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Travel still discouraged; no serious accidents reported in Anderson

Posted at 11:50 am February 17, 2015
By Oak Ridge Today Staff 2 Comments

Icy Roads in Oliver Springs

Roads remained ice-covered in Oak Ridge on Tuesday, and there was little traffic as officials urged people to not drive unless absolutely necessary. Here is a picture taken Monday of State Route 62, also known as North Illinois Avenue or East Tri County Boulevard, headed into Oliver Springs from Oak Ridge. (Photo by Marilyn Cook-Wynn)

 

Information from WYSH Radio

With ice on the roadways and temperatures not expected to get above freezing for the next couple of days, travel is still not advised.

Last night across Anderson County, no serious accidents were reported, and officials said that was due in part to people heeding their warnings to stay off the roads.

But some people may have no choice but to drive somewhere today. For those people, Clinton Police Rick Scarbrough had this piece of advice: “Drive with caution. Don’t get overconfident because just around the corner could be a solid sheet of ice. If you do have to be out, we understand, but try to avoid getting out if at all possible.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Anderson County, Clinton, Front Page News, Government, Police and Fire, Top Stories, Weather Tagged With: accidents, Anderson County, Clinton Utilities Board, Gary Long, ice, Rick Scarbrough, State Route 62, Terry Frank, travel

Officials recommend staying off roads unless travel is essential

Posted at 6:40 pm February 16, 2015
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Oak Ridge Roads on Feb. 16, 2015

South Illinois Avenue was a sloppy, slushy mix of snow, ice, and water early Monday evening.

 

Roads in Anderson County are ice-covered, and driving conditions are extremely hazardous, said Mark Lucas, Anderson County Sheriff’s Department chief deputy.

“We have already received reports of accidents due to slick roads,” Lucas said. “We are asking everyone to please stay at home and not to travel unless absolutely necessary.”

The roads in Oak Ridge appeared to be a sloppy, slushy mix of sleet, ice, and snow. There were reports in Anderson County and Oak Ridge of roads that were frozen or impassable. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Government, Oak Ridge, Police and Fire, Slider, Weather, Weather Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County Sheriff's Department, Clinton Utilities Board, Gary Cinder, ice, Mark Lucas, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge Public Works, power, roads, schools, sleet, snow, temperatures, weather

3M will invest $135 million, create 100 jobs at Clinton manufacturing facility

Posted at 3:06 pm December 5, 2014
By John Huotari 1 Comment

Food Lion Distribution Center and 3M Company Manufacturing

The 3M Company purchased the former Food Lion Distribution Center on J.D. Yarnell Industrial Parkway in the Eagle Bend Industrial Park in Clinton on Friday. 3M paid roughly $14.4 million for the 772,00-square-foot building on 160 acres, and the company will use it to make products for the oil, gas, and automotive industries. (Photo courtesy Tim Thompson/Anderson County Economic Development Association)

 

Governor Bill Haslam

Bill Haslam

Note: This story was updated at 2:30 p.m. Dec. 8.

NASHVILLE—The 3M Company has purchased the former Food Lion distribution center in the Eagle Bend Industrial Park in Clinton and will use it to manufacture products for the oil, gas, and automotive industries. The company is expected to invest $135 million and create 100 new jobs in Anderson County.

Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam and Economic and Community Development Commissioner Bill Hagerty joined 3M Company officials in Nashville to announce the company’s investment on Friday afternoon.

3M purchased the 772,000-square-foot building on 160 acres on J.D. Yarnell Parkway in the Eagle Bend Industrial Park for roughly $14.4 million. The sale closed on Friday, said Tim Thompson, president of the Anderson County Economic Development Association. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Business, Business, Clinton, Slider, Tennessee, Top Stories Tagged With: 3M, 3M Company, Aisin, Anderson County Economic Development Association, Bill Hagerty, Bill Haslam, Clinton, Clinton Utilities Board, Eagle Bend Industrial Park, Eagle Bend Manufacturing, John Bradley, manufacturing, manufacturing operations, Scott Burton, SL Tennessee, Tennessee, Tennessee Valley Authority, Terry Frank, Tim Thompson, TVA

State, SL Tennessee announce 1,000 new jobs in Clinton

Posted at 10:50 am July 25, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Submitted

CLINTON—Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam and Economic and Community Development Commissioner Bill Hagerty, along with SL Tennessee LLC officials, announced Friday that the company will build a new 250,000 square foot building to join its two existing facilities in the Clinton/I-75 Industrial Park, a Select Tennessee Certified Site. The South Korean automotive parts manufacturer will invest $80.5 million and create 1,000 new jobs in Anderson County. Located in Clinton since 2001, this will be the company’s fifth expansion.

