises the money" and gave a late winter or early
spring estimate on getting underway.
The existing 7,000 square ft. CEC links local and regional colleges
and universities to offer higher education and workforce training
programs to the citizens of South Central Virginia.
Averett College, Longwood College , Danville Community College,
Southside Virginia Community college, Virginia Tech, Virginia
Commonwealth University-Medical College of Virginia and Old Dominion
University are supporters of the CEC program.
The Halifax Education Foundation owns the building and the property.
Several accidents involving personal injuries kept Virginia
State Police busy Tuesday.
Four people were taken to Halifax Regional Hospital in South Boston
following a two-vehicle wreck Tuesday evening.
State Police reports stated that Pamela N. Reed, 22, of Halifax,
who was driving a 1994 Ford at 6:55 p.m. along Route 501 near
Millstone Church Trail (Route 843) had slowed for traffic when
her vehicle was struck in the rear by a 1994 Mazda driven by Jackie
A. Mabins, 25, of Nathalie.
Reed and three passengers in her vehicle, Terissa Watson, 24,
Jamar Braxton, 17, and Tywan Miller, 22, were treated for their
injuries in the emergency room and later released, a hospital
spokesperson said.
Investigating State Trooper D.J. Cline charged Mabins with following
too close.
The Mabins vehicle sustained an estimated $1,000 in damages, while
damage to the Reed vehicle was estimated at $500.
Tuesday afternoon an Alton man was charged after he collided with
a vehicle involved in an earlier accident.
Seth Earl Perry Jr., 29, of Alton, was driving a 1996 Chevrolet
pick-up truck along Whitt Farm Trail one mile north of Route 58
around 1:45 p.m. when he collided with the rear end of a 1994
Plymouth driven by 30-year-old Stacey Lynn Hughes of Alton.
Reports indicated that the Hughes vehicle had been involved in
a minor accident and Perry did not stop in time and struck the
rear of the vehicle.
Investigating State Trooper R.C. Compton charged Perry with reckless
driving.
Each vehicle sustained an estimated $1,000 in damages.
An Alton man was injured shortly before midnight Tuesday in a
single-vehicle accident at the intersection of Stebbins Road (Route
691) and Cluster Springs Road (Route 658).
According to a report filed by investigating State Trooper G.M.
Gilliam, Gary Lynn Hudson, 21, of Alton, was apparently driving
at an "excessive speed" when he attempted to apply the
brakes of the 1993 Mercury he was driving and slid through the
intersection and collided with an embankment.
Gilliam charged Hudson, who suffered minor injuries, with reckless
driving.
The vehicle sustained an estimated $2,500 in damages.
An Alton man was arrested Wednesday on multiple felony drug
charges, according to reports from the Halifax/South Boston Regional
Narcotic Enforcement Task Force.
Task force agents arrested Eric Donavan Brown, 26, of Bethel Road,
Alton, on five charges of felony distribution of marijuana, one
charge of felony distribution of methamphetamine and one charge
of felony transportation of controlled substances into Virginia.
Additional drugs, paraphernalia, records, money and a firearm
were allegedly seized during a search of Brown's residence in
conjunction with his arrest, and additional drug and firearms
charges are anticipated against Brown and other residents of the
house.
Brown is currently being held in the Blue Ridge Regional Adult
Detention Center in Halifax under $100,000 bond awaiting an appearance
in Halifax County General District Court July 12.
These charges are the result of a long term investigation involving
numerous jurisdictions in Virginia and North Carolina, Task Force
sources indicated.
These charges are part of a much larger drug conspiracy involving
the alleged importation of massive quantities of marijuana into
North Carolina and Virginia which has resulted in previous arrests
in both states.
Task Force sources indicate that as the investigation continues,
numerous additional arrests are anticipated involving long and
short term residents of Halifax County and several North Carolina
jurisdictions.
The Task Force is also investigating the upcoming seizures and
possible forfeiture of drug laundered or related assets such as
farms, houses, currency and vehicles.
Robert Dewey Mutter of Brookneal and resident of Woodview Nursing
Home, passed away June 24 at the age of 101.
Born in Russell Co. on May 17, 1898, Mr. Mutter was the son of
Alice Crabtree Mutter and Charles Mutter. He was married to the
late Martha Mason Mutter.
