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UT professors study dilemmas in sustaining red light camera programs

Posted at 1:35 pm August 12, 2013
By University of Tennessee 14 Comments

Red Light Camera Study Table

This figure shows a list of measures and their effectiveness, safety impacts, and efficiency impacts. (Submitted image)

KNOXVILLE— It’s a common driving predicament: As you approach the intersection, the light is yellow. Do you hit the brakes or face a red light camera fine?

Some municipalities engineer their traffic signals to force drivers into this situation in an effort to generate revenue from the cameras.

Professors at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville have analyzed this issue to determine if traffic control measures intended to boost red light revenue—such as shortening yellow light time or increasing the speed limit on a street—compromise safety. [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, Government, Top Stories Tagged With: Chris Cherry, Civil and Environmental Engineering Department, crash, fine, Lee Han, Qiang Yang, red light, red light camera, red light camera programs, red light camera systems, revenue, safety, Southeastern Transportation Center, traffic control measures, traffic engineers, traffic flow, traffic signal, Transport Policy, University of Tennessee, yellow light

Oak Ridge students return to school, police enforce traffic safety; teachers, alumni welcomed

Posted at 8:52 am August 12, 2013
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Oak Ridge Superintendent Reception

Oak Ridge Schools had a reception last week for new Superintendent Bruce Borchers, center, and Assistant Superintendent Chris Marczak. Borchers started in Oak Ridge on June 18. Also pictured above are James Hundertmark, right, who became Robertsville Middle School principal on July 1, and Christopher Scott, vice principal of curriculum and instruction at Oak Ridge High School.

Most Oak Ridge students returned to school on Monday, and police officers started a back-to-school traffic safety campaign. It’s known as “Operation Safe Start” and will focus on drivers who illegally pass school buses, speed in school zones, don’t wear safety belts or fail to ensure that their children do—or commit other unsafe driving actions near the schools.

Students at Willow Brook Elementary School and the Oak Ridge Schools’ Preschool returned to school in July. Oak Ridge will use an alternative schedule during the first week of school. (See the Oak Ridge Schools’ website for more information.)

In Anderson County, students returned to school on Wednesday, Aug. 7.

The resumption of classes in Oak Ridge caps a week in which school officials welcomed back representatives of graduating classes from 1946 to 2013, held a reception for new Superintendent Bruce Borchers and Assistant Superintendent Chris Marczak, and together with the Oak Ridge Police Department, announced a new agreement governing school resource officers, or SROs. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Education, K-12, Oak Ridge, Police and Fire, Top Stories Tagged With: alumni, Anderson County, Bruce Borchers, Chris Marczak, Keys Fillauer, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge High School, Oak Ridge Police Department, Oak Ridge Schools, Operation Safe Start, ORPD, Paul White, police, preschool, school buses, school resource officer, school zones, SRO, students, Tom Beehan, traffic safety, Willow Brook Elementary School

Council considers electronic signs, land bank, rental inspections

Posted at 5:29 pm August 11, 2013
By John Huotari 4 Comments

Oak Ridge City Council

The Oak Ridge City Council on Monday will consider new regulations for electronic signs, expanding the city’s residential rental inspection district, and creating the first-ever land bank in Tennessee.

Oak Ridge officials could prohibit animated electronic signs, expand the city’s residential rental inspection district to include about 1,700 homes, and officially set up an Oak Ridge Land Bank Corp. during a Monday night meeting.

The Oak Ridge City Council will also consider approving contracts with economic development consultant Ray Evans and state lobbyist Bill Nolan, and terminating the lease on the building that once housed the Recording for the Blind and Dyslexic on Badger Road. Now partially empty, the split-level two-story building still houses the Oak Ridge Civic Music Association, and city officials said they haven’t decided what to do with it yet.

