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The Georgia Department of Public Health reported last week that a Ben Hill County resident tested positive for West Nile Virus (WNV), and a horse tested positive for Eastern Equine Encephalitis (EEE) in Lowndes County. AS OF Monday afternoon, no new cases of either illness had been confirmed in the health district, which includes Ben Hill and Irwin counties. But one pool in Lowndes County tested posi- tive for WNV. Public health officials in South Georgia encourage everyone to guard against exposure to mosquitoes. In July, a horse in Brooks The Fitzgerald High School Purple Hurricane will travel to Kingsland this Friday, Sept. 1, to oppose AAAAAAA classi- fication Camden County. Game time is set for 7:30 p.m. THE CANES (1-1) ARE coming off of their first win of the 2017 season and the first win for new Head Coach Tucker Pruitt’s career. This game against Camden County was added to the Hurricane schedule after Albany High Canes face AAAAAAA powerhouse Camden Member FDIC Here for You anytime, anywhere ... You belong here. www.colonybank.com THIS NEWSPAPER WAS PLACED IN THE MAIL TO YOU ON TUESDAY AFTERNOON. IF IT ARRIVES LATE, PLEASE CONTACT YOUR POSTMASTER. – Serving The Area Since 1895 – 2 Sections, 20 Pages • Vol. 121, No. 39 www.herald-leader.net August 30, 2017 Herald-Leader Herald-Leader Herald-Leader 75¢ Fitzgerald Sales Papers Harveys CVS Rite Aid Sears Walmart Tractor Supply Academy Sports Editorials 2-3B Obituaries 4-5A Police Report 9A In this Issue: Fitzgerald’s Walmart Supercenter will hold a grand “re-opening” ribbon cutting at 8 a.m. Friday in celebra- tion of the major remodeling just completed at the store. The community is invited to attend. The store is located at 120 Benjamin H. Hill Dr. Walmart to cut ribbon Friday a.m. Ben Hill County Schools will be closed Monday for the Labor Day holiday. Classes will resume on Tuesday. No school on Labor Day The Jessamine Place is cel- ebrating its 45th anniversary this week, and the public is invited to take part in a 5K run/walk at 7:30-8:30 a.m. Friday at the Blue and Gray Park. The community is also invited to attend a 1 p.m. ice cream social Friday afternoon at the Jessamine Place’s edu- cational center adjacent to the Christian Kitchen (408 E. Jessamine). To find out more about the Jessamine Place and the serv- ices it provides in Ben Hill, Irwin and Wilcox counties check out this week’s Feature Front. Jessamine Place is in 45th year East Coast Asphalt of Douglas spent several weeks earlier this summer paving Central Avenue and Main Street. Now they are back at work on a DOT contract to pave U.S. 129 from Ocilla to the Ben Hill-Wilcox County line. That includes paving all of Grant and Sherman Streets through the cen- ter of Fitzgerald. City Public Works Director David Walker said Monday that the City portion of the project is expected to take four to six weeks. When working on a federal highway, pavers are not allowed to block traffic, and so they are paving one lane at time so as not to restrict traffic flow. The above photo was taken just south of the CSX line on North Grant Street. A familiar sight Last Monday, prior to Friday night’s FHS-Irwin County football game, the Rotary Clubs of Fitzgerald and Ocilla met jointly. The clubs expect the joint meeting to be an annual event prior to each year’s Border War game. No surprise, the program was a joint event by FHS Head Coach Tucker Pruitt (left) and Irwin County Head Coach Buddy Nobles. The two clubs plan a joint 10-mile run next year as a fundraiser for Rotary projects. A new tradition The 2017 Fitzgerald High School homecoming parade will be held on Thursday, Sept. 14, beginning at 6:30 p.m. ALL LOCAL schools, clubs, Parade entries now accepted for Homecoming The Fitzgerald-Ben Hill County Library has received a National Science Foundation grant to provide science- based programs for adults. THESE PROGRAMS will essentially be “book club meets science café,” according to Martha Powers-Jones, library director. Attendees can read a pre-announced popu- lar book selection, then to come to the library to discuss the book and watch and dis- cuss a short human interest video in which scientific ideas touched on in the book inter- sect everyday life. The first program, ‘Book club meets science café’ in adult programs at library Resident tests positive for WNV, no new cases