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Guest column: Housing strategy could include paint, marketing, tax breaks, plaques

Posted at 11:54 am December 29, 2012
By Martha de la Garza Fowler 3 Comments

E=mc2 (E Equals MC Squared), or Energy Equals Many Citizens Working Together

There’s no doubt that Oak Ridge could use a facelift. I applaud City Manager Mark Watson and our Oak Ridge City Council members for recognizing and attempting to address this need with their “Not In Our City” initiative.

I think, however, that “Not In Our City” has some problems:

  1. It’s a whole lot of stick and not much carrot.
  2. It creates an adversarial relationship between the city and its residents and potentially pits neighbor against neighbor.
  3. It is piecemeal in its approach and lacks an overarching vision.

How about this as an alternative? It even has a catchy slogan. In honor of Einstein, let’s call it E = mc2, or Energy Equals Many Citizens Working Together.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: alphabet houses, bungalows, cemesto, cottages, flat top, historic neighborhoods, Mark Watson, marketing, Martha de la Garza Fowler, National Historic District, National Register of Historic Places, Not in Our City, Oak Ridge City Council, older housing, paint, plaques, tax breaks, World War II

Education Foundation gives city $400,000 for ORHS debt

Posted at 1:16 pm December 6, 2012
By Oak Ridge Public Schools Education Foundation 1 Comment

Mark Watson and Lila Metcalf

Oak Ridge Public Schools Education Foundation Executive Director Lila Metcalf presents a $402,611 check to Oak Ridge City Manager Mark Watson to help pay the debt on the renovation of the Oak Ridge High School. (Submitted photo)

The Oak Ridge Public Schools Education Foundation recently made its eighth annual contribution for the rebuilding and renovation of Oak Ridge High School, a project that was completed in 2008.

In November, Lila Metcalf, the foundation’s executive director, presented a check for $402,611 to Oak Ridge City Manager Mark Watson to assist in the high school debt repayment. Since the payments began in 2005, the Education Foundation has presented the city with more than $3.5 million for the high school.

The Education Foundation raised $8 million in private funds for the high school, and that money provided the leverage for special bonds available for public schools. Together, the private funds and bonds provided the final piece of funding that made the renovation of Oak Ridge High School possible.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Government, Top Stories Tagged With: debt, Lila Metcalf, Making the Critical Difference, Mark Watson, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge High School, Oak Ridge Public Schools Education Foundation, ORHS, Qualified Zone Academy Bonds, QZAB, renovation

Baughn asks for mayor’s travel records for past five years

Posted at 11:22 pm December 5, 2012
By John Huotari 23 Comments

Trina Baughn

Trina Baughn

After asking Oak Ridge Mayor Tom Beehan to consider resigning, new City Council member Trina Baughn requested trip and cost information for all of his city-related travel in the past five years.

She asked Oak Ridge City Manager Mark Watson for the trip information in a Wednesday afternoon e-mail.

Baughn requested the mayor’s travel records for the dozen boards and committees she knows about, as well as any she doesn’t. She asked Watson to also give the total cost of each trip, including mileage, per diem, hotel expenses, entertainment, and other charges, as well as the funding sources.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: 2012 Election, Government, Top Stories Tagged With: Energy Communities Alliance, Mark Watson, National League of Cities, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge City Council, Tom Beehan, travel, Trina Baughn, trips, U.S. Department of Energy

Railway museum still on track

Posted at 10:23 am October 23, 2012
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Wheat Train Depot

Nonprofit volunteers are scrambling to ensure they can use a state grant to build a railway museum next to the Wheat boarding station, pictured in center background, at the former K-25 site in west Oak Ridge.

Plans for a railway museum in west Oak Ridge are still on track, volunteers said Monday.

It had recently appeared that the decade-old proposal could derail. During its Sept. 10 meeting, the Oak Ridge City Council agreed to give City Manager Mark Watson permission to send a letter to the Tennessee Department of Transportation, asking them to keep the $480,000 grant for the Southern Appalachia Railway Museum at the former K-25 site in west Oak Ridge.