Mr. Mutter was the oldest member of the Falling River Baptist
Church, Brookneal and a member of the Brookneal Independent Order
of Odd Fellows #267.
His survivors include his brother: Spencer Mutter of Martin, KY;
daughter and son-in-law: Lois and Merle Carwile of Brookneal;
grandchildren: Shirley Martin of South Boston, Karen Jones of
Salem, Scottie Hamlett, Cheryl Swint, Kathy Carwile of Brookneal
and Reecie Carwile of Gladys; seven great-grandchildren and eight
great-great-grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by his wife and a daughter: Elizabeth
M. Dunford.
A funeral service was held at Henderson Funeral Home, Brookneal
on Saturday morning, June 26 with the Rev. W.D. Mills officiating.
Interment with Odd Fellows rites was held at Falling River Baptist
Church.
Clarence Melvin Clark of 1815 Howard Avenue South Boston, died
July 5 at Duke University Medical Center. He was born in Halifax
county on January 27, 1947 to Clarence Melvin and Lillian Clark
Ballou.
His survivors include his son: Marvin L. Meadows of South Boston;
brothers: Edward D. Ballou of the home, Billy J. Ballou of Nathalie
and Charlie A. Ballou of Danville; sisters: Carolyn A. Hamlett
of the home, Cecelia F. Johnson and Lillian M. Newman both of
Burlington, NC; daughter-in-law: Norman Meadows; brothers-in-law:
Thomas L. Newman of Virgilina and Earl L. Johnson of Bland; sisters-in-law:
Katina T. Ballou of the home and Tajanda W. Ballou of South Boston
and five grandchildren.
Funeral services for Mr. Clark will be held Saturday July 10 at
2 p.m. at Deliverance Tabernacle with the Bishop Carl Lykes, officiating.
Burial will follow in the family cemetery.
Viewing for Mr. Clark will be from 7 to 8 p.m. today at the Chapel
of Kent, Ballou and Crowder Funeral Service.
Hallie Lowery Hudson of 4105 Turbeville Road Alton, died July
7 at Halifax Regional Hospital at the age of 89.
She was born May 4, 1910 in Halifax County to Charlie Hayes Lowery
and Clara Ford Lowery and was married to Robert Achilles Hudson.
Survivors include sons: Rev. Carl J. Hudson of Roxboro, NC, Eli
Franklin Hudson of Virgilina and Charlie Bradley Hudson of Halifax;
daughters: Mildred Hite of Buffalo Junction, Clara Garner of Hartsville,
SC, Bettie Blanks of South Boston, Edith Crews of Denniston, Gloria
Bonham of Roanoke and Jerrie Wilmouth of Alton; son-in-law: Raymond
Wilmouth of Alton; grandson Chris Wilmouth; sister Janie Hudson
of South Boston; brothers: Marshall Lowery of South Boston and
Rossie Lee Lowery of NC.
She was proceeded in death by her husband and sons: Shirley E.
"Pap" Hudson and Ertis Hudson.
Funeral services for Ms. Hudson will be held today at Brooks Funeral Home Chapel at 3 p.m. With Rev. Michael Teixeira, Rev. Carl Hudson and Danny Comer officiating. Burial will take place in the Shady Grove United Methodist Church Cemetery located in Virgilina.
David Coleman Carr of 1024 Dudley Road, Halifax, died Monday
July 5 at Duke University Medical Center at the age of 47.
He was born in Halifax County, on May 3, 1952 and was the son
of Robert Carr, Sr. and Maxine Coleman Carr. He was married to
Laura Ann Carr and was a member of Banister Hill Baptist Church.
He was a teacher at the Halifax County Middle School and an employee
of Walmart.
His survivors include his wife; daughters: Pamela Chappell of
South Boston, Tiffany Carr and Veronica Carr both of the home;
grandchild; his father of Halifax; sister: Oveda Carr Beard of
Jersey City, NJ; brother: Robert Carr, Jr. of Halifax.
Funeral services for Mr. Carr will be held today at 1 p.m. with
services at the Banister Hill Baptist Church with the Rev. D.
William Carr officiating. Burial will follow in the church cemetery.
The family have received friends at the home.