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Letter: Dodson has positive outlook, believes passionately in Oak Ridge

Posted at 12:27 am September 21, 2016
By Judy DiGregorio 2 Comments

To Oak Ridge Today:

We have known Jim Dodson, candidate for City Council, for almost 30 years. We first met him when he began teaching art at Jefferson Middle School, where he still teaches. A superb artist himself, Jim has fostered the artistic talents of many students who have gone on to win local and regional art competitions.

Jim has a positive outlook on life. No matter what the circumstances, Jim looks for the best in every person and every situation. This has made him a fantastic teacher and leader. He has served on the board of directors for several arts and civic organizations and is highly respected for his leadership abilities and his work ethic. I served on the Arts Council when he was president. He was always highly organized and prepared for every meeting. He researched the issues involved before each meeting and treated every board member with respect. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Letters, Opinion Tagged With: City Council, Dan and Judy DiGregorio, Jefferson Middle School, Jim Dodson, Oak Ridge Convention and Visitors Bureau, Secret City Task Force/Board, United Way of Anderson County

Oak Ridge receives $500,000 housing grant

Posted at 5:54 pm June 7, 2016
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Oak Ridge has received a $500,000 state housing grant from the Tennessee Housing Development Agency.

The city will use the THDA funds to renovate and weatherize 63 owner-occupied, single-family homes in the Manhattan District Overlay zone, a press release said.

The grant award will be presented to the City of Oak Ridge at 4 p.m. Wednesday, June 8, at 138 South Purdue Avenue in the Woodland neighborhood.

That property at the corner of South Purdue Avenue and Northwestern Avenue is the site of a recent project that is part of the city’s effort to renovate substandard houses. The City of Oak Ridge bought a blighted home there in April 2014 and demolished it in June 2014. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Front Page News, Government, Oak Ridge, State, Top Stories Tagged With: City Council, housing, housing grant, Katie Moore, Mark Watson, Oak Ridge, Ralph Perrey, renovations, South Purdue Avenue, Tennessee Housing Development Agency, Warren Gooch

Oak Ridge could lose $500K-$700K per year under Hall tax repeal

Posted at 11:45 am April 25, 2016
By John Huotari 16 Comments

McNally-Ragan-Calfee-at-Breakfast-with-Legislators-April-25-2016

The reduction and repeal of the Hall income tax was among the issues discussed during a Breakfast with the Legislators on Monday, April 25, 2016. Pictured above from left are Sen. Randy McNally, Rep. John Ragan, and Rep. Kent Calfee. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

Note: This story was last updated at 9:30 p.m.

Oak Ridge could lose $500,000-$700,000 per year in revenues if the repeal of the Hall income tax is approved, Oak Ridge City Manager Mark Watson said last week.

If Governor Bill Haslam signs a bill that the state legislature passed Friday, the tax, which was enacted in 1929, would be eliminated in the 2022 tax year. Haslam has not said whether he will the sign the bill into law or veto it.

If it becomes law, the bill could cost Oak Ridge about $119,000 in the fiscal year that starts July 1, or about 1.25 cents on the property tax rate, Mayor Warren Gooch said Saturday. The legislation would reduce the Hall income tax on stock and dividend income from 6 percent to 5 percent in the 2016 tax year.

The tax would be reduced by 1 percent per year after that until it is eliminated by 2022.

The Hall income tax generated total revenue of $303.4 million in Tennessee in fiscal year 2014-15, and $105.5 million went to cities and counties, with the rest going to the state.

On Thursday, Watson said the amount dispersed to Oak Ridge varies between about $500,000 to $700,000 per year. State data shows Oak Ridge collected about $708,000 in 2015. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Front Page News, Government, Government, Oak Ridge, Slider, State Tagged With: Bill Haslam, City Council, Ellen Smith, Hall Income Tax, Hall tax repeal, Hall taxes, John Ragan, Ken Yager, Kent Calfee, Knoxville News Sentinel, Mark Watson, Oak Ridge, progressive tax, Randy McNally, regressive tax, Richard Locker, sales tax, TCA, Tennesseans for Conservative Action, Tennessee General Assembly, Warren Gooch

Eighth rowing lane could cost more than $500,000, up to about $1.2 million

Posted at 2:31 pm March 23, 2016
By John Huotari 25 Comments

Cardinal-Invitational-Regatta-West-Virginia-Rowing-March-12-2016

Twelve of the nation’s best NCAA Division I women’s rowing teams competed this month in the Cardinal Invitational Regatta in Oak Ridge. Pictured above, a West Virginia University team competes at Oak Ridge Marina on Saturday, March 12, 2016. The eighth lane would require some work along the Melton Lake Drive side of the course, which is on the right side of this picture. (Photo by Julio Culiat)

 

Note: This story was last updated at 5:30 p.m.

