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Guest column: UU minister responds to historic decisions on marriage equality

Posted at 8:31 pm June 28, 2013
By Jake Morrill 3 Comments

As one ordained to spread the good news of the unending power of love in this world, this week I celebrate the Supreme Court decisions on marriage equality and that the Defense of Marriage Act has been declared unconstitutional.

The faith I affirm challenges me to speak and act for justice for all who express their love in the commitment of marriage.  Support for marriage equality is in scriptures and traditions that proclaim overriding messages of love, justice, and inclusion of those on the margins of society. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: Christian, civil marriage, Defense of Marriage Act, Jake Morrill, marriage, marriage equality, religious traditions, same-sex couples, sexual orientations, Supreme Court, unconstitutional, United States

Guest column: Home of the brave

Posted at 5:09 pm June 26, 2013
By John Ragan Leave a Comment

John Ragan

John Ragan

Two hundred and thirty-seven years ago, one of the most influential documents in the history of politics made its official appearance: The Declaration of Independence. Men, who felt the weight of history resting squarely on them, courageously shouldered the burden and fearlessly signed that piece of paper. They did so knowing the penalty for failure was death and hardship for their families.

Fortunately, from that day to this, brave citizens have continued to willingly risk life and limb in service to fellow Americans. Sadly, however, as it was in July of 1776, so, too, it is now. The cost of liberty remains high.

Today, as then, gallant American service personnel continue to lay their lives on the altar of freedom. Others sacrifice precious capabilities that the average citizen takes for granted. These men and women suffer unbelievably painful wounds, lose limbs, even endure paralysis and experience scarring inside and out. The agony of rehabilitation for these injuries cannot be exaggerated. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: child exploitation, cyber predators, Declaration of Independence, electronic recon, home of the brave, injuries, John Ragan, law enforcement, liberty, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, wounded warriors

Letter: Thanks Barbara Ferrell and team for another great Lavender Festival

Posted at 11:17 pm June 19, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Letters 2 Comments

To the Editor:

I would like to take this opportunity to thank Barbara Ferrell for all the hard work she put into pulling together another successful Lavender Festival this year. Judging from the crowd and the number of venders I witnessed on Saturday, I would venture to guess that the 15th annual event was the best yet. Barbara and her great team of volunteers are to be commended for their hard work and dedication to this community!

As a corporate sponsor for the Lavender Festival for several years, Cowperwood Company is proud to be associated with an event that celebrates good food; arts and crafts; great local entertainment; and locally grown herbs and produce. But more importantly, we are proud to be involved in an event that celebrates our great community by bringing people together for a common purpose. It seems we sometimes get caught up in the mess of making sure the city continues to prosper, and, as in most communities, we tend to “stake our sides and dig our heels in” on very important issues. So the Lavender Festival is a great opportunity for us to be involved in celebrating all that is good about Oak Ridge! [Read more…]

Filed Under: Letters Tagged With: Barbara Ferrell, Cowperwood Company, Lavender Festival, Mark Harvey

Guest column: Concept paper concerning a housing policy for Oak Ridge

Posted at 12:58 pm June 18, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns 4 Comments

By Pat Fain and Leslie Agron

Today Oak Ridge has a default housing policy that begins and ends with two modest grants from Housing and Urban Development consisting of objectives decided internally by city staff. Input from the public has been minimal at best, despite HUD requirements to hold public input meetings. These were held, minimally advertised and sparsely attended. In the past, these objectives were then approved by Oak Ridge City Council without holding Council work sessions to discuss real needs or creative solutions for those needs.

This year and this month, Council will begin an open and (hopefully) far-reaching discussion for a well-thought-out response to community concerns and the need to protect the tax base of the city from further erosion resulting from the deterioration of a significant portion of the housing built before 1945. This paper is to offer ideas and alternate thinking as the City Council proceeds to contemplate the path ahead. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: blight, code violations, deterioration, dilapidated homes, funds, grants, housing, Housing and Urban Development, housing policy, housing strategy, HUD, Leslie Agron, maintenance, nonprofits, Oak Ridge City Council, Pat Fain, poverty, rehab, tax policies, wartime houses

Letter: Cutting alternatives to incarceration may save money now, but will cost more later

Posted at 10:01 am June 13, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Letters 11 Comments

To the Editor:

Is it wise to downsize the Alternative to Incarceration (ATI) program? Anderson County Mayor Terry Frank wants to cut funding for this program by 80 percent. The program was intended to reduce the jail population by focusing on drug addiction in particular, thus preventing the need for building more expensive jail space in the future.

