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Guest column: Kudos to Kiernan and her book, ‘Girls of the Atomic City’

Posted at 11:44 pm March 31, 2013
By Martin McBride Leave a Comment

This month, national author Denise Kiernan gave a wonderful talk at the American Museum of Science and Energy. Ms. Kiernan was in town to discuss her new book, “Girls of the Atomic City—The Untold Story of Women Who Helped Win World War II.”

The book made the New York Times best seller list.

Ms. Kiernan’s book chronicles the fascinating stories of the many women who came to Oak Ridge between 1943 and 1945 during the Manhattan Project. It’s great to see these pioneers recognized for their important contributions. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Guest Columns Tagged With: Denise Kiernan, Girls of the Atomic City, Manhattan Project, Martin McBride, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, World War II

Guest column: ORCVB, Chamber funding should be reduced 50-100 percent, festivals outsourced

Posted at 12:29 am March 28, 2013
By Trina Baughn 31 Comments

Note: This is an edited version of a letter submitted by Oak Ridge City Council member Trina Baughn at a March 25 work session.

Mr. Watson and Fellow Council Members:

At our last retreat, I proposed that we each share our specific positions regarding the Economic Diversification Fund. A successful economic development strategy must focus on both retaining and increasing business and residents with a primary goal of establishing a more competitive financial position. For Oak Ridge, that means becoming a more affordable place to live and work. With that in mind, I present my point-by-point response to Mr. Watson’s Eight Point Economic Statement:

1) I support the city manager’s proposal to eliminate this fund and distribute the costs within the general fund if that distribution includes some reduction and/or reallocation of funds to the direct benefit of our taxpayers. Of the $1.4 million we currently spend, I recommend that we attribute half toward a reduction in the property tax rate (the equivalent of 7.7 cents). Such a reduction will benefit every existing and future business and home owner. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Government, Guest Columns, Oak Ridge Tagged With: community sponsorships, economic development, Economic Diversification Fund, festivals, funding, incentives, Mark Watson, Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Convention and Visitors Bureau, ORCVB, property tax rate, return on investment, subsidies, tax abatement policy, Trina Baughn, uranium processing facility

Guest column: Questions remain on Oak Ridge cleanup funding

Posted at 9:05 pm March 22, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns Leave a Comment

David Martin

David Martin

By David Martin, Oak Ridge Site Specific Advisory Board chair

There is great uncertainty on what the looming federal budget cuts will be and what effect they will have on funding for the U.S. Department of Energy’s Environmental Management, or EM, program at the Oak Ridge Reservation. We can be confident that budget cuts are coming. It is going to take a coordinated effort on the part of the DOE-Oak Ridge EM, regulators, and stakeholders to minimize the impact on current and future remediation projects, and on the men and women who carry out this work.

Right now DOE-EM is operating on a temporary six-month budget. This budget covers just the first half of Fiscal Year 2013 and is based on half of the FY 2012 budget. We should know soon how changes in the federal budget affect Oak Ridge EM for the second half of 2013. This still leaves the 2014 budget in question. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns, Oak Ridge Office, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: budget cuts, cleanup, cleanup funding, David Martin, DOE, DOE-EM, EM, environmental management, federal budget, Oak Ridge Reservation, Oak Ridge Site Specific Advisory Board, ORR, ORSSAB, SSAB, U.S. Department of Energy

Guest column: Woolly housing adelgids invade Oak Ridge

Posted at 8:45 pm March 22, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns 35 Comments

By Pat Fain and Leslie Agron

In Nimes, France, there is a 2,000-year-old Roman coliseum. For 500 years in the Middle Ages, thousands of people lived their lives within the walls of the coliseum, and in modern times it has hosted rock concerts and safely seated nearly 15,000 people.

Yet at less than 75 years of age, Oak Ridge has the blight. Woolly housing adelgids, no doubt. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: blight, code enforcement, housing, Leslie Agron, Oak Ridge, Pat Fain, wooly housing adelgids

Guest column: Anderson County Dental Clinic helps those in need

Posted at 3:12 pm March 19, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns 1 Comment

Anderson County Dental Clinic

Pictured above, from left, are Anderson County Commissioner Robin Biloski, Dental Assistant Nancy Hamilton, and Dr. Tim Bible. (Submitted photo)

The Anderson County Dental Clinic has been held monthly in Oak Ridge for 30 years and is operated solely by volunteers. This necessary outreach was started by Jeanie Bertram.

“The waiting list has held a constant number of 150 to 200 names for our free services.  Last year we treated 232 patients, with 101 of them being brand-new,” said Bertram. “We extracted 661 teeth last year for a production value for $97,484. Last year we did receive some patient fees and donations from the public totaling $10,000, and we put that right back into our services.”

