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For members: With no increase, AC schools budget could have $1.4 million in cuts

Posted at 1:07 pm May 17, 2019
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Without a tax rate increase or other new revenues, the Anderson County Schools budget could include more than $1.4 million in cuts, compared to last year, school officials said during an Anderson County Board of Education meeting on Thursday, May 16, 2019. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

CLINTON—Without a tax rate increase or other new revenues, the Anderson County Schools budget could include more than $1.4 million in cuts, compared to last year, school officials said Thursday.

There are already $650,000 in cuts included in the budget, according to information presented by Tim Parrott, director of Anderson County Schools, during an Anderson County Board of Education meeting on Thursday. That budget, which the school board approved last month, would have required about $820,000 in new revenue, said Scott Gillenwaters, chair of the school board’s Budget Committee.

Without a tax rate increase or other new revenues, the Anderson County Schools budget could include more than $1.4 million in cuts, compared to last year, school officials said during an Anderson County Board of Education meeting on Thursday, May 16, 2019. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

CLINTON—Without a tax rate increase or other new revenues, the Anderson County Schools budget could include more than $1.4 million in cuts, compared to last year, school officials said Thursday.

The cuts could include reductions in elementary school, middle school, and high school positions, and Central Office, technology, custodial, and maintenance staff; cuts to materials and supplies, and band equipment at the high schools; not finishing the gymnasium at Grand Oaks Elementary School; cutting a full-time nurse, high school coaching supplements, and a school resource officer vehicle; and reductions to transportation safety, special education assistants, and City of Rocky Top field maintenance, among a long list of potential cuts.

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If you prefer to send a check, you may do so by mailing one to: Oak Ridge Today P.O. Box 6064 Oak Ridge, TN 37831 Note: Most news stories on Oak Ridge Today are free, brought to you by Oak Ridge Today with help from our advertisers, sponsors, and subscribers. Some are considered premium content. This story is premium content. Premium content can include in-depth, investigative, and exclusive stories.

Filed Under: Anderson County, Education, Education, Front Page News, Government, K-12, Premium Content, Slider Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County Board of Education, Anderson County Commission, Anderson County Schools, Anderson County Sheriff’s Office, balanced budget, BOE, cuts, Jerry White, John S. Burrell, pay raise, property tax rate, schools budget, Scott Gillenwaters, tax rate increase, Tim Parrott

Anderson County candidate forum is Tuesday

Posted at 1:04 am July 8, 2018
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

The Anderson County Candidate Forum will be held at the Oak Ridge High School Amphitheater on Tuesday. The forum is scheduled to start at 7 p.m. Tuesday, July 10. Candidates who have opponents and are running for sheriff, trustee, mayor, Circuit Court clerk, and Anderson County Commission District 6 and 7 have been invited to speak and answer questions, a press release said. Candidates who have no opposition and are running for county clerk, register of deeds, road superintendent, Anderson County Board of Education District 6 and 7, County Commission District 8, and Oak Ridge Board of Education have been invited to be introduced. [Read more…]

Filed Under: 2018 Election, Anderson County, Government, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County Board of Education, Anderson County Candidate Forum, Anderson County Commission, Anderson County Election Commission, Anderson County general election, Charlie Hensley, Circuit Court Clerk, county clerk, Dan Robbins, Gene Patterson, League of Women Voters of Oak Ridge, mayor, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge High School, Oak Ridge municipal election, register of deeds, road superintendent, sheriff, state Democratic primary, state Republican primary, trustee

CHS athletic facility gets green light from BOE

Posted at 11:53 am January 13, 2017
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Information from WYSH Radio

On Thursday, the Anderson County Board of Education approved construction of a multi-use facility at Clinton High School, a project estimated to cost around $1.2 million. Ground could be broken as early as March 1 with a targeted opening in August.

The new facility will allow sports teams as well as band members, dance team members, cheerleaders, and others to have a dedicated practice space instead of having to use hallways or the school cafeteria. The facility will also be used by the CHS Robotics team.

