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So far, five candidates for juvenile judge, four for sheriff, three for chancellor

Posted at 8:14 pm January 10, 2014
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Anderson County Courthouse

The Anderson County Courthouse on Main Street in Clinton is pictured above.

So far, there are five potential candidates for Anderson County Juvenile Court judge, four for sheriff, and three for chancellor.

An independent has picked up a petition to run for county mayor, possibly opposing Anderson County Mayor Terry Frank, and Tennessee Rep. John Ragan has an opponent in the Aug. 7 Republican primary.

The five candidates for Anderson County Juvenile Court judge are Victoria “Vickie” Bannach, a Clinton Republican; Lauren Biloski, an Oak Ridge Republican; Victoria Bowling, a Heiskell Democrat; J. Michael Clement, a Clinton Democrat; and Brian J. Hunt, a Clinton Republican. They are candidates in the May 6 county primary.

The current juvenile court judge, Brandon Fisher, a Clinton Democrat, is running for Anderson County chancellor in that election. The other two chancellor candidates are Phil Harber, a Clinton Republican, and Robert Warren Wilkinson, an Oak Ridge Republican. [Read more…]

Filed Under: 2014 Election, Anderson County, Government, Government, Oliver Springs, State, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County chancellor, Anderson County Election Commission, Anderson County Juvenile Court, Anderson County public defender, Anthony Lay, Brandon Fisher, Brian J. Hunt, Caitlin Nolan, candidates, chancellor, county primary, Dave Clark, Don A. Layton, Donald R. Elledge, Gary Long, general election, Harry "Whitey" Hitchcock, J. Michael Clement, Jeff Cole, Jerry Creasey, John Ragan, Joseph H. Van Hook, Joshua N. Anderson, Kevin C. Angel, Lauren Biloski, Paul N. White, Phil Harber, Phillip Warfield, Randy A. Myers, Randy McNally, Republican primary, Robert L. McKamey, Robert Warren Wilkinson, Rodney Archer, Ronald N. Murch, Ronald Taylor, sheriff, state primary, Steve Mead, Steven R. Emert, Terry Frank, Tim Isbel, Tim Shelton, Tom Marshall, Tyler Mayes, Victoria "Vickie" Bannach, Victoria Bowling

Anderson committee recommends referendum on federal prisoners at county jail

Posted at 10:58 am January 10, 2014
By John Huotari 3 Comments

Anderson County Legislative Committee on Jail Referendum

The Anderson County Legislative Committee on Thursday recommended a non-binding referendum be put on the August ballot to ask voters whether federal and state prisoners should be housed at the county jail. From left are Whitey Hitchcock, Jerry Creasey, Tim Isbel, Dusty Irwin, and Steve Mead.

CLINTON—An Anderson County committee on Thursday recommended taking steps to ask voters in August whether state and federal prisoners should be housed in the county jail, which is being expanded.

Some county commissioners say that housing pre-trial federal inmates could help cover jail costs, while other county officials, including the mayor, say that they don’t want to get into the federal prison business.

On Thursday, the Anderson County Legislative Committee recommended that the Anderson County Commission consider sending the question to voters in a non-binding referendum in August.

But there are several hurdles. First, 11 of the 16 county commissioners would have to approve the move, possibly during their daytime meeting on Jan. 21, Commission Chairman Chuck Fritts said. Then, a private act would have to be approved in the Tennessee General Assembly in Nashville by early June to put the question on the August ballot. [Read more…]

Filed Under: 2014 Election, Anderson County, Government, Government, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County Commission, Anderson County Legislative Committee, Chuck Fritts, county jail, county prisoners, Dusty Irwin, federal prisoners, jail, referendum, state prisoners, Steve Emert, Steve Mead, Tennessee General Assembly, Terry Frank, Tim Isbel, Whitey Hitchcock

House-passed budget could avoid second shutdown; Senate may vote this week

Posted at 8:38 am December 16, 2013
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Y-12 National Security Complex Sign

A bipartisan budget bill being considered in Congress could avoid a second government shutdown and provide relief to federal employees and government contractors in Oak Ridge, including at the Y-12 National Security Complex, which was prepared to furlough up to 3,600 workers during the first shutdown in October.

