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Guest column: Anderson County election ballot explained

Posted at 12:44 pm July 15, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns 2 Comments

Submitted

The August 7 ballot for the state primary and local general election will be an important and complex ballot. You will find three main sections to the ballot.

First will be the state and federal primary, second will be the county general election, and third will be the retention questions for Tennessee Supreme Court judges and appellate court judges.

The first eight offices on the ballot are the contests for the state and federal primary election. They are governor, U.S. Senate, U.S. House of Representatives, Tennessee Senate, Tennessee House of Representatives, and state executive committeeman and committeewoman. These eight offices are the ones a person must declare whether they are voting in the Democratic or Republican primary.

After these eight offices come the candidates for the Anderson County general election. It does not matter which party primary you selected to vote in, Democrat or Republican, you are now free to vote for the candidate of your choice no matter to which party you belong. The county general election offices are: [Read more…]

Filed Under: 2014 Election, Anderson County, Government, Guest Columns, Opinion Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County general election, appellate court, August 7 ballot, ballot, Clinton, county general election, Democratic primary, election ballot, federal primary, judges, judicial retention, Lake City, local general election, Norris, Oliver Springs, Republican primary, retention questions, state primary, Tennessee Supreme Court

Guest column: Amnesty Week a great success at Oak Ridge Library

Posted at 11:59 pm July 13, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Oak Ridge Public Library

The Oak Ridge Public Library is pictured above.

Amnesty Week was a great success at Oak Ridge Public Library. To celebrate the Library’s 70th birthday from May 27 to May 31, library patrons were invited to return any overdue materials and have the fines forgiven. A total of 145 overdue items were returned for a sum of $421.80 in cancelled fines.

The largest fine forgiven to one patron was $109.50. The most overdue items returned for one patron was 27 items. Four lost items that were due back in December 2011 were returned.

Libraries link people to the world of knowledge. Oak Ridge Public Library now has two databases online, making it easier for everyone to find local information. The Local Organization Index and the Obituary Index are searchable at the Library’s website at www.orpl.org. Library patrons can also get individual assistance with research, résumés, or online job applications. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Government, Guest Columns, Oak Ridge, Opinion Tagged With: 70th birthday, Amnesty Week, databases, Local Organization Index, Oak Ridge Public Library, Obituary Index, overdue items, reference appointments

Guest column: Burying mistakes

Posted at 11:28 am July 4, 2014
By John Ragan 1 Comment

John Ragan

John Ragan

Our founders boldly asserted in the Declaration of Independence that our nation should exist because the “Laws of Nature and Nature’s God” entitle it to exist. They further held the God who authored these natural laws endowed everyone with certain, self-evident rights.

By these concepts, every individual has the same God-given equality before the law. There can be none with special, legal “privileges” such as royalty or aristocracy. Likewise, there can be no serfs inherently lacking certain rights.

An even more radical concept in that document is that government exists to protect these God-given rights. Furthermore, our nation’s founding document maintains that governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed, thus are accountable to them.

In other words, our founders insisted that government must answer to its citizens, not the other way around. However, events recently in the popular press have called this concept into question. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns, Opinion Tagged With: aristocracy, citizens, Declaration of Independence, electronic records, equal rights, equality, God, government, Internal Revenue Service, IRS, rights, serfs, tax collectors, Tea Party

Guest column: ECA highlights local government’s role with Energy Secretary Moniz

Posted at 6:39 pm July 1, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

ECA Board and Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz

From left to right are Aiken County Council Chairman Ronnie Young, Oak Ridge City Manager Mark Watson, Los Alamos County Councilor Fran Berting, Oak Ridge Mayor Tom Beehan, ECA Executive Director Seth Kirshenberg, Secretary Ernest Moniz, Aiken County Council Member Chuck Smith, Kennewick Mayor Steve Young, SRSCRO Executive Director Rick McLeod, Los Alamos County Administrator Brian Bosshardt, and ECA Deputy Executive Director Allison Finelli. (Submitted photo)

 

On June 23, the Energy Communities Alliance Executive Board met with U.S. Secretary of Energy Ernest Moniz to highlight the importance of the Department of Energy’s environmental cleanup, national security, nuclear energy, and waste management missions. The ECA Executive Board, including Chair and Oak Ridge Mayor Tom Beehan, and other elected local government officials also stressed the importance of regular communication and partnership between DOE and the local governments that are adjacent to DOE facilities. Secretary Moniz agreed that working with local governments is important to the success of DOE.

