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Number of students affected by bus route changes down to 1,300

Posted at 11:39 am July 17, 2014
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Keys Fillauer and Chris Marczak at Girls Inc.

Oak Ridge Board of Education Chair Keys Fillauer, left, and Oak Ridge Schools Assistant Superintendent Chris Marczak say a Wednesday change in how mileage is calculated could reduce the number of students affected by a new “parent responsibility zone” for transportation from 1,800 to 1,300. Marczak says his family is also affected by the expanded zone, where bus service is not provided.

 

The Wednesday change in how bus service is mapped could help about 500 students, reducing the number of children affected by expanded zones where parents will have to provide transportation to schools from 1,800 to 1,300, officials said.

Those students would have been in the expanded 1.5-mile “parent responsibility zone,” where bus service is not provided and parents have to arrange transportation. The expanded parent responsibility zone, which is also sometimes called a PRZ or walk zone, was approved by school officials in June.

Oak Ridge school officials announced Wednesday that they were changing how the 1.5 miles is calculated, switching from a 1.5-mile radius measured by air (also known as “as the crow flies”) to actual walking distance. That means the expanded no-bus service zone will now affect fewer families. Parents called the change a small but positive step.

Even with the modification, though, parents continue to have concerns. The protests kicked into high gear last week, and some parents expressed concerns during a Wednesday evening meeting at Girls Inc. Among the concerns were children who have to cross busy roadways or pass by the homes of registered sex offenders.

“We are paying property taxes, and our children’s safety should come first,” parent Beverly Heun said. “Our transportation should not have been cut.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, K-12, Oak Ridge, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: 1.5-mile, Adam Wilson, Amanda Jenkins, Ashley Paine, Beverly Heun, Boys and Girls Clubs of the Clinch Valley, budget, budget deficit, bus service, carpools, children, Chris Marczak, Girls Inc., Illinois Avenue, Keys Fillauer, Knox County Schools, Maryville, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Schools, Oak Ridge Turnpike, parent responsibility zone, property tax rate, property taxes, PRZ, Rhoni Basden, Robertsville Middle School, students, transportation, walk area, walk zone, Willow Brook Elementary School

Letter: Urge City Council, residents to invest in schools

Posted at 5:49 am June 14, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Letters 28 Comments

Dear members of City Council and fellow citizens:

We are writing this letter in response to the Fiscal Year 2015 budget decisions made during the June 9 Oak Ridge City Council meeting. The Council’s overwhelming vote to maintain property tax rates at the same rate they have held steady at since 2009 may bode well for the short-term pocketbooks of our residents, but the long-term results are disconcerting and disheartening for many.

City Council is alienating the tax base that it needs to nurture. The young professionals, business owners, and families with school-aged children who once flocked to this city but now trickle must be heard by Council. These families have the disposable income to spend in Oak Ridge stores, and will pay the property taxes for decades to come that will keep this city viable. Yet at this Council meeting, our voices were not truly heard.

The argument that we continue to hear is that “our schools have plenty of money” and that the schools “need to learn to live within their budget.” The Oak Ridge Schools have proven that they can do this, but what is the cost of this attitude? How does this foster a strong relationship with not only the schools and their employees, but the families and students? How can the Schools continue to maintain excellence without, at the very least, inflationary and cost of living increases, when really it takes much more? [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, K-12, Letters, Opinion Tagged With: Board of Education, Bruce Borchers, budget, digital devices, Donna Butcher, education system, expenses, Fernanda Foertter, Fiscal Year 2015, funding, Greg Foertter, Jutta Bangs, Mike Mahathy, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Schools, property tax increase, property tax rates, property taxes, school board, schools, tax base

Letter: Will not vote for tax increase, wants better communication with schools

Posted at 9:04 pm June 2, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Letters 20 Comments

Note: This is a copy of a June 2 letter from Oak Ridge City Council member Anne Garcia Garland to Parker Hardy and members of the Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce. 

Dear Chamber:

The Oak Ridge City Council has always supported the needs and beyond of the city school system. This current council has lived in that tradition. We honor and appreciate our students and our teachers and have voted to provide whatever can reasonably be provided. We have also weathered the annual School Board predictions of educational catastrophe if the increased budget projections are not allocated.

This town depends upon the base of education and economic largesse of its original homeowners at the beginning of the 1950s for its sense of pride and place in academia. It is, however, that early well-being and the growth and optimism of the early post-war years which have created a myth of extraordinary wealth and erudition with which we are burdened today. Our reality is that we are a lovely small Southern town with great diversity of education, income, and opinion. We are neither young nor old, rich nor poor, progressive nor conservative. We are all of these descriptions and many between.

This town created a wonderful culture and honored its natural environment in such an outstanding manner that it has attracted citizens from neighboring counties to live and work here. Perhaps because we did not have a large stock of new or above-average priced homes, we have not attracted a large number of the professional transferees to the federal facilities in the past couple decades. After all, “youngish” professionals selling homes in more expensive markets need the tax protection of buying comparably priced homes in this area. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, K-12, Letters, Opinion Tagged With: Anne Garcia Garland, City Council, education, funding, homes, housing, Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce, Oak Ridge City Council, Parker Hardy, property tax rate, property taxes, school board, school system, STEM school district, tax increase, workers

Theresa Scott to seek election to Anderson County Commission in District 7

Posted at 1:36 pm June 2, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Theresa Scott

Theresa Scott

Theresa Scott has announced her candidacy for Anderson County Commission in District 7. The seat is non-partisan and represents the Highland View, Pine Valley, and Glenwood precincts.