But during a Monday night City Council meeting, Watson said he hasn’t sent the letter yet. And board members of the nonprofit SARM said they are working quickly, hoping to assure the city manager of the project’s long-term sustainability.

The board members said the museum’s size has been reduced to 3,600 square feet and its estimated cost has been lowered to less than $900,000. They’re working on a plan for interior displays at the museum, completed basic environmental permitting, and expect to meet a Nov. 1 state deadline.

“We’ve had a lot of fast peddling to do to get caught up to this point,” said Charlie Poling, SARM museum director.

SARM President Scott Lindsey said funding for the museum would include the $480,000 state grant, $120,000 raised by the museum, and $300,000 from the Community Reuse Organization of East Tennessee, or CROET.

“We’ve made a lot of progress,” Lindsey said.

The museum would be built next to the current Wheat boarding station at K-25, now renamed the Heritage Center. That station is now used for SARM’s Secret City Scenic Excursion Train.

Although no city money would be involved in the museum project, Watson has warned that the municipal government is the grantee, so the financial obligations would ultimately be the city’s responsibility. SARM members said they have presented Watson with financial information on the project.

If the work proceeds, Poling said museum construction could start in the late winter or early spring, and Lindsey said it could take about nine months. Located on a few acres donated by CROET, the museum would include interior and exterior displays, office space, and a platform.

The Oak Ridge City Council agreed to apply for the TDOT grant in 2000.

Watson had earlier said SARM has many hurdles to overcome before Nov. 1, including major design revisions, a National Environmental Policy Act environmental clearance for the new site, identification of the right-of-way, and design review. On Monday, he said there has been a “lot of movement” in the past four weeks.

Filed Under: Community, Government Tagged With: Charlie Poling, Heritage Center, K-25, Mark Watson, Oak Ridge City Council, SARM, Scott Lindsey, Southern Appalachia Railway Museum, TDOT, Tennessee Department of Transportation

Oak Ridge High School debt payments revived as issue in campaign

Posted at 1:34 pm October 17, 2012
By John Huotari 11 Comments

Oak Ridge Board of Education Candidates

Three candidates are running for two seats on the Oak Ridge Board of Education, including incumbents Angi Agle, left, and Keys Fillauer, right, and challenger Leonard Abbatiello.

The standoff between municipal and school officials over debt payments for the $66 million renovation of Oak Ridge High School has been revived in this fall’s campaign.

The public debate had been largely dormant since May, when the Oak Ridge City Council voted to withhold about $766,000 from the school system until education officials transfer revenues raised under an Anderson County sales tax increase approved in 2006.

In recent forums, former Oak Ridge City Council Leonard Abbatiello accused the current five-member Oak Ridge Board of Education of defaulting on the high school loan payments.

“They did that, in June, voluntarily, without a vote,” Abbatiello said. “This breach of trust is one that we cannot tolerate.”

But Angi Agle, one of the two incumbents running for re-election to the school board in the Nov. 6 election, challenged Abbatiello’s allegation that the school board has defaulted. The school board doesn’t borrow money, Agle said.

Oak Ridge officials said last week that the city has not defaulted on the loan.

“I’m not going to risk our credit rating,” Oak Ridge City Manager Mark Watson said. “We’re making sure that the payments are made.”

However, municipal officials said the school system is past due on what it owes to the city. They said the city has used reserves to make up a shortfall of between $200,000 and $250,000.

The disagreement between the city government and school system is over new revenues generated by a 2006 sales tax increase in Anderson County. School officials have argued they can keep that part of the new sales tax revenues that are collected outside Oak Ridge. Until recently, all the new money, including revenues collected outside the city, were used for high school debt payments.

But city officials said the 2006 county sales tax increase essentially took away money from the city. They cite a 2005 financial plan to argue that all the new county revenues, including money generated outside the city, should be used for debt payments on the ORHS renovation.

School officials say a written agreement is needed, and they proposed one in May, but the City Council informally rejected it.

