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Anderson County has fireworks Saturday night

Posted at 12:25 pm July 4, 2020
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Fireworks at Alvin K. Bissell Park in Oak Ridge on July 4, 2017. (File photo by D. Ray Smith)

There are fireworks in Anderson County for Independence Day this evening.

The fireworks are funded by Anderson County with help from private donations from businesses and residents.

Anderson County commissioners debated last month whether to have the fireworks because of the COVID-19 pandemic. They also debated how much to spend, with potential amounts ranging between $12,000 and $20,000. The goal was to get to a total of about $20,000.

The fireworks show will start at 9:45 p.m. today (Saturday, July 4) at Anderson County High School. The high school campus will be closed to the public.

Anderson County High School is at 130 Maverick Circle in Clinton, close to Exit 122 on Interstate 75. The Anderson County mayor’s office recommended that anyone watching the fireworks from public areas around Exit 122 use social distancing, which generally means staying six feet away from people who don’t live with you.

There are normally fireworks in cities such as Oak Ridge, but those displays have been canceled this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

This year, in what could be a one-time event, the county is hosting and helping to fund the display.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Community, Community, COVID-19, Festivals, Front Page News, Government, Health, Slider Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County Commission, Bob Smallridge, COVID-19, fireworks, Independence Day, Steve Mead, Terry Frank, Theresa Scott, Tim Isbel

Governor Lee grants county mayors the authority to require masks

Posted at 8:35 pm July 3, 2020
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Bill Lee

Note: This story was updated at 9:05 p.m.

Tennessee Governor Bill Lee on Friday granted county mayors in most of Tennessee to require or recommend face masks.

The governor’s order, Executive Order 54, is meant to allow county mayors to respond to significant increases in COVID-19 cases.

Tennessee’s densely populated areas, including the Memphis and Nashville areas, continue to have many of the state’s COVID-19 cases.

But local governments want more flexibility to respond to rising cases, and that includes “setting stronger expectations around masks,” Lee said in a press release Friday evening.

“This targeted approach ensures we protect both lives and livelihoods and safely keep our economy open in Tennessee,” the governor said. “We encourage every Tennessean across the state to use a face covering or mask, make sure to socially distance, and wash hands frequently.”

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, COVID-19, Front Page News, Government, Health, State, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County, Bill Lee, COVID-19, face masks, order, Tennessee

Updated: State sets another record in new daily COVID cases

Posted at 5:46 pm July 3, 2020
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

There was free drive-through testing for COVID-19 in the Oak Ridge High School parking lot on Wednesday, April 15, 2020. Note: Some faces have been blurred in the photo above to protect patient privacy. (File photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

Note: This story was last updated at 10:15 p.m.

Tennessee set another record in new daily cases of COVID-19, with 1,822 more cases reported Friday.

The number of active cases in the state rose to more than 18,000.

There have now been more than 11,000 cases in Shelby County, which includes Memphis in West Tennessee, and more than 10,000 cases in Davidson County, which includes Nashville in Middle Tennessee.

In East Tennessee, the case count has passed 1,000 in Knox County, which includes Knoxville, and there are more than 2,000 cases in Hamilton County, which includes Chattanooga.

Eleven more illnesses were reported in Anderson County on Friday. That’s the highest one-day increase.

There have now been 116 cases in Anderson County. Subtracting recoveries and deaths, there are now 42 active cases in the county, which is a high.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: COVID-19, Front Page News, Health, Health, Slider Tagged With: Anderson County, COVID-19, Tennessee, Tennessee Department of Health

COVID-19 emergency delays start of football, girls soccer seasons

Posted at 11:26 am July 3, 2020
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Blankenship-Field-James-Mitchell-Aug-2019
Blankenship Field—the city’s football field—is pictured above in August 2019. (File photo by James Mitchell via City of Oak Ridge)

The extension of the COVID-19 emergency in Tennessee has delayed the start of the high school football and girls soccer seasons.

Tennessee Governor Bill Lee has extended the COVID-19 state of emergency until August 29. A prior order by the governor includes limitations and restrictions on contact sporting events and activities.

In an update sent to member schools on Tuesday, Bernard Childress, executive director of the Tennessee Secondary School Athletic Association, said member schools cannot have any competition or scrimmage with other schools while the governor’s order is in place. The schools cannot have close contact activities during practice for football, 7-on-7 football, girls soccer, wrestling, and basketball. Football and girls soccer cannot begin their seasons as originally scheduled, Childress said.

The Oak Ridge football season opener had been scheduled for August 21.

The TSSAA Board of Control had a special meeting Wednesday and voted unanimously to require that member schools follow the governor’s executive order for sports activities.