An eighth lane at the seven-lane Oak Ridge rowing course could cost more than $500,000 and up to about $1.2 million, officials said Tuesday.

The eighth lane has been on the wish list of rowers and many local officials for years. They say it would allow the Oak Ridge Rowing Association to compete for bigger races and international regattas, which require an eighth lane. It would also keep the site a top-tier rowing venue and provide more on-water capacity, allowing more competitors in events. It’s also expected to significantly increase the economic impact of rowing races, or regattas.

Officials announced a $250,000 state grant for the eighth lane in April 2015.

In August, the city hired Barge, Waggoner, Sumner, and Cannon Inc. for design and survey work, among other tasks.

A March 1 memo from BWSC to Jon Hetrick, Oak Ridge Recreation and Parks director, outlines five construction options with various estimates of probable costs ranging between $543,771 and $1,162,444. The five estimated construction costs include a 20 percent contingency. All five options would include a retaining wall and earthwork, which would include excavation and dredging. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Front Page News, Government, Government, Oak Ridge, Rowing, Slider, Sports, Top Stories Tagged With: Army Corps of Engineers, Barge Waggoner Sumner and Cannon Inc., BWSC, capital improvement plan, City Council, eighth rowing lane, gabion basket wall, John Ragan, Jon Hetrick, Mark Watson, Melton hill lake, Melton Lake Drive, Melton Lake Park, Oak Ridge Convention and Visitors Bureau, Oak Ridge Marina, Oak Ridge Recreation and Parks, Oak Ridge Rowing Association, Oak Ridge rowing course, regattas, Rick Chinn, Russell Byrd, sheet pile wall, state grant, Tennessee Department of Tourist Development, Tennessee Valley Authority, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

Letter: Appreciates city reps listening to concerns, thankful for ‘Adopt a Shelter Pet Month’

Posted at 1:29 pm March 16, 2016
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

To the Editor:

While walking my dogs this evening, I took a minute to reflect on how appreciative I am to have representatives in Oak Ridge city government that listened to my concerns and immediately took action to correct some problems that I raised.

Several months ago, I emailed City Council, the Oak Ridge Police Department, and the city manager expressing concern about streetlights being out in Hendrix Creek, speeding cars on Hendrix Drive, and a need for sidewalks so residents can safely enjoy their neighborhood without being hit by a passing car. I was astonished to receive several emails the following day indicating that my concerns were heard and that the issues raised would be addressed.

Mayor Warren Gooch connected me with the Public Works Department who had the bulbs changed and streetlights functioning within a day or two. Councilmen Charlie Hensley and Kelly Callison and Councilwoman Trina Baughn and Mayor Pro Tem Ellen Smith responded with concern for the sidewalks and indicated that they were going to look into the issues that were expressed. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Letters, Opinion Tagged With: Adopt a Shelter Pet Month, Anderson County, Anderson County Commission, Charlie Hensley, City Council, city government, Ellen Smith, Friends of the Oak Ridge Animal Shelter, Jim Akagi, Kelly Callison, Lauren Biloski, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Police Department, Public Works Department, S.A.R.G., S.C.A.R., Terry Frank, Trina Baughn, Warren Gooch

City board recommends senior center at Civic Center; will ask for $50K for conceptual studies

Posted at 1:00 pm March 10, 2016
By John Huotari 2 Comments

Oak-Ridge-Civic-Center-March-7-2016

A city board has recommended that the Oak Ridge Senior Center be located at the Civic Center on Oak Ridge Turnpike, and the board will ask the City Council to consider $50,000 for conceptual studies, possibly in April. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

An Oak Ridge board has recommended that the city’s senior center be located at the Civic Center and Alvin K. Bissell Park, and the board will ask the City Council, possibly in April, to consider $50,000 for conceptual studies.

The Oak Ridge Senior Center is currently located in a county-owned building on Emory Valley Road. It’s been there since 1999.

Some senior center users have been advocating for a new home for years, arguing that they didn’t voluntarily leave the former Wildcat Den (the Midtown Community Center) and that their current home has a number of deficiencies. But despite those efforts, the senior center remains on Emory Valley Road.

