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Veterans Day Parade canceled due to COVID-19

Posted at 3:37 pm September 22, 2020
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

This year’s Veterans Day Parade in Anderson County has been canceled because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The decision to cancel the annual parade because of uncertainties related to the pandemic was made by the Clinton American Legion Post #172, in partnership with The Veterans of Foreign Wars Post #12051, AMVETS Post #2, and Disabled American Veterans Chapter 26, a press release said.

“With the COVID-19 concerns and issues throughout the county and within the schools, the American Legion membership felt, ‘due to safety of spectators and participants alike,’ it is best to forego the parade this year and plan for a bigger and better parade in 2021,” the press release said.

While this year’s parade has been canceled, discussions are under way to develop a program to celebrate Veterans Day and follow proper social-distancing restrictions and guidelines, the release said.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Community, COVID-19, Front Page News, Government, Health Tagged With: Anderson County, COVID-19, Leon Jaquet, Veterans Day Parade

Children’s Halloween Party will be drive-through this year

Posted at 3:16 pm September 22, 2020
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Submitted

The Children’s Halloween Party hosted by the Oak Ridge Recreation and Parks Department will be a drive-through event this year.

The Children’s Halloween Party (Halloween Hollow) is scheduled from 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday, October 29. It will begin at the field on the west side of Alvin K. Bissell Park and end at the parking area on the west side of the Oak Ridge Civic Center.

It’s a drive-through event because of COVID-19.

“Event participants will be able to enjoy Halloween scenes and pick up pre-ordered T-shirts, and children four years old to 4th grade will receive treats,” a press release said.

Employees and volunteers will sanitize frequently and be required to wear masks or face coverings when approaching a car and when within six feet of another person, the press release said. Any participants who want to come in to view the spooky scenes and receive treats will also be required to wear masks or face coverings, the release said.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Festivals, Front Page News, Government, Oak Ridge, Top Stories Tagged With: Alvin K. Bissell Park, Children's Halloween Party, COVID-19, Halloween Party, Oak Ridge Civic Center, Oak Ridge Recreation and Parks Department

Oak Ridge Chamber selects new president/CEO

Posted at 10:49 am September 21, 2020
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Christine Michaels

The Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors has selected Christine Michaels as the new president and chief executive officer of the organization.

Michaels replaces Parker Hardy, who retired this summer after a 24-year career at the Chamber.

As president/CEO, Michaels will be responsible for advancing the business interests in the community and serving the membership in the areas of leadership growth, residential growth, advocacy, economic growth, and community alignment, a press release said.

Michaels comes to the Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce from within the chamber of commerce industry as president and CEO of the Greater Fayetteville Chamber in Fayetteville, North Carolina. While at the 700-member Greater Fayetteville Chamber, Michaels introduced new entrepreneurship opportunities for exiting military personnel and served on several task forces for city development, including as a member of the Metropolitan Planning Organization advisory committee. During her tenure, she increased member retention by 15 percent, supervised a staff of five employees, and managed a $700,000 budget.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, Front Page News, Oak Ridge, Top Stories Tagged With: Christine Michaels, Greater Fayetteville Chamber, John Garrity, Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce, Parker Hardy, president

Nine Lakes Winemaker’s Market is Saturday, precautions in place

Posted at 9:44 am September 10, 2020
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Bottles of Tennessee wine not found in stores will be for sale at the Nine Lakes Winemaker’s Market at Melton Lake Park in Oak Ridge on Saturday, Sept. 12, 2020. (Photo courtesy Nine Lakes Wine Festival)

The fourth annual Nine Lakes Wine Festival has been converted to a safer, spread out, open-air “Winemaker’s Market” on Saturday, September 12, a press release said. The festival is scheduled from 3 to 7 p.m. Saturday at Melton Lake Park in Oak Ridge.

“All of our winemakers will be wearing masks, and we ask that the public does, too,” said event director Rebecca Williams. “They will be spread out in the park, with at least 10 feet between vendor tents, and we may have to limit ticket sales to allow for social distancing.”

