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Emory Valley Road to be closed temporarily as railroad tracks removed

Posted at 5:14 am June 25, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff 5 Comments

Emory Valley Road Railroad Crossing

Emory Valley Road will temporarily be closed between Briarcliff Avenue and Fairbanks Road as railroad tracks that are no longer used are removed.

 

Emory Valley Road will temporarily be closed between Briarcliff Avenue and Fairbanks Road as railroad tracks that are no longer used are removed on Thursday.

Rogers Group Inc., a city contractor, is removing the railroad tracks that cross Emory Valley Road and Briarcliff Avenue on Thursday. The project should be completed on Friday, a city press release said.

The road closure is designed to help make the construction project safe for workers and motorists, and it will will require that traffic be detoured. The detour routes will be clearly marked, the press release said. The closures will affect only one direction of traffic at a time. Message boards will be located on Lafayette Drive to remind motorists of the closure so an alternate route can be taken. All residential and business properties will have access during this closure; however, streets will be posted for no through traffic. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Government, Government, Oak Ridge, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Briarcliff Avenue, construction, detours, Emory Valley Road, Fairbanks Road, Oak Ridge Public Works Department, railroad tracks, Rogers Group Inc.

In final vote, City Council again rejects tax increase for schools

Posted at 8:58 pm June 16, 2014
By John Huotari 3 Comments

Oak Ridge City Council Budget Meeting

The Oak Ridge City Council on Monday again said “no” to a property tax rate increase to give more money to Oak Ridge Schools. Council is pictured above during a June 9 budget meeting.

 

Note: This story was last updated at 11:15 a.m. June 17.

Two last-minute attempts to pass smaller-than-requested tax increases for the Oak Ridge Schools failed on Monday, and the City Council voted 4-2 to approve a budget that does not raise taxes in the fiscal year that starts July 1.

The decision to not raise taxes for the seventh year in a row came after a parade of residents in two meetings this month asked Council to fully fund the schools. Many said they moved here because of the schools, and they said the educational system is Oak Ridge’s primary asset. School teachers, administrators, and school board members also said they support a greater investment in the schools.

“Flatline budgets will eventually produce flatline results,” said Steve Reddick, an eighth-grade social studies teacher at Jefferson Middle School and co-president of the Oak Ridge Education Association.

The schools had requested $17.9 million from the city, but the no-tax-increase budget lowered that amount to $14.6 million. School officials had previously said they will have to “go back to the drawing board” and make cuts if Council did not approve the tax rate increase. It’s not clear yet what cuts might be made. The Oak Ridge Board of Education could discuss changes to the school system’s budget, which was approved in May, during a Monday evening meeting.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Government, Government, K-12, Oak Ridge, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: 1:1, Affordable Care Act, Anne Garcia Garland, budget, Charlie Hensley, Chuck Hope, Jefferson Middle School, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Education Association, Oak Ridge Schools, pay raise, property tax rate, property tax rate increase, Steve Reddick, tax increase, tax rate, technology initiative, Trina Baughn, Walter Zobel

More red-light, speeding violations since cameras disabled, Redflex says

Posted at 7:53 pm June 12, 2014
By John Huotari 42 Comments

Red-light Camera at Oak Ridge Turnpike and New York Avenue

Redflex Traffic Systems Inc. said an eastbound traffic camera at Oak Ridge Turnpike and New York Avenue/Lafayette Drive had the third-highest rise in detected speeding violations, a 243 percent increase in the number of drivers traveling at 46 mph or more, after the cameras were disabled April 21. Pictured above is the westbound camera.

 

The Arizona company that operated traffic cameras in Oak Ridge for five years said reckless driving has increased significantly, average speeds have risen, and there has been an increase in red-light running and speeding violations since the systems were disabled April 21.

The two biggest increases in speeding violations were in school zones on eastbound and westbound Robertsville Road near Willow Brook Elementary School, camera vendor Redflex Traffic Systems Inc. said in a report that could be discussed during a Traffic Safety Advisory Board meeting on Tuesday. The average number of school zone violations jumped from a little more than two per day in the 14 days before the cameras were disabled to 10 or 11 per day afterward.

