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Arrest report: Feb. 28

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CULLMAN - Below are the arrests reported for Feb. 28. All persons are innocent until proven guilty.

 

GJ = grand jury; FTA = failure to appear

Cullman County Sheriff’s Office

Aldridge, Dana Jean, 38

  • FTA- driver’s license not in possession
  • FTA- speeding
  • unlawful possession of a controlled substance

Buxton, Kimberly Ann, 37

  • FTA- third-degree theft of property (old charge only)

Carroll, Kevin Douglas, 45

  • FTA- second-degree unlawful possession of marijuana

Doss, Kimberly Brooke, 40

  • FTA- third-degree domestic violence harassment
  • FTA- driving while revoked

Evans, Miranda Madonna, 33

  • possession of drug paraphernalia

Hann, Terrell Matthew, 32

  • FTA- driving while revoked

Hester, Bradley Dewayne, 36

  • possession of drug paraphernalia

Marsh, Myron Clifton Jr., 53

  • violation of a domestic violence protection order

Sanders, Colton Joe, 25

  • FTA- possession of drug paraphernalia
  • FTA- unlawful possession of a controlled substance

Shirley, Jason Earl, 34

  • possession of drug paraphernalia

Turner, Nevada Wayne, 46

  • harassment

 

Cullman Police Department

Beasinger, Tonya M., 43

  • unlawful distribution of a controlled substance

Henderson, Colton C., 24

  • FTA- public intoxication

Widner, Crystal L., 36

  • fourth-degree theft of property

Buxton, Kimberly A., 37

  • unlawful possession or receipt of a controlled substance

Sparks, Angela M., 35

  • unlawful possession or receipt of a controlled substance

Hankins, Tyler M., 22

  • FTA- second-degree unlawful possession of marijuana
  • FTA- insurance violation

 

Hanceville Police Department

No arrests reported.

 

Find arrest reports online Monday-Friday at www.CullmanTribune.com.


2 Alabama journalism icons to be inducted into Hall of Honor

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Kathryn Tucker Windham, left; Paul Davis, right / Courtesy of the Alabama Press Association

Kathryn Tucker Windham and Paul Davis, both icons in Alabama community journalism, will be inducted into the Alabama Newspaper Hall of Honor during ceremonies at Auburn University on Saturday, April 7, 2018.

Kathryn Tucker Windham began her newspaper career at age 12, reviewing movies for her cousin Earl Tucker’s weekly newspaper, The Thomasville Times.

She graduated from Huntingdon College in 1939 and returned to The Thomasville Times as a freelance writer. In 1940, she was hired by The Alabama Journal in Montgomery as a feature writer and police reporter. She was one of the first women to cover the police beat for a major daily newspaper in the South.

In 1942, Windham moved to Birmingham where she served as publicity director for the Alabama War Bond Committee, and in 1944 she went to work for The Birmingham News, editing state news and aviation and serving as a courthouse reporter.

In 1946, she married Amasa Benjamin Windham, and the couple moved to Selma where they raised their three children. She also wrote freelance articles for Progressive Farmer magazine and many Alabama newspapers. From 1950 to 1966, she wrote a locally syndicated newspaper column “Around Our House.”

After her husband died in 1956, she joined the staff of The Selma Times-Journal, where she worked until 1973.

Along with her newspaper work, Windham wrote 20 books, the most familiar being “13 Alabama Ghosts and Jeffrey.” It was the first in a series of eight books about Jeffrey, the ghost Windham said inhabited her Selma home.

In addition to her writing, Windham was also known for her story telling and radio broadcasts. She was frequently invited to the National Storytelling Festival in Jonesborough, Tennessee and could also be heard on Alabama Public Radio.

Windham was a very talented photographer. She began taking photographs with the Graflex at The Thomasville Times. The first camera of her own was a Brownie she bought in 1930.

Her photographs were included in many showcases including “In View of Home: Alabama Landscape Photographs,” organized by the Huntsville Museum of Art, and “Amazing Alabama,” an exhibition organized for the Retirement Systems of Alabama.

In his nomination, Ed Williams, professor emeritus of journalism at Auburn University, said, “Kathryn Tucker Windham was a dear personal friend and a friend to all of us in Alabama journalism. She truly is one of Alabama’s treasures.”

Like Windham, Paul Davis was a well-known figure in Alabama journalism. He was born in Clanton and grew up in Alberta, just down the road from W. D. Partlow Developmental Center. Davis became a fierce advocate for the patients at both Partlow and Bryce, and as a journalist, uncovered abuses at the facilities that he had witnessed as a child. His work led to the Wyatt v. Stickney case, which set new national standards for the care of the mentally ill and developmentally disabled, requiring the state to provide adequate care.

He began his career in the early 1960s at The Tuscaloosa News as a night shift reporter, and eventually became associate editor. His work was nominated twice for a Pulitzer Prize.