Having run previously in 2010, Scott said in a press release that she has been strongly encouraged by community residents to run again for County Commission.

“I am very humbled to see that people in my district continue to show their approval for me to step into this position. I want to be their choice,” Scott said in the release. “My platform remains the same—speaking up for and on behalf of the residents, taxpayers, homeowners, and voters of my district.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: 2014 Election, Anderson County, Government, Top Stories Tagged With: Alexander Inn, Anderson County Commission, Anderson County Government, Anderson County Underage Drinking Task Force, campaign advertisements, Cedar Hill Park, District 7, Glenwood, Highland View, Neighborhood Watch, Oak Ridge Beer Permit Board, Oak Ridge Citizen Police Academy, Oak Ridge City Council, Pine Valley, property taxes, taxpayers, Theresa Scott, volunteer work

Republican forum: Issues range from jobs, retail to drug courts, trial experience

Posted at 8:46 am April 9, 2014
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Anderson County Republican Party Forum

Anderson County Mayor Terry Frank, center, gives an opening statement during a Tuesday night candidate forum for Republican Party candidates. Also pictured are Anderson County Commissioner Zach Bates, left, who is challenging Frank in the May 6 GOP primary, and Oak Ridge Police Department Officer Randy Myers, one of two Republican candidates for sheriff.

Note: This story was last updated at 11:45 a.m.

The starkest differences between any candidates at a Tuesday night Republican Party forum might have emerged in the race for Anderson County chancellor, where candidates Michael Farley and Nicki Cantrell clashed on questions of trial experience and whether the Chancery Court should ever be used to hear criminal cases.

In the race for sheriff, Republican candidates Anthony Lay and Randy Myers agreed on one key question: No federal inmates should be housed at the Anderson County jail.

In the race for mayor, Terry Frank, the incumbent, said she had presided over one of the few—and possibly the only—tax cut in Anderson County history, while her opponent, Commissioner Zach Bates, said the county’s biggest economic challenge is “retail leakage.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: 2014 Election, 2014 Election, Anderson County, Government, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County jail, Anthony Lay, Brian Hunt, candidate forum, chancellor, Chancery Court, Democrat, drug court, federal inmates, general election, jobs, judge, Juvenile Court, Lauren Biloski, League of Women Voters, mayor, Michael Farley, Neighborhood Watch, Nicki Cantrell, Oak Ridge Police Department, Phil Harber, property taxes, Randy Myers, Republican Party, retail, sheriff, tax cut, Tennessee Highway Patrol, Terry Frank, truancy, U.S. Department of Energy, Vickie Bannach, William Lantrip, Zach Bates

Guest column: Watson responds to Abbatiello’s column on budgeting, property taxes

Posted at 9:42 pm March 20, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns Leave a Comment

Mark Watson

Mark Watson

By Mark Watson

Oak Ridge City Manager Mark Watston responded Thursday to a guest column by former City Council member Leonard Abbatiello on budgeting and property taxes.

I have reviewed the comments from Mr. Abbatiello for the paper. There are a couple of clarifications that need to be made in his comments, but generally “matching” our budget cycles with various Tennessee or federal cycles is good. Oak Ridge is the earliest in the state at present time. Hohenwald and Memphis has a collection period beginning July 1. Morristown, Crossville, and Norris have a period beginning Aug. 1. Alcoa, Maryville, Johnson City, Dyersburg, Newbern, and Sardis have a collection period beginning Sept. 1.

Perhaps most importantly (as Mr. Abbatiello knows), June is the month of tax appeals. At present, we have various changes that occur during that month after our June 1 collection period. This causes a number of administrative changes, which do have a cost, so a shift in the calendar would avoid some of this administration, especially during a reappraisal (next one in 2015). [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns, Opinion Tagged With: budget, budget cycle, budgeting, collection, Leonard Abbatiello, Mark Watson, Oak Ridge City Manager, property taxes

Guest column: Let’s house federal prisoners, not raise taxes, to pay for new jailers

Posted at 9:40 pm January 15, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns 15 Comments

Chuck Fritts

Chuck Fritts

By Anderson County Commission Chairman Chuck Fritts

Commissioners,

A question we need to be asking ourselves: “Would our citizens rather us house low-risk federal prisoners in the Anderson County Detention Facility, or would they rather we raise their property taxes by about 15 cents to fund the cost of staffing the new jail addition?” When you honestly look at it, these are the only two choices we really have.

As chairman, I don’t have the opportunity to speak during our meetings, so I’ll give you my comments in advance. I have “carbon copied” the press so you don’t have to worry about me violating the Sunshine Law with this information.