The event will not offer wine samples to taste this year.

“The state will not allow it, and we agree it would not be a safe thing to do,” Williams said. “Instead, we’re offering a unique shopping event, sort of like a farmer’s market for wine. Tennessee wines are not generally sold in stores, so you really have to come to an event or drive out to a winery to find them.”

Thirteen local wineries will be represented at the event. General admission tickets are $10, and they benefit United Way of Anderson County. They include a wine tote and tasting glass to take home, the press release said.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, Business, Community, Festivals, Front Page News, Oak Ridge, Slider, Tennessee Tagged With: Appalachian Region Wine Producers, James R. Riddle, Melton Lake Park, Nine Lakes Wine Festival, Oak Ridge, Rebecca Williams, United Way of Anderson County, Winemakers Market

Obituary: Mavis Vanderpool Kohler

Posted at 9:10 am September 10, 2020
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Mavis Kohler

Mavis Vanderpool Kohler of Oak Ridge died peacefully Sunday morning, September 6. She was 99 and a veteran of World War II.

She was predeceased 10 years ago by her husband of 62 years, Peter Bogart Kohler, and earlier by her parents, Laura Hall Vanderpool and John Vanderpool.

Born in the small mountain town of McDowell, Kentucky, she was one of six children. Although her parents had only grade-school educations, she was graduated from Pikeville College (now University of Pikeville) with a teaching degree. She vividly remembered the day Pearl Harbor was attacked, sitting in her dorm room listening to the President’s speech on the radio. She returned home to McDowell and Floyd County, where she took a one-year teaching job in a two-room schoolhouse; she served as principal and taught fourth, fifth, and sixth grades.

With her two older brothers enlisting in service, she also answered the call to duty and became among the first group of women to enlist in the U.S. Navy’s WAVES (Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service). Leaving eastern Kentucky for the first time in her life, she boarded a train and reported to Hunter College in New York City for basic training. Following basic and advanced training, she served as a Pharmacists Mate in the Medical Corps and was based in Washington, D.C., working in U.S. Navy clinics and hospitals.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Obituaries Tagged With: Mavis Vanderpool Kohler, obituary

Oak Ridge celebrating 65th anniversary of school desegregation

Posted at 4:36 pm September 5, 2020
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Four of the “Oak Ridge 85” students at a recent music event. From left to right are Larry Gipson (Oak Ridge 85), Eric Dozier (musician), Deloise Mitchell (Oak Ridge 85), Emma McCaskill (Oak Ridge 85), and Mary Guinn (Oak Ridge 85). (Photo by Barbara McCord)

Oak Ridge is celebrating the 65th anniversary of its school desegregation this weekend.

“Sixty-five years ago this September, 85 brave and dedicated young African American students entered all-white classrooms in the Oak Ridge High School and the Robertsville Junior High School in Oak Ridge, Tennessee in a historic school system desegregation,” organizers said in a press release.

It wasn’t the first public school desegregation in the nation, but organizers said it was the first public school desegregation in the Southeast.

“As such, it challenged the racist and sometimes dangerous Jim Crow culture,” the press release said. “This desegregation stands as an important milestone in American civil rights history.”

The anniversary events are being held with the Oak Ridge school system. Public participation in some events had to be scaled back because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Courts, Education, Federal, Front Page News, Government, History, History, K-12, Slider, United States Tagged With: desegregation, Emma McCaskill, Harold Middlebrook, Larry Gipson, Margret Strickland Guinn, Martin McBride, Mary Ellen Mahone Bohanon, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge 85, Oak Ridge High School, Oak Ridge Schools, public school desegregation, Robertsville Junior High School, Rose Weaver, school desegregation

Public notice: Draft environmental assessment available for Technology and Training Center

Posted at 4:33 pm August 19, 2020
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

AVAILABILITY OF THE DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT FOR THE OAK RIDGE ENHANCED TECHNOLOGY AND TRAINING CENTER (ORETTC) (DOE/EA-2144)

