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Guest column: Becoming a healthy community

Posted at 9:35 pm January 14, 2015
By Pat Fain Leave a Comment

Stability and growth of that complex system called a community depends on honesty, equality, fairness, balance, foresight, continuity, healthy relationships, maturity, safety, common goals, and recognizable successes shared among all community members and good leadership.

Industry and government facilities were having great difficulty attracting highly educated and qualified professionals to Oak Ridge despite competitive salaries in the new millennium. One of the attractions that might help this problem was thought to be the existence of superior schools for the children of those professionals, combined with attractive, upscale housing.

As is so typical in Oak Ridge, many bright minds saw only their need and targeted the solution they hypothesized would make it work. Also, as so often happens with brilliant focused minds, the complexity of the economic and social organization, its influence, and the needs of the whole community were not factored into the equation. There was an assumption that the hypothesis of good schools, combined with an abundance of attractive housing, would solve the problem. So, $67 million was spent on building and equipping a state-of-the-art high school with amenities usually limited to high-priced, private, college prep schools. This, despite the critical need for a new preschool facility having been very high on the official city list of capital needs for over a decade. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Guest Columns, K-12, Opinion Tagged With: early education, education, Head Start, housing, Oak Ridge, Pat Fain, preschool, schools, taxpayers

ORAU, MCLinc donate services to Emory Valley Center Capital Campaign

Posted at 9:22 pm January 14, 2015
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

ORAU Survey Team

An environmental survey team from ORAU partnered with Materials and Chemistry Laboratory Inc. to provide sampling and laboratory analysis for Emory Valley Center, which is in the initial stages of demolishing an old building on its campus to make room for a new facility. The ORAU survey team consisting of Tim Vitkus, Adam Kirthlink, Jason Lee, Daniel Edds, Evan Harpeneau, and Mark Berkheimer donated their time and performed sampling to identify any contaminants that may be present at the site. (Submitted photo)

 

Oak Ridge Associated Universities and Materials and Chemistry Laboratory Inc. recently joined together to donate a total of $9,000 in services to Emory Valley Center in support of their Capital Campaign for a new facility.

The new building will incorporate many features to enhance the lives of people with disabilities being served, including a Job Training Center, Life Enrichment Classrooms, Adult Day Center, Medical Clinic, Speech, Physical and Occupational Services, Gym, and more, a press release said.

An environmental survey team from ORAU partnered with Oak Ridge-based Materials and Chemistry Laboratory Inc., or MCLinc, to provide sampling and laboratory analysis for Emory Valley Center, which is in the initial stages of demolishing an old building on its campus to make room for the new facility. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, Community, Front Page News, Nonprofits, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge Associated Universities, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: Adam Kirthlink, Capital Campaign, Daniel Edds, Emory Valley Center, environmental survey, Evan Harpeneau, Janet Wood, Jason Lee, Jennifer Enderson, Mark Berkheimer, Materials and Chemistry Laboratory Inc., MCLinc, Oak Ridge Associated Universities, ORAU, Tim Vitkus

Friends of Oak Ridge Library has winter book sale Thursday-Sunday

Posted at 9:01 pm January 14, 2015
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Oak Ridge Public Library

The Oak Ridge Public Library is pictured above.

The Friends of the Oak Ridge Public Library has its winter 2015 Book Sale from Thursday evening, January 15, through Sunday, January 18.

The book sale will be held in the Oak Ridge Public Library Auditorium at 1401 Oak Ridge Turnpike.

The sale will include fiction and nonfiction books, magazines, LP records, and other publications, a press release said. Most titles are 50 cents or $1 each. Titles withdrawn from the Library are half-price from Thursday through Saturday. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Front Page News, Government, Oak Ridge Tagged With: auction, book sale, books, Children's Summer Program, Friends of the Oak Ridge Public Library, magazines, Nancy Hardin, Oak Ridge Public Library, records, sale, silent auction

ORNL Federal Credit Union raises $65K for United Way

Posted at 8:36 pm January 14, 2015
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

ORNL FCU Donation to United Way

Pictured above from left to right are Chris Outland (ORNL FCU title services manager), Lydia Birk (2014 UWAC campaign chair), Ben Jones (ORNL FCU Maryville Branch manager), and Bethany Rush (branch floater). (Photo courtesy United Way)

 

ORNL Federal Credit Union raised $64,861 for the United Way of Anderson County’s annual giving campaign, bringing the total for the last two years to more than $131,000, a press release said.