The Monday night City Council meeting starts at 7 p.m. in the Oak Ridge Municipal Building Courtroom. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, Government, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge, Top Stories Tagged With: Badger Road, Bill Nolan, electronic sign ordinance, electronic signs, Highland View, Highland View Redevelopment Area, Kathryn Baldwin, land bank, Manhattan District Overlay, MDO, Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Community Development, Oak Ridge Land Bank Corp., Oak Ridge Municipal Building Courtroom, Oak Ridge Municipal Planning Commission, Ray Evans, Recording for the Blind and Dyslexic, rental units, residential rental inspection, sign industry

Beer Board has hearing for Applebee’s, could re-open Brewski’s hearing

Posted at 3:58 pm August 11, 2013
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

The Oak Ridge Beer Permit Board on Monday will have a hearing for an Oak Ridge restaurant and bar that reportedly sold beer to a minor in March.

The board agreed last month to have the show cause hearing for Applebee’s Neighborhood Bar and Grill during a meeting that starts at noon Monday. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, Government, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge, Police and Fire, Top Stories Tagged With: Applebee's, Applebee's Neighborhood Bar and Grill, Back 2 Brewski's, beer permit suspension, Nang Crossno, Oak Ridge Beer Permit Board, restaurant, show cause hearing, Tennessee Alcoholic Beverage Commission

Apartment manager who saw son hit by car files $750,000 lawsuit

Posted at 3:36 pm August 11, 2013
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

An apartment manager who saw her son struck by a car at an Oak Ridge apartment complex in June has filed a $750,000 lawsuit against the driver and the driver’s husband.

Kimberly Roark filed the complaint on behalf of her and her son in Anderson County Circuit Court on July 19. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Government, Oak Ridge, Police and Fire, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County Circuit Court, Briarcliff Avenue, British Woods Apartments, complaint, Jackson C. Webster, Kimberly Roark, lawsuit, Oak Ridge Police Department, Shaohua Liu, Zhenfeng Han

Oak Ridge man remains jailed on attempted arson, aggravated assault charges

Posted at 12:51 pm August 11, 2013
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

John Devin Ingram

John Devin Ingram

An Oak Ridge man remained jailed on Sunday on charges of aggravated assault and attempted arson after he allegedly poured lighter fluid on his wife, their home, and another victim, and tried to start a truck on fire, authorities said.

John Ingram, 23, was arrested Monday morning. Authorities said he had allegedly poured lighter fluid on the interior of a truck and side of a duplex that he and his wife share on Hunter Place and threatened to light it on fire. Ingram allegedly tried to start the truck on fire using a cigarette lighter, Oak Ridge Police Department Officer Garrett Robbins wrote in arrest warrants filed in Anderson County General Sessions Court. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Oak Ridge, Police and Fire, Top Stories Tagged With: aggravated assault, Anderson County General Sessions Court, attempted arson, auto burglaries, evading arrest, Garrett Robbins, Hunter Place, John Devin Ingram, lighter fluid, Oak Ridge Police Department, ORPD, Pearl Road, Pomona Road, Simon Byrne, theft

Tuesday lecture features leader in high-performance computing at ORNL

Posted at 6:13 pm August 10, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Jeff Nichols

Jeff Nichols

A leader in high-performance computing at Oak Ridge National Laboratory will be the featured speaker at the monthly meeting of Friends of ORNL.

Jeff Nichols is associate laboratory director for ORNL’s Computing and Computational Sciences Directorate. Nichols leads the laboratory’s advanced high-performance computing in priority areas such as climate change, nuclear energy, fusion energy, nanotechnology, and biotechnology, a press release said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Science, Top Stories Tagged With: Computing and Computational Sciences Directorate, Friends of ORNL, high-performance computing, Jeff Nichols, Leadership Computers as Instruments of Discovery, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ORNL, University of Tennessee Resource Center

Picture: DOE director of economic impact, diversity visits ORNL

Posted at 5:57 pm August 10, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Dot Harris at Oak Ridge National Laboratory

From left, Dot Harris, director of the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Economic Impact and Diversity, and Michael Colbert, deputy director of DOE’s Office of Diversity and Inclusion, listen as Research Alliance in Math and Science student Darius Degraffenried presents his research. (Photo by ORNL’s Jason Richards)

The U.S. Department of Energy’s Dot Harris, director of the Office of Economic Impact and Diversity, visited Oak Ridge National Laboratory Thursday and Friday.