His hard-nosed reporting garnered widespread attention and led to reform of mental institutions nationwide. He defended the people who could not defend themselves.

He was present when George Wallace stood in the door of Foster Auditorium at the University of Alabama to prevent African-Americans from attending the school. Later, when Wallace met with the US Deputy Attorney General, Davis was the only reporter present to cover the meeting.

Davis went on to become editor of The Selma Times-Journal and vice president and general manager of the Natchez (Mississippi) Democrat. He and his wife, Gayle, purchased the Auburn Bulletin and The Tuskegee News, and he was a regular contributor for the Opelika-Auburn News.

Throughout his career, he never gave up his fight to protect those with the mental health issues. He served on the advisory board for the Alabama Department of Mental Health.

In his nomination of his father, Alan Davis wrote, “In every community he called home, he became the driving force in local charities. In Auburn, he helped establish and ramp up the local food bank. In Tuscaloosa, he helped establish a half-way house for those struggling with addiction. He never stopped giving back to those who needed help.”

Davis was awarded the Alabama Press Association’s Lifetime Achievement Award in 2006. He served as president of APA in 1990.

The Hall of Honor ceremony will be held at Auburn’s Ralph Brown Draughon Library on April 7, 2018. Registration begins at 10:15 a.m. and the program will begin at 11 a.m. Invitations will be mailed to all APA members by the University Relations Department at Auburn University.

McMillan makes campaign stop in Cullman

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Alabama Commissioner of Agriculture and Industries John McMillan made campaign stop in Cullman Thursday. McMillan is running for state treasurer. / W.C. Mann

CULLMAN - On Thursday morning, Alabama Commissioner of Agriculture and Industries John McMillan stopped by Peoples Bank in Cullman, not as commissioner but as a candidate.  He is concluding his second term and is seeking the office of state treasurer, the position currently occupied by McMillan’s personal friend, Young Boozer. 

“We’re both serving the last year of our two-(term) limit, which all the constitutional offices of Alabama have.  So I had looked at what my future might hold.  Young and several other close friends in the state government came to me and asked me if I would consider this,” said McMillan, “and my initial reaction was not a lot of interest.  But Young and I have been friends--same Rotary Club and all that--for many years, but I did continue to talk to him and visit with him, and over a fairly short period of time found that I did have enough interest in it to pursue it.  So, basically, that’s it.”

Said McMillan, “I understand, from the position I’m in now, number one: how important these down ballot positions are, and secondly: how few of our citizens understand the importance to consumers and everybody else that both of these positions--ag and the treasurer’s office--have.”

McMillan grew up in Stockton, in Baldwin County, working on a family-run farm and sawmill.  He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Economics from Rhodes College.  He served on the Baldwin County Commission and two terms as a state representative.  He has been commissioner of the Alabama Department of Conservation & Natural Resources, and he spent 14 years on the state personnel board.  McMillan has served as commissioner of the Alabama Department of Agriculture and Industries since 2010.

What will be the major issue or issues for the office of the treasurer in the next term?

McMillan replied, “Young and I have both agreed that there are a couple of programs, for example: the old PAC college savings plan is frozen, but he has started the 529 college savings plan, and then there’s another plan that’s called EnABLE that the Legislature just passed in 2012; that is a program set up for tax-free contributions for the long-term care or benefit of special needs folks with disabilities and that sort of thing.  

“We both agree that both the 529 and the ABLE program--EnABLE is official, but ABLE is what it’s referred to (www.enableal.com)--both need more promotion.  I have a special needs son myself, my wife and I, that’s still with us, and we weren’t even familiar with that program, for example.  So, I think the promotion of those two programs.  

“And then, depending on the general economy and what the Legislature decides to do with funding issues, one of the things that I’m very much interested in: I was instrumental in the oil and gas lease program that enabled us to have the Alabama Trust Fund for oil and gas proceeds, when I was commissioner of conservation.  And those revenues are declining, so it’s going to be important, I think, particularly to have an interest in protecting and preserving that fund.  And it’s gone from in excess of $150 million a year down now to somewhere in the neighborhood of $50 million a year, and that’s going to continue to decline as those wells are depleted.  I think that’s an important thing that I have a lot of personal interest in.

“Those will probably be the main things, because so much of the rest of it depends on interest rates and the economy generally and nationally, and all of those kinds of things.  A lot of that involves and requires decisions that move along through time.”

McMillan has been a part of Alabama’s government since his election to the Alabama House of Representatives in 1974, holding numerous elected and appointed positions over the years, and he feels that his career and record make him a suitable candidate for one more office.

Said McMillan, “I have had a lot of experience in state government, and (I’ve) been very successful, for example, in working with the legislature and fixing a lot of problems at the Department of Agriculture and Industries.  So I’m up to those challenges.