Dr. Tim Bible, a longtime volunteer dentist, said: “This is so important; these individuals simply have no means to pay for dental care, which is desperately needed. Our clinic currently has five general dentists, two oral surgeons, the University of Tennessee General Dentistry Department volunteers, 12 registered dental assistants, three clinic support staff, and five front office staff who rotate through the clinic in any given year. We are so proud of this wonderful service we provide to our residents.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns, Health Tagged With: Anderson County Dental Clinic, dental care, dentist, Jeanie Bertram, Nancy Hamilton, Robin Biloski, Tim Bible, volunteers

Guest column: The City Council should negotiate with EPA

Posted at 9:38 pm March 15, 2013
By Martin McBride 1 Comment

At its next meeting, the Oak Ridge City Council will consider whether to attempt to negotiate a better deal with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on the sewer upgrades or not.

About three and a half years ago, the EPA inspected the Oak Ridge sewer system and noted excessive rain water leaking into that system during storms. In April 2010, EPA sent the city a show cause letter which requested a face-to-face meeting to “show cause” why EPA should not intervene. Instead of meeting with EPA, the Council chose to phone in an informal response. Subsequently, EPA imposed a 20-page administrative order filled with expensive add-on requirements and a $170,000 civil penalty.

The total cost of the sewer improvements is in the neighborhood of $50 million. Paying for these improvements has so far required two major utility rate increases and a major increase in city debt. More rate hikes are likely.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: administrative order, debt, Environmental Protection Agency, EPA, Martin McBride, Oak Ridge City Council, rain water, rate hikes, sewer improvements, sewer system, sewer upgrades, show cause, utility rate increases

Guest column: A tale of two cities

Posted at 11:26 pm March 12, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns 10 Comments

By Leslie Agron and Pat Fain

“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times…” Oak Ridge is on the cusp of a renaissance; Oak Ridge is in its worst-ever financial shape. Despite the looming risk of the guillotine for questioning the conventional wisdom here, we want to examine where Oak Ridgers are coming from when they speak of our future. To do this we, conveniently, will compare these possible futures for Oak Ridge with two present day Tennessee cities: Farragut and Chattanooga.

Farragut is a place most Oak Ridgers are fairly familiar with. It is mostly new and upscale. It tends toward sprawl and toward heavily developed strips, but has no real heart. It has low taxes, but is not a full-service city. Chattanooga is an older city with a downtown and outlying neighborhoods of varying ages. It is a full-service city with commensurate taxes. Chattanooga has done an outstanding job of revitalizing some of its older neighborhoods. The neighborhood in the vicinity of its Aquarium is particularly noteworthy in this regard.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: blight, buildings, Chattanooga, economic growth, Farragut, full-service city, homes, land bank, Leslie Agron, neighborhood, Oak Ridge, Pat Fain, two cities

Guest column: Anderson County court, criminal prosecution programs at risk

Posted at 9:50 pm March 8, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns 2 Comments

Dave Clark

Dave Clark

Proposals to redistrict Tennessee’s 31 judicial districts may cost Anderson County its full-time judges, prosecutors, public defenders, and their staffs. Proponents want to jumble 15 of Tennessee’s 31 judicial districts containing the state’s 95 counties. The pending proposal would eliminate the 7th Judicial District consisting of Anderson County and combine Anderson, Scott, Union, Campbell, Claiborne, and Fentress counties into a single district. If the move is approved in Nashville, local officials and their offices may be relocated, and many other programs may be terminated.

Currently, Anderson County has a single circuit judge, chancellor, district attorney general, and public defender. All of these offices are located in the county seat in Clinton on a full-time basis. The other counties that are part of the proposed new super-district are headquartered in Scott County in the city of Huntsville, Tenn. It is unclear if redistricting would result in all of Anderson’s current officials relocating to Huntsville. However, what is clear is that under the proposal, Anderson County officials would have duties in other counties, some of them an hour or more away, such as Jamestown, the county seat of Fentress County, located on the Cumberland Plateau bordering Kentucky.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: 7th Judicial District, Anderson County, chancellor, circuit judge, crime, Dave Clark, district attorney general, Jim Normand, judges, judicial districts, Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce, Parker Hardy, prosecutors, public defenders, redistricting, Rick Chinn

Guest column: The velocity of money is 70 mph

Posted at 9:58 am March 5, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns 34 Comments

By Pat Fain and Leslie Agron

The usual theory behind economic development for a community is that the local economy is too small. So, economic development experts seek to bring in new companies, especially industrial ones, to enhance that economy. The theory is that increased local purchases by new companies and their employees are multiplied several times as the money spreads throughout the community. Every additional purchase results in additional sales tax from the same original dollar that exited the new company. Companies that manufacture goods or provide services externally have the greatest value theoretically as they actually bring new money into the community. The rate at which this happens is called the velocity of money.