Despite the disagreement between city and school officials, Agle and Oak Ridge Board of Education Chair Keys Fillauer would not characterize the relationship between the two bodies as adversarial.

“I do not believe the Board of Education and the City Council have an adversarial relationship,” said Fillauer, a retired teacher and coach. “We do not always agree. I think that’s healthy.”

“We’re going to disagree from time to time,” Agle said. Those disagreements will generally be about money, she said.

Agle and Fillauer said the solution is for the two bodies to work together to find a middle ground.

“The answer, in large part, is talking,” said Agle, the only candidate or school board member who has a child in school. In the meantime, there are areas where the city and school system can work together, including on phone systems and a new computer data center, Agle said.

The school board candidates have participated in a series of recent forums, including one sponsored by an Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce task force and another hosted by the League of Women Voters of Oak Ridge.

Among other things, they were asked which programs or services they might cut.

Abbatiello said he would cut $100,000 in funding for legal help.

“It provides nothing for education,” he said.

But Fillauer, who defended the spending on legal help, said cuts have already been made to programs from driver’s education to summer band camp, and he doesn’t want the list to grow. There are some programs that have been eliminated that he would like to fund again, if possible, using higher tax revenues and more state money.

“There is nothing at this point in time that I would put on the table to cut,” Fillauer said.

Agle said she is optimistic that the city’s sales tax situation is improving, and a new Kroger Marketplace shopping center could generate the equivalent of 10 cents on the property tax rate. That will be critical to schools, Agle said.

“It’s not a debt problem,” Agle said. “It’s a revenue problem.”

 

Virtual schools

Asked about virtual schools, Agle said she is a proponent of technology, but the only virtual school in Tennessee has had miserable results so far.

Fillauer said he doesn’t support using money designated to public schools for for-profit institutions. He also said he is opposed to a school voucher system.

Abbatiello said technology is a tool and should be used profitably when possible.

 

Demographic changes

Abbatiello said Oak Ridge has a two-tier school system, and the system’s excellence is jeopardized by family quality. He said there are 160 high-performing students, and the rest have to “get what they can.”

Forty-five percent of students are on the free-lunch program, Abbatiello said. He said he’s proud of new commercial developments such as the Kroger project, but the degree of growth that the city needs is “unreal.”

He cited economic problems, saying only 10 new homes were built in Oak Ridge last year, among other things.

Agle said it’s true that there is a higher percentage of economically disadvantaged children in classrooms today, but the excellence of the well-respected school system is not at risk. She cited, for example, a recent National Blue Ribbon designation for Glenwood Elementary School from the U.S. Department of Education.

Agle said educators have to teach differently and bridge the gap between those who are ahead of their classes and those who are behind. Still, schools can help improve the lives of disadvantaged children. Some of those students take advanced placement classes and go on to college, Agle said.

“Just because they’re poor does not mean they can’t learn,” she said.

Fillauer seemed to bristle at Abbatiello’s comments about family quality.

“That is absolutely, 100 percent wrong,” Fillauer said. “We need to educate everyone who comes through Oak Ridge schools.”

 

Preschool

The candidates were asked whether the city might get a new preschool, a project that’s been on the school’s wish list for years.

“It is something that is desperately needs to be done,” Agle said. Sales tax revenues are absolutely critical to funding projects like those, she said.

Fillauer agreed that the city’s tax base needed to improve, but he said school officials won’t lose interest in building the new facility.

“This is one item that I can assure you that will stay on the plate of the Board of Education,” Fillauer said.

Abbatiello acknowledged that the decades-old preschool is not appropriate, but he suggested the school system will have to live with it.

“Debt is killing us,” Abbatiello said. “You can’t continue to ignore what you’re spending.”

Early voting for the Nov. 6 election started Wednesday morning and ends Nov. 1.

Note: This story was last updated at 10:36 p.m. Oct. 17.