“I want to congratulate SL Tennessee on its latest expansion and thank the company for the 1,000 new jobs created in Clinton,” Haslam said. “SL Tennessee has been an outstanding corporate citizen in Anderson County for nearly 15 years, and we are grateful to the company for bringing us one step closer to our goal of making Tennessee the No. 1 location in the Southeast for high quality jobs.”

“Tennessee has the greatest concentration of automotive industry employment in the South and with the addition of 1,000 new jobs from today’s announcement, we continue to build on this momentum,” Hagerty said. “Upon completion of this project, SL Tennessee will more than double its workforce, making it the largest employer in Clinton and one of the largest in Anderson County. I appreciate SL Tennessee’s continued investment in our state and for providing quality jobs to our citizens.”

This is the second 1,000 plus jobs announcement in the past two weeks in the automotive sector. Last week, Volkswagen announced a $600 million investment in Tennessee and 2,000 new jobs being created in Chattanooga. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Anderson County, Business, Clinton, Clinton, Government, State, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County Economic Development Association, automotive parts, Bill Hagerty, Clinton, Clinton I-75 Industrial Park, Clinton Utilities Board, Economic and Community Development, Gov. Bill Haslam, jobs, John Bradley, Scott Burton, SL Corporation, SL Tennessee, Tennessee, Tennessee Department of Economic and Community Development, Tennessee Valley Authority, Terry Frank, TVA, Volkswagen, Y.K. Woo

Guest column: Anderson communications center very busy during Tuesday storm

Posted at 11:31 am June 15, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Anderson County Commission and Mark Lucas

Anderson County Sheriff’s Department Chief Deputy Mark Lucas is pictured above at right during a special County Commission meeting in November. Also pictured are Anderson County Commissioners Rick Meredith, center, and Jerry White.

To All:

(Tuesday) evening was very, very busy. From 3 p.m. until 11 p.m., our communications center received 589 telephone calls, of which 143 were on 911. The overwhelming number of calls were between 5 p.m. and 7 p.m., when 365 calls came to our dispatch center. Of these 365 calls, 109 were on 911.

Comparing to last Tuesday from 3 p.m. until 11 p.m., we received 156 total telephone calls, of which 20 were on 911. The two-hour period from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. last week was only 41 total calls, of which five were on 911.

For the entire shift from 3 p.m. until 11 p.m., that was a 288 percent increase. For the two hours from 5 p.m. until 7 p.m., the increase was 790 percent.

We had four communications officers working (Tuesday) when the storm hit. A fifth came into work on her own to help out. Many of these 911 and non-emergency calls required dispatching of emergency personnel from law enforcement, fire, or EMS. Others required notifications to the state and county highway departments and the utility companies. It was non-stop for hours. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Guest Columns, Opinion, Police and Fire, Weather Tagged With: 911, Anderson County, Anderson County EMS, Anderson County Highway Department, Anderson County Sheriff's Department, Clinton, Clinton Utilities Board, communications center, dispatch, emergency personnel, EMS, fire, Lake City, law enforcement, Mark Lucas, non-emergency calls, Norris, Oak Ridge, Oliver Springs, rescue squad, Sheriff's Communications Center, storm, telephone calls, Tennessee Department of Transportation, Tuesday storm, volunteer fire departments

WYSH: Storm damage follow-up; EF0 tornado confirmed in Kingston

Posted at 1:32 pm June 12, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Mike Marsh Home Storm Damage

One of several pictures showing the storm damage Tuesday to the home of Mike and Wanda Marsh on Timbercrest Drive in Oak Ridge. (Photo courtesy Mike Marsh)

 

Information from WYSH Radio

The National Weather Service has confirmed the powerful storms that rolled through the area on Tuesday included an embedded tornado in Kingston.

Officials with the NWS office in Morristown assessed the damage and said an EF-0 tornado touched down along 3rd Street in Kingston. The winds of an EF-0 tornado are around 65-85 miles per hour.

The NWS said the widespread damage throughout East Tennessee was almost entirely from straight-line winds and down-bursts. Kingston is the only site suspected of sustaining tornado damage.

The Weather Service says straight-line winds estimated at 80 mph packed a destructive punch in Clinton, which appeared to bear the brunt of the damage from Tuesday’s severe weather. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Top Stories, Weather Tagged With: Clinton, Clinton High School, Clinton Utilities Board, damage, down-bursts, EF-0, electricity, Hoskins Drug Store, Jack Suggs, Kingston, National Weather Service, Norris, Norris Road, NWS, outages, Pass Time Garage, power, storms, straight-line winds, tornado, tornado damage

Oak Ridge: 4,000 lose power, 70 homes damaged

Posted at 1:05 pm June 11, 2014
By John Huotari 1 Comment

Wadsworth Circle Home Tree

One of two trees that fell on a home on West Wadsworth Circle. The second tree, visible on the ground in the background, punched a hole in the roof and displaced a mother, grandmother, and two children.

