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Letter: Urge City Council, residents to invest in schools

Posted at 5:49 am June 14, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Letters 28 Comments

Dear members of City Council and fellow citizens:

We are writing this letter in response to the Fiscal Year 2015 budget decisions made during the June 9 Oak Ridge City Council meeting. The Council’s overwhelming vote to maintain property tax rates at the same rate they have held steady at since 2009 may bode well for the short-term pocketbooks of our residents, but the long-term results are disconcerting and disheartening for many.

City Council is alienating the tax base that it needs to nurture. The young professionals, business owners, and families with school-aged children who once flocked to this city but now trickle must be heard by Council. These families have the disposable income to spend in Oak Ridge stores, and will pay the property taxes for decades to come that will keep this city viable. Yet at this Council meeting, our voices were not truly heard.

The argument that we continue to hear is that “our schools have plenty of money” and that the schools “need to learn to live within their budget.” The Oak Ridge Schools have proven that they can do this, but what is the cost of this attitude? How does this foster a strong relationship with not only the schools and their employees, but the families and students? How can the Schools continue to maintain excellence without, at the very least, inflationary and cost of living increases, when really it takes much more? [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, K-12, Letters, Opinion Tagged With: Board of Education, Bruce Borchers, budget, digital devices, Donna Butcher, education system, expenses, Fernanda Foertter, Fiscal Year 2015, funding, Greg Foertter, Jutta Bangs, Mike Mahathy, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Schools, property tax increase, property tax rates, property taxes, school board, schools, tax base

In first vote this month, Council rejects schools request for tax increase

Posted at 9:37 pm June 9, 2014
By John Huotari 7 Comments

Oak Ridge City Council Budget Meeting

The Oak Ridge City Council rejected the school system’s request for a 37-cent tax rate increase on Monday, instead voting in the first of two votes this month to keep the tax rate steady for the seventh year in a row.

Note: This story was last updated at 9:55 a.m. June 10.

In the first of two votes this month, the Oak Ridge City Council on Monday rejected a request from school officials for a 37-cent tax rate increase that would, among other things, help fund a technology initiative meant to eventually provide an electronic learning device or tablet to all students.

Council member Charlie Hensley said the tax increase would be the largest in the city’s history, and it came in late in the budget process.

The property tax rate is now $2.39 per $100 of assessed value. The increase would push it to $2.76, and it could cost the owner of a $200,000 home another $15 per month.

“I was looking to support a tax increase, but the one that we got asked for is really, really high,” Hensley said.

There was a two-part vote on the budget on Monday. The first reduced the amount transferred to the schools to roughly $14.6 million, which was about $3.3 million less than the school board had requested, and it kept the tax rate steady for the seventh year in a row. The vote on that amendment was 5-2, with Hensley and Council member Chuck Hope voting no. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Government, Government, K-12, Oak Ridge, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: 1:1, 1:1 initiative, Anne Garcia Garland, Bob Eby, Charlie Hensley, Chris Johnson, Chuck Hope, fireworks, funding, Keys Fillauer, Mark Watson, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Convention and Visitors Bureau, property tax rate, school budget, Secret City Sounds, tax increase, tax rate increase, technology initiative, Trina Baughn

Guest column: Tax hike will hurt city’s ability to recruit DOE workers

Posted at 6:26 pm June 4, 2014
By Martin McBride 8 Comments

The Oak Ridge Schools are requesting a substantial property tax increase to fund items they see as essential to their future.

Yet an Oak Ridge tax hike will markedly reduce our city’s ability to recruit new U.S. Department of Energy workers. According to the latest DOE report, Anderson County is losing over $300,000 per week to Knox County in DOE payroll. That loss rate is increasing, and a tax hike would make this serious problem worse.

Unfortunately, our city has a DOE “isolation fence” around it. In most cases, new workers are sent by the DOE system directly to Knox County—mainly to Farragut. And as a result, their important housing decisions are made without talking to an Oak Ridge realtor. They never get an opportunity to find out how wonderful it is to live here.

The new Kroger store won’t affect this uneven playing field. A property tax hike (of any size) will simply make the problem worse—giving Farragut an even greater advantage over us. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns, Opinion Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County Commission, City Council, DOE, DOE workforce, Farragut, funding, housing, Knox County, Kroger, Martin McBride, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge Schools, payroll, property tax increase, realtor, tak hike, tax rate, U.S. Department of Energy

Letter: Will not vote for tax increase, wants better communication with schools

Posted at 9:04 pm June 2, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Letters 20 Comments

Note: This is a copy of a June 2 letter from Oak Ridge City Council member Anne Garcia Garland to Parker Hardy and members of the Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce. 