Initial plans called for a state-of-the-art sound system throughout the facility as well as men’s and women’s showers and locker rooms. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, High School, K-12, Sports Tagged With: Anderson County Board of Education, athletic facility, Brad Collette, CHS, Clinton High School, multi-use facility

Gail Martin—former AC school board member, county election administrator—dies at 75

Posted at 12:24 pm September 9, 2016
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Shirley Gail Martin

Shirley Gail Martin

Note: This story was updated at 2:37 p.m.

Shirley Gail Martin, a former longtime member of the Anderson County school board who served two years as county election administrator, died Wednesday, September 7. She was 75.

Martin, of Claxton, passed away peacefully surrounded by her loved ones at Methodist Medical Center in Oak Ridge, her obituary said.

“She was an education activist who gave 24 years to the Anderson County Board of Education, as well as being a devoted Democrat,” the obituary said.

Former Anderson County School Director Larry Foster, who retired at the end of June, said Martin will be missed as a personal friend and also as a community leader. She worked for excellence in education in Anderson County, Foster said, and her long service on the school board indicated that.

Martin stayed involved in the educational area even after she left the school board, and she would attend meetings, call Foster from time to time to ask what was happening, and bring issues of concern to him.

“She wanted excellence,” Foster said Friday. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Education, Front Page News, Government, K-12, Obituaries, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County Board of Education, Anderson County Democratic Party, Anderson County Democratic Women, Anderson County Election Commission, Catherine Denenberg, Gail Martin, Holley-Gamble Funeral Home, Jo Ann Garrett, Larry Foster, Mark Stephens, Shirley Gail Martin

School board rescue: Bell saves life of Martin

Posted at 9:16 pm July 18, 2016
By John Huotari 4 Comments

Don Bell

Don Bell

Don Bell, an Anderson County School Board member, used his Red Cross training and the Heimlich maneuver to save the life of Gail Martin, a former School Board member, during a recent meal at Applebee’s in Oak Ridge.

Bell was honored by the Anderson County Board of Education on Thursday. He has also been recognized at Anderson County Commission meetings.

On Thursday, Bell said Martin choked on a piece of steak during the meal at Applebee’s about a month-and-a-half ago. She grabbed her throat and started turning blue, Bell said.

Bell had taken Red Cross training near the end of his career at Oak Ridge Schools. He is certified in CPR and the Heimlich maneuver, an emergency technique that uses abdominal thrusts to help clear someone’s airway. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Anderson County, Education, Front Page News, Government, K-12, Police and Fire, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County Board of Education, Anderson County School Board, CPR, Don Bell, Heimlich maneuver, Red Cross, Red Cross training

Contract with Parrott, the next director of schools, approved by AC school board

Posted at 12:24 pm March 17, 2016
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Tim Parrott

Tim Parrott

Information from WYSH Radio

Meeting briefly on Monday, the Anderson County Board of Education voted unanimously to approve a four-year contract with the next director of schools, Tim Parrott, who will take over for the retiring Larry Foster on July 1.

Parrott currently serves as the system’s deputy director of curriculum and instruction, and he will earn $134,000 a year plus a $750-a-month car allowance.

A committee made up of school board members Scott Gillenwaters and Dail Cantrell along with the schools’ finance director, Jim Woodward, conducted contract negotiations. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Front Page News, K-12, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County Board of Education, Dail Cantrell, deputy director of curriculum and instruction, director of schools, Jim Woodward, Larry Foster, Scott Gillenwaters, Tim Parrott

AC school board to interview Parrott for schools director

Posted at 11:35 am February 22, 2016
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Information from WYSH Radio

Anderson County Schools will have a special-called meeting on Monday, February 29, to interview Tim Parrott, a current employees, for the director of schools position.

If hired, Parrott would replace Larry Foster, who is retiring. Parrott currently works in the Anderson County Schools Central Office as director of career and special education, and he has spent decades in the county school system.

The February 29 meeting starts at 6:30 p.m. in the Anderson County Schools board room.

The Anderson County Board of Education recently voted to suspend the interview process in its search for the next schools director and to begin working with Parrott on a new contract to succeed Foster.

Only one other applicant applied for the post, and members of a special search committee indicated that Parrott’s resume clearly stood out in comparison.