 

Note: This story was last updated at 2:40 p.m.

Roughly 4,000 customers lost power in the Tuesday evening storm, and about 70 damaged homes will require repairs by an electrician before power can be restored, an Oak Ridge official said Wednesday morning.

Oak Ridge Electric Director Jack Suggs said he doesn’t recall ever having 70 homes damaged in one storm, although the Electric Department has experienced worse storms when many utility poles were broken. But the brief, fierce Tuesday storm, which brought severe winds and driving rain, was significant in terms of its damage to homes and its far-reaching nature, from Blair Road on the west end of town to east Oak Ridge and beyond—into Clinton and Anderson County, Suggs said.

“It was pretty widespread,” Suggs said.

Janet Bowker on Plymouth Circle and Storm Debris

Janet Bowker, left, walks through debris on Plymouth Circle in front of her home, where a tree fell into her bedroom during the Tuesday evening storm. Her home is at right but not visible in this picture. There were no injuries, but Bowker does not have power now.

 

The storm, which ripped through Oak Ridge at about 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, left a trail of debris: scattered branches and limbs, broken trees, fallen power lines, and damaged buildings and homes. It also triggered a flood of calls to the city’s 911 call dispatch center.

About 500 customers remained without power around noon Wednesday, including the 70 damaged homes. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Government, Oak Ridge, Slider, Top Stories, Weather, Weather Tagged With: Anderson County, BBB-TV, Clinton, Clinton Utilities Board, CUB, damaged homes, Dustin Byrd, electricity, Highland View, Hunter Circle, Jack Suggs, Janet Bowker, Kingston, Lake City Highway, National Weather Service, NWS, Oak Ridge Electric Department, Passtime Garage, Plymouth Circle, power, power lines, rain, repairs, Roane County, severe winds, storm, Wadsworth Circle, WYSH Radio

Storm damages buildings, knocks down trees, knocks out power

Posted at 9:20 pm June 10, 2014
By John Huotari 1 Comment

Passtime Garage Storm Damage

Passtime Garage on South Main Street in Clinton was damaged by a fast-moving storm and severe winds early Tuesday evening. (Photo courtesy WYSH Radio/WGAP Radio)

 

Note: This story was last updated at 12:15 a.m. June 11.

There are reports of trees and power lines down throughout Anderson County, and some roads are still blocked after a fast-moving storm ripped through East Tennessee, authorities said early Tuesday evening.

There have been reports of trees that have fallen on homes, but so far no injuries have been reported.

Tractor Trailer Blown Over near Lake City

A tractor-trailer was reported to have been blown over on Lake City Highway. (Photo courtesy WYSH Radio/WGAP Radio)

The short, fierce storm whipped through Oak Ridge and Anderson County with severe winds and driving rain at about 5:30 p.m. Tuesday. It left a path of debris: scattered branches and limbs, broken trees, fallen power lines, and damaged buildings and homes. The Anderson County Sheriff’s Department said there was a semi truck and trailer that apparently was blown over by high winds on Lake City Highway at Old Lake City Highway.

“It has now been removed and the roadway is open,” the Sheriff’s Department said early Tuesday night. The Tennessee Highway Patrol is investigating the crash.

At about 8:30 p.m., the Clinton Utilities Board reported that 6,173 customers had been affected by the storm, and 4,068 were still without power. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Oak Ridge, Police and Fire, Slider, Top Stories, Weather Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County Sheriff's Department, Clinton Utilities Board, East Tennessee, Lake City Highway, Oak Ridge, power lines, storm, trees

Most snow in about 15 years, Weather Service says

Posted at 12:43 pm February 13, 2014
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Snowman at Blankenship Field

Kids build a snowman at Blankenship Field on Thursday morning after more than eight inches of snow fell in Oak Ridge. From left are Killian Fillmore, Andrew Bivens, Gavin Hensley, and Liam Hensley.

Note: This story was last updated at 5:02 p.m. with more photos.

More than eight inches of snow fell in parts of Oak Ridge between Wednesday night and Thursday morning as a major winter storm hit the Southeast, and there were reports of as much as 10 to 12 inches in parts of Anderson County. A meteorologist at the National Weather Service in Morristown said it’s the most snow in East Tennessee in more than a decade.

