• About
    • About Us
    • What We Cover
  • Advertise
    • Advertise
    • Our Advertisers
  • Contact
  • Donate
  • Send News

Oak Ridge Today

  • Home
  • Sign in
  • News
    • Business
    • Community
    • Education
    • Government
    • Health
    • Police and Fire
    • U.S. Department of Energy
    • Weather
  • Sports
    • High School
    • Middle School
    • Recreation
    • Rowing
    • Youth
  • Entertainment
    • Arts
    • Dancing
    • Movies
    • Music
    • Television
    • Theater
  • Premium Content
  • Obituaries
  • Classifieds

Guest column: Thanksgiving traffic safety

Posted at 12:15 am November 27, 2013
By Anderson County Sheriff Leave a Comment

By Sheriff Paul White

The Thanksgiving holiday is one of the busiest travel times of the year, and to help save lives on our roadways, the Anderson County Sheriff’s Department will be teaming with other state and local law enforcement officers to crack down on seat belt violations.

During the 2011 Thanksgiving holiday period, 249 passenger vehicle occupants were killed in motor vehicle traffic crashes nationwide. Fifty percent of those killed were not wearing seat belts.

Sheriff’s deputies will be out in force during the long weekend. The goal is simple: to enforce the law in order to save more lives. Whether you’re traveling across the country or just across town, one of the best ways to ensure a safe arrival is to always buckle up. It’s a simple step that each of us can take to protect ourselves and our loved ones. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: Anderson County Sheriff's Department, crashes, motor vehicle, Paul White, seat belt, seat belt violations, Thanksgiving, traffic safety

Guest column: A successful Oak Ridge Mall project

Posted at 11:45 am November 16, 2013
By Trina Baughn 1 Comment

Trina Baughn

Trina Baughn

Note: This is a copy of a Nov. 14 e-mail from Oak Ridge City Council member Trina Baughn to Anderson County Commissioners and Mayor Terry Frank.

Honorable Mayor Frank and County Commissioners:

Like you and all of our citizens, I recognize the need for the successful redevelopment of the Oak Ridge Mall property. My research, to include discussions with various city officials and partners from their past projects, has me convinced that if anyone can help us finally turn the mall around, it is Crosland Southeast.

The generation of added sales tax revenue from new retail is our highest priority in this venture. Not only do we desire more shopping options, but the financial health of our community is highly dependent upon new sources of revenue.

No one can guarantee that the anticipated sales tax will materialize nor is it realistic to expect such an assurance. However, there is one guarantee contained within this plan. Once demolition has begun, the terms of the tax increment financing (TIF) will be permanently secured, regardless of whether or not anything is built. The end result will lock in a 20-year freeze on the property tax collected by the city and the county. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: Anderson County Commission, Crosland Southeast, Oak Ridge Mall, property tax, retail, revenues, sales tax, sales tax revenue, tax increment financing, Terry Frank, TIF, Trina Baughn

Guest column: County looks ‘dysfunctional’ on jail dispute, needs solutions

Posted at 10:11 am November 15, 2013
By Myron Iwanski 5 Comments

Myron Iwanski

Myron Iwanski

Anderson County Mayor Terry Frank’s op-ed column submitted to the media last week questioned County Commission’s decision to expand the jail. It has some incorrect statements about the history of this decision that need to be corrected.

In 10 years, the peak daily population of the jail nearly tripled. In 2000, there were 120 inmates, and in 2010 there were 340. The jail had a capacity of 226 when the decision to expand the jail was made in 2011. The peak daily population this year has increased to 396.

Mayor Frank’s claim that the jail is not overcrowded in very misleading.