Filed Under: 2012 Election, Education, Government Tagged With: Angi Agle, debt, demographic changes, Keys Fillauer, Leonard Abbatiello, Mark Watson, Nov. 6 election, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge High School, preschool, virtual schools

City accepting applications for Oak Ridge boards and commissions

Posted at 9:23 pm October 16, 2012
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

The Oak Ridge City Clerk’s Office is accepting applications to fill vacancies on city boards and commissions for terms beginning Jan. 1.

To be considered, completed applications must be submitted to the City Clerk’s Office by 5 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 16. Late applications or submissions will not be considered.

To make the process more convenient, an online application has been created and is available on the City Clerk’s departmental website or by visiting http://tiny.cc/12boardsapp. Paper applications are also available in the City Clerk’s Office in the Oak Ridge Municipal Building.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Government Tagged With: boards, commissions, Diana Stanley, Mark Watson, Oak Ridge City Clerk, Oak Ridge City Council

City starts search for Jackson Square design firm this week

Posted at 6:21 pm October 15, 2012
By John Huotari 1 Comment

TDOT Commissioner John Schroer Tours Jackson Square

Tennessee Department of Transportation Commissioner John Schroer, left, tours Jackson Square on Monday with Oak Ridge Mayor Tom Beehan, center, and City Manager Mark Watson.

The search for a company to help transform historic Jackson Square with the help of an $800,000 grant could start this week, Oak Ridge officials said Monday.

The city plans to release a request for proposals, or RFP, for consulting engineers this week, Oak Ridge City Manager Mark Watson said. The winning firm will help design and configure the new square, and meet with the public. Picking a company could take three to four weeks, Watson said.

A separate company will be selected to do an environmental review of historic buildings at Jackson Square, Oak Ridge’s original town center.

The redevelopment of the square will use a roughly $800,000 state award of federal highway money to improve the parking lot on Broadway Avenue, build and repair sidewalks, add trees and pedestrian lighting, and make the square an “attractive, landscaped plaza and parking area.”

Tennessee Department of Transportation Commissioner John Schroer toured the square on Monday afternoon with TDOT and local officials, but he declined to put a timeline on the project, which requires a local funding match of $200,000.

Watson said it would take at least 18 months to get to the construction bidding stage.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Government Tagged With: Jackson Square, John Schroer, Mark Watson, Oak Ridge, request for proposals, RFP, Tennessee Department of Transportation, Tom Beehan, traffic enhancement grant

Watson discusses Kroger shopping center, Jackson Square on Tuesday

Posted at 9:33 am October 1, 2012
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Mark Watson

Mark Watson

During a Tuesday afternoon speech, Oak Ridge City Manager Mark Watson will discuss economic challenges, the proposed Kroger shopping center at Oak Ridge Turnpike and Illinois Avenue, and the redevelopment of Jackson Square.

Watson’s speech is titled “The State of the City: Past Accomplishments; Future Vision.” It’s scheduled to begin at noon Tuesday in the Social Hall of the Oak Ridge Unitarian Universalist Church.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Government Tagged With: League of Women Voters of Oak Ridge, Lunch with the League, Mark Watson, Oak Ridge City Manager, Oak Ridge Unitarian Universalist Church, State of the City

Oak Ridge mall owner focuses on one buyer, no sale date announced

Posted at 9:59 am August 28, 2012
By John Huotari 6 Comments

Oak Ridge City Center

The Oak Ridge City Center, pictured at center above, is for sale and the owners say they are working with potential buyers, although no sale date has been set.

Local officials have announced a few different timelines and deadlines for the redevelopment of the Oak Ridge Mall since April, but the company that owns the property last week declined to set a specific sale deadline.

“We are working diligently with buyers, and there will be an announcement forthcoming,” said Steve Arnsdorff, chief manager of Oak Ridge City Center LLC, which owns the mall.

Mall owners are focused on one buyer, Arnsdorff said during an interview last week.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, Government Tagged With: Mark Watson, Oak Ridge City Center, Oak Ridge Mall, Ray Evans, redevelopment, Steve Arnsdorff

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