For those who have not kept up with these developments, the ATI program was put in place in Anderson County a year ago by Mike Baker, a longtime officer in the Iowa corrections system. His analysis of Anderson County’s constantly increasing number of jail inmates points to several problems, one of which is “recidivism” (when a former prisoner returns to jail).

He commented that “Anderson County has a tremendously high recidivism rate. When I looked at the jail stats this morning, the average number of ‘priors’ for the 348 inmates incarcerated was nearly 10, while the average age of the inmates is 31. Those numbers indicate that inmates between the ages of 18 and 31 are being arrested on average nearly once each year.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: Letters Tagged With: alternatives to incarceration, Anderson County, Anderson County Commission, ATI, budget, drug, incarceration, inmates, jail, Mike Baker, Robin Toth, sentencing, Terry Frank

Guest column: County mayor proposes restructuring alternatives to incarceration

Posted at 2:38 am June 8, 2013
By Terry Frank 2 Comments

Terry Frank

Terry Frank

Created by an Anderson County Commission resolution in 2011, the Alternatives to Incarceration, or ATI, program has been batted around as a political hot topic. Though there appears to be disagreement regarding the program, there seems to be agreement on the purpose, intent, and merit of the program. As is the case with most programs, debate centers on implementation.

After much study of ATI as currently structured, I offered steps in our budget proposal to allow us to step away from the mistakes or misunderstandings that took place at the program’s inception in 2011, restructure with more modest and measurable goals, and allow room for growth in the number of clients the program will serve. Small steps forward will allow for much needed growth in trust and credibility of the program itself. The program also needs more realistic, tangible goals to achieve success, and it needs a cooling-off period to allow the mission to depoliticize.

Success requires the confidence of participants, that is, ATI stakeholders like our public defender, our district attorney general, our judges, and our law enforcement community.

The proposed restructuring emphasizes the original mission of the program—offering true alternatives to alleviate jail overcrowding—but it also redirects 1.62 cents on the tax rate to immediate needs: more detention officers. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: alternatives to incarceration, Anderson County Commission, Anderson County Detention Facility, Anderson County mayor, Anderson County Sheriff's Department, ATI, budget, detention officers, drug court, health care costs, home monitoring, jail overcrowding, life cycle costs, lobbying, pre-trial release, proposal, recidivism, rehabilitative programs, tax rate, Terry Frank, volunteers

Letter: Pays taxes but often doesn’t have access to wheelchair accessible parking

Posted at 12:13 am June 7, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Letters 1 Comment

To the editor:

The most troubling thing about the American with Disabilities Act civil rights laws is that there is no enforcement.

By this, I mean a way to show the public why certain logical decisions were made to benefit the public.

As an example: new and modern businesses are being built, but no one stops to thank the architect or craftsman for including these ADA civil rights regulations on paper.

Today, I ate at Zaxby’s, a chicken drive-through. Guess what they had? The correct ADA handicapped parking for wheelchair users. The city did their job by issuing a business license. A great addition to the Oak Ridge community. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Letters Tagged With: ADA, American with Disabilities Act, civil rights laws, handicapped parking, Lee Roy Gilliam, wheelchair accessible parking, wheelchair users

Letter: Thanks Council for donating city lot to Habitat

Posted at 11:26 pm June 3, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Letters 5 Comments

To the Editor:

I would like to take this opportunity to thank the members of the Oak Ridge City Council who voted in favor of donating a city-owned lot to Habitat for Humanity of Anderson County (HFHAC). The board of directors, staff, and volunteers of HFHAC are incredibly excited and grateful to have the opportunity to partner with the City of Oak Ridge on our next building project.

We consider this a historic opportunity for community building through a true public-private partnership. As the City of Oak Ridge takes over blighted properties, HFHAC would like to offer our assistance at returning them to a taxable status. In 2011, Habitat for Humanity of Anderson County homeowners combined paid over $115,000 in city and county property taxes, supporting crucial services. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Letters Tagged With: blighted properties, City of Oak Ridge, Habitat for Humanity of Anderson County, HFHAC, home, Jennifer Sheehan, lot, Oak Ridge City Council

Guest column: Trying to set the record straight on the property tax rate

Posted at 1:04 pm June 2, 2013
By Ellen Smith 14 Comments

Online comments by local citizens in response to some recent guest columns about city and county budgets and taxes have revealed some mistaken notions about the way property tax rates are established in Tennessee cities and counties. I want to set the record straight regarding a couple of misconceptions about property tax that I see being spread in recent public discussions.