A school zone violation occurs when a driver is detected traveling at 21 mph or more in a 15 mph school zone.

Meanwhile, detections of red-light violations, which can lead to the most serious accidents, increased from an average of 20 per day at four locations in the three weeks before the cameras were disabled to up to 28 per day in the fourth week afterward, Redflex said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Government, Government, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge, Police and Fire, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Civic Center, high school, Lafayette Drive, New York Avenue, North Illinois Avenue, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Turnpike, reckless driving, red light cameras, red light violations, red-light running, Redflex, Redflex Traffic Systems Inc., Robertsville Road, school zone violations, speed enforcement cameras, speeding violation, traffic cameras, Traffic Safety Advisory Board, TSAB, Willow Brook Elementary School

In first vote this month, Council rejects schools request for tax increase

Posted at 9:37 pm June 9, 2014
By John Huotari 7 Comments

Oak Ridge City Council Budget Meeting

The Oak Ridge City Council rejected the school system’s request for a 37-cent tax rate increase on Monday, instead voting in the first of two votes this month to keep the tax rate steady for the seventh year in a row.

Note: This story was last updated at 9:55 a.m. June 10.

In the first of two votes this month, the Oak Ridge City Council on Monday rejected a request from school officials for a 37-cent tax rate increase that would, among other things, help fund a technology initiative meant to eventually provide an electronic learning device or tablet to all students.

Council member Charlie Hensley said the tax increase would be the largest in the city’s history, and it came in late in the budget process.

The property tax rate is now $2.39 per $100 of assessed value. The increase would push it to $2.76, and it could cost the owner of a $200,000 home another $15 per month.

“I was looking to support a tax increase, but the one that we got asked for is really, really high,” Hensley said.

There was a two-part vote on the budget on Monday. The first reduced the amount transferred to the schools to roughly $14.6 million, which was about $3.3 million less than the school board had requested, and it kept the tax rate steady for the seventh year in a row. The vote on that amendment was 5-2, with Hensley and Council member Chuck Hope voting no. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Government, Government, K-12, Oak Ridge, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: 1:1, 1:1 initiative, Anne Garcia Garland, Bob Eby, Charlie Hensley, Chris Johnson, Chuck Hope, fireworks, funding, Keys Fillauer, Mark Watson, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Convention and Visitors Bureau, property tax rate, school budget, Secret City Sounds, tax increase, tax rate increase, technology initiative, Trina Baughn

Beer Board suspends Lincoln’s beer permit for two weeks

Posted at 2:05 pm June 9, 2014
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Allen Schwartz and Roy McKinnon at Oak Ridge Beer Board Meeting

Allen Schwartz, right, attorney for Lincoln’s Sports Grille, and restaurant consultant Roy McKinnon said Lincoln’s has made substantial changes.

Note: This story was last updated at 6:45 p.m.

The Oak Ridge Beer Board has suspended the beer permit of Lincoln’s Sports Grille for two weeks starting at midnight today (Monday).

The 14-day suspension will end just before midnight June 23. It was approved by Beer Board members in a 4-3 vote on Monday afternoon. Liquor and food sales are not affected.

Beer Board members said they weren’t satisfied with the remediation plan presented by Lincoln’s following a May meeting after an April fight.

“There is a cultural change that is occurring, but it has to occur faster,” Beer Board Chair Randy Tedford said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, Government, Government, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge, Police and Fire, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Allen E. Schwartz, Allen Schwartz, Barton Bailey, beer permit, Colin Colverson, compliance check, Darrin Osborne, Debra Solmonson, Lincoln's Sports Grille, Lincoln’s, Oak Ridge Beer Board, Oak Ridge Beer Permit Board, Oak Ridge Police Departmetn, Randy Tedford, Roy McKinnon, Sara Keenan, suspension, Tennessee Alcoholic Beverage Commission, Theresa Scott, Wendy Williams

City recommends budget with no tax increase, Council votes Monday

Posted at 6:14 pm June 3, 2014
By John Huotari 25 Comments

Oak Ridge City Council

The Oak Ridge City Council is pictured above during an August 2013 meeting. (File photo)

Note: This story was updated at 7:40 p.m. June 4.