The current effort to find a new home has been under way since last year and picked up in January, said Linda McGhee, senior programs recreation manager in the Oak Ridge Recreation and Parks Department. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Front Page News, Government, Government, Oak Ridge, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Alvin K. Bissell Park, Bob Smallridge, City Council, Civic Center, Linda McGhee, Midtown Community Center, Oak Ridge Public Library, Oak Ridge Recreation and Parks Department, Oak Ridge Schools Preschool, Oak Ridge Senior Advisory Board, Oak Ridge Senior Center, Senior Center, Wildcat Den, YWCA Building

Oak Ridger with public, private work experience appointed city clerk

Posted at 10:37 am February 1, 2016
By Oak Ridge Today Staff 1 Comment

Beth Hickman

Beth Hickman

Note: This story was updated at 12 p.m.

An Oak Ridge resident who has management and administrative experience in the public and private sectors has been appointed city clerk, officials said Monday.

Oak Ridge City Manager Mark Watson announced the appointment of Beth Hickman on Monday. Hickman will replace former City Clerk Diana Stanley, who resigned in November 2015.

Hickman has more than 15 years of management and administrative experience in both the public and private sectors, a press release said.

She served as field representative for former U.S. Congressman Lincoln Davis and as executive assistant at The Roane Alliance.

She is presently employed at Vanderbilt University Law School as a faculty assistant. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Front Page News, Government, Oak Ridge Tagged With: Beth Hickman, City Clerk, City Clerk's Office, City Council, City of Oak Ridge, Diana Stanley, Lincoln Davis, Mark Watson, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge City Clerk, Vanderbilt University Law School

Traffic light study under way, new plans could be implemented this year

Posted at 5:18 pm January 3, 2016
By John Huotari 2 Comments

TDOT Commissioner John Schroer and Mayor Pro Tem Jane Miller

TDOT Commissioner John Schroer presents a signal optimization grant check to former Oak Ridge Mayor Pro Tem Jane Miller. (File photo from September 2014 courtesy City of Oak Ridge)

 

A traffic light timing study is under way, and new plans could be implemented early this year, city officials said in December.

Oak Ridge Today asked about the signal timing project during a December interview with Oak Ridge Electric Director Jack Suggs and Jon van Eek, power utilization program supervisor in the Oak Ridge Electric Department. That interview focused on radar-based traffic detectors at six intersections in Oak Ridge.

The City of Oak Ridge announced in September 2014 that it had been awarded a Tennessee Department of Transportation grant for $237,500 for a signal timing optimization project.

Suggs and van Eek said the timing study is under way, and they hope to have new plans implemented after January 1, 2016. The plan is to move the maximum number of cars in all directions and to move the maximum number of vehicles, Suggs said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Front Page News, Government, Government, Oak Ridge, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: air emissions, City Council, City of Oak Ridge, Climate Action Plan, CMAQ, Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement Program, Environmental Quality Advisory Board, greenhouse gas emissions, Jack Suggs, Jon van Eek, Oak Ridge Electric Department, signal timing, signal timing optimization, Steve Byrd, TDOT, Tennessee Department of Transportation, traffic congestion, traffic light study, traffic light timing, traffic patterns

County Commission approves 18-month lease for General Sessions Court

Posted at 10:05 pm December 17, 2015
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Anderson-County-General-Sessions-Court-Exterior-Nov-19-2015

The seven-year lease on the Anderson County General Sessions Court, Division II, on Bus Terminal Road in Oak Ridge expires Dec. 31, 2015, but the Anderson County Commission on Thursday agreed to an 18-month lease to keep the courthouse where it is now. That will give county officials time to consider options for where to locate the courthouse. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

Note: This story was last updated at 1:50 p.m. Dec. 18.

CLINTON—With no other alternative lined up yet, the Anderson County Commission on Thursday agreed to an 18-month lease for the Anderson County General Sessions Court in Oak Ridge. That will keep the courthouse at its current home until mid-2017, giving county officials time to consider where to locate the General Sessions Court, Division II.

The courthouse is used by police officers in Oak Ridge, Oliver Springs, and Rocky Top, among other agencies and businesses.

The current seven-year lease expires at the end of the year, and officials have been trying to determine since October whether to keep the courthouse where it is now, find a new location in Oak Ridge, or move the Division II court to Clinton, where Division I is located.

County commissioners approved the 18-month lease at a rate of $5,500 per month during a Thursday evening meeting. The lease, which was approved 12-2, will not include a warehouse building used by the county at the courthouse site on Bus Terminal Road. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Anderson County, Front Page News, Government, Government, Police and Fire, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County Commission, Anderson County General Sessions Court, Chuck Fritts, City Council, City of Oak Ridge, Division II, General Sessions Court, Jerry White, Mark Watson, Myron Iwanski, Oak Ridge Utility District, Recording for the Blind and Dyslexic, Roger Miller, Ron Murch, Terry Frank, Tony Cappiello, Tracy Wandell, Vintage Development, Zach Bates

Opinion: A blueprint for growth, the choice is yours

Posted at 7:40 pm November 23, 2015
By Oak Ridge Today Staff 12 Comments

By Leonard Abbatiello

Nov. 19, 2015

In a previous article, I pointed out how Oak Ridge has changed. To summarize, we have changed drastically since the mid-1970s, becoming Tennessee average in median income, graduation rates, ethnic and age distributions. We are also heavily in debt, as we continue to spend beyond our means for all of our high quality services.

