Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Latest KSST News

  • Awards Presented At Band Banquet
  • Lodge Honors Three
  • New Board Members Join HCMH Board
  • The Week Ahead
  • 'Relay For Life' Results
  • SSISD Board Retains Officers
  • Groundbreaking For New Industry
  • Large Crowd Attends Bolton Reception
  • SS Work Camp
  • City Manager Report (Video)
  • Welding Event (Video)
  • Ice Cream Freeze Off Entries Being Accepted (Video)
  • Local Group Helps Dispose Of Old Flags (Video)

Three Wildcats’ band students shared the Rex Wilemon Award presented at the Saturday night Band Banquet. The award went to Rebecca Sehnert, Josh Kiestler and Color Guard Captain Gabby Vaughn.

Jade Hill received the Louis Armstrong Jazz Band Award. Drum Major Ashleigh Wallace captured the Director’s Award. Josh Kiestler got the Band Booster Scholarship and three students, Marissa Walter, Alyssa Figueroa and Jake Gilmore, received Tommy Sterrett Scholarships.

The Sulphur Springs Masonic Lodge #221 presented Mirabeau B. Lamar Scholarships to two Sulphur Springs High School seniors Saturday evening at the Lodge Hall.

Freddie Taylor received a scholarship on behalf of his daughter Ayana Taylor who could not attend because she was instructing at a cheerleader camp. A second scholarship went to Katelyn Stewart, who plans to attend UT-Tyler and study pediatric oncology nursing.

KSST’s Bill Bradford also received a Community Builder Award.

Two longtime members of the Hopkins County Memorial Hospital Board were remembered fondly at a meeting Monday night as two new members took their place. Chad Young and Jan Chapman served for nine years on the board. New members David Black and Suzanne Thomas Bankston were sworn in.

The board then kept Joe Bob Burgin as president and selected Tim Kelty as vice-president and Joseph Crouch as secretary.

At Monday’s Hospital Board meeting at 6 p.m., outgoing board members Jan Chapman and Chad Young will receive plaques for their service. After election results are canvassed, new board members David Black and Suzanne Thomas Bankston will be sworn in. New officers for the board will be named. The board will also consider the contract of CEO Michael McAndrew.

This is the last week for early voting in Hopkins County in Democratic and Republican primaries. Early voting will continue at the Sulphur Springs Public Library from 8 a.m. until 5 p.m. through Friday. Regular election day is Tuesday, May 29 from 7 a.m. until 7 p.m. at voting boxes throughout the county.

Amy Denison of Sulphur Springs is the first in the Paris Junior College Surgical Technology program to gain entry into the Association of Surgical Technologists National Honor Society. Ms. Denison had a 4.0 grade average and 100% attendance and further distinguished herself through academic and clinical achievements said to exceed the standards expected of top students. A pinning ceremony was held last Thursday.

Sulphur Springs High School’s UIL Academic Team will be taking fourteen students to state competition in Austin on Monday and Tuesday. Included are Miranda Caddell in Headline Writing, Rebecca Sehnert in Ready Writing, the Literary Criticism Team of Colby Carter, Madison Millsap, Ashleigh Wallace and Sarah Forsman, the Spelling and Vocabulary Team of Ashley Clegg, Jacqueline Tovar-Yanez, Ivon Gonzales and Sylvia Gudino and the Accounting Team of Reagan Humphrey, Jarred Cowley, Justin Mathews and Dominic Ortega.

The city of Sulphur Springs Planning and Zoning Commission will consider requests from three property owners at a meeting Monday night at 6 p.m. at City Hall. Frank Long is seeking replat approval and a zoning change for property at Oak and Beckham from Multiple Family to Professional Office so he can convert a house into a law office. Gary Priest is seeking replat approval and rezoning of property on the southwest corner of League and Camp from Multiple Family to Light Commercial for a restaurant. Donna Gregory Edgar is asking for rezoning of property on the south side of Wildcat Way at Majors Drive from Single Family to Multiple Family.

As Relay For Life concluded Saturday morning, event chair Tony Aguilar said that Relay raised a preliminary total of $66,873.22 and attracted 28 teams.

In the youth division, Saltillo took the spirit award and best baton, Cumby won best campsite and First United Methodist Church sold the most luminaria and raised the most money, almost $3,000.

In the adult division, Phi Beta Kappa won the spirit award, Farmers’ Electric Co-op had best baton, Super Handy had the best campsite, Saltillo teachers sold the most luminaria and Morningstar raised the most money, $6,000.

After a lengthy discussion about why the Sulphur Springs School Board just arbitrarily rotates members to the president’s position, the board voted unanimously for a motion that keeps all of its officers on board for another year. The vote came during a special meeting after last Saturday’s election.