“I feel like I’ve been blessed to have had these opportunities, and for this position I’ve got the skills, knowledge and experience to do a good job.  And nobody’ll work harder than I will.  I pride myself on being the one that makes coffee everywhere I’ve ever been.”

Copyright 2018 Humble Roots, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Old-fashioned games help Cullman Primary School earn 'School of Distinction' honor

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Old-fashioned games helped Cullman City Primary School earn the "School of Distinction" honor. / Cullman Primary School

CULLMAN - On Monday, Cullman City Primary School (CCPS) was recognized as a School of Distinction by the Council for Leaders in Alabama Schools (CLAS) at an awards luncheon in Prattville.  The reason was profoundly simple: its students enjoy playing games.

CCPS Principal Tricia Culpepper explained, “This is our second year of doing board games, and what we were targeting was we wanted to increase our students’ speaking skills and sportsmanship skills in the classroom.  Our PTO provided us with funding, and I had a group of teachers from kindergarten and one from first grade, and they chose appropriate board games to play.  And then, once a month, we invite the parents to come in, and grandparents, and they come in and play the board games with the students.  And we’ve seen a big increase in our students’ ability to communicate, and to take turns.

Said Culpepper, “One of our teachers here is getting her doctorate in curriculum and instruction at (the University of) Alabama, so she actually did a survey for us and wrote a paper about it, and so she presented that at Alabama about our board games.  So now, we not only have our kindergarten and first grade doing it, but we also have our Head Start, our 3- and 4-year-old classes playing the games as well.  They have more age-appropriate games than our k and one games have.”

In an age in which everything seems to occur on a screen to which some young person’s face is glued, CCPS went (literally!) old-school, choosing classic tabletop favorites like Connect Four, Uno, Sorry!, Perfection and Trouble, along with some more modern selections like Quick Cups.  Yes, the kids are spending school time playing games, but they are also developing social skills.

Culpepper continued, “And the neat thing is, we have parents that have contacted us because the children came home at Christmas, and that’s what they wanted to play, and those are the games that they wanted for Christmas gifts . . . It’s a really good family connection piece, because you can get the kids to play it here, and they can go home and play it with their family.

“Our teachers have done a great job of incorporating this.  Teachers have a lot on their plates these days, and so I really appreciate what they’ve done into their weekly, their monthly schedule.  And they have really worked hard to make sure the children know the games.  It took a while, especially for the kindergarten; they introduced a game a week.  And so, I really appreciate what they’ve done, because they’re the ones that are actually doing the games in the classrooms; we always appreciate what they’re doing for us.

“I have a great group of teachers here that really work.  What is so wonderful about our school is we are able to target this specific age.  The youngest learners that come in are 3 years old, so we really are experts in instruction from ages 3 to 8, and our teachers work in every area: physically, mentally, emotionally.  And so these board games really can help across the board with our students, with verbal skills or cognitive skills, and I just am really happy with the fact that our teachers just take it to heart, and work to implement these games in the classroom.”

CCPS was one of only 24 schools selected statewide for the CLAS School of Distinction award.

Copyright 201 Humble Roots, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Gov. Kay Ivey signs statewide ridesharing bill into law

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Ridesharing law effective statewide July 1

Gov. Kay Ivey waves from the seat of an Uber/Lyft car, before riding to ceremonially sign HB190 at the state Capitol in Montgomery, Thursday, March 1, 2018. HB 190 was sponsored by Rep. David Faulkner, R-Birmingham and Sen. Bobby Singleton, D-Greensboro, and creates statewide regulations for transportation network companies, also known as ridesharing companies. (Photo source: Governor's Office, Jamie Martin)

MONTGOMERY– Gov. Kay Ivey on Thursday — alongside Rep. David Faulkner, R-Birmingham, Sen. Bobby Singleton, D-Greensboro, Ride for Alabama coalition members and local rideshare drivers — signed Alabama’s rideshare legislation into law during a bill signing ceremony at the State Capitol.

Alabama is the 45th state in the nation to welcome comprehensive ridesharing, allowing companies like Lyft and Uber to operate statewide. The law officially takes effect July 1, 2018.

“Today, we are paving the way for ridesharing throughout all of Alabama, regardless of location or proximity to major metropolitan areas,” Ivey said. “I am proud to have supported this bill throughout the legislative process and commend the hard work of Representative Faulkner and Senator Singleton for sponsoring the bill and Ride for Alabama coalition members for their strong support throughout the legislative process.”

“When I first spoke at the Ride for Alabama coalition launch in January, I stated that one of my primary responsibilities in the Alabama House is to ensure that all Alabama residents have access to safe, reliable and efficient methods of transportation,” Faulkner said. “The legislation that I and Senator Singleton carried, and that Governor Ivey signed today, does just that.”

Previously, ridesharing companies were allowed to operate only in select, approved cities in Alabama. By enacting statewide legislation, suburban and rural communities will now have access to the many benefits the rideshare industry provides, including enhanced driver earning opportunities.