The board discussed the effect that the extended COVID-19 state of emergency will have on contact sports in the fall. Football, girls soccer, and competitive cheer are considered contact sports.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: COVID-19, Front Page News, Health, High School, Sports Tagged With: 7-on-7 football, basketball, Bernard Childress, Bill Lee, Blankenship Field, competitive cheer, contact sports, COVID-19, football, girls soccer, state of emergency, Tennessee Secondary School Athletic Association, TSSAA, wrestling

ORNL Federal Credit Union requiring face masks in all branches

Posted at 9:33 am July 3, 2020
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

The Oak Ridge branch of ORNL Federal Credit Union on Rutgers Avenue is pictured above on Friday, July 3, 2020. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

ORNL Federal Credit Union is requiring face masks in all branch offices starting today (Friday, July 3).

The credit union announced the policy in response to a decision by the Knox County Board of Health. The health board approved a public health order this week that requires masks in most indoor public places, the credit union said. Financial institutions are not exempt. The public health order, which is effective today, is in response to the increasing number of local and national COVID cases.

ORNL Federal Credit Union said face masks will be required in all of its branch offices, not just Knox County branches. Disposable face masks will be provided to members who do not have one, the credit union said. People who enter a branch without a mask will be asked to use the credit union’s digital or drive-through services.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, COVID-19, Front Page News, Health, Oak Ridge, Top Stories Tagged With: COVID-19, face masks, ORNL Federal Credit Union

COVID-19 cases rise by 1,800, another new high

Posted at 3:55 pm July 1, 2020
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

A summary of COVID-19 cases in Tennessee through Wednesday, July 1, 2020. (Image courtesy Tennessee Department of Health)

Note: This story was last updated at 7:35 p.m.

COVID-19 cases in Tennessee rose by about 1,800 on Wednesday, another new high as the case count surges in Tennessee.

The previous high of 1,410 new cases was just five days ago, on Friday, June 26.

There were five new deaths reported Wednesday and 50 new hospitalizations. Current hospitalizations climbed from 527 on Monday to 574 on Tuesday.

Tennessee has now averaged more than 1,000 new cases per day for the last four days, which is a new trend. It’s not clear how long that trend might continue, if it continues.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: COVID-19, Front Page News, Health, Health, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: COVID-19, Tennessee

Tennessee reports more than 3,000 new COVID cases in three days

Posted at 5:51 pm June 30, 2020
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

A graph showing daily new COVID-19 cases in Tennessee through Monday, June 29, 2020. (Graph by Ken Mayes/Used with permission)

Tennessee reported more than 3,000 new COVID-19 cases in the past three days—an average of more than 1,000 new cases per day—and the number of cases has passed 100 in Anderson County.

There are now about 15,300 active cases in Tennessee and 32 active cases in Anderson County.

The Tennessee Department of Health did not report COVID-19 data on Sunday because of an unplanned shutdown of the state system. But the two-day numbers released Monday showed an average of more than 1,000 new cases per day for Sunday and Monday.

The state reported an additional 1,212 new cases on Tuesday. That is the second-highest new daily total reported since the first case was diagnosed in the state on Wednesday, March 4.

The highest daily total in Tennessee, 1,410, was reported just four days ago, on Friday.

The COVID-19 dashboard by the Tennessee Department of Health through Monday, June 29, 2020.

The Baker Center for Public Policy at the University of Tennessee said the seven-day average for new cases in the state has reached a new all-time high every day since June 24.

Hospitalizations are also at an all-time high. There have been an average of 47 new hospitalizations each day, the Baker Center said.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: COVID-19, Front Page News, Health, Health, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County, coronavirus, COVID-19, Ken Mayes, Tennessee, Tennessee Department of Health

Updated: State reports new daily high in COVID cases

Posted at 2:48 pm June 27, 2020
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

This COVID-19 dashboard by the Tennessee Department of Health is through Saturday, June 27, 2020.

Note: This story was last updated at 2:30 p.m. June 28.

Tennessee reported about 1,400 new cases of COVID-19 on Friday, a new daily high, and the state passed 40,000 total cases on Saturday.

There were 1,410 new cases reported Friday. Of those, 1,396 were new confirmed cases, according to the Tennessee Department of Health. Fourteen were new probable cases.

The previous high was 1,188 new cases a week earlier, on June 19.

Seven of the state’s top 10 highest new daily case counts have been in the past two weeks. Five of them have been in the past five days.

The number of cases increased by 728 on Saturday, pushing the total to 40,172. Of those cases, 39,848 were confirmed, and 324 were probable.

The number of cases in Anderson County rose by one to 90 on Saturday. The day before, on Friday, the case count went up by eight, the highest increase in the county. Previously, the largest daily increase had been five.