Oak Ridge City Manager Mark Watson on Monday recommended a budget that does not raise the property tax rate, setting up a potential conflict with school officials, who have requested a 37-cent tax increase to avoid cuts.

The Oak Ridge Board of Education already approved its budget in in two meetings last week. That budget, which was scaled back from an earlier proposal, could include an extra $3.3 million to start implementing a technology initiative known as 1:1 that would provide electronic learning devices to all students over three years, add five technology positions, and give 2 percent pay raises to staff.

But the budget is still subject to the amount appropriated to the schools by the city. Oak Ridge provides a little less than one-third of the school system’s funding.

While the schools have approved a budget for the fiscal year that starts July 1, the city has not. The Oak Ridge City Council will consider the municipal budget in two separate meetings this month, one on June 9 and the second on June 16. The city budget also includes a 2 percent pay raise for employees.

It’s not clear that Oak Ridge City Council members will agree to raise taxes to accommodate the school system’s request. In his budget presentation to Council on Monday, Oak Ridge City Manager Mark Watson said Council members have endorsed keeping the tax rate unchanged for the seventh year in a row.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Government, Government, K-12, Oak Ridge, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: 1:1, 1:1 devices, Anderson County, Bruce Borchers, budget, city budget, electronic learning devices, engineering, Mark Watson, mathematics, municipal workers, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Convention and Visitors Bureau, Oak Ridge Public Schools Education Foundation, Oak Ridge Schools, pay raises, property tax rate, Ray Evans, sales tax revenues, school board, school budget, school staff, science, STEM, Steve Jones, tax increase, tech initiative, technology, technology initiative

ORCVB could become city department as hotel tax collections fall

Posted at 11:57 am May 29, 2014
By John Huotari 1 Comment

Oak Ridge Convention and Visitors Bureau

The Oak Ridge Convention and Visitors Bureau’s Welcome Center at the Midtown Community Center on Robertsville Road is pictured above.

 

It’s now a city contractor, but the Oak Ridge Convention and Visitors Bureau could become a municipal department, possibly starting this fall, under a proposal now being considered by city officials.

Set up in 1981, the ORCVB is the city’s tourism organization. Among other things, it helps present the annual Secret City Festival; promotes rowing, travel, and events; and operates a visitors center at Midtown Community Center on Robertsville Road. The contract with the city is its only contract.

The bureau is funded by hotel and motel tax collections. But those collections have fallen for the past four years, from roughly $550,000 in Fiscal Year 2009 to about $490,000 in FY 2013. During a Tuesday work session, Oak Ridge City Manager Mark Watson said there have been reductions in reductions in government travel and daily expense, or per diem, reimbursements.

As the hotel and motel tax collections have fallen, so has the value of the ORCVB’s contract with the city, from $404,208 a few years ago to $314,100 now. The percentage the bureau has earned from the hotel tax revenues has also been reduced during the past three years, from 80 percent a few years ago to 65.4 percent today. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Government, Government, Oak Ridge, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Katy Brown, Mark Watson, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Convention and Visitors Bureau, ORCVB, Secret City Festival, tourism

Memorial Day ceremony honors 181 Anderson County residents who died in conflicts

Posted at 9:34 am May 27, 2014
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Anderson County Memorial Day Wreath-laying

From left, Anderson County Veteran Services Director Leon Jaquet, Mayor Terry Frank, and Tennessee Rep. John Ragan take part in a Memorial Day wreath-laying ceremony on Monday at the Anderson County Courthouse in Clinton.

 

CLINTON—More than 100 Anderson County residents have died in conflicts from the Revolutionary War more than 200 years ago to the ongoing war on terrorism and battles in Afghanistan, a county official said during a Memorial Day ceremony on Monday.