“Rural parts of our state will now have access to these innovative transportation methods, and more Alabama residents will have the opportunity to earn additional income,” said Singleton. “With Governor Ivey giving her signature to this legislation, Alabama’s economy will move forward, public safety will increase, and Alabama residents will experience greater quality of life.”

“We want to thank the Governor for her support of this law. Lyft is providing tens of thousands of Alabamians earning opportunities and transportation options that did not exist a few short years ago,” said Scott Coriell, communications manager for Lyft. “We’re excited to expand those benefits to more individuals and families around the state in the coming months.”

“With this statewide framework for ridesharing, more Alabamians will benefit from access to safe rides and flexible work opportunities through Uber – and current customers will benefit from an even more reliable experience,” said Uber General Manager, Kasra Moshkani.  “We thank Governor Ivey, Representative Faulkner, and Senator Singleton for their leadership and look forward to expanding throughout Alabama.”

Throughout the legislative process, the bill was supported publicly by the Ride for Alabama coalition, comprised of multiple Chambers of Commerce and third-party entities, such as the Alabama Hospitality and Restaurant Association, Birmingham Urban League, Decatur-Morgan County Chamber of Commerce, the National Association of Women Law Enforcement Executives, the Alabama Black Chamber of Commerce, and the Alabama Association for the Deaf, among others.

Hospice of Cullman County seeking volunteers

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CULLMAN - Cullman Regional’s Hospice of Cullman County is looking for volunteers to assist in a variety of areas.

Opportunities include:

Patient care volunteers– Assist caregivers with running errands, chores, shopping, meal preparation, visiting or provide breaks for caregivers. These volunteers share a cup of coffee, hold a hand, visit the patient and caregiver or provide a listening ear for patients and caregivers.
Office volunteers– Answer telephones, make copies and assist with filing and large mailings
Bereavement volunteers– Work with survivors who have recently experienced the loss of their loved one
Resource volunteers– Provide professional expertise for patients and their families
Special projects volunteers– Assist with projects including fundraisers, crafts, holiday celebrations and more
Bi-lingual volunteers– Translate for workers and/or patients and their families, particularly Spanish-English
Professional hair stylist volunteers– Style hair for patients and/or caregivers

For more information, call 256-739-5185.

Copyright 2018 Humble Roots, LLC. All Rights Reserved. Image credit: Cullman Regional

Arrest report: March 1

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CULLMAN - Below are the arrests reported for March 1. All persons are innocent until proven guilty.

 

GJ = grand jury; FTA = failure to appear

Cullman County Sheriff’s Office

Barrett, Shannon Troy, 45

  • possession of drug paraphernalia

Cox, Westly Daniel, 29

  • possession of drug paraphernalia

Gillilan, Gregory Linston, 51

  • third-degree promoting prison contraband

Hankins, Tyler Mark, 23

  • first-degree theft of property (2 counts)

Johnson, Michael Lee Thomas, 23

  • possession of drug paraphernalia

Kelso, Dustin Anthony, 27

  • FTA- driving while suspended
  • FTA- tag light required

Martin, Hannah Leah, 21

  • chemical endangerment of a child

Nunnelley, Jacky Lee, 43

  • first-degree theft of property

Ponder, Trevor Lindley, 26

  • possession of drug paraphernalia
  • unlawful possession of a controlled substance

Taylor, Calvin Heath, 29

  • second-degree bail jumping- first-degree criminal trespassing (2 counts)

 

Cullman Police Department

Kelso, Dustin A., 27

  • FTA- expired tag (2 counts)
  • FTA- driving while suspended
  • FTA- insurance violation (2 counts)

Carroll, James D., 46

  • FTA- public intoxication

Roach, Roy W. II, 42

  • third-degree criminal trespassing

 

Hanceville Police Department

No arrests reported.

 

Find arrest reports online Monday-Friday at www.CullmanTribune.com.

4-way stop now in place at dangerous Hanceville intersection

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New stop signs greet motorists approaching Edmondson Road on Alabama Highway 91. / W.C. Mann

HANCEVILLE - Crews from the Alabama Department of Transportation (ALDOT) on Friday installed stop signs to create a four-way stop at the notorious intersection of Alabama Highway 91 and Edmondson Road on Hanceville’s east side.  The move is a response to three deaths that occurred in vehicle collisions at the intersection. Crews also installed rumble strips on the east side approach to Edmondson Road along Hwy. 91 and spent time directing traffic through the intersection to make sure all motorists passing through slowed down and were aware of the change.

Hanceville Mayor Kenneth Nail, who originally asked ALDOT for a traffic light at the intersection, said, “We appreciate the governor helping us out with this deal. I’m no traffic engineer, but I hope this saves lives.  I don’t know; it’s really up to the state of Alabama, but that’s all we can do, is just hope and pray that this will save a few lives.”