While the hospitalization rate has fallen across the state, the number of current hospitalizations has increased during the past few weeks from 391 on Friday, June 12, to 484 on Thursday, June 25.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: COVID-19, Front Page News, Government, Health, Health, Slider, State Tagged With: Anderson County, Bill Lee, case count, COVID-19, Lisa Piercey, Tennessee, Tennessee Department of Health, Terry Frank

Three people shot, two arrested, one charged with attempted murder

Posted at 10:13 pm June 26, 2020
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Adrian C. Curb

Three people were shot in Oak Ridge on Thursday, four bystanders were allegedly in imminent danger, and two people have been arrested, with one facing two charges of attempted first-degree murder, according to police and court records.

Adrian Conan Curb, the 40-year-old Oak Ridge man charged with attempted murder after the shooting, allegedly had a handgun with a drum-style magazine attached, according to arrest warrants filed in Anderson County General Sessions Court.

The shooting was reported at about 8:39 p.m. Thursday on South Dillard Avenue in Scarboro.

The three people who were shot were taken to hospitals with injuries that aren’t considered life-threatening, the Oak Ridge Police Department said in a press release Friday.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Courts, Front Page News, Oak Ridge, Police and Fire Tagged With: accessory after the fact, Adrian Conan Curb, aggravated assault, Anderson County Detention Facility, Anderson County General Sessions Court, attempted first-degree murder, felon in possession of a firearm, Marvell Moore, Oak Ridge Police Department, ORPD, possessing a firearm, reckless endangerment, Scarboro, shooting

Japanese supercomputer displaces ORNL’s Summit as world’s most powerful

Posted at 1:05 pm June 22, 2020
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

A Japanese supercomputer has displaced the Summit supercomputer, pictured above at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, as the world’s most powerful. Summit is a 200-petaflop IBM system. (Photo courtesy Katie Bethea/ORNL)

Note: This story was last updated at 3 p.m. June 24.

A Japanese supercomputer has displaced the Summit supercomputer at Oak Ridge National Laboratory as the world’s most powerful and bumped other U.S. and Chinese machines down one spot on a semiannual list of the fastest systems.

Summit had been ranked the world’s most powerful supercomputer on the semiannual TOP500 list since June 2018. It was bumped to number two when the new TOP500 list was released Monday.

The new top system is installed in Kobe, Japan, and it is named Fugaku. In a high-performance test, it performed at 415.5 petaflops. A petaflop is a quadrillion floating-point operations per second.

Fugaku’s performance was 2.8 times better than Summit’s, according to TOP500. Summit delivered 148.8 petaflops on the high-performance test.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Front Page News, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ORNL, Science, Slider, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: China, Cray, exaflop, Frontier, Fugaku, Fujitsu, IBM, Japan, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Mellanox, Milky Way-2A, National Nuclear Security Administration, NNSA, NVIDIA, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ORNL, petaflop, Rick Perry, Sierra, summit, Sunway TaihuLight, supercomputer, Tianhe-2A, Top500, U.S. Department of Energy, United States

Apartment kitchen fire displaces seven residents

Posted at 11:34 am June 22, 2020
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Seven apartment residents were displaced after a kitchen fire on Wakefield Road on Friday, but no injuries were reported.

The fire was reported at about 8 p.m. Friday.

When crews arrived, the Oak Ridge Fire Department found a kitchen fire in one of six apartments. The fire was quickly extinguished, but there was heavy fire damage to that apartment, the ORFD said.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Front Page News, Oak Ridge, Police and Fire Tagged With: fire, Oak Ridge Fire Department, Wakefield Road

Tennessee reports new daily high in COVID-19 cases

Posted at 11:11 am June 22, 2020
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

A chart of daily new COVID-19 cases in Tennessee through Saturday, June 20, 2020. (Chart courtesy Ken Mayes, used with permission)

Note: This story was last updated at 12:30 p.m.

Tennessee reported 1,188 new COVID-19 cases on Friday, a new daily high, and the state passed 500 confirmed deaths on Saturday, according to the Tennessee Department of Health.

The new high in daily new cases occurred in the same week that the state reported what are now its third- and sixth-highest totals of new cases in one day: 885 on Sunday, June 14, and 726 on Monday, June 15.

Of the 1,188 new cases reported Friday, the state said 1,181 were new confirmed cases and seven were new probable cases.

The previous daily high was 1,156 on May 1. That was reported after a large number of new cases was diagnosed at Turner Trousdale Correctional Center, according to Nashville investigative reporter Phil Williams.

It’s not clear why there was a new high on Friday. There was a large number of new tests reported, 15,176. But the rate of positive results, 7.8 percent (comparing total new cases to total new tests), was in the range of the rate for the rest of the week, when the positive rate ranged between 4.9 percent and 8.8 percent.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: COVID-19, Front Page News, Health, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County, Brazil, CBS News, COVID-19, Lisa Piercey, Mexico, Tennessee, Tennessee Department of Health, Terry Frank, United States, World Health Organization

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