The U.S. House of Representatives has passed a budget bill that could avoid a second government shutdown in mid-January, a development that will likely offer some relief to federal employees and government contractors in Oak Ridge—and to the businesses that support them.

U.S. Rep. Chuck Fleischmann, a Tennessee Republican, said he supported the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013 in the House on Thursday.

“Tonight, the House took a modest step toward reforming spending and setting our government on a more stable path,” said Fleischmann, a second-term congressman whose district includes Oak Ridge.

But the bill still has to pass the deeply divided Senate, which is preparing to take up the budget bill this week. The Washington Post reported that Democrats are still trying to come up with the 60 votes necessary to break a GOP-led filibuster in the Senate. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Federal, Government, Government, Slider, Top Stories, Y-12 National Security Complex Tagged With: Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013, budget bill, Chuck Fleischmann, debt, Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board, deficit, Democrats, DNFSB, fiscal fight, furloughs, government shutdown, House, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Republicans, Senate, sequester, spending, U.S. House of Representatives, Y-12 National Security Complex

Alexander, Feinstein introduce bill to stop cell phone calls on planes

Posted at 3:59 pm December 12, 2013
By John Huotari 2 Comments

U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander

Lamar Alexander

U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander on Thursday introduced legislation to prohibit cell phone conversations on commercial airline flights, a possibility the Federal Communications Commission is scheduled to consider today (Thursday).

“Keeping phone conversations private on commercial flights may not be enshrined in the Constitution, but it is certainly enshrined in common sense,” said Alexander, a Tennessee Republican. “This legislation is about avoiding something nobody wants: nearly two million passengers a day, hurtling through space, trapped in 17-inch-wide seats, yapping their innermost thoughts.”

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, a California Democrat, is an original cosponsor of the legislation. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Federal, Government, Government, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: cell phone, cell phone conversations, cellular data plans, commercial airline, Commercial Flight Courtesy Act, commercial flights, Dianne Feinstein, FCC, Federal Aviation Administration, Federal Communications Commission, Lamar Alexander, planes, Tom Wheeler

Mayor, sheriff reach agreement on salary suit, but war of words follows

Posted at 12:00 am December 9, 2013
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Anderson County Detention Facility Expansion

The salary dispute between the Anderson County mayor and sheriff focused on the spending to hire up to 36 new jailers to staff a 212-bed expansion that is still under construction at the Anderson County Detention Facility in Clinton.

CLINTON—The Anderson County mayor and sheriff reached an agreement Friday that could end their five-month-old legal dispute over an annual salary agreement, possibly closing one expensive and contentious chapter in local government even as it opened a new war of words between top officials.

Knox County Circuit Court Judge Dale C. Workman could sign the agreement Monday morning.

Anderson County Mayor Terry Frank and Sheriff Paul White said the agreement allows the sheriff to hire 15 full-time permanent deputies and additional temporary deputies when the sheriff deems appropriate as he prepares to open a 212-bed jail expansion. But the hiring must stay within the spending limit approved by the Anderson County Commission this year, and the temporary employees cannot work more than six months.

Terry Frank

Terry Frank

Frank and White announced the agreement in a one-page press release distributed Friday. The case had been scheduled to be heard in Knox County Circuit Court on Monday morning. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Anderson County, Government, Government, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County Commission, Anderson County Detention Facility, Anderson County Sheriff's Department, Dale C. Workman, deputies, jail, jail expansion, Jay Yeager, Knox County Circuit Court, litigation, Mark Lucas, mayor, Myron Iwanski, Paul White, salaries, salary agreement, salary suit, sheriff, Terry Frank, writ of mandamus

Atomic Heritage still hopeful that Manhattan Project Park legislation will pass

Posted at 5:46 pm December 3, 2013
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

K-25 Building Aerial View

Now mostly demolished, the former mile-long, U-shaped K-25 Building is pictured above. The site could be included in a Manhattan Project National Historical Park. (Photo courtesy of U.S. Department of Energy)

Note: This story was updated at 1:30 p.m. Dec. 4.