The last fatality at the intersection occurred on Jan. 4, 2018.  Burshel Eugene Boatrite, 74, of Crane Hill was killed, and another person injured, when a pick-up truck and 18-wheeler collided at the intersection.

That same month, after a wave of community reaction, ALDOT announced its decision to install the four-way stop.

Copyright 2018 Humble Roots, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

  • W.C. Mann
    ALDOT crews also installed rumble strips along Hwy. 91 approaching the new four-way stop.

45th annual Cullman Rotary Club Auction is March 9

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Guests peruse items at last year's Cullman Rotary Club Auction. / Tribune file photo

CULLMAN -The 45th annual Cullman Rotary Club Auction will be held on Friday, March 9 at the Cullman Civic Center.  Doors will open, and the viewing of auction items begin, at 4:30 p.m. The silent auction will take place from 5:30 to 6:15 p.m. The live auction begins at 6:45 p.m.
Hundreds of items large and small - household, personal, business and other - have been donated by local merchants and individuals. There is something for every taste and in every price range. Raffle tickets are also available for Glock 9mm handgun and $500 cash. The raffle winner will be drawn during the event.

Visit the Cullman Rotary Club Facebook Page (http://qrne.ws/cullmanrotary) to see auction item previews and get more information.

“It’s such a great community event. We receive our auction items from generous donations by local businesses, industries and individuals. All the proceeds are used to provide charitable donations throughout the community, and we recognize our sponsors at the time of auction,” said Cullman Rotary Club Fundraising Chair Eli Howard.

This popular annual event is the Rotary Club's primary fundraiser, and it supports the organization's service to the community throughout the year.

“We raised over $50,000 last year that helped to support local charities and projects here in Cullman. Rotarians always work hard to make the Rotary Auction a success, and we appreciate all of the community support that makes this event successful year in and year out,” said Cullman Rotary Club President Perry Shields.

For more information about the Rotary Auction, call Howard at 256-737-7128.

At a glance
45th Annual Cullman Rotary Club Auction
March 9, 2018
Cullman Civic Center
Viewing starts at 4:30 p.m.
Silent Auction from 5:30-6:15 p.m.
Live Auction begins at 6:45 p.m.

Obituary: Roger Dewayne Deaver

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Funeral service for Roger Dewayne Deaver, age 53 of Vinemont, will be at 1 p.m. on Saturday, March 3, 2018 at Panama Baptist Church with Greg Aldridge officiating. Burial will be at Panama Cemetery. Cullman Heritage Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Mr. Deaver passed away on Wednesday, February 28, 2018. He was born March 22, 1964 to Dennis and Joyce Deaver. He is preceded in death by his father and brother, Keith Allen.

Survivors include his wife, Lynda Yates Deaver, sons; Joshua Allen Deaver and Jonathan (Leslie) Deaver, mother, Joyce Deaver, grandson, James Dennis Deaver, brothers; Randy (Kay) Deaver, Tim (Karen) Deaver, Ricky (Christy) Deaver, Kevin (Pricilla) Deaver, Edwin Deaver, and Derwin Deaver, sisters; Kathy West and Jeanetta Cornwell; David Watson, and a host of nieces and nephews.

Visitation will be from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m. on Saturday, March 3, 2018 at Panama Baptist Church.

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Obituary: Kenneth Ray Hardin

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Kenneth Ray Hardin, 47, of the Brooklyn Community, passed away at his home. Mr. Hardin was born August 3, 1970 in Flint, Michigan to Bobby Lee and Marlin Jane (Moore) Hardin.

Kenneth is preceded in death by his parents. Survivors include his brother, Michael Hardin (Tina); sister, Margaret Reynolds (Mark); and a host of nieces, nephews, and friends.

Memorial services will be held 6 p.m. Saturday, March 3, 2018 in Holly Pond Funeral Home Chapel. Holly Pond Funeral Home is honored to serve the family.

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Obituary: Henry Melvin Brazelton

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Graveside services for Henry Melvin Brazelton, 65, are Saturday, March 3, 2018 at 11 a.m. at Ready Cemetery in Toney, Alabama.

Mr. Brazelton passed away on Thursday, March 1, 2018 at Hanceville Nursing and Rehab.

He is survived by his brothers, Walter Brazelton and Edward Brazelton; sisters, Dorcas Murray and Sarah Tucker; seven nephews and three nieces.

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Obituary: Randall Earl Bowen

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Funeral service for Randall Earl Bowen, age 63 of Cullman, will be at 2 p.m. on Sunday, March 04, 2018 at Cullman Heritage Funeral Home with Rev. Don Froelich officiating; burial at Union Hill. Cullman Heritage Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Mr. Bowen passed away on Wednesday, February 28, 2018 at his residence. He was born, September 29, 1954 to Arthur Bowen and Betty Jean Wallace.

