Stephens County High School Junior Connor Roberts won the AAAA state championship in boys’ essay at the state literary meet this past weekend in Warner Robins. Roberts said the competition requires participants to write an essay of 600 words or less on the spot within a certain amount of time. “You have two hours to write an essay, a rough draft then cut it out to a final draft and then a judge scores the essay using a rubric and they compare scores,” said Roberts. Competitors either write on a literary topic or a current events topic and they do not know the topics ahead of time. Roberts said he chose a literary topic once his options were presented. “It was ‘Why authors choose to set novels in certain countries based on the values of the peoples within the country’,” said Roberts. “I wrote it on Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad.” He went on to say that preparing for such a contest requires a lot of reading and reviewing. His advisor for the competition is Stephens County High School English teacher Connie Harding. She said that she is very proud of Connor’s performance. “He scored 92 out of 100,” said Harding. “His choice of Heart of Darkness speaks of his being well-read. He is an extremely well read young man.”
The Stephens County Land Use Regulation Committee wants county commissioners to make a decision on whether or not they want to move forward with the creation of a land use plan for Stephens County. Monday, the committee met and voted 7 to 1 to place a motion before county commissioners at their March 26 meeting asking them to move forward with the creation of a land use regulation plan. Committee member Cynthia Brown is one of the “yes” votes. “We are not looking to do anything that is going to do harm to our citizens or businesses that are there,” said Brown. “We want to move ahead with a community that attracts good jobs that allow people to make a living and to do it in an environment that is safe and healthy.” Brown said that land use is also a mechanism for preventing undesirable businesses and industries from not locating in Stephens County.
U.S. Representative Doug Collins is the chair of a new Congressional group formed to work with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers on water management issues across the country. One issue concerning our region is the lake level on Lake Hartwell. Speaking at a recent breakfast in Hart County, Collins talked about the new group. “The Corps of Engineers really most of the time could care less what the state thinks,” Collins said. “But I’ve got a little secret for the Corps of Engineers. They’re going to have to care what I think because I’m going to be dealing with them on a day-to-day basis.” Collins said he would be working with South Carolina U.S. Representative Jeff Duncan on the Lake Hartwell management plan. He said the two plan to tour the Hartwell Lake and Dam Project in Hartwell in the coming weeks.
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