A bill to create a Manhattan Project National Park that would include Oak Ridge has already passed the U.S. House of Representatives, but now it’s tied up in the Senate.

Still, the nonprofit Atomic Heritage Foundation in Washington, D.C., remains hopeful that the legislation will pass.

The Manhattan Project National Historical Park Act was included as an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act, which the House passed in June.

The Senate is now negotiating the procedure for considering 507 amendments that have been offered to that legislation, the Atomic Heritage Foundation said in a Tuesday e-mail. [Read more…]

Filed Under: East Tennessee Technology Park, Federal, Government, Government, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Slider, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: Atomic Heritage Foundation, atomic weapons, B Reactor, Ben Ray Lujan, Chuck Fleischmann, Congres, Congress, Doc Hastings, Gun Site, Hanford, J. Robert Oppenheimer, K-25, K-25 Building, Little Boy, Los Alamos, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Manhattan Project, Manhattan Project National Historical Park, Manhattan Project National Historical Park Act, Maria Cantwell, Mark Udall, Martin Heinrich, National Defense Authorization Act, NDAA, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oppenheimer House, Patty Murray, U.S. House of Representatives, U.S. Senate, V Site, X-10, X-10 Graphite Reactor

Friendship Bell closed while city makes repairs

Posted at 12:21 pm December 3, 2013
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Friendship Bell Repairs

A symbol of the friendship between Oak Ridge and Japan, the 20-year-old Friendship Bell at Alvin K. Bissell Park is closed while the city make repairs to the structure holding up the bell.

A 20-year-old symbol of the friendship between Oak Ridge and Japan is closed while the city makes structural repairs.

The Friendship Bell at Alvin K. Bissell Park was designed in Oak Ridge and cast in Japan in 1993. It’s mounted inside a wooden pavilion at the park in central Oak Ridge, but there is some rot in the wooden columns holding up the bell, said Jon Hetrick, Oak Ridge Parks Division supervisor. A structural engineer and an architect are evaluating the pavilion’s condition, and the city is waiting for their report.

Oak Ridge and Japan have a history dating back 70 years, when Manhattan Project production sites in the Secret City enriched uranium for the first atomic bomb used in war. That bomb, code-named “Little Boy,” was detonated over Hiroshima, Japan, on Aug. 6, 1945, three days before a second bomb was dropped on Nagasaki and just days before World War II ended. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Government, Government, Oak Ridge, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Alvin K. Bissell Park, atomic bomb, Friendship Bell, Hiroshima, Japan, Jon Hetrick, Manhattan Project, Nagasaki, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge Community Foundation, World War II

Alexander opposes cell phone calls on airplanes as FCC considers rule change

Posted at 6:02 pm November 26, 2013
By John Huotari 19 Comments

KLM 747

A low-flying KLM 747 airplane is pictured above. (Photo by Kitty Terwolbeck/Creative Commons License 2.0)

A proposed rule change announced Thursday that would allow air travelers to make cell phone calls above 10,000 feet has already generated a backlash.

On Tuesday, U.S. Sen. Lamar Alexander, a Tennessee Republican, said he would also oppose the move.

“Imagine two million passengers, hurtling through space, trapped in 17-inch-wide seats, yapping their innermost thoughts,” Alexander said. “The Transportation Security Administration would have to hire three times as many air marshals to deal with the fistfights.”

On Thursday, the Federal Communications Commission said it will consider changing the rules, which Chairman Tom Wheeler called out-of-date. The change would also allow air travelers to use their cellular data plans above 10,000 feet. Restrictions would remain for takeoffs and landings. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Federal, Government, Government, Top Stories Tagged With: air travelers, airplanes, cell phone calls, cell phone conversations, FCC, Federal Communications Commission, Lamar Alexander, Tom Wheeler, Transportation Security Administration, Washington Post

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