This overcrowding is causing major problems in being able to properly classify inmates based on risks and other factors. This was the major reason the state was about to decertify the jail in 2011. It also does not take into account that we have approximately 3,000 outstanding arrest warrants, some of which prosecutors and deputies will tell you are for criminals that need to be in the jail. These criminals are not being actively pursued because of a lack of jail space. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: Anderson County Commission, criminal justice, inmates, jail, jail expansion, jailers, mayor, Myron Iwanski, overcrowding, salary agreement, sheriff, tax increase, Terry Frank

Guest column: AC Commission needs to stay involved with mall project

Posted at 8:22 pm November 12, 2013
By Martin McBride Leave a Comment

Declining DOE Residency Hurts Anderson County

In 2003, the Anderson County Commission approved a county subsidy for a revitalization project at the Oak Ridge Mall.

Had that project succeeded, it would have generated a substantial increase in county revenue, allowing tax rates to be lowered. A successful mall project would have also helped stabilize the U.S. Department of Energy payroll gap with Knox County. Stabilizing this gap would have generated nearly $100 million more in DOE payroll for the Anderson County economy—in this year alone.

Obviously, the potential economic benefit from a successful mall project is huge.

To give the project the best chance for success, the Commission needs to couple the requested mall subsidy to four key Commission actions: [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County Commission, county revenue, DOE, DOE payroll, DOE workforce, Knox County, Oak Ridge Mall, payroll gap, tax increment financing, tax subsidy, taxes, TIF, U.S. Department of Energy

Guest column: White crosses, Normandy, and honoring veterans

Posted at 8:49 am November 11, 2013
By John Ragan 1 Comment

John Ragan

John Ragan

A few years ago, I traveled to France visiting the American Cemetery in Normandy on a guided tour. Our French guide was an expert on what we were seeing. A native to the region, she was steeped by her family lore in eyewitness accounts to the events of more than a half a century earlier.

That family background had spurred her to become a tour guide just before the 50th anniversary of D-Day. Her excellent knowledge of English and history convinced her employer, despite her youth, to assign her escort duties for American veterans visiting on that momentous occasion.

She spoke in a tone of reverence about the “older gentlemen” she had taken from place to place. Movingly, she recounted how they pointed here or there and commented how different something appeared compared to when they had seen it as young men. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: American Cemetery, commander-in-chief, D-Day, France, House, John D. Ragan, John Ragan, military, Normandy, Saving Private Ryan, Senate, veterans, white crosses

Guest column: Mayor opposes move to house federal inmates at county jail

Posted at 9:05 am November 6, 2013
By Terry Frank 4 Comments

Terry Frank

Terry Frank

Prior to my election as mayor, the history of our county jail expansions and additions was one directly related to increasing inmate population. The year 2011 saw property taxes increased 16.2 cents and monies were allocated to alleviating the overcrowding.

Immediately, the quick construction of a new 128-bed dorm as a lower cost solution of $1.74 million alleviated most of the jail overcrowding problem, leaving only the women’s unit with crowding concerns.

Anderson County citizens were then asked that, while current problems were being addressed, why not make plans to address potential overcrowding for years to come? This new $11 million+ addition of another 212 jail beds would carry us for at least the “next 10 years,” according to then-Interim Mayor Myron Iwanski (Commission meeting 4/18/2011). Not only would the new addition allow us room for growth for the future, we were told, but it would be designed with the latest design efficiencies put in place, therefore enabling a more efficient, cost-effective manner of operating our county jail. In fact, then-Interim Mayor Iwanski said “it’s going to be a whole lot less expensive” and a “much more efficient operation.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns, Opinion Tagged With: Anderson County, county jail, dorm, federal inmates, financial stature, inmates, jail overcrowding, jailers, Myron Iwanski, prisoners, Terry Frank, women's unit

Guest column: Legal battle between county mayor, sheriff must be resolved immediately

Posted at 9:01 am November 6, 2013
By Myron Iwanski 1 Comment

Myron Iwanski

Myron Iwanski

Note: This is a copy of an Oct. 9 e-mail that Anderson County Commissioner Myron Iwanski sent to the other commissioners and county officials. The sheriff’s salary lawsuit against the county mayor was not discussed during the Oct. 21 County Commission meeting, as Iwanski had hoped, but it is scheduled to be considered during a special meeting this evening.