Dear Chamber:

The Oak Ridge City Council has always supported the needs and beyond of the city school system. This current council has lived in that tradition. We honor and appreciate our students and our teachers and have voted to provide whatever can reasonably be provided. We have also weathered the annual School Board predictions of educational catastrophe if the increased budget projections are not allocated.

This town depends upon the base of education and economic largesse of its original homeowners at the beginning of the 1950s for its sense of pride and place in academia. It is, however, that early well-being and the growth and optimism of the early post-war years which have created a myth of extraordinary wealth and erudition with which we are burdened today. Our reality is that we are a lovely small Southern town with great diversity of education, income, and opinion. We are neither young nor old, rich nor poor, progressive nor conservative. We are all of these descriptions and many between.

This town created a wonderful culture and honored its natural environment in such an outstanding manner that it has attracted citizens from neighboring counties to live and work here. Perhaps because we did not have a large stock of new or above-average priced homes, we have not attracted a large number of the professional transferees to the federal facilities in the past couple decades. After all, “youngish” professionals selling homes in more expensive markets need the tax protection of buying comparably priced homes in this area. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, K-12, Letters, Opinion Tagged With: Anne Garcia Garland, City Council, education, funding, homes, housing, Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce, Oak Ridge City Council, Parker Hardy, property tax rate, property taxes, school board, school system, STEM school district, tax increase, workers

Guest column: Oak Ridge Chamber endorses schools’ funding request

Posted at 3:27 pm May 30, 2014
By Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce 5 Comments

Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce

The Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce is pictured above.

Note: This is a copy of a May 30 letter sent to Oak Ridge Mayor Tom Beehan and members of City Council.

Mayor Beehan and members of Council:

The Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce has a long-standing tradition of supporting education in our community.

Education is critical in the development of the workforce and is the foundation for a community’s economic vitality.

Our Oak Ridge Schools is an internationally recognized system of excellence and is known for being a leader in new, innovative programs. These educational opportunities, rigor, and performance provided by Oak Ridge Schools have been, and continue to be, the key attraction for new residents to our community. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Government, Guest Columns, K-12, Oak Ridge, Opinion Tagged With: budget, budget request, Chris Johnson, education, financial resources, funding, Keys to College and Career Readiness, Melinda Hillman, Oak Ridge Chamber, Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Schools, Parker Hardy, property tax increase, residents, school funding, STEM, STEM school district, Tom Beehan, workforce

Guest column: 2015 school budget considerations

Posted at 10:34 am May 27, 2014
By Trina Baughn 2 Comments

Trina Baughn

Trina Baughn

I have reviewed your budget proposals and would like to share my thoughts for consideration in your final deliberations. I should clarify that because our charter forbids City Council, as a body, from “modifying or deleting any item in school estimates,” my statements do not reflect the opinions of my fellow council members.

As you know, we are blessed to live in a community that actively and generously supports education. Not only do we rank fifth in the state for our level of local funding (54 percent), but, at $12,075 per pupil, we continue to outspend the state average of $9,293 and the national average of $11,068.

Our generosity, however, has taken a toll that we can no longer ignore. Having the third highest tax rate ($4.74) in the area has been counterproductive to attracting new residents. One need only look to the phenomenal growth in Farragut, whose property tax rate is less than half of ours ($2.32), to appreciate the negative impact of our high taxes. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns, Opinion Tagged With: budget, budget presentation, City Council, cuts, education, funding, graduation rate, Maryville, spending, tax rate, teacher salaries, Trina Baughn

Anderson Schools rejects Oak Ridge Head Start application over false federal data

Posted at 7:26 pm April 21, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff 14 Comments

Larry Foster

Larry Foster

Note: This story was last updated at 8:35 p.m.

Anderson County Schools director optimistic that resolution will be reached

By John Huotari and Sara Wise

They had concerns about the alleged falsification of federal documents that contained data on motor skills of children, so Anderson County school officials rejected Oak Ridge’s application for Head Start funding in the 2014-2015 school year.

The decision could affect roughly $700,000 in funding, or enough to cover about 118 students in the Oak Ridge Head Start program, a federal entitlement program for low-income children. Anderson County Schools supervises the local Head Start program.

But Anderson County Schools Director Larry Foster said the county school board’s unanimous April 10 decision could be rescinded based upon collaboration between the two school systems. Representatives of the two systems have already had discussions, and school board chairs are expected to discuss what can be done to resolve funding for next year.

