The Andalusia City Council adopted Resolution No 2020-26 on Tuesday, August 4, appointing the following poll workers in the municipal election of August 25, 2020.

 

Election school is set for 10 a.m. on Tuesday, August 11, 2020, in the Andalusia City Hall Auditorium, 505 E. Three Notch Street.

 

 

CITY OF ANDALUSIA

MUNICIPAL ELECTION

AUGUST 25, 2020

 

Chief Inspector

Charles R. Jackson     

905 Waterford Rd, District 4

 

Inspector

Carolyn Curry

320 Feagin Ave.

District 1

            

Asst. Inspector            

Jenny Pitts

390 Diane Dr.

District 4                     

            

Machine Operator

John Odom

520 Pugh St.

District 3

                                    

DISTRICT ONE

            

Asst. Clerk

Tyawanda Barnes

400 Marshall St.

District 1

 

Asst. Clerk

Judy Phillips

100 Dahlia Dr.

District 4

 

Asst. Clerk

Shekila Williams

302 College St.

District 1

DISTRICT TWO

Asst. Clerk

Louise Anderson

1703 Prestwood Bridge Rd

District 2

            

Asst. Clerk

Beverly O’Neal

112 SS Ridge Rd

District 2                     

            

Asst. Clerk

Marie Murphy

520 Church St.

District 2

 

Alternates:

Lynne Dayton

105 Aspen Ln.

District 5                          

 

Carol Moore

903 Albritton Rd.

District 4              

 

Shelia Williams

2220 Easley Dr.

District 4   

                                                

Family members, former students who became co-workers, and friends gathered at the Will Coleman Center Friday morning to pay tribute to the man who mentored countless young people through the Center’s programming for almost 50 years.

Coach Richard Robertson is retiring from the responsibilities of the Center in what would have been his 49thofficial year, had the COVID-19 virus not shut down activities there this summer. And he’s not retiring because he wants to, but because “my girls just boss me,” he said, referring to his daughters, Michele Robertson and Mirenda Kirksey.

Andalusia Director of Leisure Services Tommie Agee said one of the blessings of his move to Andalusia has been getting to know Coach Robertson. 

“Anytime I go somewhere representing the City, people stop me and ask, ‘Do you know Coach Robertson?’ ” he said. “He’s done a great job here at the Center, and we’re going to miss him.” 

Former Leisure Service Director Dwight Mikel said, who first met Coach Robertson as a student during integration said, “I love and respect Coach for what he was able to teach not only to the kids, but to some of us grown-ups, too.” 

Mikel said Robertson always made people aware of the sacrifices made by earlier generations that made so many things possible. 

Councilman Will Sconiers said he grew up swimming at the Coleman Center in the afternoons, and playing Little League baseball for Coach Robertson in the early evenings.

“He was a father figure to a lot of young men in the community,” he said. “He was so dedicated, he would pick us up and take us to practice just to make sure we got there.”

Rose White-Parker recalled that she wanted badly to play basketball in school, but here were no teams for the girls in 1976. 

“I told Coach, ‘I wanta play.’ He said, ‘You’re a girl.’

“I said, ‘I know I’m a girl. I want to play,” she recalled. “He said, OK, but he was going to treat me like he did the boys, and he did.”

White-Parker dressed out with the boys until Robertson could put a girls team together. Later, White-Parker worked with Coach Robertson at the Coleman Center and in the Andalusia City Schools system, where she teaches physical education and coaches girls JV basketball. 

“I would meet him in the hallway, and if I needed help, we’d go work out the X’s and O’s,” she said. 

Ann Shakespeare said she and all of her siblings grew up in the neighborhood with Coach Robertson and participated in the programs he ran at the Coleman Center. 

“Coach embraced all children,” she said. “He was always encouraging someone’s child to keep going.”

Joe Nix said one of the hardest things he had to do as a youngster was learn to call his first cousin Richard, “Coach Robertson.” 