Filed Under: Education, Front Page News, K-12, Meetings and Events Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County Board of Education, Anderson County Schools, director of schools, Larry Foster, schools director, Tim Parrott

With Foster retiring, AC school board approves search committee

Posted at 3:26 pm January 18, 2016
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Larry Foster at Anderson County Commision

Larry Foster, Anderson County schools director, is retiring at the end of June, and a search committee has been formed to find his replacement. Foster is pictured above during a July 2015 meeting of the Anderson County Commission. (File photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

Information from WYSH Radio

Anderson County Board of Education Chair John Burrell announced at last week’s school board meeting that he has appointed a search committee to find the next director of schools. The next director will replace Larry Foster, who is retiring at the end of June.

The board voted unanimously to approve the makeup of the committee, which will be chaired by Gail Martin, who is also the committee’s representative for Claxton. Curtis Sexton will represent Rocky Top, while Glenda Langenberg will represent Oak Ridge. Jim Stewart will represent Clinton, Dail Cantrell will represent Andersonville/Norris, and Robert McKamey will serve as the representative for the Anderson County Commission, Dutch Valley, and Norwood. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Front Page News, K-12, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County Board of Education, BOE, Curtis Sexton, Dail Cantrell, Gail Martin, Glenda Langenberg, Jim Stewart, John Burrell, Larry Foster, Robert McKamey, school board

Clinton alumni propose multi-sport facility

Posted at 12:47 pm July 29, 2015
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Clinton High School Multi-sports Complex

A group of Clinton Senior High School alumni have proposed a better facility for current and future student athletes. Pictured above is a proposed 12,000-square-foot modern sports facility. It would include universal access for all student athletes, with enough room for multiple teams to practice at the same time. (Image courtesy CSHS Legacy)

 

Alumni from Clinton High School have proposed a better facility for current and future student athletes. They have plans for a 12,000-square-foot multi-sport complex that could be used as a practice facility for several sports and host volleyball matches and wrestling meets.

The facility would include a weight training area, and artificial surface practice field for football, band, cheerleaders, and dance teams. A second story would have office space for coaches and a film room, according to plans posted on the website CSHS Legacy.

WYSH Radio in Clinton reported that the Anderson County Board of Education has given officials at Clinton High School the go-ahead to start exploring the possibility of constructing the new multi-sport facility at no cost to taxpayers.

WYSH said the proposed project would also renovate the existing, but aging, football field house. A second and separate part of the proposed project would also renovate the Don Lockard Gymnasium. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, High School, K-12, Slider, Sports, Sports, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County Board of Education, band, Blankenship Field, cheerleaders, CHS, Clinton High School, Clinton Senior High, CSHS Legacy, dance, Don Lockard Gymnasium, football, football fieldhouse, Jack Armstrong Stadium, multi-sport complex, multi-sport facility, practice facility, Sportsplex, volleyball, weight training, wrestling, WYSH Radio

AC Commission approves 10-cent tax rate increase for pay raises

Posted at 1:19 am July 21, 2015
By John Huotari 2 Comments

Rachel Minardo at Anderson County Commission

Rachel Minardo, president of the Anderson County Education Association, and others have advocated for a 4 percent pay raise for county school teachers and staff. Above, Minardo talks to the 16-member Anderson County Commission in Clinton on Monday. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

Note: This story was last updated at 4 p.m.

CLINTON—After rejecting a few other proposals, Anderson County commissioners on Monday approved a 10-cent property tax rate increase to fund 2 percent pay raises for county employees and school teachers and staff.

The vote for the tax rate increase was 9-5-1.

Eight cents of the 10-cent increase is for Anderson County Schools, and the other two cents will cover the pay raise for county employees, with the exception of elected officials and county commissioners.

Earlier in the five-hour meeting, commissioners rejected proposals to:

  • raise the property tax rate by 10 cents for a 2 percent pay raise for the schools,
  • raise the tax rate by 5 cents for a 1 percent raise,
  • approve the school budget as submitted with no tax increase,
  • raise the property tax rate by 7.5 cents for the schools, and
  • use $1.7 million from the fund balance for a one-time bonus for schools in Anderson County, Oak Ridge, and Clinton.