“At ORNL Federal Credit Union, we are committed to making a difference by giving back and helping to improve the quality of life for others in our communities,” said Colin Anderson, ORNL FCU executive vice president and chief financial officer. “An investment in the United Way is an investment in our community.”

Donations to UWAC are an investment in the community, a United Way press release said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, Community, Nonprofits, Oak Ridge, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County, Colin Anderson, giving campaign, ORNL FCU, ORNL Federal Credit Union, Rick Morrow, United Way, United Way of Anderson County, UWAC

Guest column: Investments—who do you trust?

Posted at 8:29 pm January 14, 2015
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns Leave a Comment

Lydia Birk

Lydia Birk

By Lydia Birk

The air waves are filled with commercials regarding which investment firm you should rely on; after all, you want to eventually retire and live comfortably and healthy and maintain your lifestyle. Yet, how much do you personally know about investing: the timing, the company’s track records, transparency, can they be trusted? There is an overload of information spinning around, and for many of us, it is confusing and time-consuming, so we trust our investments to the professionals.

Those of you who donate to the United Way of Anderson County and check the box to have Fund Distribution Volunteers make investment decisions are doing the same thing. Trusting educated, informed, committed people to invest your dollars where they will do the most good. In Anderson County, we have a multitude of programs that serve the needs of youth through food programs, backpack programs, after-school programs, preschool programs, utility assistance so they don’t shiver at night, programs to inspire, to encourage, to challenge. And programs that address the mental and physical health of our youth. Which of these programs are most effective, which ones address the most pressing issues, which ones are transparent in managing your gifts, do you chose to put a roof over their heads or food in their bellies? [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Guest Columns, Nonprofits, Opinion Tagged With: AAUW Oak Ridge, after-school programs, Anderson County, backpack programs, food programs, fund distribution, investment, preschool programs, Rick Morrow, United Way, United Way of Anderson County, utility assistance, UWAC, volunteers

Obama’s visit: Education, manufacturing, a chance to see the president

Posted at 3:36 pm January 14, 2015
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

President Barack Obama at Pellissippi State Community College

President Barack Obama announces a proposal to offer two years of free community college to responsible students during a half-hour speech at Pellissippi State Community College in Hardin Valley on Friday. (Photo by Rob Welton)

 

Note: This story was last updated at 9:30 a.m. Jan. 15.

HARDIN VALLEY—It was a once-in-a lifetime opportunity for some, a chance to shake hands with the president of the United States of America or wave at his heavily guarded motorcade as it passed by on a local roadway.

For others, it was a chance to hear about a presidential proposal modeled after a Tennessee program that would make the first two years of community college free to students who maintain at least a 2.5 grade point average. That proposal, officially announced at Pellissippi State Community College in Hardin Valley on Friday, expands on the 20th century idea that all children in the United States are entitled to a public education. In the 21st century economy, the White House said, 12 years of school is no longer enough.

For a much-smaller group, Friday’s visit by President Barack Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, and his wife Jill Biden offered an opportunity to hear an in-person announcement of a new advanced manufacturing hub, the country’s fifth, that will be led by the University of Tennessee in Knoxville and have Oak Ridge National Laboratory as a founding partner. That announcement at Techmer PM in Clinton was highlighted by a 3-D printed carbon fiber replica of a Shelby Cobra that the president joked about receiving for his birthday. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, Clinton, College, Education, Education, Federal, Government, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Slider, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: advanced composites, advanced manufacturing, Alesia Orren, America's College Promise, Barack Obama, Bill Haslam, Bob Corker, Clayton Arts Performing Center, community college, Congress, Darrell Freeman, Democrat, education, FAFSA, federal student financial aid form, General Assembly, Hardin Valley, IACMI, Institute for Advanced Composites Manufacturing Innovation, Jill Biden, Joe Biden, John J. Duncan Jr., Jose Rodriguez, Lamar Alexander, manufacturing, manufacturing hub, middle class, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ORNL, Pellissippi State Community College, President Obama, public education, Republican, Roane State Community College, Rob Welton, Shelby Cobra, State of the Union, Techmer PM, technical school, Tennessee, Tennessee Board of Regents, Tennessee Promise, tnAchieves, trade school, tuition, U.S. Department of Energy, United States, United States of America, University of Tennessee, Warren Gooch, White House