“He was my first JV football coach,” Nix recalled. “In those days, if I got the ball, I would always go around one of the ends. He taught me that the shortest distance between two points is a straight line.”

Marshall Locke grew up next door to Robertson.

“He was more than a coach, he was a mentor,” Locke said. Locke played sports with his neighbor as his coach, then grew up to be an assistant coach under his tutelage.

“He would always say, ‘Hey, think about the kids,’ ” Locke, now head coach at Monroe County High School, recalled. “It was always the kids, the kids, the kids.”

Paula Simpson said she could remember participating in Coach Robertson’s summer program when she was a five-year-old. 

“We called it play school,” she said. “Every year, I could not wait until school was out so I could go to play school.”

Later, she said, Coach Robertson told her to stop at the Center and fill out some paperwork.

“The next thing I knew, I had my first job. He would give us ‘nuggets’ all day every day,” she said. “I’ve been a teacher for 26 years, and I pass those nuggets along to my students every day.

“When I started a family, and my daughter turned 5, she was right up here every summer,” she said. 

“I remember Coach would pull up with some bags of peaches,” she said. “He would tell us, ‘Come get you a peach. When you get done, go plant this seed, and next year, you bring me a peach.’ Same thing with watermelons. We planted the watermelon seeds right up there on the fence row every year, and if the deer didn’t get them, we’d have watermelons.

Simpson  said she tells her students every year the same thing Coach Robertson told her and her friends. 

“Just do right.”

Sammie Glover, who grew up with Robertson, said his friend has done much more for the community than teach them X’s and O’s.

“Any kid who needed assistance, Coach Robertson was there,” Glover said. “He helped produce young men and women of character.”

Mayor Earl Johnson said perhaps no man in the history of Andalusia has touched as many lives as Robertson.

 “This Center is named after Will Coleman, and he was a great man, too. But he didn’t spend nearly as much time here as Richard Robertson did. I’m going to request that the Council add your name to the Center,” Johnson told Robertson in presenting a resolution in his honor. “

Kirksey and Robertson said their father, who has been alternating his time between them in Tallahassee and Texas during the pandemic, really doesn’t want to be anywhere but in Andalusia and at the Coleman Center. 

“He thinks we’re too harsh,” Michele Robertson said. “We just want to make sure we still have him around so we can continue to love on him.”  

Andalusia has been named a 2019 Certified Municipality by the Alabama League of Municipalities (ALM), a highly regarded honor awarded to cities and towns in which the mayor and all councilmembers have earned the professional designation of Certified Municipal Official. 

This was the second year Andalusia was recognized as a Certified Municipality. It also gained recognition in the inaugural class last year.

This designation through ALM signifies that the mayor and all councilmembers have completed a minimum of 40 credit hours of formal training on the foundational elements of municipal government conducted or endorsed by ALM via its Certified Municipal Official (CMO) Program. Qualifying municipalities are selected by ALM based on CMO program credit hour records during the previous calendar year and receive an official certificate as well as an annual Certified Municipality digital seal for use on the municipality’s website

“As mayor, I am proud that Andalusia is just one of a handful of cities to be represented with this distinction,” Mayor Earl Johnson said. “This is representative of the hard work members of our council have done, reading the assigned materials, and getting up to speed on the law. I know the citizens you represent appreciate what this represents.”

The 2019 Certified Municipal Achievement Awards were presented in Montgomery on Thursday, July 23, during the Business Session of ALM’s annual convention.

U.S. Census workers will begin door-to-door canvassing in Andalusia today, Saturday, August 8, just as local and state officials are urging residents to take steps to make sure they are counted. 

The Census Bureau has shortened the deadline to respond to the census by a month, and will end counting on Sept. 30, it announced Monday, prompting concerns that some will not be counted. 

As of Friday, 62 percent of the estimated U.S. population had responded to the Census. The response rate in Alabama is 60.7 percent, and in Andalusia is 60.1 percent. If the rate does not increase to at least 90 percent by the end of September, the state will lose one or two Congressional seats, as well as federal funding. 