He is preceded in death by his, parents and sisters, Becky Massey and Alice Faye Bowen. Survivors include his, daughters, Debbie (Rick) Thiot, Summer (Tony) Mullet, grandchildren, Stephanie (Jason) McClendon, Jasmine Mullet, Laura Mullet, and Lauren Thiot, great grandchildren, Talyn McClendon, and Jasper Long, sister, Christine (Benny) Hale, Derinda (Charles) Johnson, brother, Roger (Kathy) Bowen, Bobby McMurtry and a host of family and friends.

Visitation will be from 6 p.m. until 8 p.m. on Saturday, March 3, 2018 and 9 a.m. until funeral time Sunday, March 4, 2018 at Cullman Heritage Funeral Home.

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Hanceville business leaders brainstorm with Chamber, Economic Development

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Cullman Area Chamber of Commerce Director of Business Development Brian Poole and Cullman County Economic Development Director Cherrie Haney listen to Hanceville business and organizational leaders at a meeting on Friday. / W.C. Mann

HANCEVILLE - On Friday afternoon, a dozen Hanceville government, business and organizational leaders met with Cullman County Economic Development Director Cherrie Haney and Cullman Area Chamber of Commerce Director of Business Development Brian Poole to talk over ideas for growing the city’s businesses and economy.

Haney, who lives in Hanceville, told the group, “I like to shop here, and I want to see Hanceville grow.  And that’s what this is all about: to help you grow your business.  And it’s going to help you communicate with each other, so you can maybe help each other grow.”

Poole added, “As (Chamber President Leah Bolin) laid out the things that she would like to see happen, she said, ‘You know, we need to help every town in the county grow.  We need to help every business in the county grow.’

“And so, as I started thinking about that, I thought, ‘Well, yeah, okay; we can do that.’  And then I started counting the businesses, and I said, ‘Okay, in about five years I’ll hit the last business.’  And so I thought to myself, ‘How do I do that, where we can bring people together and work together?’  That way, instead of having me go and visit one business at a time, now we’re all visiting each other.”

Poole hosted a similar event in Good Hope Thursday evening that drew 30 local business representatives, and he stated that the chamber and economic development planned to hold quarterly meetings in Hanceville in the evenings after regular work hours, so more business owners could attend.

He assured the group, “This is not our last one; this is our first one.  So we’ll do this four times a year, every quarter.  And every quarter we’ll get better and better at this, because we’ll start learning each other, seeing where we can help each other, and we’ll talk a little bit about different things.”

Hanceville Mayor Kenneth Nail spoke to The Tribune about what brought the two agencies to town.

“There (were) some citizens who put forth some concerns, that they would like to see the chamber get more involved out in the county,” said Nail. “And Leah (Bolin), I think she stepped up, and I think that’s what this is about.  They’re trying to help the other towns and cities, all towns and cities in Cullman County.  I was glad to hear that they went to Good Hope, and they’re going to be going some other places.  So, you know it sure can’t hurt, and that way everybody kind of gets together here, and we know who we are.  And maybe we can help each other.”

For more information on chamber events and programs, visit http://www.cullmanchamber.org.  For more on Cullman County Economic Development, visit http://www.co.cullman.al.us/economic-development.html.

Copyright 2018 Humble Roots, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Cullman’s Keith Twitty earns CLCP designation

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AREA safety manager Michael Kelley, left, and AREA president and CEO Fred Braswell, right, congratulate Keith Twitty, center, on his recent Certified Loss Control Professional (CLCP) designation.

MONTGOMERY - Keith Twitty of Cullman, who works as a safety specialist with the Alabama Rural Electric Association (AREA), recently earned the Certified Loss Control Professional (CLCP) designation. It is an intensive program in electric utility safety and loss control.

The CLCP program is conducted by the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association (NRECA), the national service organization that represents more than 900 not-for-profit electric cooperatives, and the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business.

Earning the CLCP designation means that Twitty has developed the skills needed to communicate safety issues with staff and management of the 22 rural electric cooperatives served by AREA. He’s also learned how to use tools and techniques to collect, analyze, maintain and interpret safety data and records.

The program requires participants to complete a rigorous series of seminars and tests, a 30-hour OSHA course and a detailed final course project.

According to OSHA, 4.2 million injuries occur annually in the workplace. One of the goals of a CLCP is to help ensure a safe work environment for utility workers and the public in general. Avoiding workplace accidents avoids down time and can ultimately lead to lower utility rates.

Twitty started at AREA in November 2013. Earlier in his career, he was technical programs manager and a journeyman/lead line worker with TVPPA. He also served in the U.S. Marine Corps from 1986-1992. He is a graduate of Wallace State Community College and completed the TVPPA Lineman Apprentice Training Course at Nashville State Technical Institute.