About 50 percent of our housing is over 70 years old and in various conditions located on lots that are often unsuitable for today’s desired off-street parking. Currently, over 12 percent of all homes are vacant, and those on the market are selling at 75 percent of their initial asking price. All aging residential housing is collectively dropping in both value and desirability. Our low-income population has increased to the point that they are the majority of our residents, and they cannot financially support our high-end services. Today, we are building only 10s of new homes annually, and a large percentage of the Manhattan Era housing remains vacant. Department of Energy radioactive and hazardous waste storage taints the community image as an attractive place to live.

We have evolved to this condition from a city that was given to us citizens debt free in the 1960s and rocketed to be the highest property taxed Tennessee city by 1973. Since then, it has endured a long list of both failed and evaporated DOE promised self-sufficiency projects. Today, DOE self-sufficiency efforts are no longer offered by DOE. Things even got worse following the 1985 fragmentation of all DOE single contractor federal operations, which then made effective local financial discussions impossible. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Opinion Tagged With: City Council, DOE, DOE PILT, double property taxation, growth, housing, Leonard Abbatiello, Oak Ridge City Charter, Oak Ridge Reservation, payment in lieu of taxes, PILT, school system, toxic waste, U.S. Department of Energy, waste storage

School Board endorses recommendation for preschool at Elm Grove

Posted at 2:28 pm November 3, 2015
By John Huotari 1 Comment

Elm Grove Park Oct. 21, 2015

Elm Grove Park in east Oak Ridge has been proposed as a site for a new preschool, and it’s considered the best potential location. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

The Oak Ridge Board of Education on Monday endorsed a recommendation to build a new preschool at Elm Grove Park. A new preschool has been on the city’s wish list for years, but this particular proposal is still in the early stages.

The school board received a report from the Joint City/Schools Preschool Planning Committee on Monday and endorsed the committee’s report in a 4-0 vote. The recommendation will now be considered by the city.

There was once a school at Elm Grove Park in east Oak Ridge, and the committee’s report, presented to City Council and the BOE in a work session in October, recommended using that city-owned site, officials said.

“We think that after the factors we discussed, it was the most appropriate site,” Oak Ridge Schools Superintendent Bruce Borchers said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Front Page News, Government, K-12, Oak Ridge, Top Stories Tagged With: BOE, Bruce Borchers, City Council, Elm Grove Park, Head Start, Joint City/Schools Preschool Building Committee, Mark Watson, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge Schools, preschool, school board

City accepting applications for first special events board

Posted at 9:14 pm October 19, 2015
By Oak Ridge Today Staff 23 Comments

Secret City Festival World War II Re-enactment 2015

A Flak 88 firing during a Battle of Normandy re-enactment at the 2015 Secret City Festival in Oak Ridge. (Photo by Rob Welton)

 

Election notice: The City Clerk’s Office is accepting resumes and letters of interests from members of the public who want to serve on the inaugural board of directors for a new nonprofit organization that will be responsible for implementing the expanded Secret City Festival/Celebration.

City Council will select eight remaining members of the 14-member board. Six members of the board of directors have been designated from the former Special Events Advisory Task Force, and those representatives include Ben Arnold, Mike Brown, Judi Gray, Kate Groover, Ray Smith, and Michelle Ward.

The election for this committee is scheduled to occur at the November 16, 2015, City Council meeting. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Front Page News, Government, Meetings and Events, Oak Ridge Tagged With: Ben Arnold, City Clerk's Office, City Council, Diana Stanley, Judi Gray, Kate Groover, Michelle Ward, Mike Brown, Ray Smith, Secret City Festival, Secret City Festival/Celebration, Special Events Advisory Task Force

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Classifieds

Availability of the draft environmental assessment for off-site depleted uranium manufacturing (DOE/EA-2252)

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) announces the … [Read More...]

Public Notice: NNSA announces no significant impact of Y-12 Development Organization operations at Horizon Center

AVAILABILITY OF THE FINAL ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT FOR THE OFFSITE HOUSING OF THE Y-12 DEVELOPMENT … [Read More...]

ADFAC seeks contractors for five homes

Aid to Distressed Families of Appalachian Counties (ADFAC) is a non-profit community based agency, … [Read More...]

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