The board canvassed election returns, which saw incumbents Jason Dietze and Don Sapaugh reelected to the board.

Trustee Clay Johnson questioned why the board rotated members through the presidency each year. Superintendent Mike Lamb said he had never seen such a system at any of his stops in Lindale, Huntsville or Forney. He expressed more of a comfort level if he knew the board leadership wouldn’t be changing every year.

Johnson’s proposed slate of officers approved by the board for the next year turned out to be exactly like the current slate with Dietze as President, Kerry Wright as vice-President and Don Sapaugh as secretary.

In other business, the board voted to go paperless at board meetings converting to a computerized agenda and board book known as Board Book.

Sulphur Springs and Hopkins County welcomed in a new industry at a groundbreaking Tuesday. The industry is Thru Way Trailers. They will be located on Pioneer Parkway in the Pioneer Business Park located west of CMH Road between Main Street and the I-30 Service Road just west of Sulphur Springs.

Thru Way Trailers is a Canada-based company that has been in business more than twenty years. Since they do a lot of business south of the United States, they were in the market for a location in the southern part of the U.S. and chose Sulphur Springs. They are expected to initially employ about twenty-five people at the Sulphur Springs site.

Retiring Sulphur Springs School Superintendent Patsy Bolton kept a promise to her granddaughter and read a poem at her retirement reception Wednesday afternoon that ended with “I quit”. It was in keeping with Ms. Bolton’s wishes to have an upbeat reception so she didn’t get emotional.

A large crowd, including her childhood best friend Janet and many of her ex-students, came and went.

Ms. Bolton called her career a wonderful experience and ended by saying, “thank you all”.

Ben Vos, the coordinator of Sulphur Springs Work Camp, says there is still room for another twenty to thirty youths and adults for this year’s camp, which runs June 3-6. Work camp is like taking a mission trip without leaving town.

Vos says the goal this year is to prepare and paint twenty houses in the community. Vos says last year 400 workers and 100 other volunteers painted 25 houses.

To register for work camp, contact Vos at 903 348-0375 or online at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Cost is $75 for youths in grades six through twelve and $25 for adults.

With the downtown plaza shaping up and the old library being turned into a new city hall, people ask Sulphur Springs City Manager Marc Maxwell, “what’s next?” Maxwell says he spent some days last week in West Palm Beach, Florida finding the answer.

Maxwell says the Conference For New Urbanism stressed stepping back and rethinking processes that have been in place sixty years. Maxwell says strict zoning by use has created sprawl that he says can’t be sustained economically.

The opposite approach, he says, is to loosen codes allowing lots of flexibility. For example to allow retail at the ends of residential blocks. Maxwell says the result is a denser development with less cost per acre. This is the direction he says he hopes to take the city in years ahead.

The seed of a new statewide competition may have been planted in Sulphur Springs Friday. That’s the vision High School Ag Mechanics teacher Dan Froneberger has for a welding competition held Friday that he believes is the only one of its kind in the state. Ten teams competed in a barbeque smoker build off. Each team met with their Ag teacher and then had six hours to construct the cooker. Sacks of tools went to the top three finishers and each school got to keep their smoker. Froneberger says one day competitions such as this could be area wide with top teams advancing to state competition.

The Hopkins County Chamber of Commerce is now accepting entries for their annual Ice Cream Freeze Off coming up on Saturday, June 9 at 4 p.m. on the first Saturday of Dairy Festival.

Chamber President Meredith Caddell said information was sent out to last year’s participants last week. She stressed it is free to enter freezers of ice cream. Again categories will include former winners in Super Scoops, adults in Big Dips and children in Little Dips. Ice creams may be plain, chocolate or vanilla; fruit, just one fruit and novelty.

Recipes must be included with entry forms. Those just wishing to sample the ice creams can get an all-you-can-eat cup for $3 at the event.

The area Marine Corps Detachment #1357 recently began a program to provide locations where a person can retire their old flag properly. Attorney Tommy Allison says there are currently six collection boxes in Sulphur Springs and three more in the area. Locations include City Hall, Northeast Texas Janitorial Supply, the Chamber of Commerce, County Clerk’s Office, the Hospital and at the Senior Citizens Center.

There are also locations in Mt. Vernon, Commerce and Cumby.

Allison says the collected flags will be disposed of in an appropriate ceremony.

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May 15 2012

Ben Vos, the coordinator of Sulphur Springs Work Camp, says there is still room for another twenty to thirty youths and adults for this year’s camp, which runs June 3-6. Work camp is like taking a mission trip without leaving town.

Vos says the goal this year is to prepare and paint twenty houses in the community. Vos says last year 400 workers and 100 other volunteers painted 25 houses.

To register for work camp, contact Vos at 903 348-0375 or online at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . Cost is $75 for youths in grades six through twelve and $25 for adults.

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