Harris spoke at the Research Alliance in Math and Science banquet Thursday evening, and she attended a RAMS poster session that preceded the dinner.

Her agenda also included visits to ORNL’s supercomputing facilities, Spallation Neutron Source, the Carbon Fiber Technology Facility, and the Manufacturing Demonstration Facility, as well as discussions on the lab’s education, outreach, partnerships, and small business programs. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: Carbon Fiber Technology Facility, Computing and Computational Sciences Directorate, Dot Harris, Manufacturing Demonstration Facility, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Office of Economic Impact and Diversity, ORNL, RAMS, Research Alliance in Math and Science, Spallation Neutron Source, supercomputing, U.S. Department of Energy

Utility worker injured in Anderson County trench

Posted at 10:00 am August 10, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Information from WYSH Radio

A Hallsdale-Powell Utility District worker suffered a broken leg Thursday when a piece of rock came loose from the wall of a trench he was working in and fell on him.

James Moore was working on a project to install a water line on East Wolf Valley Road shortly before 11 a.m. Thursday when the accident happened. Moore was pulled from the trench by emergency crews and taken to the University of Tennessee Medical Center for treatment of his injury.

Filed Under: Anderson County, Police and Fire, Top Stories Tagged With: broken leg, Hallsdale-Powell Utility District, James Moore, trench

Local attorney spearheading stuffed animal drive for Juvenile Court

Posted at 9:15 am August 10, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Information from WYSH Radio

A local attorney who practices primarily in Anderson County Juvenile Court has organized a stuffed animal drive to help calm the fears and anxiety of children who have to testify in court.

Rebecca Franklin is celebrating her birthday this year by spearheading a drive to collect new stuffed animals that will be placed in a toy box that was custom-built by her husband and will find a permanent home in the juvenile courtroom where children must speak to the judge. Franklin said she has seen a similar program work in Knox County and the stuffed animals helps children feel more comfortable and open up about the issues that have brought them to the courtroom. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Government, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County Juvenile Court, attorney, Jolley Building, Rebecca Franklin, stuffed animal drive, stuffed animals

Six dogs, two birds die in locked, unoccupied home; father, daughter cited

Posted at 5:05 pm August 9, 2013
By John Huotari 1 Comment

Six dogs and two birds died after they were locked in an unoccupied home in Woodland for several months, and an Oak Ridge father and daughter were cited for animal cruelty this week because they allegedly failed to provide the animals with food, water, care, and shelter, authorities said.

On Tuesday, the father and daughter—Hillman N. Wright, 90, and Annette M. Wright, 57—received nine misdemeanor citations each for animal cruelty, authorities said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Oak Ridge, Police and Fire, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County General Sessions Court, animal cruelty, Annette M. Wright, Christopher Carden, Hillman N. Wright, Julie Armes, Marietta Circle, Oak Ridge Police Department Officer, Woodland

OREPA commemorates Nagasaki bombing with peace lantern ceremony

Posted at 5:03 pm August 9, 2013
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Ralph Hutchison

Ralph Hutchison

The Oak Ridge Environmental Peace Alliance will commemorate the bombing of Nagasaki, Japan, on Aug. 9, 1945, with a peace lantern ceremony this evening at Sequoyah Hills Park in Knoxville.

The ceremony begins at 8 p.m. and will include Buddhist drumming and chanting, traditional Japanese folk dancing, music, shadow puppets, and, at 8:45pm, the launching of peace lanterns, a press release said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Nonprofits, Top Stories Tagged With: bombing, Japan, Nagasaki, nuclear weapons, Oak Ridge Environmental Peace Alliance, OREPA, peace lantern ceremony, Ralph Hutchison, Sequoyah Hills Park

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