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) announces the availability of this Draft Environmental Assessment (EA), which analyzes the potential impacts of constructing and operating the ORETTC to train first responders and other experts in nuclear operations, safeguards, and emergency response.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: National Nuclear Security Administration, Public Notices, Sponsored Posts, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: draft environmental assessment, National Nuclear Security Administration, NEPA, NNSA, Oak Ridge Enhanced Technology and Training Center, ORETTC, U.S. Department of Energy

Updated: Crews repairing water main break

Posted at 6:05 pm August 13, 2020
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Oak Ridge crews are repairing a water main break at the corner of Rutgers Avenue and Oak Ridge Turnpike, the city said Thursday afternoon, Aug. 13, 2020. (Photo by City of Oak Ridge)

Note: This story was updated at 12 p.m. Aug. 16.

Oak Ridge crews repaired a water main break at the corner of Rutgers Avenue and Oak Ridge Turnpike, the city said last week.

Just before 5 p.m. Thursday, the city said Oak Ridge Public Works crews were shutting valves to isolate the break. Crews could be repairing the main for the next several hours, the city said. Water was cut off for the Jimmy Johns and Home Federal Bank on the Oak Ridge Turnpike.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Front Page News, Government, Oak Ridge, Top Stories Tagged With: Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge Public Works, Oak Ridge Turnpike, Rutgers Avenue, water main break

Register by Aug. 24 for online and in-person ORICL courses

Posted at 12:04 pm August 5, 2020
By Carolyn H Krause Leave a Comment

The Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning (ORICL) is offering a smorgasbord of 54 courses for its fall term, half of which are in-person classes. The other 27 offerings are online via Zoom videoconferencing.
The fall catalog is posted on the ORICL website (www.roanestate.edu/oricl). The registration form and calendar are also posted there. Online registration opens Aug. 10.
Aug. 24 is the deadline for online registration and mailed paper forms (postmarked no later than that date). The registration fee for three terms (fall, winter-spring, and summer) is $100; by paying it online or by a check included with the mailed paper form, you will become an ORICL member for a year. Mail your form and check to ORICL, RSCC, 701 Briarcliff Avenue, Oak Ridge, TN 37830. For more information, contact the ORICL office at oricl@roanestate.edu.
The size of in-person classes will be reduced because of social distancing requirements. To be on campus all students must wear masks, practice social distancing in the classrooms, hallways and restrooms and use the provided hand sanitizer. Before attending class, you must do a daily wellness screening by clicking on the Coronavirus Updates tab of the www.roanestate.edu website and filling out a questionnaire that you must bring with you in printed form or downloaded on your smartphone.
ORICL offers art classes at the Oak Ridge Art Center on pottery (taught by Bill Capshaw), jewelry making, weaving, elements of design using mixed media and other topics.
ORICL’s in-person classes in the Coffey-McNally building on Roane State Community College’s Oak Ridge Branch Campus deal with topics such as Australia, annuities, investing, Leonardo da Vinci, Winston Churchill and the history of the U.S. after World War II.
Students attending courses in the classroom can learn how to speak Russian, how to make effective oral presentations, how to deal with hearing loss and tinnitus, and how to obtain wisdom from past writings.
The science of birds, contemporary mathematicians, CBD from hemp, combatting elder abuse, reducing unwanted phone calls and learning family history are topics of other in-person classes.
The only in-person history class is on a topic of high interest: “The Great Monsters of the 20th Century” such as Adolf Hitler and Josef Stalin.
The classes on the history of Israel, American racism and Native Americans are online. Most travelogues are online; they include Zoom classes on Berlin, Iceland and caves in France and Spain.
Other online classes deal with stock option investing for income, Secret City stories, myths and fairy tales, caring for dementia patients, medical advocacy and various medical topics, ranging from COVID-19 and vaccines to inflammatory bowel diseases of the colon.
If you like reading books, writing and exploring literary topics, you may want to register for these online courses: reading Shakespeare out loud, writing a memoir, learning about the great American novel “Huckleberry Finn” and Homer’s “The Odyssey” and experiencing poetry.
If you enjoy participating in book groups, ORICL has online courses on nonfiction, mystery novels, classical literature and technical books. The fiction book group meets in person.
The traditional Friday Lecture series, which often addresses scientific topics for a lay audience, will be online.

