Local/Area News

Henryetta school board members went from tennis courts to space Monday night.
At the October meeting, board members approved resurfacing the school tennis courts at a cost of $36,800.
Superintendent Dwayne Noble pointed out the courts have never had a new playing surface since they were installed well over ten years ago.
“We were going to do it last year but COVID came up. If we don’t fix it now, someday it will cost us three times as much,” he said. “We looked at it two years ago and it was going tacos us $26,000.”
The work will give players a new surface and includes six new nets. He said the project should be completed in time for the spring season.
Elementary principal Roger Williams bought four special displays for board members to see.
students with boardAssistant principal Leslie Jones described to board members how Autumn McCain, a third grade teacher, had given students the assignment to learn about space. Originally designed to increase their knowledge of science and vocabulary, it wound up going into the arts as they designed posters with the solar system.
Class members voted on the top four displays to be presented to the board. Those displays were constructed by Hayden Stayhorn, Evan Dunzy, Failey Farrow and Riley Zamora. As part of the presentation, Zamora read from his work describing each of the planets in the solar system.
The number of dropouts has been declining according to principal Kelly Furer. She told the board in the 2018-19 school year the dropout rate was 2.8 percent and a year later had dropped to 1.9 percent. “This is something we work on. We contact the students to learn why they leave high school and try to get them enrolled in other schools,” she said.
At the same time, graduating students who need remedial education at college are also being examined. For the 2019-20 school year she said of 21 students going to college, five were in need of remediation.
The superintendent told the board only two students are currently quarantined due to the COVID virus. “Our attendance is better than normal. The goal is to stay at five days a week. This time last year we were going week by week.
Teachers Andrea Hargis and Alan Montgomery were recognized for their perfect attendance this school year.
Henryetta high school junior and senior class members will be attending the career encounters program at OSUIT in Okmulgee. That is a full day event giving students and opportunity to see the various programs offered at the school.
Another 60 students have signed up for the college career fair also to be held at OSUIT.
Board members approved a $1 per hour pay increase for Mary Craft, Joyce Henderson, Dana Davis, Beth Potter and Melanie Green. All are school secretaries.
At a special public hearing Monday night, federal programs director Rick Enis described how the Impact Aid program helps students.
That program provides funding to schools based on land not subject to ad valorem taxes.
He said monies from that fund has been used to pay the school electric bill as well as fund special education.
Noble told the board new computers have arrived and will be distributed in the coming days. Those computers were purchased through CARES federal funds. Older, outdated computers will be declared surplus.

Henryetta continued on the plus side for sales tax monies this month.
For the third consecutive month, Henryetta reported a gain in retail sales amounting to $291,097. That was up from $242,471 a year ago.
Also on the plus side was the use tax check from the state. This month is amounted to $33,976, up $6,073 from last October.
Those totals are based on local tax receipts from August business.
Henryetta’s gain amounts to $1,100,419 for the fiscal year that started July 1. During the same four months of the previous fiscal year, the town received $1,030,809.
Henryetta joined Okmulgee, Morris, Checotah, Eufaula and Okemah on the plus side. Dewar, Beggs, Weleetka and Dustin all reported declines in sales tax monies for the month.
The disbursement of $184,039,891 in sales tax collections returned to the cities and towns reflected an increase of $23,526,342 from the $160,513,549 distributed to the cities and towns in October last year.

 Town 2021 2020
 Henryetta  $291,097  $242,471
 Okmulgee  $658,508  $515,978
 Dewar  $15,045  $15,381
 Morris $25,257  $23,717 
 Okemah  $120,406  $116,720
 Weleetka  $17,510 $19,334
 Beggs  $44,884  $53,170
Dustin $2,471 $3,587
Checotah $413,128 $347,766
Eufaula $219,310 $212,125
bobby ribbon
Even though Bobby’s Branding Iron Boutique opened in May, owner Bobby Burt held off with a ribbon cutting ceremony until he had the store looking just right Saturday morning he, along with Ron Richmond from the Chamber of Commerce and grandchildren Faith and Camilla as well as Craig Bissell, Minda Jones, Samm and Scott Lawrence were on hand to officially be open for business. Burt has been in the antiques, collectables and resale business for seven years in north Texas and Oklahoma. His store is located at 406 West Main in Henryetta.

Construction of the QuikTrip store at the east end of Main Street is on schedule with a May, 2022 opening date.
That was the word form Aisha Jefferson-Smith when she spoke to members of the Henryetta Rotary Club this week.
She said the company will start taking applications some 90 days prior to opening and all employees will be going through a trainingg program. The program will vary in length depending upon the job the person is hired for.
first QT storeSmith provided Rotarians with a history of the Tulsa-based company starting with the first store in 1958. It opened as a small grocery store by Burt Holmes and Chester Cadieux.
By 1967 there were 43 stores in Oklahoma. The following year QuikTrip ranked out of state with a store in Missouri.
Now QuikTrip has over 800 stores with some of those operating as convenience stores only.

 

 

 

 

qt layout

Artist conception of the Henryetta store layout.

Every year the Tulledega Masonic Lodge in Henryetta provides thousands of dollars to organizations and activities.
This Saturday, Oct. 9, the lodge will be hosting a fish fry from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. to help add funds so they can keep on helping others.
The fish fry will be held at the lodge hall at 402 East Trudgeon in Henryetta with tickets being sold for $10 each.
According to lodge members the dinner is an all you can eat affair with dessert and drinks as part of the purchase price.