THP: Man injured in December crash dies

Posted at 1:50 pm January 14, 2015
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Note: This story was updated at 2:41 p.m. Jan. 18.

A man injured in a late December accident on Interstate 40 in Roane County died from his injuries, according to the Tennessee Highway Patrol.

The crash happened on I-40 near Gallaher Road in Kingston on Saturday, December 27.

Troopers said that Josephine Yeager, 18, of Dayton, was driving a 2004 Kia minivan in the far right eastbound lane near mile marker 356 and was trying to change lanes into the far left lane when she hit a 2014 Cadillac sedan driven by Norma L. Craig, 70, of Cookeville. The collision forced the Cadillac off the left side of roadway into the center median, THP Trooper Alexander Evans said in a report. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Police and Fire, Roane County, Tennessee, Top Stories Tagged With: Alexander Evans, crash, Gallaher Road, I-40, Interstate 40, Jack Craig, Jack W. Craig, Josephine Yeager, Kaitlyn M. Moorman, Kingston, Norma Craig, Norma L. Craign, Roane County, Tennessee Highway Patrol, THP

Anderson County hires Alternatives to Incarceration director

Posted at 1:46 pm January 14, 2015
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Anderson County Detention Facility

The Anderson County Detention Facility in Clinton is pictured above.

Information from WYSH Radio

Anderson County is one step closer to having a full-time director for its Alternatives to Incarceration program.

Last week, the committee in charge of finding someone to head the department unanimously recommended hiring Clinton resident Mary Young to fill the position. She will be responsible for finding ways to reduce the jail population through programs that could include expanded use of electronic monitoring devices, “day reporting” (described as a way to have offenders work on community projects during the day while still sleeping in their own beds at night), and offering more classes like anger management to help offenders deal with some of the underlying issues that led to their arrests and subsequent incarcerations.

Young will operate out of the Anderson County jail and officials say that she has worked in a similar program in California. She is expected to begin work on February 2. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Anderson County, Government, Police and Fire, Top Stories Tagged With: alternatives to incarceration, Anderson County, anger management, arrest, day reporting, electronic monitoring, incarceration, Mary Young, Mike Baker

Clinton police investigating man’s death

Posted at 1:38 pm January 14, 2015
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Information from WYSH Radio

According to a police report on file at the Clinton Police Department, investigators are looking into the death of a 36-year-old Clinton man.

The incident occurred on December 27 when Clinton Police were called to a home on Lee Lane and found 36-year-old Jason Sharp unconscious on the floor, bleeding from his mouth and not breathing.

Despite the efforts of first responders, Sharp died shortly after arriving at Methodist Medical Center. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Clinton, Police and Fire, Top Stories Tagged With: Clinton Police Department, CPD, death, Jason Sharp, WYSH, WYSH Radio

Manhattan Project National Historical Park to be discussed at Altrusa meeting Wednesday

Posted at 7:42 pm January 13, 2015
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Ray Smith

Ray Smith

The Manhattan Project National Historical Park will be the focus of the Wednesday luncheon meeting of Altrusa International of Oak Ridge.

Ray Smith, Y-12 National Security Complex historian, will be discussing the honor and importance in having a national park site in Oak Ridge, a press release said. Smith’s presentation will include the potential implications of a national park site in Oak Ridge as well as the probable timeframe for implementation of the national park bill, the release said.

