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NHCS to tack on fees, weighs cost of FOIA software to accommodate high demand for public records
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Wilmington-area school districts reassessing plans to require masks
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Under legal threat, BCS tweaks meeting prayer
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A Leland Middle School teacher resigned Wednesday after being accused of growing trafficking amounts of marijuana.
Catherine Neely, a 47-year-old sixth grade math teacher, is being held on a $110,500 bond on a charge of of manufacturing and trafficking of marijuana, according to the Brunswick County Sheriff’s Department.
According to an arrest warrant provided by the Brunswick County Sheriff s Office, Neely allegedly possessed more than 24 pounds of marijuana and drug paraphernalia and was growing marijuana in a greenhouse in her backyard.
Neely has been on an approved leave of absence from the school since Jan. 19, according to a message from Brunswick County Schools. Leaves of absence are requested by employees, typically for personal or medical reasons, said the district’s Chief Communications Officer Daniel Seamans. Leave of absence requests are confidential and Seamans is unable to state why her absence was requested.
Brian Griffith, H2GO’s wastewater plant superintendent, said in 2019 the Belville plant was operating at full capacity. (Port City Daily photo/Johanna F. Still)
BRUNSWICK COUNTY Two public wastewater treatment plants serving northeastern Brunswick County are so maxed out of treatment capacity, utilities turned to a pump-and-haul arrangement to divert excess flow to a southwestern plant with room to handle it. The operation created chaos for school pick-ups and drop-offs at Town Creek Middle and Elementary Schools.
In recent months, tanker trucks made 40 to 50 daily trips to a pump station located at Town Creek Park. Eighteen-wheelers hauling thousands of gallons of sewage would back into one section of a four-point roundabout the only way to access the schools to unload, blocking parents attempting to pick up or drop off students.