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Letter: Medicaid, TennCare expansion could benefit Tennessee

Posted at 5:26 pm January 31, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Letters Leave a Comment

To the Editor:

I just went to my first Breakfast with the Legislators, hosted by the League of Women Voters in Oak Ridge.

First, let me thank the League and the four legislators who came, representatives Kent Calfee and John Ragan, and senators Ken Yager and Randy McNally.

I appreciate the thoughtful and varied questions that were asked. I learned a lot from the legislators and the questions.

My particular area of concern was the expansion of Medicaid/TennCare in Tennessee under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Obamacare).

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Letters Tagged With: benefits, Breakfast with the Legislators, expansion, federal money, Medicaid, Obamacare, Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, TennCare

Guest column: City needs a return on public spending on Chamber, ORCVB

Posted at 5:06 pm January 26, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns 4 Comments

By Leslie Agron and Pat Fain

This coming Monday evening, the Oak Ridge City Council and the city manager will hold a work session that has the potential to become the seminal discussion on the future growth and success of Oak Ridge. This discussion will probably begin with the question of the city contracts with the Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce ($250,000) and the Oak Ridge Convention and Visitors Bureau ($400,000) and, unfortunately, it may just end there. If this happens it could be another significant opportunity fumbled.

There are very legitimate reasons to question the continued expenditure of public dollars for the type and quality of results delivered by these two entities. The need for growth of revenue is real. Several years ago, without even a minimal public discussion of what kind of city we want to be in the future, the city and the Chamber entered into a series of open-ended contracts. That produced amorphous and inadequate results. The Chamber can well blame a lack of direction and vision on the city. The city can point to lots of sound and fury and fast food restaurants as being an inadequate answer to long-term financial woes and economic growth needs.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: accountability, budget, contracts, deliverable, expenditures, marketing, Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Convention and Visitors Bureau, public dollars, taxes

Guest column: Oak Ridge not an island anymore

Posted at 1:43 pm January 19, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns 7 Comments

By Leslie Agron and Pat Fain

“This Island Earth” is a classic 1950s sci-fi flick. Its gifts to the popular culture include the “interocitor” (an all-purpose communicator and weapon) and the origin of the sound bite “They’re pulling us up!” In it we learn not only that we are not alone, but that we are not even remotely enough located to stay uninvolved in cosmic conflicts.

Oak Ridge in the early 1950s was a remotely located, somewhat self-sufficient compound. It had been built that way intentionally by Gen. Groves in the 1940s. Nearly everyone who worked here also lived here because the government had made sure to offer them suitable rental housing.

The seeds of change were sown in the mid-1950s with the sale of those government-owned homes and the enactment of Eisenhower’s interstate highway system. As the interstates were built and the region grew a little closer, a few people began to commute to jobs in Oak Ridge.

As the 1970s and 1980s progressed, West Knoxville blossomed, and Pellissippi Parkway was built.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: adjacent communities, commute, housing, Island Oak Ridge, isolated Oak Ridge, Leslie Agron, Pat Fain, population, workers

Guest column: Recommends more negotiations with EPA, DOE on sewer system upgrade

Posted at 12:59 pm January 13, 2013
By Martin McBride 2 Comments

Note: This is a copy of a letter sent to Oak Ridge Mayor Tom Beehan and Oak Ridge City Council members, among others.

Dear Mayor Beehan,

Next Monday evening you will begin considering a major increase in the Oak Ridge city debt to finance the sewer upgrade project. This increase and the associated utility rate increases:

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: debt, DOE, EPA, EPA order, Martin McBride, negotiations, Oak Ridge, sewer system upgrade, U.S. Department of Energy, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, utility rate increases

Guest column: Let’s work hard rather than ‘rubber stamping’ water, sewer debt

Posted at 12:28 pm January 7, 2013
By Trina Baughn 3 Comments

We are only a few days into 2013 and most of us have discovered that we will have to make do with less this year. Before January ends, Oak Ridgers will realize that fact again when they receive their water and sewer bills, which will reflect the second rate hike since last May.

But before you have a chance to see your newly increased bill, Oak Ridge City Council may take an action that will cause your rates to rise a third time before 2013 ends. On Jan. 14, City Council will vote whether or not to apply for two state loans totaling $18 million. This debt, in addition to a large portion of the $15 million issued since September 2011, will pay for work affiliated with a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency administrative order that requires the city to stop sewer overflows.

All $33 million borrowed will be paid by Oak Ridgers through multiple increases in your water and sewer rates. The amount of those increases is not determined until after each round of debt is issued. In other words, the city first borrows on your behalf and then determines how much it will charge you without consideration for your ability to pay.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: administrative order, debt, debt policy, DOE, EPA order, loans, mandate, Oak Ridge City Council, rate hike, rate increases, remediation, sewer overflows, sewer rates, Trina Baughn, U.S. Department of Energy, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, water rates

Letter: Americans have right, responsibility to protect selves, property

Posted at 7:05 pm January 1, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Letters 1 Comment

By Mark DeVol

Who is responsible for our safety?

The Militia Act of 1903 was initiated by U.S. Secretary of War Elihu Root following the Spanish American War. H.R. 11654 established the “regular army”; the “organized militia,” henceforth known as the National Guard; and the “unorganized militia.”

H.R. 11654 defined the unorganized militia as “every able-bodied male between the ages of 18 and 45.” It further established that all members of the “unorganized militia” have the absolute personal right and Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms of any measure and type.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Letters Tagged With: citizen protection, gun owners, Mark DeVol, Militia Act of 1903, protect, Reid v. Covert, safety, Second Amendment, U.S. Constitution, unorganized militia, Warren v. District of Columbia

Guest columnists offer New Year’s resolutions

Posted at 10:16 pm December 29, 2012
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns Leave a Comment

By Pat Fain and Leslie Agron

In this column, we offer our New Year’s resolutions.