Those 181 heroes are remembered and their names inscribed on the Veterans Memorial at the Anderson County Courthouse in Clinton, Veteran Services Director Leon Jaquet said.

“We gather here today in remembrance of our nation’s heroes, especially our county’s heroes who have paid the ultimate sacrifice in support of this nation’s agenda throughout the world,” Jaquet said. “Our fathers, mothers, brothers, sisters, sons, and daughters who served this country to protect our freedoms and wrote that final check with their lives in support of freedom and democracy.”

Jaquet recognized guests at Monday’s ceremony, including Glen and Amy Morris, parents of Staff Sgt. Daniel Morris, who was killed in Iraq in 2006, and Gerald and Kathy Hovater, parents of Cpl. Jason Hovater, who died in Afghanistan in 2008.

“We remember the 1.3 million Americans who have made the supreme sacrifice during this nation’s wars, from the Revolutionary War to the continued War on Terrorism and Afghanistan,” Jaquet said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Government, Government, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Afghanistan, airmen, Anderson County, Anderson County Courthouse, Anderson County Veterans Services, conflicts, Daniel Morris, Iraq, Jason Hovater, John Ragan, Leon Jaquet, Memorial Day, military personnel, Persian Gulf, sailors, soldiers, Terry Frank, Veterans Memorial, Vietnam, war

City to use traffic camera money for parking lot work at Blankenship Field

Posted at 2:57 pm May 22, 2014
By John Huotari 9 Comments

Red-light Camera at Oak Ridge Turnpike and New York Avenue

The Oak Ridge City Council agreed last week to use $180,000 in traffic camera money for improvements to the lower parking at Blankenship Field.

 

The Oak Ridge City Council agreed last week in a 5-2 vote to use $180,000 in traffic camera money for improvements to the lower parking lot at Blankenship Field, which is used for football games and high school graduation.

The request from Oak Ridge Mayor Tom Beehan was reviewed at a City Council work session on April 28.

The work could include resurfacing work at the lower parking lot and access to the lower levels and visitors bleachers under the American with Disabilities Act. The project has been reviewed by the city staff, and it could include resurfacing, ADA improvements, handicapped parking, and new pavement and striping.

The work would complement a project to replace the demolished visitors bleachers at Blankenship Field, a $455,000 project that was unanimously approved by the Oak Ridge Board of Education in March. The bleachers had been deemed unsafe, and school officials are hoping to replace them before the first home football game on Aug. 29. The school board agreed to use the school system’s fund balance to pay for the replacement bleachers. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Government, Government, High School, K-12, Middle School, Oak Ridge, Slider, Sports, Top Stories Tagged With: ADA, American with Disabilities Act, Anne Garcia Garland, Blankenship Field, Blankenship Revitalization Committee, bleachers, Charlie Hensley, Chuck Hope, David Mosby, football games, high school graduation, Jackson Square, Jackson Square revitalization, Jane Miller, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge City Council, parking, parking lot, pavement, Redflex Traffic Systems, Tom Beehan, traffic cameras, Trina Baughn, visitors bleachers

Roane Commission sends ‘In God We Trust’ proposal to committee

Posted at 1:04 am May 13, 2014
By Sara Wise Leave a Comment

Roane County Courthouse

An “In God We Trust” sign could be placed above the main entrance of the Roane County Courthouse in Kingston under a proposal being considered by county officials. The signs could also be displayed in the Roane County Commission chambers. (Photos by Sara Wise)

 

KINGSTON—The Roane County Commission voted on Monday to defer a resolution to the property committee that would place signs that say “In God We Trust” on the County Courthouse in Kingston.

The vote to defer was closely split, at 8-7. Commissioners James Brummett, Ray Cantrell, Bobby Collier, Randy Ellis, Jerry Goddard, Chris Johnson, and Fred Tedder all voted not to defer the resolution.

Many commissioners who voted against deferment argued that deferral would only delay the process further. Others, however, felt that the issue should have gone through the committee before the commission had any say in the matter.