I am very concerned that the legal battle between the mayor and sheriff has not been resolved. This battle will have huge impacts on our budget this year and in future years. I have asked that this item be placed on the agenda for the Operations Committee meeting, and I would like to see it discussed by the full County Commission at its next meeting.

Costs continue to mount in this legal battle. If the large attorney fees are included with the cost for staff time to prepare all the documents and evidence being demanded, I believe this case could end up costing the county hundreds of thousands of dollars.

More importantly, no matter which side prevails in this case, I fully expect we will be told by Tennessee Corrections Institute and/or the federal courts that we must fund the jail. As we wait for this legal case to be resolved, nothing is being done toward bringing in the federal inmates we need to help provide the funds we need to operate the jail in future. This will likely mean that we will be forced into a tax increase next year. This could have been avoided had this case been worked out and we instead focused on getting the revenue we need to operate the jail. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns, Opinion Tagged With: Anderson County Commission, attorney fees, budget, federal inmates, funding, jail, jail staffing, jailers, legal battle, mayor, Operations Committee, revenue, sheriff, tax increase

Guest column: Diversity in proximity—an aesthetic approach to urban architecture

Posted at 12:38 am October 28, 2013
By Andrew Howe 5 Comments

I’m very glad there is positive forward movement on redevelopment of the Oak Ridge Mall. However, I feel that the current layout proposed will fall far short of the ideal design, one that will best do what Oak Ridge wants it to.

I recently returned from my honeymoon through the Carolinas and Georgia, and along the way it dawned on me precisely what elements are in play regarding our gut “feelings” about downtown shopping, dining, and nightlife architecture—what makes one place more appealing than another. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: Andrew Howe, architecture, Asheville, asphalt, brick, Columbia, concrete, Crosland Southeast, design, dining, diversity, layout, Market Square, multi-story buildings, Oak Ridge Mall, proximity, Savannah, shopping, urban architecture

Guest column: October marks Crime Prevention Month

Posted at 8:40 pm October 17, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns Leave a Comment

Crime Prevention Logo

The Anderson County Sheriff’s Department joined with the Anderson County Board of Commissioners in proclaiming October as Crime Prevention Month for 2013. Sheriff Paul White has challenged the entire community to make crime prevention a priority and wishes to thank law enforcement officers throughout Anderson County along with the many people who have taken personal responsibility for their neighborhoods as well as community organizations that work for the common good.

In 1984, the National Crime Prevention Council, the nation’s center of excellence for preventing crime, designated October as Crime Prevention Month. The month-long commemoration reflects the adage that prevention pays off. NCPC strongly believes that citizen involvement in crime prevention can and has played a vital role in helping many communities stay safe.

Crime Prevention Month recognizes successful crime prevention efforts on the local, state, and national levels to generate interest and enthusiasm for prevention efforts to continue to grow even stronger and become more widespread. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County Sheriff's Department, crime prevention, Crime Prevention Month, David Massengill, National Crime Prevention Council, NCPC, Neighborhood Watch, October

Guest column: Selling Oak Ridge to the DOE workforce

Posted at 1:18 am September 30, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns 37 Comments

Change in DOE Payroll Chart

by David Stanley

Our city urgently needs to market Oak Ridge to the local U.S. Department of Energy workforce. That workforce brings a billion dollar payroll into East Tennessee each year. Unfortunately, the Oak Ridge economy sees very little of this money.

Over the last two decades, the erosion of DOE residency has cost the City of Oak Ridge a great deal of payroll. The problem looks even worse when one considers the concurrent payroll increase of our city’s competition. For example, over those two decades the gap between the annual Oak Ridge and Knox County DOE payrolls grew by $130 million dollars. That’s just the growth in the gap. The total gap in DOE payroll between Oak Ridge and Knox County is now approximately $270 million dollars per year.