Earlier in the day, the ECA Executive Board also met with National Nuclear Security Administration Administrator Frank Klotz, Acting Assistant Secretary for Environmental Management Dave Huizenga, and other DOE and administration officials, as well as congressional staff.

Mayor Beehan stated that local governments can be DOE’s asset for gaining support for missions and for infrastructure development at the sites, but in order for that to occur, local governments must be involved in decision-making. Mayor Beehan also stressed the importance of land transfer to local communities. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Government, Guest Columns, Oak Ridge, Opinion, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: Aiken County Council, Allison Finelli, Brian Bosshardt, budget, Chuck Smith, Dave Huizenga, defense waste, DOE, ECA, ECA Executive Board, Energy Communities Alliance, environmental management, Ernest Moniz, Fran Berting, Frank Klotz, Hanford Site, Kennewick, land transfer, local government, Los Alamos, Mark Watson, National Nuclear Security Administration, NRC, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, nuclear waste, Oak Ridge, Rick McLeod, Ronnie Young, Savannah River CRO, Seth Kirshenberg, small modular reactor, SMR, SRSCRO, Steve Young, technology transfer, Tom Beehan, U.S. Department of Energy, Waste Isolation Pilot Plant, WIPP

Guest column: B&W Y-12 improved Y-12, made a big difference in the community

Posted at 2:01 pm June 23, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns Leave a Comment

David Bradshaw

David Bradshaw

By David Bradshaw

It has been almost 14 years since B&W Y-12 LLC took over operation of the Y-12 National Security Complex in Oak Ridge.

Soon a new contractor will be in charge. Thanks to the work of the B&W Y-12 team and many others, they will inherit a very different and much improved facility.

One only needs to approach Y-12 to see the changes. The first thing you will see is the New Hope Center, built as a public-private partnership and located just outside the secure gates of Y-12 to make sure public access is easy. It has conference space, an outstanding auditorium, and a museum that highlights everything from Y-12’s critical role in the Manhattan Project, to the NASA “moon box” built by Y-12, to Y-12’s role in winning the Cold War. Y-12 had always been a secret place and this space built with the public in mind was a major change.

The modernization process is even more obvious inside the gate. Y-12 completed and opened the new Highly Enriched Uranium Materials Facility. It’s a state of the art building. The new Uranium Processing Facility will be just as impressive with design work well underway. Both facilities allow the U.S. Department of Energy to close down old buildings that date back to the Manhattan Project. With the HEUMF and UPF in place, Y-12 will be far more efficient with operations not only more secure, but centralized in one place instead of being spread out over several locations. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, Community, Guest Columns, National Nuclear Security Administration, Nonprofits, Oak Ridge, Opinion, U.S. Department of Energy, Y-12 National Security Complex Tagged With: B&W Y-12, B&W Y-12 LLC, Chamber of Commerce, Cold War, David Bradshaw, East Tennessee, East Tennessee Economic Council, HEUMF, Highly Enriched Uranium Materials Facility, Innovation Valley, Jack Case Center, Manhattan Project, mentor/protégé, moon box, New Hope Center, nonprofits, public education, radioactive material, small businesses, U.S. Department of Energy, UPF, uranium processing facility, Y-12 National Security Complex

Guest column: Oak Ridge—a city teetering—which way will it go?

Posted at 11:50 am June 23, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns 24 Comments

Bob Eby

Bob Eby

By Bob Eby

Friday, June 20

This week, I experienced great joy and significant sadness. The joy was being with my daughter and son-in-law as she birthed our first grandchild and we brought her home from the hospital in California. It was because I was with them during this joyous time that I missed last Monday night’s City Council meeting, but I did watch it live through Internet streaming (technology is great!). It was during that time that I felt sadness and disappointment. I realized that this wonderful community I have known for 50 years now balances on a tipping point, to fall on a downward spiral or gradually move forward with a great and dedicated effort toward prosperity. Why do I say this?

Last year, the Board of Education hired a new superintendent who brought with him much energy and a vision to re-establish the Oak Ridge Schools to its premier status as not only the number one school district in the State of Tennessee but also the premier district in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) in the country. The Board fully supported the vision, though we were recommending a three-year roll-out, which we felt was more realistic and would allow opportunity to adjust the implementation as we and the staff worked together to achieve our goals.