“It is extremely important that every person in Andalusia and Alabama be counted in the 2020 Census,” Mayor Earl Johnson said. “We know there were areas of the city that were undercounted in 2010, and this has affected our ability to recruit retail here. A second undercount in 2020 would continue to hamper economic development efforts and affect federal grant funding for the next 10 years.

“We know that at least one seat in the U.S. Congress, and up to $13 billion in federal funding that we depend upon for healthcare, education, and infrastructure are at state,” Johnson said. “I urge every citizen of Andalusia who has not done so to take six minutes to complete the Census today.” 

The City of Andalusia and the Andalusia Area Chamber of Commerce are joining Alabama’s “Drop Everything and Be Counted” effort and encouraging businesses that have not already done so to schedule time this Wednesday, August 12, for employees to complete the 2020 Census. 

“If you are a business owner who is willing to allow employees time to do this during the workday, and you need help, please let us know,” the mayor said. “We can send someone with an electronic device and help facilitate their registration.”

“At the Chamber we believe that improvements to Alabama’s essential services are good for business,” Executive Director Chrissie Duffy said. “There is up to $13 billion in federal funding at stake, and we want to make sure get our share. This small task plays an important role in our collective futures. That's why we're encouraging all Covington County businesses to join us for Drop Everything Day on August 12th."

Duffy suggested hosting a breakfast for your employees during which they can complete the census form, or blocking off half an hour for employees to all focus just on taking the census. 

“Create time slots for employees to sign up and take the census if you don’t have enough computers available,” she said. “Whatever strategy you choose, let your employees know how important the 2020 Census is. It’s only 10 questions, but it can make a huge impact on our communities.”

The easiest way to complete the Census is self-response online at www.My2020Census.gov, by phone at 844-330-2020 or by mail. 

Census Bureau workers will only knock on the doors of those who have not responded. Federal Census Bureau workers have undergone training and will adhere to all rules of social distancing and face coverings.

“We have spoken with several local residents who will be working for the Census here,” Johnson said. “We have city employees calling all residents to encourage them to register. 

A 90-year-old female who had slipped away from her home and caregivers was found safe late Sunday night, thanks to the help of the Andalusia Fire Department and its thermal imaging technology.

Andalusia Police Department Chief Paul Hudson said he and his officers were involved in investigating a stabbing and a police pursuit when the department received a call that a caregiver had awakened to find that the woman, who suffers from dementia, had left her home on Packer Avenue. 

“They got up to check on her and realized she was gone,” Hudson said.

The APD responded, and called on the Covington County Sheriff’s Posse for assistance. However, the posse was unable to use their tracking dogs because too many people had already walked around the area. 

Hudson said the APD then requested assistance from the fire department. 

“From what I understand, Chief Hudson briefed firefights on what needed to be done,” AFD Chief Russell McGlamory said. “We took Engine 7, which has enough scene lights to light up the world.”

As some firefighters drove the neighborhood searching with those lights, others used the department’s thermal imaging equipment. 

“It’s basically a handheld device that picks up heat,” McGlamory said. “We normally use them if we go in a smoke-filled house, but you can actually see a thermal image silhouette of the person.”

The woman was found not too far from her home in the edge of a wooded area, where she had curled up.

“It didn’t really look like the silhouette of a human, but they were able to see the heat and locate her,” he said. 

McGlamory credited the newest member of the department, Colter Poole, with actually finding the woman. Hudson said she was located within five minutes of the department’s arrival. 

“She appeared to be uninjured, but we had rescue come and evaluate her,” Hudson said. 

The APD referred to family to the Project Lifesaver program, a partnership between the Pilot Club of Andalusia and the Covington County Sheriff’s Department which provides tracking bracelets for those with brain disorders or injuries who might wander away from their caregivers and become lost. 

Hudson expressed his appreciation to the AFD, the Covington County Sheriff’s Department and the Covington County Sheriff’s Posse for their assistance.