No wonder Turkey Creek and so many new housing developments have gone over there. That’s where the DOE payroll went! [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: Anderson County, David Stanley, DOE, DOE payroll, DOE workforce, East Tennessee, economy, Farragut, housing developments, Knox County, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge City Council, payroll, residency, revenue, Turkey Creek, U.S. Department of Energy

Guest column: Oak Ridge Schools explain funding issues, maintenance of effort test

Posted at 12:33 pm September 10, 2013
By Oak Ridge Schools 2 Comments

In the spirit of collaboration, the Oak Ridge Schools would like to share pertinent information in regard to the current maintenance of effort (MOE) issue that faces our community. Tennessee law requires that local governments fund local school systems by at least the same amount each year.

In August, Oak Ridge Schools were notified by the State Department of Education, Office of Local Finance, about the failure to pass the MOE test. Failure to correct this problem by Oct. 1 will result in a loss of Basic Education Program (BEP) funding at a rate of $1.87 million per month.

The only possible resolution to satisfy state law is an increase in local funding from the city general fund in the amount of $250,000. This budget amendment would need to be approved in two readings by City Council, and two readings by the Board of Education.

Numerous meetings have occurred between city and schools staff. In addition, the “high school debt/potential failure of MOE” item has been an ongoing discussion for the past two years. To date, no meetings have been scheduled by the City Council to make the necessary budget amendments. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns, Opinion Tagged With: ADM, Anderson County, average daily membership, Basic Education Program, BEP, BEP funding, budget, City of Oak Ridge, funding, maintenance of effort, MOE, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge High School, Oak Ridge Schools, ORHS, sales tax, shortfall, Tennessee Department of Education, transfer

Guest column: The sky is not falling on school funding, city manager says

Posted at 12:04 pm September 10, 2013
By Mark S. Watson 1 Comment

Mark Watson

Mark Watson

The Sky is NOT Falling!

It is not often that a city manager takes the time to write an editorial, but I think this is one of those times.

These past two weeks, I have been working with new School Superintendent Bruce Borchers in reviewing a notice he received from the State of Tennessee that the financial formulas for required school funding have not been met by Oak Ridge. This principle is known as maintenance of effort.

Oak Ridge is one of the few school systems in Tennessee recognized as a city system. The school system is a “department” of the city for budgetary purposes.

Our school system has maintained itself through the years as one of the premier school systems in the state, and citizens here pay much more than the minimum requirements for school maintenance found elsewhere. However, with ups and downs of sales taxes and reductions in some state funding categories, the school and the city have found themselves calculated as coming up short in the statewide formula. This is the problem that Superintendent Borchers and myself find ourselves working together to resolve. With a solution, we will take that to our respective City Council and School Board. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns, Opinion Tagged With: Bruce Borchers, maintenance of effort, Mark Watson, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge City Manager, Oak Ridge School Board, revenue, sales tax, school funding, Tennessee

« Previous Page
Next Page »

Search Oak Ridge Today

Recent Posts

  • James Buckner named director of Environment, Safety & Health for ORAU and ORISE
  • National Supplemental Screening Program celebrates 20 years of service; eligible individuals encouraged to participate
  • ORAU Annual Giving Campaign raises $91,479 in 2025
  • Alan Forbes named director of Safeguards & Security for ORAU and ORISE
  • ORAU and American Museum of Science and Energy Foundation formalize partnership to advance Manhattan Project 2.0
  • Author and Law Professor Derek W. Black to Speak on Public Education and Democracy
  • Anderson County Chamber Headquarters Dedication Set for October 17
  • ORISE announces winners of 2025 Future of Science Awards
  • SL Tennessee Supports New Anderson County Chamber Headquarters
  • ORAU 2025 Pollard Scholarship recipients announced

Copyright © 2026 Oak Ridge Today