There is a proposal being presented to place a non-binding referendum on the ballot in August on whether or not to house “low-risk federal prisoners” in the Anderson County Detention Facility. This concerns me greatly for several reasons: [Read more…]

Filed Under: 2014 Election, Guest Columns Tagged With: Anderson County Commission, Anderson County Detention Facility, Chuck Fritts, federal prisoners, jail addition, jailers, property taxes, referendum, state prisoners, tax increase

More than 400 attend Rocky Top meeting in Lake City on Friday

Posted at 1:12 pm November 4, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Information from WYSH Radio

More than 400 people attended Friday night’s bean and cornbread social and informational meeting on a proposal to change the name of Lake City to Rocky Top as the first step toward the creation of a massive Rocky Top theme park.

The event was held at Main Street Baptist Church and featured a presentation from the developers of the proposed tourist destination as well as from Anderson County Property Assessor Johnny Alley, who told the crowd that property taxes would not only not go up because of the project, but if all goes as planned, residents could actually see their property taxes decline as new revenue comes in. Lake City Mayor Tim Sharp told residents that the only cost to the town will be changing the name.

The park, as proposed, would be built on land owned by the city on Highway 441 between I-75 and Highway 25. The first phase of the development would be called the Rocky Top Pavilion and would feature a theater designed to attract musical acts like those found in Branson, Mo.; an indoor-outdoor water park; and a large restaurant. Developers also envision a sports hall of fame and museum. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, Government, Lake City, Lake City, Top Stories Tagged With: I-75, Johnny Alley, Lake City, Lake City Council, museum, property taxes, restaurant, Rocky Top, Rocky Top Pavilion, sports hall of fame, theater, theme park, Tim Sharp, tourist destination, water park

BBB: OS Budget Committee recommends water, sewer, tax rate increases

Posted at 7:27 pm June 14, 2013
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Information from WYSH Radio

On Thursday, the Oliver Springs Budget Committee recommended a tax rate increase and across-the-board water and sewer rate increases as they prepare to adopt a budget for the upcoming fiscal year.

BBB-TV reported that the committee recommended water and sewer rate increases for both residential and commercial customers as the city prepares to apply for a loan to make improvements to its aging wastewater plant. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Government, Oliver Springs, Top Stories Tagged With: BBB-TV, budget, Eddie Kelly, insurance, Oliver Springs Budget Committee, Oliver Springs City Council, parks and recreation director, property taxes, rate increases, sewer, water, WYSH

Guest column: Do our competitors ‘hammer us’ on property tax rates?

Posted at 1:50 pm May 28, 2013
By Myron Iwanski 39 Comments

Myron Iwanski

Myron Iwanski

I agree with Martin McBride that Oak Ridge is a great place to live. However, I do not agree with his statement in recent columns that high property taxes are the reason Anderson County’s and Oak Ridge’s populations are not growing as fast as those in some area counties.

The following information from county and city audit reports and websites, the University of Tennessee County Technical Advisory Service, and the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics website help make my point. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County Commission, Consumer Price Index, CPI, full-service city, growth, homeowner, Martin McBride, Myron Iwanski, Oak Ridge, population growth, property tax rates, property taxes, services, tax rate increases, taxes, wheel taxes

Council considers budget tonight

Posted at 8:53 am May 28, 2013
By John Huotari 2 Comments

Oak Ridge City Council Budget Meeting

The Oak Ridge City Council will consider the municipal budget, which is not expected to raise property taxes, during a second and final reading Tuesday evening.

The Oak Ridge City Council will consider the municipal budget on second and final reading tonight.

If approved, the budget would not raise property taxes, but it would give employees a 1 percent pay raise and add another $50,000 for the Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce contract.

Tonight’s meeting also includes a presentation of the Oak Ridge Schools’ budget, which was approved on second and final reading on Thursday. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Government, Oak Ridge, Top Stories Tagged With: Habitat for Humanity of Anderson County, municipal budget, Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge High School, Oak Ridge Schools, pay raise, property taxes, Secret City Festival, sinkhole, soccer field

Council approves no-tax-increase budget that could be amended

Posted at 10:08 pm May 13, 2013
By John Huotari 12 Comments

Mark Watson

Mark Watson

The Oak Ridge City Council on Monday gave initial approval to a budget that does not raise property taxes but could be amended.

Council members Trina Baughn and Chuck Hope proposed amendments that could be considered during a special meeting before second and final reading of the budget on May 28.

The budget presented by City Manager Mark Watson on Monday would give city employees a 1 percent pay raise, cut funding for the Oak Ridge Convention and Visitors Bureau, and change the city’s contract with the Chamber of Commerce. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Government, Oak Ridge, Top Stories Tagged With: amendments, Chuck Hope, Mark Watson, Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Convention and Visitors Bureau, pay raise, property tax rate, property taxes, Trina Baughn

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Classifieds

Availability of the draft environmental assessment for off-site depleted uranium manufacturing (DOE/EA-2252)

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) announces the … [Read More...]

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AVAILABILITY OF THE FINAL ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT FOR THE OFFSITE HOUSING OF THE Y-12 DEVELOPMENT … [Read More...]

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Aid to Distressed Families of Appalachian Counties (ADFAC) is a non-profit community based agency, … [Read More...]

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