With their recent action, the City Council not only chose not to support this vision, but they very likely have failed to provide our teachers and associated staff the recognition they so deserve with any funding for their first raise (2 percent) in four years. City Council does plan to provide city-employeed staff with a raise. I think it is only right that all employees of our community receive a raise. All school staff and city employees are equally deserving of this recognition of their value to Oak Ridge. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Guest Columns, K-12, Opinion Tagged With: 1:1, budget, business community, Chamber of Commerce, Charlie Hensley, Chuck Hope, city manager, election year, engineering, mathematics, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge City Council, per capita spending, school system, science, STEM, superintendent, taxes, technology, technology initiative, tipping point

Guest column: Emory Valley Center ‘Dances the Night Away’ at Prom

Posted at 9:42 am June 19, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns Leave a Comment

2014 EVC Couples Dancing

Emory Valley Center couples dancing at the May 31 prom at the Elks Lodge. (Submitted photos)

The Elks Lodge in Oak Ridge hosted a prom for more than 100 Emory Valley Center clients and their staff on Saturday evening, May 31. The theme for the prom was “Dance the Night Away,” with the Elks Lodge transformed into a disco decorated in silver, black, and white for the evening.

The Oak Ridge Boat Club donated to secure Viki Ward as the DJ for the evening. Ward and her dancers kept the music going and added to the fun of the evening. Those attending also had a wide variety of food and drinks available donated by volunteers with the Elks, Food City, Food Lion, Kroger, and Walmart in Oak Ridge. The Arc of Anderson County also made a donation in support of the prom.

The ladies attending each received a wrist corsage and the men a special lapel pin, and everyone had a bag of “goodies” to take home with them. Photos were taken of attendees and put into special prom frames for everyone to have a memento of their special evening. One of the highlights of the evening was when the Prom Prince and Princess and Prom King and Queen were crowned. After they were crowned, they were spotlighted in a special dance and then invited the rest of the crowd to join them. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Guest Columns, Nonprofits, Opinion Tagged With: ARC of Anderson County, Dance the Night Away, Elks Lodge, Emory Valley Center, Jennifer Enderson, Oak Ridge Boat Club, Viki War

Guest column: Yes to one device per child, no to property tax increase

Posted at 2:38 pm June 15, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns 6 Comments

Aditya "Doc" Savara

Aditya “Doc” Savara

By Aditya “Doc” Savara

On June 2, Dr. Bruce Borchers, the superintendent overseeing Oak Ridge Schools, presented a 2015 school budget plan to City Council, which included a request for a property tax increase of about 15 percent. Landlords would presumably pass this increase onto renters as well.

The justification for this tax increase is to pay for thousands of touchscreen tablet computers and notebook computers: one for each child in our school system for most age ranges. The idea is bold and expensive. The revolutionary change is based on the following three premises:

  1. Our children need to be “technology-ready” for the future with sufficient experience to make such technology feel “ordinary” to them.
  2. These devices may have educational benefits in our schools.
  3. When parents are trying to decide where they will live, parents might choose a city that follows a one-device-per-child policy.

I taught at Northwestern University, where I won department-wide and college-wide teaching awards. Based on my teaching experience, I was initially against one device per child, because I did not think such devices would improve learning, certainly not enough to justify such an expense (my experience is that better teachers and better students result in better learning). [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Government, Guest Columns, K-12, Oak Ridge, Opinion Tagged With: Aditya "Doc" Savara, Bruce Borchers, computer devices, curriculum, notebook computers, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Schools, one device per child, property tax increase, school budget, tax increase, technology ready, touchscreen tablet computers, videos

Guest column: Anderson communications center very busy during Tuesday storm

Posted at 11:31 am June 15, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Anderson County Commission and Mark Lucas

Anderson County Sheriff’s Department Chief Deputy Mark Lucas is pictured above at right during a special County Commission meeting in November. Also pictured are Anderson County Commissioners Rick Meredith, center, and Jerry White.

To All:

(Tuesday) evening was very, very busy. From 3 p.m. until 11 p.m., our communications center received 589 telephone calls, of which 143 were on 911. The overwhelming number of calls were between 5 p.m. and 7 p.m., when 365 calls came to our dispatch center. Of these 365 calls, 109 were on 911.

Comparing to last Tuesday from 3 p.m. until 11 p.m., we received 156 total telephone calls, of which 20 were on 911. The two-hour period from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. last week was only 41 total calls, of which five were on 911.