3 local men arrested for multiple vehicle thefts

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Left to right: Jacky Lee Nunnelley, Tyler Mark Hankins, Alexander Douglas Quick / Cullman County Sheriff’s Office

CULLMAN - Three local men were arrested this week in connection to multiple vehicle thefts. The Cullman County Sheriff’s Office (CCSO) said Jacky Lee Nunnelley, 43, of Holly Pond; Tyler Mark Hankins, 23, of Fairview; and Alexander Douglas Quick, 23, of Cullman were each charged with first-degree theft of property. Nunnelley and Hankins were also charged with first-degree receiving stolen property.

According to the CCSO, the investigation that led to the arrests began several weeks ago when a work truck was stolen from behind the old Piggly Wiggly at the construction site of the new Cullman Fire Rescue station on Alabama Highway 157.

During the investigation, said a statement from the CCSO, it was determined that the three suspects were involved in at least four vehicle thefts. From there, all three suspects were located and arrested over the course of two days, Thursday, March 2 and Friday, March 3, 2018; the stolen vehicles were located and returned to the owners.

“I am thankful we were able to recover the stolen vehicles and get them back to the owners and also that these thieves are now sitting in jail where they belong,” said Cullman County Sheriff Matt Gentry. “I would also like to thank the investigators who worked long hours on this case and were able catch these suspects.”

The CCSO said additional charges may be pending as the investigation continues.

All three suspects are being held in the Cullman County Detention Center: Quick on a $10,000 property bond, and Nunnelley and Hankins each on a $20,000 property bond.

Copyright 2018 Humble Roots, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

2 busted for selling meth in Cullman County

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Tonya Monk Beasinger, left; Steven Keith Graves, right / Cullman Police Department

CULLMAN - The Cullman Police Department’s Crime Suppression Unit (CSU) this week arrested two people for allegedly selling methamphetamine.

Tonya Monk Beasinger, 43, of Vinemont was arrested on Wednesday and charged with unlawful distribution of a controlled substance. Beasinger, who was on probation at the time of her arrest, remains incarcerated in the Cullman County Detention Center as of Saturday afternoon.

On Tuesday, Steven Keith Graves, 29, of Cullman was arrested and charged with unlawful distribution of a controlled substance. Out on bond at the time of his arrest, Graves also remains incarcerated in the Cullman County Detention Center as of Saturday afternoon.

Copyright 2018 Humble Roots, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Workforce solutions: confronting local housing shortage

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CULLMAN - As Cullman continues to grow, finding its workforce and population places to live is becoming more of a challenge.  Even the Cullman Area Chamber of Commerce is embarking on a study, according to its website, “to counter the area's significant housing shortage.”  Plans are in the works for an apartment complex on the city’s north side, and the recent update of a city zoning ordinance has paved the way for a significant increase in the number of loft apartments downtown.

To find out more about the current housing situation, and Cullman real estate in general, The Tribune called on one of the area’s top realtors, Wes Warren of Happy Homes Real Estate. 

What’s it like being a realtor in Cullman today?

“Great!  I get to see the public and talk to the public every day, and actually get to meet new people, especially those that are moving into town- getting to meet new residents of Cullman, being able to show them the town.  It’s so exciting every day, being almost a different day every day.”

How is the housing market in Cullman right now?

“It’s definitely a good market, meaning, you know, sales are very well--especially in the city of Cullman--doing very well. But actually the whole county as a whole is doing well, too.  The market’s really good.  It’s more of a seller’s market, just because of the limited inventory.”

How limited is it, and at what economic level?

“It’s probably all across the board.  (In the) city of Cullman there is, fairly, a shortage, for sure, of houses that are out there that are available for the people to see.  You know, we’ve got a lot of buyers that are even sitting in rentals, kind of just sitting on standby, waiting on property that they’re looking for. You know, something that jumps out at them or something they really want.  So there’s a limited number of those houses available.”

Are you seeing new people moving in, or Cullmanites moving around?

“It’s a pretty good mix.  We do have a lot of people moving in, with the industry and some of these businesses, and that kind of thing.  But we also have people that may even work out of town, that don’t mind the drive, because I think they want to live in this town.”

What are the positive moves happening in the Cullman market to respond to the shortage?

“There’s a lot of new builds going on right now, different subdivisions are expanding and that kind of thing.  And those are doing really, really well.  I think the need is, there’s still people that are interested in these older neighborhoods, that just--location wise--want to be in a different place, and the limited number of houses in those areas that are available.

“And the point is that people (in the historic neighborhoods) are happy living where they are, so they don’t want to move.  It’s just limiting that inventory in those areas.  But the new builds are doing real well, as well.

“There’ll be houses, but not everybody wants a 1970s ranch house that needs updating.  A lot of people are wanting move-in ready homes, and those (houses’) availability in the older neighborhoods are few and far between.”

A Cullman native and descendant of early city residents, Wes Warren has been active in the area’s real estate market for most of his life, and has for several years he has been the top-producing real estate agent in Cullman.  Happy Homes, since its founding by Warren as a one-man operation just six years ago, has grown to become the top-producing company in the Cullman market with a staff of 18. Find out more at http://happyhomesrealestate.com.