reported Qualifying for the November 8 Municipal election ended Friday afternoon. Only two seats are contested. Mayor Mark Massee is being chal- lenged by Jim Puckett. Councilman At-Large (Eastern District) Albert Webb is being challenged by Mark M. White. COUNCILMAN AT-LARGE (Western District) Jason Holt did not qualify to run for re- election. Jimmy Johnson is the sole qualifier for that seat. In all other seats, incum- bents are unopposed. They are: First Ward Councilman Alex Tillman; Second Ward Councilman Charles Coney; Third Ward Councilman Dennis Jefferson and Fourth Ward Councilman Michael Griffin. For the Water Light & Bond Commission, incumbents run- ning unopposed are: First Ward, David Griffin; Second Ward, Robert Leverson and Fourth Ward, Tommy Hatcher. THE LAST DATE TO regis- ter to vote in the Municipal election is October 10. Voters may register at the Board of Elections office, located at 115 W. Pine St. or online at http://sos.ga.gov/. Early voting will begin on October 16 at the Board of Elections office from 7:30 a.m. until 3:45 p.m., Monday through Friday. There is no Saturday voting. Election day voting will take place at the Fitzgerald Fire Department, located at 315 E. Pine St. Voting hours will be 7 a.m. until 7 p.m. City qualifying ends with Mayor, one Council seat contested for Nov. 8 In a called meeting last Thursday night, the Ben Hill County Commission approved two zoning requests author- ized by the Fitzgerald/Ben Hill County Planning Board. PRIOR TO THE REGULAR meeting, public hearings were held for both requests. Two citizens spoke in favor of a zoning request by G&L Pawn Shop, located at 395 Redwood Rd. In regular session, the Commission voted to rezone one acre located at 395 Redwood Rd. from General Farming-County to Community Commercial- County. The Commission also voted to rezone .45 acres owned by Roger Merritt, locat- ed at 260 Jack Allen Rd. West, from R-6-M to Community Commercial-County. In other business: COUNTY MANGER MIKE Dinnerman informed the Commission that funds had been repaid to the general fund using SPLOST revenue. He noted that $77,289 paid by general funds for 2016 projects, should have been paid by SPLOST funds. Projects paid by 2017 general funds of $15,684 should have been paid using SPLOST funds. The general fund for both years was adjusted and SPLOST funds used to repay the general operating fund. • An item on the agenda to discuss a financial manager position was tabled for a future meeting. Commission OKs zoning requests Gabe Grubbs, 9-year-old son of Jason and Tiffany Grubbs, played in the Baseball Youth All American Games in Elizabethtown, Ky. THE ANNUAL tournament attracted top 9-and-up play- ers from 39 states and three countries. Gabe was randomly assigned to a 10 with 10 other players. He led his team to victory with top statistics in almost every category. During the games, he posted a .813 batting average, stole seven bases and drove in 14 RBI. His coaches selected him as Hustle Award Winner. Gabe started playing base- ball when he was 3 years old. He played T-Ball until he was Gabe ‘hustle’ winner in Youth All-American Games in Kentucky GABE GRUBBS (Turn to Gabe, 10-A) (Turn to Book club, 10-A) (Turn to Resident, 10-A) (Turn to Canes, 10-A) (Turn to Parade, 10-A) BY SHERRI BUTLER Based on ratings in the newly released Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Dorminy Medical Center is well ahead of the class in providing a quality patient experience. THE SURVEY awards new summary star ratings for 3,504 hospitals eligible to receive a rating. Hospitals are scored on a one-to-five-star scale based on 11 publicly reported measures assessed in the HCAHPS survey assessing patient experience. Dorminy Medical Center earned four stars, up from 3 stars previously. Data for this survey was collected between October 1, 2015, and September 30, 2016. Out of all the hospitals eli- gible for a rating, only 215 received a five-star rating. Dorminy is one of 1,203 to receive the four-star rating and the only one among the area hospitals we checked, including larger hospitals. DMC’S 4-STAR overall rat- ing is broken down into eight areas that are individually rated. Dorminy earned 5 stars in doctor communica- tion. It received 4 stars in nurse communication, staff responsiveness, pain man- DMC climbs to 4-star rating in patient experience survey (Turn to DMC climbs, 10-A)

