• About
    • About Us
    • What We Cover
  • Advertise
    • Advertise
    • Our Advertisers
  • Contact
  • Donate
  • Send News

Oak Ridge Today

  • Home
  • Sign in
  • News
    • Business
    • Community
    • Education
    • Government
    • Health
    • Police and Fire
    • U.S. Department of Energy
    • Weather
  • Sports
    • High School
    • Middle School
    • Recreation
    • Rowing
    • Youth
  • Entertainment
    • Arts
    • Dancing
    • Movies
    • Music
    • Television
    • Theater
  • Premium Content
  • Obituaries
  • Classifieds

IDB endorses professional services contract with Chamber

Posted at 8:31 pm July 1, 2013
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

The Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce could provide an office for the Industrial Development Board, store its files, prepare its meeting minutes and agendas, and take care of its accounting under a proposal endorsed Monday.

The Chamber would do the work for $25,000 per year, IDB Chair David Wilson told board members.

The hiring of the Chamber would come amid a shifting economic development environment in Oak Ridge that has resulted in a funding cut for the Chamber of Commerce and a plan to make dormant the roughly decade-old Oak Ridge Economic Partnership.

The city has hired two economic development consultants, Ray Evans and Steve Jones, and two members of the Economic Partnership, Kim Denton and Kathy Barber, have been laid off. The Economic Partnership is a support corporation for the Chamber.

In a voice vote Monday, five IDB members agreed to have a memorandum of understanding drafted between the IDB and Chamber, have the city and Chamber attorneys review it, and let Wilson sign it if he and Chamber President Parker Hardy can reach an agreement.

“All we’re trying to do is pull it together and organize it,” Wilson said.

Right now, he said, IDB files are scattered all over the place in paper and electronic form.

The IDB could meet at the Chamber or continue meeting at the Municipal Building. Calls to the IDB office could be routed to the city consultants.

“I look at this as a work in progress,” Wilson said.

He said more than $900,000 has been spent at the Horizon Center Business Park in west Oak Ridge in the last few years, and two sites have been certified there, one by the state and one by the Tennessee Valley Authority. There could be a big economic payoff, Wilson said, but the city needs professionals working on its behalf in its pursuit of a larger tax base and more jobs.

IDB members estimated the new arrangement would cost the board an additional $18,000 to $20,000 per year because the board now pays $28 per hour for help from the city staff and another $4,000 for bookkeeping.

After the meeting, Oak Ridge City Manager Mark Watson said he thinks economic development officials have generated a good agreement and are well-prepared for retail, industrial, and commercial opportunities.

Watson told the IDB he will meet biweekly with Hardy, Evans, and Jones.

“We want to simplify,” he said. “We want to be fast.”

Voting for the proposed agreement between the IDB and Chamber were Wilson and IDB members Lou Dunlap, Richard Chinn, Chris Johnson, and Hal Osucha.

Johnson and Chinn both said the agreement with the Chamber was necessary, especially with the recent changes in local economic development organizations.

“It’s just almost a have-to,” Johnson said. “I think that is the only natural partnership I can think of.”

“If we’re sincere about industrial recruiting, this is a no-brainer,” Chinn said.

Filed Under: Business, Government, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge, Top Stories Tagged With: Chris Johnson, David Wilson, economic development, Hal Osucha, Horizon Center, IDB, Kathy Barber, Kim Denton, Lou Dunlap, Mark Watson, Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce, Oak Ridge Economic Partnership, Oak Ridge Industrial Development Board, Parker Hardy, Ray Evans, Richard Chinn, Steve Jones

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

More Business News

Kairos Power begins construction on demonstration reactor

Kairos Power has started construction on a test nuclear reactor in west Oak Ridge. The Hermes Low-Power Demonstration Reactor is the first of its type to be approved for construction by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory … [Read More...]

Learn about Oak Ridge history during World War II

You can learn more about the history of Oak Ridge during World War II during a free national park walk through Jackson Square on Thursday, July 18. The walk is offered by the Manhattan Project National Historical … [Read More...]

Legal Aid Society presentation at Lunch with League

Two representatives of Legal Aid Society of Middle Tennessee and the Cumberlands will be featured at Lunch with the League in Oak Ridge on Tuesday. The two representatives are Mary Michelle Gillum and Paula Trujillo. … [Read More...]

UT Arboretum Society has spring plant sale in April

The University of Tennessee Arboretum Society will have its annual plant sale in Oak Ridge in April. It's the 57th Spring Plant Sale, and it's scheduled for April 12 and 13 at the UT Arboretum at 901 South Illinois … [Read More...]

Three students, schools selected for ORNL FCU art, mural program

Three students and schools have had their art work selected for the ORNL Federal Credit Union's Community Art and Mural Program. Introduced in 2017, the Community Art and Mural Program was created to support … [Read More...]

More Business

More Government News

Election is Thursday

The Anderson County general election and state and federal primary elections are Thursday. Competitive races include the Democratic and Republican primaries for U.S. Senate, Republican primary for Tennessee House of … [Read More...]

Kairos Power begins construction on demonstration reactor

Kairos Power has started construction on a test nuclear reactor in west Oak Ridge. The Hermes Low-Power Demonstration Reactor is the first of its type to be approved for construction by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory … [Read More...]

County law director dies at 65

Anderson County Law Director Nicholas ?Jay? Yeager, of Clinton, died Friday. He was 65. Yeager was assistant attorney in Anderson County from 2001 to 2006, and he has been law director since then. "Mr. Yeager was … [Read More...]

Outdoor Pool to close for season Aug. 12

Indoor Pool to re-open Monday The Oak Ridge Outdoor Pool will closed for the season on Monday, August 12, and the Indoor Pool will re-open Monday, July 29, after being closed for a few months for renovations. The … [Read More...]

Tennis court dances recreate wartime event

Monthly dances by the Manhattan Project National Historical Park recreate the open-air tennis court dances that entertained 75,000 workers and their families in the Secret City during World War II. "Put on your … [Read More...]

More Government

Recent Posts

  • ORAU Annual Giving Campaign raises $91,479 in 2025
  • Alan Forbes named director of Safeguards & Security for ORAU and ORISE
  • ORAU and American Museum of Science and Energy Foundation formalize partnership to advance Manhattan Project 2.0
  • Author and Law Professor Derek W. Black to Speak on Public Education and Democracy
  • Anderson County Chamber Headquarters Dedication Set for October 17
  • ORISE announces winners of 2025 Future of Science Awards
  • SL Tennessee Supports New Anderson County Chamber Headquarters
  • ORAU 2025 Pollard Scholarship recipients announced
  • Democratic Womens Club Hosts State Rep. Sam McKenzie
  • Flatwater Tales Storytelling Festival Announces 2025 Storytellers

Search Oak Ridge Today

Copyright © 2026 Oak Ridge Today