Copyright 2018 Humble Roots, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

  • Wes Warren
    Photo courtesy Wes Warren/Happy Homes Real Estate, Facebook

Cullman Lions’ annual Fish and Ham Dinner a hit

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Lions and Leos form a meal assembly line in the Cullman Middle School lunchroom for Saturday’s annual Fish and Ham Dinner. / W.C. Mann

CULLMAN - Saturday was a beautiful day for a fish fry, and that’s exactly what went down at Cullman Middle School. The Cullman Lions Club, with plenty of help from the Cullman Lioness Club and local high school Leo clubs, fired up the fryers for the Lions’ annual Fish and Ham Dinner.  The menu included a choice of Mississippi farm-raised catfish or ham, hush puppies made fresh onsite, baked potatoes, fresh-made coleslaw, drinks and desserts.  It was a good day for folks to get out, and that they did; by noon, more than 350 patrons had already purchased meals, and both dine-in and drive-through lines were still growing.

More than 100 Lion, Lioness and Leo volunteers expected to sell between 1,600 and 1,700 plates through the course of the day.  Though specific numbers were not available, the Lions expected to clear $12,000 or more after expenses.  That money will go to support multiple projects in the Cullman area.

Outside by the fish and hushpuppy fryers, Cullman Lions Club Vice President Andrew Manning, one of Cullman’s youngest Lions, shared, “It’s just a great opportunity to serve the public, the people of Cullman, and to give back.  I’ve been a lifelong citizen of the city, and it’s been a great opportunity to give back and help folks in the community.  And the Fish and Ham Dinner’s just part of what we do to help give back.  It’s a good fundraiser for us and creates an opportunity for us to give that back into the community.”

Cullman Lions Membership Committee Chair Frank Odell added, “These profits are used for community betterment.  The Lions Club does a lot of things within the community and outside the community, but this money is just earmarked for local projects.”

The local charities, programs and other entities supported by the Cullman Lions include, among others:

  • Cullman Caring for Kids United Way Food Bank
  • Good Samaritan Health Clinic
  • Grace Episcopal Church’s Grace Place
  • Stiefelmeyer Park
  • Field of Miracles
  • Cullman Regional Foundation and renovations of Cullman Regional waiting rooms
  • Hope Horses, Inc.
  • Glasses and eye exams for low income families
  • Sponsoring diabetic kids to go to Camp Seale Harris
  • Sponsoring high school students to go to Troy University’s youth leadership conference

The popularity of the Fish and Ham Dinner, especially in an election year, could be measured by the number of local leaders who came out for handshakes and hugs.  By lunchtime, County Commissioners Garry Marchman and Kerry Watson, Sheriff Matt Gentry, Judge Martha Williams, former representative and current gubernatorial candidate James Fields and Alabama House of Representatives candidate Alex Chaney had all dropped by for a hot meal and a little campaigning.

Odell concluded, “We’re one of the largest Lions Clubs in the state.  We have quite a good heritage and background: a lot of good community leaders.  I think one of the secrets of Lions Club and the Lioness Club is that we really work together well.  This is a great fundraising project, but it’s also a time for us to bond and work together in one building as a group.  We have a lot of different teams, and it always flows really, really well, so it’s a good function for us.  And then the people that come into the dining room, it’s a little hospitality; so, we’re kind of celebrating our Lions Club with the community.

“Our motto is ‘We Serve,’ so we’re very much project-oriented and team-oriented, and just trying to make a better community.”

For more information on the Cullman Lions Club, visit www.cullmanlions.com.

Copyright 2018 Humble Roots, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

  • W.C. Mann
  • W.C. Mann
  • W.C. Mann

Chicken dinner Sunday to support Holly Pond Band

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Holly Pond High School 2017-18 Bronco Band / Courtesy Holly Pond HS/Facebook

HOLLY POND - Sunday is a bad time for poultry in Holly Pond, as the Bronco Band is hosting its semi-annual chicken dinner.  Band Director Evan Curtis hopes to move a lot of birds, because the band is ready for new uniforms.

Said Curtis, “This is a traditional fundraiser that we have twice per year, and this year the funds are going toward getting new band uniforms.  Our current uniforms are 20 years old, so we are in desperate need of new ones.  

“The fundraiser is headed up by our band boosters. They spend hours preparing for this event, and even cook the food themselves, and (meals) are served by the students.”

Plates are $7 each, and include a boneless chicken breast, cole slaw, baked potato, green beans, roll, and dessert (choice of cake, cookies or brownie).

The chicken dinner is happening Sunday, March 4 in the Holly Pond High School lunchroom at 160 New Hope Road in Holly Pond. It will kick off at 11 a.m. and go until the food runs out (usually by 2 p.m.).

Copyright 2018 Humble Roots, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

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