On the Oak Ridge Today website, citizen Andrew Howe posted a comment saying:

“The property tax rate should NEVER have to increase. It is basically a percentage of the value of the home, right? And if the value of the home rises (as it should, in line with the cost of living), then the taxes will also rise.”

I can’t quarrel with Mr. Howe’s logic, but his conclusions are wrong. This is because he makes an assumption that is valid in many states but isn’t valid in Tennessee.

Under Tennessee law, when properties are reappraised, state officials calculate—and publicize—the property tax rate that will give the local government the same total amount of property tax that it was getting from existing properties before the reappraisal. (This calculated rate is called the “certified tax rate.”) That’s the new baseline tax rate. If a local government in Tennessee wants to get more property tax revenue after a reappraisal, the governing body has to vote to increase the tax rate above the certified rate. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: Anderson County, appraisal, certified tax rate, city budget, county budget, Ellen Smith, Oak Ridge, property tax collections, property tax increases, property tax rate, property tax rates, property tax revenues, property values, reappraisal, tax bills, taxes, Tennessee

Guest column: H.M.S. Carbon Fiber

Posted at 12:51 pm June 2, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns 1 Comment

By Leslie Agron and Pat Fain

Anyone a Gilbert and Sullivan fan?

“When I was a lad I served a term / As office boy to an attorney’s firm. /
I cleaned the windows and I swept the floor, / And I polished up the handle of the big front door.” (HMS Pinafore)

So, how does this go in Oak Ridge? Perhaps: Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s Carbon Fiber Technology Facility will revolutionize the choice of materials used in manufacturing. Major manufactures, such as auto companies, will be falling over themselves soon to locate here, so as to capitalize on the technical information to be transferred from ORNL (possibly, but it might be a few years out yet). They will all want sites in Horizon Center, next to the ORNL demonstration facility, to be closest to the technology (maybe, but remember that Nissan found a Middle Tennessee location adequate for transfer of battery technology they consider vital to their future).

Carbon fiber manufacturing is a high energy-utilizing process. ORNL’s demonstration facility could take most of the 10-megawatt energy capacity at Horizon Center (true, but Horizon Center was designed as a commercial park, not as an industrial park). So we need a large project to bring 20 megawatts of additional electrical capacity into Horizon Center right away to meet this pressing need (hmm…has there been someone knocking at our doors lately that they have not been telling us about? What we seem to need right now is an incremental project to put in a lesser amount of power, especially at peak load times, so that the one or two parcels we might sell soon at Horizon Center will have adequate power available—else they are correct that nothing might sell). [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: Carbon Fiber Technology Facility, electrical capacity, energy, Gilbert and Sullivan, Heritage Center, HMS Carbon Fiber, HMS Pinafore, Horizon Center, industrial development, kilowatts, land, Leslie Agron, megawatts, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Pat Fain, power, power lines, solar facility, solar power, Tennessee Valley Authority, TVA

Letter: Fond memories of EVC prom, ‘An Evening with the Stars’

Posted at 10:58 pm May 31, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Letters Leave a Comment

To the Editor:

What a night May 11 was for over 100 individuals served through Emory Valley Center in its mission to enhance the lives of adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities!

Maggie and Andy Owen, supported by many volunteers, led the charge to hold EVC’s second Prom, “An Evening with the Stars.” This year’s theme was a Hawaiian Luau, with decorations, food, and personal photos all relating to a fun adventure for our individuals.

The Y-12 National Security Complex graciously donated New Hope Center for our individuals to enjoy this evening in a way they had never experienced. Donations to underwrite costs by local businesses and private sponsors were greatly appreciated to make the evening possible. We are so fortunate to have the dedication of the Owen’s family and their circle of volunteers to help the Center further its quest for person-centered activities for those we are dedicated to support. Feel free to visit our website, www.emoryvalleycenter.com, to relive that night with photos, which I know will bring a smile to your face.

Robin Biloski

Development Director

Emory Valley Center

Filed Under: Letters Tagged With: An Evening with the Stars, Andy Owen, Emory Valley Center, EVC, Hawaiian Luau, Maggie Owen, New Hope Center, prom, Robin Biloski

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

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