Teachers said they haven’t had a pay raise since 2012, and they last received a bonus in 2013 and that was $200. They have said all the surrounding school districts except Campbell County pay more, and they want to be able to recruit and retain good teachers—and not be a training ground for other districts. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Education, Front Page News, Government, Government, K-12, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: ACEA, Anderson County Board of Education, Anderson County Commission, Anderson County Education Association, Anderson County Schools, budget, certified tax rate, Chuck Fritts, Daniel McInturff, Jerry Creasey, Jerry White, Jim Woodward, Kelly Williams, Larry Foster, Mark Alderson, Myron Iwanski, pay raises, Philip Warfield, property assessments, property tax rate, property tax rate increase, Rachel Minardo, reappraisals, Rick Meredith, Robert McKamey, Robin Biloski, Steve Emert, Steve Mead, tax rate, tax-neutral rate, Theresa Scott, Tim Isbel, Tracy Wandell, Whitey Hitchcock, Zach Bates

Anderson County teachers disappointed as commissioners delay vote on budget, pay raise

Posted at 1:10 pm June 24, 2015
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Anderson County Budget Committee and Rachel Minardo, Chris Phillips, and Connie Aytes

Rachel Minardo, right, a first-grade teacher at Claxton Elementary School and president of the Anderson County Education Association, asks for a 4 percent pay raise for county teachers and school staff during a May 28 public hearing on the county budget. Also pictured are Chris Phillips, left, director of accounts and budgets for Anderson County, and Connie Aytes, deputy budget director.

 

CLINTON—Anderson County teachers were disappointed as they watched county commissioners postpone a vote on the budget and a possible 4 percent pay raise on Tuesday.

But they’ll be back on Monday, June 29, for the next meeting of the Anderson County Commission, said Rachel Minardo, a first-grade teacher at Claxton Elementary School and president of the Anderson County Education Association.

It’s not clear if the 16-member Commission will agree to fund the school system’s request for a 4 percent raise for all teachers and staff. That’s what the Anderson County Board of Education unanimously recommended last month. The request could require the equivalent of an 18-cent increase in the property tax rate.

But during debate over proposed pay raises for some county employees on Tuesday, several commissioners said they want to be consistent and fair to all workers. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Education, Government, K-12, Top Stories Tagged With: 4 percent raise, Anderson County, Anderson County Board of Education, Anderson County Budget Committee, Anderson County Commission, Anderson County Education Association, Anderson County Schools, Bill Haslam, certified tax rate, Chris Phillips, Chuck Fritts, Claxton Elementary School, Clinton High School, Daniel McInturff, Jerry White, Larry Foster, Melanie Lamberson, Monique Berry, Norris Middle School, one-to-one devices, pay raise, property tax rate, public hearing, Rachel Minardo, reappraisals, Robin Minch, teachers, Terry Frank, Theresa Scott

Preschool concerns over paint, Head Start funding reaching resolution

Posted at 10:15 am June 24, 2015
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Oak Ridge Schools School Administration Building

Concerns over federal funding, lead-based paint, and the Oak Ridge Preschool appear to be reaching a resolution. And that ought to be good news for parents and staff members who have been worried during the past year that the program could lose federal money and even have part of its program shut down.

There have been two separate concerns, one related to lead-based paint at the Oak Ridge Schools Preschool and the other related to the reported falsification of federal data.

Work to repair the lead-based paint could start June 29, Preschool Principal Charlsey Cofer said after a Monday night meeting of the Oak Ridge Board of Education.

And a one-year probationary period with an on-site monitor for the Head Start program ends the next day, on June 30. That monitor was put into place last year as part of a 10-point plan worked out by Anderson County and Oak Ridge schools in April 2014 after concerns were raised about the falsification of federal data at the Oak Ridge Preschool, specifically reports on the motor skills of children.

Oak Ridge Schools will now do its own monitoring, but Anderson County Schools, which supervises the local Head Start program, can come in at any time. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Education, Front Page News, K-12, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: 10-point plan, Anderson County Board of Education, Anderson County Head Start, Anderson County Schools, Anderson County Schools Head Start, Charlsey Cofer, falsification of federal data, federal data, federal funding, federal money, Head Start, lead-based paint, Melinda White, monitor, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge Preschool, Oak Ridge Schools Preschool, Oak Ridge Schools Preschool/Head Start., on-site monitor, preschool, red light camera money

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