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The Georgia Department of

Public Health reported last

week that a Ben Hill County

resident tested positive for

West Nile Virus (WNV), and ahorse tested positive forEastern Equine Encephalitis(EEE) in Lowndes County.

AS OF Monday afternoon,no new cases of either illnesshad been confirmed in thehealth district, whichincludes Ben Hill and Irwincounties. But one pool inLowndes County tested posi-tive for WNV.

Public health officials inSouth Georgia encourageeveryone to guard againstexposure to mosquitoes. InJuly, a horse in Brooks

The Fitzgerald High SchoolPurple Hurricane will travel toKingsland this Friday, Sept.1, to oppose AAAAAAA classi-fication Camden County.Game time is set for 7:30 p.m.

THE CANES (1-1) AREcoming off of their first win ofthe 2017 season and the firstwin for new Head CoachTucker Pruitt’s career. Thisgame against Camden Countywas added to the Hurricaneschedule after Albany High

Canes face AAAAAAApowerhouse Camden

Member FDIC

Here for Youanytime, anywhere ...

You belong here.

www.colonybank.com

THIS NEWSPAPER WAS PLACED IN THE MAIL TO YOU ON TUESDAY AFTERNOON. IF IT ARRIVES LATE, PLEASE CONTACT YOUR POSTMASTER.

– Serving The Area Since 1895 –

2 Sections, 20 Pages • Vol. 121, No. 39

www.herald-leader.net August 30, 2017

Herald-Leader Herald-Leader Herald-Leader75¢Fittzgerald

Sales Papers Harveys

CVSRite Aid

SearsWalmart

Tractor SupplyAcademy Sports

Editorials2-3B

Obituaries4-5A

Police Report9A

In this Issue:

Fitzgerald’s WalmartSupercenter will hold a grand“re-opening” ribbon cuttingat 8 a.m. Friday in celebra-tion of the major remodelingjust completed at the store.

The community is invitedto attend. The store is locatedat 120 Benjamin H. Hill Dr.

Walmart tocut ribbonFriday a.m.

Ben Hill County Schoolswill be closed Monday for theLabor Day holiday. Classeswill resume on Tuesday.

No school onLabor Day

The Jessamine Place is cel-ebrating its 45th anniversarythis week, and the public isinvited to take part in a 5Krun/walk at 7:30-8:30 a.m.Friday at the Blue and GrayPark.

The community is alsoinvited to attend a 1 p.m. icecream social Friday afternoonat the Jessamine Place’s edu-cational center adjacent to theChristian Kitchen (408 E.Jessamine).

To find out more about theJessamine Place and the serv-ices it provides in Ben Hill,Irwin and Wilcox countiescheck out this week’s FeatureFront.

JessaminePlace is in45th year

East Coast Asphalt of Douglas spent severalweeks earlier this summer paving Central Avenueand Main Street. Now they are back at work on aDOT contract to pave U.S. 129 from Ocilla to theBen Hill-Wilcox County line. That includes pavingall of Grant and Sherman Streets through the cen-ter of Fitzgerald. City Public Works Director David

Walker said Monday that the City portion of theproject is expected to take four to six weeks. Whenworking on a federal highway, pavers are notallowed to block traffic, and so they are paving onelane at time so as not to restrict traffic flow. Theabove photo was taken just south of the CSX lineon North Grant Street.

A familiar sight

Last Monday, prior to Friday night’s FHS-IrwinCounty football game, the Rotary Clubs ofFitzgerald and Ocilla met jointly. The clubs expectthe joint meeting to be an annual event prior toeach year’s Border War game. No surprise, the

program was a joint event by FHS Head CoachTucker Pruitt (left) and Irwin County Head CoachBuddy Nobles. The two clubs plan a joint 10-milerun next year as a fundraiser for Rotary projects.

A new tradition

The 2017 Fitzgerald HighSchool homecoming paradewill be held on Thursday,Sept. 14, beginning at 6:30p.m.

ALL LOCAL schools, clubs,

Parade entries now accepted forHomecoming

The Fitzgerald-Ben HillCounty Library has received aNational Science Foundationgrant to provide science-based programs for adults.

THESE PROGRAMS willessentially be “book clubmeets science café,” accordingto Martha Powers-Jones,library director. Attendees can

read a pre-announced popu-lar book selection, then tocome to the library to discussthe book and watch and dis-cuss a short human interestvideo in which scientific ideastouched on in the book inter-sect everyday life.

The first program,

‘Book club meets science café’ in adultprograms at library

Resident tests positive for WNV, no new cases reported

Qualifying for the November8 Municipal election endedFriday afternoon. Only twoseats are contested. MayorMark Massee is being chal-lenged by Jim Puckett.Councilman At-Large (EasternDistrict) Albert Webb is beingchallenged by Mark M. White.

