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Wednesday, 05 January 2011 01:21

City gets donation of fitness equipment


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Basketball or walking won't be the only activity at T.J. when exercise equipment arrives. Basketball or walking won't be the only activity at T.J. when exercise equipment arrives.

The donation of exercise equipment and the offer of additional equipment at a discounted price will help give the public more options when they go to T.J. Davis and Chaloner recreation centers as well as participate in wellness programs at the Jo Story Senior Center.

The donation of equipment from Northern Carolina Orthopedics and the offer of equipment from a wellness center which went out of business was discussed during tonight's city council work session.

The orthopedics company is donating seven pieces of equipment to the city, according to a memo from City Manager Paul Sabiston. "The request from NCO was to make this equipment available to the public and to those that may not otherwise have access to such equipment in an effort to educate the public on the general need for overall wellness."

The city will also be able to buy 11 pieces of mainly Cybex equipment from the T.J. Davis Endowment Fund, the memo notes. The fund, which has not been touched in about 10 years, has $11,378 in it.

The offer of equipment is different than discussion last year of having a membership driven fitness center at T.J. Davis, Sabiston told council.

Parks and Recreation Director John Simeon told council, addressing a concern by council member Suetta Scarbrough, there would be some supervision of equipment use. although he couldn't guarantee it would be constant supervision.

Scarbrough said she would be interested in installing a camera system so employees could watch those using the equipment. "I think it's a wonderful idea and am all for it since it's free."

Sabiston said one of the donors has agreed to come out and offer nutritional and work out tips once the equipment is installed.

Councilman Ed Liverman also noted the city was not interested in buying five to 10 pieces of new equipment each year, "To go into the gym business. We're not trying to compete with them. It might expose people to that lifestyle and lead them to those businesses."

Greg Lawson made the motion to accept the donated equipment and use the trust fund to buy the other equipment. His motion was seconded by Scarbrough and passed unanimously.

 

In other matters tonight council:

 

Was told by police Chief Jeff Hinton the Roanoke Rapids magistrate's office would no longer be open on nights and weekends. During those times officers would have to travel to Halifax, which would increase fuel consumption and tie up officers longer.

 

Was told by fire Chief Gary Corbet the fire department was entering into written mutual aid agreements with the Davie and Rheasville volunteer fire departments and the Weldon Fire Department. There has never been a written agreement, Corbet explained, only a verbal agreement.

 

Was told by Bill Dreitzler of ms consultants a short list of sites for a proposed solid waste transfer station should be ready by council's February meeting. After consideration of those sites another public hearing would be held.

 

Lance Martin

Lance Martin

E-mail: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

comments  

 
-2 #4 Anthony Finney 2011-01-06 12:52
Hey, bright one! EVERYTHING appeals to limited audiences! You're tax dollars are going to get spent on something that you will not benefit from either way, and how the heck is this an "endeavor the city has no business being in"? Its not like its going to cost them hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars. We are talking about an investment of a 3-6 acre property, preferably PRE-EXISTING land, and about $8,000.

SO, since this is such a lame idea, what's your idea to improve the appeal of the city ot its residents. Not the interstate travelers, which is why we have all the restaurants. Not the out-of-area folks, which is why the theater was built. But something that can appeal to the people who already live here. Get back to me on this one.
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+3 #3 This Is Why 2011-01-06 03:36
#1 It's a lame idea.

#2 You want to spend public funds for something that appeals to a very limited audience.

#3 It's another endeavor the city has no business being in.

Long story short, if it's such a wonderful, appealing idea, get a group of investors together and make a go of it. But stop trying to make my tax dollars pay for it. Right now we can afford to pay for the necessities, and this idea doesn't qualify.
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-2 #2 Anthony Finney 2011-01-05 21:59
Some people amaze me. They will vote down an idea, probably have no clue as to what the project DOES or DOESN'T call for, but cannot give a plausible reason for their negative vote. If you don't agree, I would like to know why. Otherwise, I just view it as white noise on the internet.
We have a multitude of parks in this town that are going to waste, and some of them could easily fit a few holes on them. Most of the tennis courts in the area are going to shambles, and yet no support for the world's fasting growing sport can be garnered by the citizens of the same community who constantly complain about "nothing to do in Roanoke Rapids". Disc golf can be enjoyed by all age groups, both sexes, nearly anyone is capable of playing regardless of physical conditioning and is a great way to get your kids off the video games and out into the parks to get active. It is inexpensive to start playing and 86% of the nations courses are free. So whats the problem??
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-1 #1 Anthony Finney 2011-01-05 12:45
I still think the city should look into building a disc golf course/ walking trail or join with Dominion on the Lake Park and open that disc golf course year round, and add another 9 holes to it to make it a full 18 holes. While they continue to add stuff to the rec buildings, the parks are going to crap! And those of us who want nice parks are just S.O.L.!
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