Ellis, who filed the resolution in favor of the signs, said that the resolution would reach the committee either way, and that the committee would have the final say in the design and placement of the signs.

“Roane County is deep in its faith,” he said. “Not one of my constituents…has come to me against this.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Faith, Government, Government, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County Courthouse, Bobby Collier, Chris Johnson, Fred Tedder, George Nelson, In God We Trust, James Brummett, Jerry Goddard, national motto, property committee, Randy Ellis, Ray Cantrell, Roane County Commission, Roane County Courthouse, Tom McFarland

Lake City’s name change to Rocky Top on hold for now

Posted at 1:29 am May 6, 2014
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Tim Isbel at Hearing on Lake City Name Change to Rocky Top

Tim Isbel, president of the Rocky Top Marketing and Manufacturing Co., at a federal court hearing on Monday on Lake City’s proposed name change to Rocky Top.

Note: this story was updated at 2:52 a.m.

KNOXVILLE—Lake City’s proposed name change to Rocky Top is on hold for now as a federal judge considers a request to stop the move.

The name change has been proposed as part of an expensive plan to convert the former coal mining town in northern Anderson County into a tourist destination. But it has been challenged by the publisher of “Rocky Top,” a well-known bluegrass song and unofficial University of Tennessee anthem.

Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam has signed a bill that allows the name change, but the proposal has not yet gone back to the Lake City Council for final approval. Under the state law, Lake City could become Rocky Top on July 3, said Tim Isbel, an Anderson County Commissioner and president of Rocky Top Tennessee Marketing and Manufacturing Co.

That company has proposed a development that could be worth up to $450 million over six years and include an indoor and outdoor water park, coal miners theater, children’s museum, train rides, restaurant, and candy company on some 300 acres near two exits off Interstate 75. During a hearing in U.S. District Court in Knoxville on Monday, officials said it could bring 200 new jobs to Lake City and generate another $6 million in sales tax per year. But the project hinges on the name change. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, Federal, Government, Government, Lake City, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County, Bill Haslam, bluegrass song, Boudleaux and Felice Bryant, Boudleaux Bryant, candy company, children's museum, coal miners theater, House of Bryant Publications LLC, intellectual property, John Triggs, Lake City, Lake City Council, name change, Nathan D. Rowel, Rocky Top, Rocky Top Tennessee Marketing and Manufacturing Co., Tim Isbel, train rides, U.S. District Court, University of Tennessee, Waddey Patterson, water park

Oak Ridge building bathrooms, changing rooms at Melton Lake Park

Posted at 11:36 pm April 22, 2014
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Oak Ridge Marina Bathrooms

Workers build a block wall, patch and texture the ceiling, and hang drywall for new bathrooms and changing rooms in part of the former New China Palace restaurant at Melton Lake Park.

One section of a former Chinese restaurant at Melton Lake Park has already been converted into a rental shop for kayaks and bikes.

Now, another part of the city-owned building at the Oak Ridge Marina is being converted into public restrooms and changing rooms for big events. The bathrooms, which will be open to the public, could open next month.

It’s one of the steps in implementing a waterfront development plan approved by Oak Ridge City Council in December 2009. That plan included such features as a new picnic pavilion, walking trails, new playground, permanent restrooms, enhanced lighting and landscaping, outdoor casual dining, and recreational equipment rental.

The bathrooms will include multiple stalls, and the city will open the changing rooms for large events, such as regattas (rowing races). That will double the restroom capacities, said Pat Fallon, operations and maintenance manager for the Oak Ridge Public Works Department. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Government, Government, Oak Ridge, Recreation, Slider, Sports, Top Stories Tagged With: bathrooms, bikes, casual dining, changing rooms, kayaks, marina, Mark Watson, Melton Lake greenway, Melton Lake Park, New China Palace, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Marina, Oak Ridge Public Works Department, Oak Ridge Rowing Association, Pat Fallon, picnic pavilion, playground, recreational equipment rental, regattas, restaurant, restrooms, walking trails, waterfront development plan

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