In Oak Ridge, however, the size of the economy that occurs within our city limits is enormous for our population. The problem for Oak Ridge is that much of that economy occurs within non-taxable institutions and the vast majority of their staff does not live in Oak Ridge. Thus, in Oak Ridge the velocity of money is 70 mph—the speed at which those folks are cruising down Interstate 40 on Friday evening as they take their paychecks home!

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: economic development, economic growth, economy, federal facilities, Leslie Agron, Oak Ridge, Pat Fain, property taxes, residents, revenue, sales taxes, tax revenues, velocity of money

Guest column: Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, Cub Scouts collect food pantry donations

Posted at 9:00 am March 3, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns Leave a Comment

Scouts Sort Food at Grace Lutheran

Scouts, leaders, and family members from Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, and Cub Scouts troops sort food donations in Grace Lutheran’s Fellowship Hall. (Submitted photos)

Submitted by Scoutmaster Mike McEahern

The need is greater than ever.

As families continue to struggle across the country, local organizations like the Great Smoky Mountain Council of the Boy Scouts of America are striving to make a difference close to home.

On Feb. 9, Boy Scouts from Troop 224 from Grace Lutheran Church; Troop 328 from Kern United Methodist Church; and Cub Scouts from Pack 328 and Girl Scouts from Troop 20737, both from First United Methodist Church, teamed up to collect donations in the annual Scouting for Food drive. Donations were collected from neighborhoods throughout Oak Ridge and delivered to the Grace Lutheran Food Pantry. Additionally, Pack 328 led collection efforts at First United Methodist and Woodland Elementary—rewarding the leading classroom at Woodland with a pizza party.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Faith, Guest Columns Tagged With: Boy Scouts, Boy Scouts of America, Cub Scouts, donations, First United Methodist Church, Girl Scouts, Grace Lutheran church, Grace Lutheran Food Pantry, Great Smoky Mountain Council, Kern United Methodist Church, Mike McEahern, Pack 328, Scouting for Food, Troop 20737, Troop 224, Troop 328

Guest column: Electronic signs a reality, responsible use should be allowed

Posted at 10:36 pm March 1, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns 13 Comments

Note: This is a copy of a Jan. 28 letter from the Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce that was received by the Municipal Planning Commission during a recent public hearing on electronic signs.

On Aug. 23, 2012, the City’s Community Development Director sent a letter to the Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce requesting Development Forum help in clarifying and updating the city’s electronic reader board (moving copy) sign regulations. The Forum first discussed this issue with Community Development staff on Sept. 6 and provided broad feedback associated with issues such as light intensity and the need to incorporate new sign technologies into the city’s regulations. The Chamber remained in contact with city staff, but proposed language was not provided until December.

Since then, the Development Forum and representatives of the Oak Ridge Business Coalition have collaborated in discussions associated with proposed revisions to the city sign ordinance pertaining to reader board signs (moving copy signs). It is our shared opinion that:

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, Government, Guest Columns, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge Tagged With: advertising, animation, Development Forum, display time, electronic signs, light intensity, moving copy signs, Oak Ridge Business Coalition, Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce, Oak Ridge Community Development, reader board signs, video

Guest column: Researches EPA sewer order, says more work needed

Posted at 6:01 pm February 25, 2013
By Trina Baughn 1 Comment

Last month, Oak Ridgers were hit with a water/sewer rate increase for the second time in nine months to pay for $15 million worth of debt that you were told (incorrectly) was issued to cover a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency mandate. On Monday night, City Council is preparing to approve another $18 million in debt for the same cause, which will result in subsequent rate increases.

A statement I received this weekend from one resident sums up the frustrations that so many of you have been sharing with me: “Utility rates (water, sewer, electrical, trash pickup, etc.) keep going up; the city and county property ‘double’ taxation is simply too much. It so happens that our group of friends and us discuss the idea of moving to other less costly vicinities nearby more often than before. We would strongly suggest that our city government start budgeting our expenditures with the money we have.”

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: administrative order, Clean Water Act, EPA, EPA Inspection Report, federal order, fines, Lamar Dunn, loan, mandate, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge City Council, overflows, rate increases, sanitary sewer overflows, sewage, sewer lines, sewer rates, show cause letter, SSOs, TDEC, Tennessee Department of Environmental and Conservation, Trina Baughn, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, water rates

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