“It’s been about 15 years since we’ve had a snow like this,” NWS Meteorologist David Hotz said. “This is definitely one of the best ones we’ve had in quite a while.”

The last snowfall of a similar magnitude that he could recall was in either 1998 or 1999.

Other big snowfalls include the historic 1993 storm and a winter storm in 1996 that dumped 15 to 17 inches.

More than eight inches of snow fell in parts of Oak Ridge between Wednesday night and Thursday morning, and there were reports of as much as 10 to 12 inches in parts of Anderson County. A meteorologist at the National Weather Service in Morristown said it's the most snow in East Tennessee in more than a decade.  "It's been about 15 years since we've had a snow like this," NWS Meteorologist David Hotz said. “This is definitely one of the best ones we’ve had in quite a while.”  The last snowfall of a similar magnitude that he could recall was in either 1998 or 1999.  Other big snowfalls include the historic 1993 storm and a 1996 storm that dumped 15 to 17 inches.  The wet, heavy snow that started falling in Oak Ridge at about 7 p.m. Wednesday—it was the second round of snow that day—continued into Thursday morning. But with temperatures rising Thursday morning and the sun coming out, much of the snow was quickly melting.  Still, many roads, particularly side streets, still had slush on them, and there were a few slippery spots.  Crews from the Oak Ridge Public Works Department worked all day Wednesday, through the night, and into Thursday morning. They put down two layers of brine, or highly salted water, before the snow started and switched to salt trucks and snow plows once the snow started falling.  Public Works Department Gary Cinder said there were no major problems.  “It’s been a calm event," Cinder said. "It was a heavy snow. It was deep enough that we could push it, and it was wet enough that it would slide easily. It wasn’t sticking because of the brine.”  It might have helped that many people stayed off the roads as many offices, schools, and businesses closed early on Wednesday—if they hadn't already been closed for the day—and remained closed on Thursday.  Cinder said the Public Works Department was able to keep the main streets relatively clear. At times, the snow was heavy enough, though, that the snow was recovering roads that crews had already plowed.  “A lot of times, they just had to go back and forth," Cinder said.  Cinder said there were a few trees down and a few isolated power outages.  In Anderson County, Sheriff's Department Chief Deputy Mark Lucas said the Tennessee Department of Transportation and the Anderson County Highway Department were working to clear the snow, but roads remained hazardous.  "Travel is not advised," Lucas said in a Thursday morning e-mail. "We had several reports of minor accidents with cars off in the ditch or stuck in the snow, but since the snow didn't begin to fall until the evening hours, traffic was light. There also have been a few trees down as well."  Lucas said there were also some power outages overnight, but it appeared that the Clinton Utilities Board had most of those restored except for a few isolated areas.  He advised residents to check with CUB for details and said power outages can be viewed at http://outage.clintonub.com.  Deputies went to their "snow plan" Wednesday evening and are patrolling the county in four-wheel-drive vehicles.  "We are responding only to accidents with injury or those that are a significant traffic hazard," Lucas said.  Cinder said Oak Ridge has eight trucks outfitted with snow plows in the front and salt spreaders in the back. The city has two bins that, when fully loaded, can store 2,400 tons of salt. Oak Ridge has plenty of salt for the rest of the winter, he said.  There about 220 miles of roads in Oak Ridge and crews focus first on main streets and state routes such as Illinois Avenue and Oak Ridge Turnpike, then collector city streets such as Pennsylvania, Georgia, and Florida avenues, and then neighborhood side—if the snow lasts long enough and is heavy enough. The number of lane miles that crews have to take care of is double the road mileage because crews have to go up streets in one lane and then back down them in another.  Hotz, the meteorologist, said water on East Tennessee roads could re-freeze tonight as the temperature drops into the 20s and that could cause problems, including black ice, especially on secondary streets that still have slush. Drivers should use caution when driving tonight, especially on secondary streets, although well-traveled roads and interstates should be in good shape, Hotz said.  He said there could be another smaller storm system late Friday and Friday night. It could start with rain that changes over to snow, and there could be some light accumulations in East Tennessee valleys, but more snow is expected in the mountains, Hotz said.  The temperature is expected to warm back up into the 50s and lower 60s next week, Hotz said.

Crews from the Oak Ridge Public Works Department worked all day Wednesday and through the night into Thursday to clear roads, including South Illinois Avenue, as more than eight inches of snow fell in parts of the city.

The wet, heavy snow that started falling in Oak Ridge at about 7 p.m. Wednesday—it was the second round of snow that day—continued into Thursday morning. But with temperatures rising Thursday morning and the sun coming out, much of the snow was quickly melting.

Still, many roads, particularly side streets, still had slush on them, and there were a few slippery spots.