COUNCILMAN AT-LARGE(Western District) Jason Holtdid not qualify to run for re-

election. Jimmy Johnson is thesole qualifier for that seat.

In all other seats, incum-bents are unopposed. They are:First Ward Councilman AlexTillman; Second WardCouncilman Charles Coney;Third Ward CouncilmanDennis Jefferson and FourthWard Councilman MichaelGriffin.

For the Water Light & Bond

Commission, incumbents run-ning unopposed are: FirstWard, David Griffin; SecondWard, Robert Leverson andFourth Ward, Tommy Hatcher.

THE LAST DATE TO regis-ter to vote in the Municipalelection is October 10. Votersmay register at the Board ofElections office, located at 115W. Pine St. or online athttp://sos.ga.gov/.

Early voting will begin onOctober 16 at the Board ofElections office from 7:30 a.m.until 3:45 p.m., Mondaythrough Friday. There is noSaturday voting.

Election day voting will takeplace at the Fitzgerald FireDepartment, located at 315 E.Pine St. Voting hours will be 7a.m. until 7 p.m.

City qualifying ends with Mayor, oneCouncil seat contested for Nov. 8

In a called meeting lastThursday night, the Ben HillCounty Commission approvedtwo zoning requests author-ized by the Fitzgerald/BenHill County Planning Board.

PRIOR TO THE REGULARmeeting, public hearings wereheld for both requests. Twocitizens spoke in favor of azoning request by G&L PawnShop, located at 395 RedwoodRd.

In regular session, theCommission voted to rezoneone acre located at 395Redwood Rd. from GeneralFarming-County toCommunity Commercial-County. The Commission alsovoted to rezone .45 acresowned by Roger Merritt, locat-ed at 260 Jack Allen Rd. West,

from R-6-M to CommunityCommercial-County.

In other business:• COUNTY MANGER MIKE

Dinnerman informed theCommission that funds hadbeen repaid to the generalfund using SPLOST revenue.He noted that $77,289 paidby general funds for 2016projects, should have beenpaid by SPLOST funds.Projects paid by 2017 generalfunds of $15,684 should havebeen paid using SPLOSTfunds. The general fund forboth years was adjusted andSPLOST funds used to repaythe general operating fund.

• An item on the agenda todiscuss a financial managerposition was tabled for afuture meeting.

Commission OKszoning requests

Gabe Grubbs, 9-year-oldson of Jason and TiffanyGrubbs, played in theBaseball Youth All AmericanGames in Elizabethtown, Ky.

THE ANNUAL tournamentattracted top 9-and-up play-ers from 39 states and threecountries.

Gabe was randomlyassigned to a 10 with 10 otherplayers. He led his team tovictory with top statistics inalmost every category. Duringthe games, he posted a .813batting average, stole sevenbases and drove in 14 RBI.His coaches selected him asHustle Award Winner.

Gabe started playing base-

ball when he was 3 years old.He played T-Ball until he was

Gabe ‘hustle’ winnerin Youth All-AmericanGames in Kentucky

GABE GRUBBS

(Turn to Gabe, 10-A)

(Turn to Book club, 10-A)

(Turn to Resident, 10-A)

(Turn to Canes, 10-A)

(Turn to Parade, 10-A)

BY SHERRI BUTLER

Based on ratings in thenewly released HospitalConsumer Assessment ofHealthcare Providers andSystems from the Centers forMedicare and MedicaidServices, Dorminy MedicalCenter is well ahead of theclass in providing a quality

patient experience.THE SURVEY awards new

summary star ratings for3,504 hospitals eligible toreceive a rating. Hospitals arescored on a one-to-five-starscale based on 11 publiclyreported measures assessedin the HCAHPS surveyassessing patient experience.

Dorminy Medical Center

earned four stars, up from 3stars previously. Data for thissurvey was collected betweenOctober 1, 2015, andSeptember 30, 2016.

Out of all the hospitals eli-gible for a rating, only 215received a five-star rating.Dorminy is one of 1,203 toreceive the four-star ratingand the only one among the

area hospitals we checked,including larger hospitals.

DMC’S 4-STAR overall rat-ing is broken down into eightareas that are individuallyrated. Dorminy earned 5stars in doctor communica-tion. It received 4 stars innurse communication, staffresponsiveness, pain man-

DMC climbs to 4-star ratingin patient experience survey

(Turn to DMC climbs, 10-A)