For the entire shift from 3 p.m. until 11 p.m., that was a 288 percent increase. For the two hours from 5 p.m. until 7 p.m., the increase was 790 percent.

We had four communications officers working (Tuesday) when the storm hit. A fifth came into work on her own to help out. Many of these 911 and non-emergency calls required dispatching of emergency personnel from law enforcement, fire, or EMS. Others required notifications to the state and county highway departments and the utility companies. It was non-stop for hours. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Guest Columns, Opinion, Police and Fire, Weather Tagged With: 911, Anderson County, Anderson County EMS, Anderson County Highway Department, Anderson County Sheriff's Department, Clinton, Clinton Utilities Board, communications center, dispatch, emergency personnel, EMS, fire, Lake City, law enforcement, Mark Lucas, non-emergency calls, Norris, Oak Ridge, Oliver Springs, rescue squad, Sheriff's Communications Center, storm, telephone calls, Tennessee Department of Transportation, Tuesday storm, volunteer fire departments

Guest column: Self-perpetuating politics

Posted at 11:42 am June 8, 2014
By David Allred 21 Comments

By David Allred, June 4, 2014

I got a phone call tonight that bothered me. The content of the message wasn’t so much an annoyance as the delivery system. You see, our schools sold us a bill of goods some time back about automated phone dialing. They said it would assist us in the event of emergencies, public service announcements, and other items of communication that might be pivotal to parent/school relations.

They were right. It’s a great system, probably worth the tax dollars, but I am no expert on its worth by any stretch of the imagination. Still, when that same taxpayer system of communication is used to solicit more taxpayer funds, I confess to being put on edge.

You see, I was one of hundreds, probably thousands of households, asked to fork over a little bit more money for a little more technology: tablets for all our students.

It’s a grand idea, I suppose. I mean, it is probably money that could be spent on an extra teacher or two or 12 or 20, but let’s face it—the tablet prepares our students for the modern world and there’s hardly anything more true of the modern world than replacing people with machines. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Guest Columns, K-12, Opinion Tagged With: automated phone dialing, phone call, political agenda, political message, political viewpoint, tablets, tax increase, tax payment, taxpayer funds, taxpayer phone system, teacher raises, technology

IRS: Keep your records safe in case disaster strikes

Posted at 9:26 am June 8, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns Leave a Comment

IRS Special Edition Tax Tip 2014-15

Some natural disasters are more common in the summer. But major events like hurricanes, tornadoes and fires can strike any time. It’s a good idea to plan for what to do in case of a disaster. You can help make your recovery easier by keeping your tax and financial records safe. Here are some basic steps you can take now to prepare:

  1. Backup Records Electronically. You may have access to paperless bank and other financial statements online. If so, your statements may already be securely stored there. You can also scan tax records and insurance policies onto an electronic format. You can use an external hard drive, CD, or DVD to store important records. Be sure you back up your files and keep them in a safe place. If a disaster strikes your home, it may also affect a wide area. If that happens, you may not be able to retrieve your records.
  2. Document Valuables. Take photos or videos of the contents of your home or business. These visual records can help you prove the value of your lost items. They may help with insurance claims or casualty loss deductions on your tax return. You should store them with a friend or relative who lives out of the area. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Federal, Government, Guest Columns, Opinion Tagged With: disaster relief, emergency plans, IRS, natural disasters, tax records, tax returns, tax tip, valuables

Guest column: Roane State supports schools’ proposed tech initiatives

Posted at 1:09 pm June 6, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns Leave a Comment

Chris Whaley

Chris Whaley

Note: This is a copy of a Friday letter sent to Oak Ridge City Council members by Roane State Community College President Chris Whaley.

Ladies and Gentlemen,

Roane State Community College fully supports Oak Ridge Schools’ proposed technology initiatives, which include ensuring that all students—regardless of socioeconomic background—have devices that allow them to access education technology from school and home.

Why do we support this vision? Because there is no college readiness without technology readiness.

Consider, when a student walks through Roane State’s doors, they will: [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Government, Guest Columns, K-12, Oak Ridge, Opinion Tagged With: AirServer software, app, Chris Whaley, devices, electronic textbook, Engaged Learning Environment, Internet, iPad, LCD projector, Learning Management System, mobile learning, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Schools, Roane State Community College, technology, technology initiative, technology readiness

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