Most New Year’s resolutions are known more their breach than honoring. As we have dared to insert ourselves into the public dialogue for the past eight months, without invitation or expectation of embracement, we again dare the whimsical and promise to really try to keep the following resolutions as guest columnists:

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: guest columnists, Leslie Agron, New Year's, Pat Fain, resolutions

Guest column: The tree that keeps on giving

Posted at 10:04 pm December 29, 2012
By Judy DiGregorio 1 Comment

I looked out the kitchen window one cold March morning and suddenly noticed a new tree standing in our backyard—a six-foot, straggly evergreen with bits of tinsel still clinging desperately to its branches. The tree had not been there the day before. Since we had neither a son named Jack nor any magic beans, we knew one of our mischievous friends had planted the tree.

“I know exactly who did this,” said my husband Dan. “It had to be Danny Sutton. That rascal loves playing practical jokes. Remember the time he took those squirt guns to that wedding?”

Dan soon confirmed that Danny was the culprit, and a new post-holiday tradition began. Each year Danny found a new spot in our yard to deposit his old Christmas tree, and it was often days later before we realized he had done it.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: Christmas tree, Dan DiGregorio, Danny Sutton, Judy DiGregorio, practical joke

Guest column: Housing strategy could include paint, marketing, tax breaks, plaques

Posted at 11:54 am December 29, 2012
By Martha de la Garza Fowler 3 Comments

E=mc2 (E Equals MC Squared), or Energy Equals Many Citizens Working Together

There’s no doubt that Oak Ridge could use a facelift. I applaud City Manager Mark Watson and our Oak Ridge City Council members for recognizing and attempting to address this need with their “Not In Our City” initiative.

I think, however, that “Not In Our City” has some problems:

  1. It’s a whole lot of stick and not much carrot.
  2. It creates an adversarial relationship between the city and its residents and potentially pits neighbor against neighbor.
  3. It is piecemeal in its approach and lacks an overarching vision.

How about this as an alternative? It even has a catchy slogan. In honor of Einstein, let’s call it E = mc2, or Energy Equals Many Citizens Working Together.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: alphabet houses, bungalows, cemesto, cottages, flat top, historic neighborhoods, Mark Watson, marketing, Martha de la Garza Fowler, National Historic District, National Register of Historic Places, Not in Our City, Oak Ridge City Council, older housing, paint, plaques, tax breaks, World War II

Guest column: Report on National League of Cities conference trip

Posted at 10:27 am December 24, 2012
By Anne Garcia Garland 2 Comments

The National League of Cities Congress of Cities and Expo differs from the other annual conference held in Washington. The Legislative Conference is focused on interfacing with federal elected officials and agencies and considering the national agenda. This year’s conference in Boston is the one that focuses on bringing together local officials from all over the country to share ideas and solutions to local issues.

This year’s foci were on promoting strong local economies, building sustainable communities, and strengthening neighborhoods and families. There were workshops on how businesses, individuals, groups, governments, and communities are being affected by the recession. There were presentations and roundtable discussions on common issues and ongoing solutions.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: Anne Garcia Garland, conference, Congress of Cities and Expo, financial empowerment, housing, Legislative Conference, micro-loans, National League of Cities, trip

Guest column: Holiday inn — Oak Ridge needs lodging for recreational visitors

Posted at 2:49 pm December 23, 2012
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns 1 Comment

By Leslie Agron and Pat Fain

Not so much the old Holiday Inn on South Illinois Avenue next to the Skyway Drive-In Theater (with movie sound piped into the facing motel rooms!), nor even our newest hostelry on Tulsa Road… We’re reaching back to the 1942 Bing Crosby and Fred Astaire flick called “Holiday Inn” in a blatant attempt to stretch a holiday tie-in. With terrific Irving Berlin music, including “White Christmas,” for which it won an Oscar for Best Original Song, they sing and dance their way through the plot: “At an inn which is only open on holidays, a crooner and a hoofer vie for the affections of a beautiful up-and-coming performer.”

Coincidentally, another 1942 event was the founding of Oak Ridge as a part of the Manhattan Project.

Often in our vision for “Something Else” for the economic revitalization of Oak Ridge we have mentioned that this city could greatly benefit from serious development of the visitor portion of our economy. This is a proposal for additional lodging in Oak Ridge to forward that end. We need to take a long, hard look at the characteristics of what is available now versus what it would take to appeal to people coming here simply to visit.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: cabins, campground, Clark Center Park, economic revitalization, holiday inn, Leslie Agron, lodging, Oak Ridge, Pat Fain, recreational visitors

Letter: Second Amendment ‘fanatics’ unchallenged, reasonable regulations constitutional

Posted at 4:25 pm December 22, 2012
By Oak Ridge Today Letters 31 Comments

To the Editor:

I have worked with mentally disabled people for more than 30 years, including serious predators.

Please do not let the apologists for the National Rifle Association try to change the subject to just reinstitutionalizing the mentally ill. Yes, the mental health system is seriously broken nationwide, but this is only a symptom of the malaise of the country that has ceased to accept responsibility for caring properly for the sick and the poor. OMG! A right to health care and food! Appalling.

Unmanaged and untreated mental illness is a national tragedy and disgrace, but it is not to blame for guns in the hands of unstable people. Our acquiescence and silence and failure to challenge the Second Amendment fanatics is the root cause.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Letters Tagged With: Constitution, constitutional rights, guns, National Rifle Association, NRA, public safety, regulations, Second Amendment

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