Crews from the Oak Ridge Public Works Department worked all day Wednesday, through the night, and into Thursday morning. They put down two layers of brine, or highly salted water, before the snow started and switched to salt trucks and snow plows once the snow started falling.

Public Works Department Gary Cinder said there were no major problems. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Government, Oak Ridge, Police and Fire, Slider, Top Stories, Weather, Weather Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County Highway Department, Anderson County Sheriff's Department, Clinton Utilities Board, David Hotz, East Tennessee, Gary Cinder, Mark Lucas, National Weather Service, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge Public Works Department, salt trucks, snow, snow plows, snowfall, Tennessee Department of Transportation, winter storm

Guest column: Emergency management director responds to question about drinking water safety

Posted at 6:43 pm February 7, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns Leave a Comment

Note: Anderson County Emergency Management Director Steve Payne recently responded to a citizens’ question about safety measures the county has in place to protect drinking water in the event of a hazardous situation like that which recently occurred in West Virginia. Here’s Payne’s response, which was forwarded by the County Mayor’s Office, which had initially received the question.

Dear Mayor Frank,

Please forward to the citizen who asked:

What safety measures does Anderson County have in place to protect citizens’ drinking water in the event of a hazardous situation like that which occurred recently in West Virginia?

Anderson County is home to some 50 facilities that manufacture, process, store, or utilize quantities of hazardous radiological or chemical materials. The majority of these facilities are located in industrial parks in the county and cities of Oak Ridge, Clinton, and Lake City.

Facilities with quantities of hazardous materials that meet or exceed threshold levels established by the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) are required by federal law to file each year a Tier 2 Report stating the material(s) and quantity on site. In addition to the name and quantity of each material, the report includes Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS), a site map showing location of material, type of storage container, type of storage conditions, and description of dikes, holding basins, and other safeguard measures. Tier 2 reports received in 2013 from private, non-DOE facilities identify 42 separate hazardous materials. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns Tagged With: Anderson County Basic Emergency Operations Plan, Anderson County EMA, Anderson County Emergency Management, Anderson County Emergency Management Agency, Anderson County Local Emergency Planning Committee, Anderson County Water Authority, Bacon Springs, BEOP, chemical materials, Clinch River, Clinton, Clinton Utilities Board, DOE, drinking water, drinking water safety, EMA, Hallsdale-Powell Utility District, hazardous, hazardous materials, Lake City, LEPC, Lin Chilcoat, Lower Clear Creek, Material Safety Data Sheet, MSDS, Norris, Oak Ridge, Oliver Springs Water Department, OSHA, radiological materials, safety, SERC, State Emergency Response Commission, Steve Payne, Terry Frank, Tier 2 report, U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration

Aisin auto casting announces $53.8 million expansion in Clinton

Posted at 10:27 am December 17, 2013
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

An auto parts manufacturer in Clinton has announced a second major expansion, a $53.8 million investment expected to create 81 new jobs during the next two years.

The investment was announced Tuesday by Tennessee Economic and Community Development Commissioner Bill Hagerty and executives from Aisin Holdings of America Inc.

The company’s subsidiary in Clinton is called Aisin Automotive Casting Tennessee, and it’s located along Frank L. Diggs Drive south of State Route 61 and just west of Interstate 75. It’s the company’s second major business expansion since locating in Tennessee in 2004. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Business, Clinton, Government, State, Top Stories Tagged With: Aisin Automotive Casting Tennessee, Aisin Holdings of America Inc., Anderson County Economic Development Association, auto manufacturers, auto parts, Bill Hagerty, Clinton, Clinton Utilities Board, expansion, Frank L. Diggs Drive, General Motors, Interstate 75 Industrial Park, John Bradley, Nissan, Scott Burton, Stephen Barnes, Tennessee, Tennessee Economic and Community Developmen, Tennessee Valley Authority, Terry Frank, Toyota, TVA

Utility scam warning for businesses

Posted at 11:38 am September 16, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

WYSH Radio in Clinton had a scam warning on Monday for businesses who are also customers of Clinton Utilities Board.

Earlier this month, a CUB official notified the Clinton Police Department that three businesses had contacted the utility reporting that they had received phone calls from two different numbers in which the caller told them that they were with the “CUB Disconnect Office” and that they were behind on their bills. In each case, the caller told the business that their service would be disconnected if payment was not made immediately and then provided instructions on how to wire the money through a money service from Walmart or Kmart. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, Clinton, Clinton, Government, Top Stories Tagged With: bills, Clinton Police Department, Clinton Utilities Board, CUB, payment, scam, utility, utility scam

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

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