Smith will be covering the potential meaning of the park for the City of Oak Ridge, the American Museum of Science and Energy, the Y-12 National Security Complex Calutrons, the Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s Graphite Reactor, and the East Tennessee Technology Park’s Heritage Center K-25 Gaseous Diffusion Building site. Smith will also discuss how the newly renovated Guest House at the Alexander Inn in Oak Ridge might contribute to the overall national park strategy. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Front Page News Tagged With: affordable health care act seminar, Alexander Inn, Altrusa, Altrusa International, Altrusa International of Oak Ridge, American Museum of Science and Energy, City of Oak Ridge, East Tennessee Technology Park, Graphite Reactor, Guest House, Hanford, Heritage Center, House of Representatives, K-25 Gaseous Diffusion Building, Los Alamos, luncheon, Manhattan Project National Historical Park, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, President Obama, Ray Smith, Subcommittee on National Parks, Y-12 historian, Y-12 National Security Complex

Now Senate education chair, Alexander announces plan to ‘fix’ No Child Left Behind

Posted at 7:29 pm January 13, 2015
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander

Lamar Alexander

“During the last six years, this committee has held 24 hearings and reported two bills to the Senate floor to fix the law’s problems. We should be able to finish our work within the first few weeks of 2015 so the full Senate can act.” —Lamar Alexander

WASHINGTON, D.C.—U.S. Senate education committee Chairman Lamar Alexander has announced a plan to fix the No Child Left Behind law, wrapping up six years of committee work and sending a bill to the Senate floor within the first few weeks of 2015, the senator’s office said Tuesday.

Alexander, a Tennessee Republican, announced his plan on the Senate floor, a press release said.

“No Child Left Behind has become unworkable—and fixing this law, which expired over seven years ago, will be the first item on the agenda for the Senate education committee,” Alexander said. “I look forward to input from all sides on this proposal as we move forward with a bipartisan process that will keep the best portions of the law, while restoring responsibility to states and local communities and ensuring that all 50 million students in our nation’s 100,000 public schools can succeed.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Federal, Government, K-12, Top Stories Tagged With: Lamar Alexander, NCLB, No Child Left Behind, Patty Murray, public schools, Senate Education Committee, Senate HELP Committee, U.S. Senate

Pellissippi State transcript: Obama proposes free community college for two years

Posted at 8:49 pm January 12, 2015
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

President Barack Obama

President Barack Obama

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT ON AMERICA’S COLLEGE PROMISE

This is a transcript of remarks made by President Barack Obama at Pellissippi State Community College in Hardin Valley in west Knox County on Friday, January 9. The president was at Pellissippi State to announce a proposal that would make community college free for two years to responsible students across the country. The proposal is modeled on the relatively new Tennessee Promise.

Friday’s visit was the first by a president to Pellissippi State.

Pellissippi State Community College

Knoxville, Tennessee

2:05 P.M. EST

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, everybody!  (Applause.)  Hey!  Thank you!  (Applause.)  Thank you so much.  Thank you.  Thank you, everybody.  Thank you.  Everybody, please have a seat.  Please have a seat.  Well, it is good to be back in Tennessee.  I hope you guys aren’t getting tired of me.  I’ve been coming around a lot lately, because there’s a lot of good stuff happening here.

I want to begin by thanking Joe and Jill Biden.  They’re not just good friends and good partners, but they really believe in the power of education and they really believe in creating those kinds of ladders of opportunity that gave all three of us and Michelle the chances, the incredible opportunities that we’ve had today.  And they understand the promise of America’s community colleges.  Well, Jill really understands it, and Joe — (laughter) — he doesn’t really have a choice.

Before I get into the reason that I’m here today, I want to begin by saying just a few words about the tragic events that we’ve watched unfold in France over the last several hours and days.  And because events have been fast-moving this morning, I wanted to make sure to comment on them. [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, Federal, Front Page News, Government Tagged With: Affordable Care Act, America's College Promise, Anthony Wise, auto industry, Barack Obama, Bill Haslam, Bob Corker, college degree, education, France, homeownership, Jill Biden, jobs, Joe Biden, John Duncan, Knoxville, Lamar Alexander, Madeline Rogero, Maryville College, Pellissippi State Community College, Rahm Emanuel, State of the Union, technical training, Tennessee Promise, transcript, workforce

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