CUTLINE: Watercolor art class held last year in an ORICL classroom.

Filed Under: Front Page News

No injuries but home destroyed by fire on East Pasadena

Posted at 1:07 pm August 3, 2020
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

No one was injured, but a home was destroyed by a fire on East Pasadena Road in Oak Ridge early Monday, July 27, 2020. (Submitted photo)

No one was injured, but a home was destroyed by a fire in Oak Ridge last week.

The fire was reported in the 100 block of East Pasadena Road early Monday, July 27, the Oak Ridge Fire Department said.

Firefighters responded to a report of a structure fire at the home around 3:16 a.m. last Monday. When they arrived, fire crews found that 25 percent of home was on fire, with flames coming through the roof in the back corner.

Three engines, a tower truck, rescue truck, and battalion chief fought the fire for approximately 20 minutes before gaining control, the ORFD said. The Oak Ridge Electric Department responded to disconnect the power at the pole, and the Oak Ridge Police Department provided security.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Front Page News, Oak Ridge, Police and Fire Tagged With: East Pasadena Road, fire, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge Fire Department

Oak Ridge lab accredited to analyze air, surfaces for COVID-19 virus

Posted at 12:36 pm August 3, 2020
By Kay Brookshire Leave a Comment

Edward Sobek, president of Assured Bio Labs LLC reviews COVID-19 analysis systems before the processing of samples. (Submitted photo)

An environmental microbiology laboratory in Oak Ridge is the first in the United States to receive accreditation to analyze air and surfaces for the presence of the virus that causes COVID-19, a press release said.

Assured Bio Labs LLC was granted accreditation for testing environmental air and surfaces for SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, by the American Industrial Hygiene Association’s Laboratory Accreditation Program, the press release said. AIHA announced the accreditation in a tweet on June 25.

As businesses bring employees back to work, COVID-19 data for touch points and air is essential to protect workers and the public, the press release said. Accreditation ensures the quality of laboratory analysis.

“Since March, we have been running samples for local municipalities and for New York City essential businesses in the financial district,” said Edward A. Sobek, president of Assured Bio Labs LLC. In April, the lab began providing COVID-19 surface and air testing for health care facilities in the Northeast as they converted COVID-19 patient rooms into standard rooms.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, COVID-19, Front Page News, Health, Health, Oak Ridge, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: accreditation, AIHA, American Industrial Hygiene Association, Assured Bio Labs, COVID-19, Edward Sobek, SARS-CoV-2, surface and air testing

Dodson running for second term on City Council

Posted at 11:28 am August 3, 2020
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Jim Dodson

Oak Ridge City Council member Jim Dodson is running for a second four-year term in the November 3 municipal election.

Dodson has been a teacher in Oak Ridge Schools for 33 years.

He was elected to City Council in November 2016, and he serves as the Council representative on the Oak Ridge Municipal Planning Commission and Youth Advisory Board.

In a press release, Dodson said he has a strong record of community service and leadership on several civic boards, organizations, and commissions.

“I will definitely work alongside my Oak Ridge and East Tennessee neighbors for a better quality of life in our community,” Dodson said. “I hope to continue giving our residents a voice on City Council and promoting excellent educational opportunities for all our kids and young adults.

“I will also continue to help recruit businesses and families to Oak Ridge as the place to relocate. I look forward to working as an Oak Ridge City Council member to maintain and improve all city services while providing safe and thriving neighborhoods.”

[Read more…]

Filed Under: 2020 Election, Front Page News, Government, Oak Ridge, Top Stories Tagged With: election, Jim Dodson, municipal election, Oak Ridge City Council

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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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ADFAC seeks contractors for five homes

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

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