“Hopefully, this can be resolved,” Foster said during a brief break in a Monday morning Anderson County Commission meeting in Clinton. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, K-12, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County Board of Education, Anderson County Schools, audit, auditors, Bruce Borchers, Charlsey Cofer, children, Christine Marie Blackburn, funding, gross motor skills data, Head Start, Head Start funding, irregularities, Larry Foster, Melinda White, motor skills, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge Head Start, Oak Ridge Preschool, Oak Ridge Schools, school board

Anderson County receives $64,600 in funding to reduce tobacco use

Posted at 1:46 pm April 16, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Tennessee Commissioner and Anti-Tobacco at Anderson County Health Department

Anderson County has received almost $65,000 in funds to support initiatives that reduce tobacco use. Local officials recently received the check from Tennessee Health Commissioner John Dreyzehner. (Photo Courtesy of Anderson County Health Department)

CLINTON—Tennessee Health Commissioner John Dreyzehner visited the Anderson County Health Department on Friday to present $64,600 in funding as part of the Tennessee Tobacco Settlement Program.

Dreyzehner was in East Tennessee last week to present tobacco settlement checks to the Roane County Health Department ($38,860) and the Loudon County Health Department ($38,103) as well as the check to Anderson County.

Each county in Tennessee will receive funding annually during the three-year program to reduce the burden of tobacco use in the state.

Locally, the Anderson County Health Department is using the funds to support a new “Baby and Me—Tobacco Free” program as well as a partnership with Allies for Substance Abuse Prevention (ASAP) of Anderson County and the Coordinated School Health programs in each of the three school systems in Anderson County. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Government, Health, State, Top Stories Tagged With: Allies for Substance Abuse Prevention of Anderson County, Anderson County Health Department, Art Miller, ASAP, Baby and Me—Tobacco Free, Bill Haslam, Coordinated School Health, funding, I Choose Not to Use, Janet Ridley, John Dreyzehner, John Ragan, Loudon County Health Department, Roane County Health Department, Stephanie Strutner, Tennessee Department of Health, Tennessee Tobacco Settlement Program, Terry Frank, tobacco, tobacco use, Youth Coalition, youth tobacco use

K-25: Large, flat, close to ORNL, interstate—good for economic development

Posted at 7:14 pm March 28, 2014
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Gov. Bill Haslam Visits ETTP/K-25

Sue Cange gives Gov. Bill Haslam, right, an update on the almost-completed demolition of the mile-long, U-shaped K-25 Building. Cange is deputy manager of the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Environmental Management. Also pictured are Leo Sain, left, president of cleanup contractor UCOR, and Jeff Tucker, UCOR deactivation and decommissioning manager.

It was built during World War II to help enrich uranium for the world’s first atomic bombs. Then, it helped win the Cold War. Now, the former K-25 site in west Oak Ridge presents a giant opportunity for economic development in Tennessee, Gov. Bill Haslam said during a tour last Friday.

“We have a real interest in what happens here,” Haslam said in a short meeting with reporters before getting a brief update on the demolition of the former mile-long, U-shaped K-25 Building, which was once the world’s largest building under one roof.

The governor said the K-25 site, now known as East Tennessee Technology Park or Heritage Center, has 2,000 flat acres with infrastructure already in place, including roads and rails, and it’s three miles from Interstate 40 and seven miles from Oak Ridge National Laboratory, the U.S. Department of Energy’s largest science and energy laboratory.

“We don’t have that opportunity in a lot of places,” Haslam said. “Finding 2,000 flat acres in East Tennessee is virtually impossible.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, East Tennessee Technology Park, Government, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge Office, Roane County, State, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: auto manufacturing, Bill Haslam, business, cleanup, Darryl Kerley, East Tennessee Technology Park, Ernest Moniz, ETTP, funding, Heritage Center, John Ragan, K-25, K-25 Building, Ken Yager, Kent Calfee, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ORNL, Randy McNally, Ron Woody, Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation, Tom Beehan, transportation, U.S. Department of Energy, uranium, World War II

Low bid on Blankenship bleachers: $524,000

Posted at 2:51 pm March 22, 2014
By John Huotari 2 Comments

Blankenship Field Visitors Bleachers

Deemed to be unsafe, the visitors bleachers at Blankenship Field have been removed, and replacing them could cost more than $500,000.

The low bid on the bleacher replacement project at Blankenship Field came in at $523,940, a school official said Friday.

The bid on the project to replace the demolished visitor bleachers includes grading work and a handicap sidewalk at Jack Armstrong Stadium. Proposals were accepted through Friday. The recommended proposal from Dant Clayton Corp. of Louisville, Ky., will be considered by the Oak Ridge Board of Education on Monday.

Allen Thacker, Oak Ridge Schools maintenance and operations supervisor, said the project could cost another $40,000 if the Wildcat Crossing stairs on the home side of the field are reconditioned. That would make the total cost $563,940. It was the lowest of two qualified bids.

Thacker said funding for the project has not yet been identified. It’s been discussed at several recent meetings of the Oak Ridge City Council and Board of Education. Municipal and education officials have said options include city funding, school funding, a mix of the two, and donations. Earlier this month, School Board Chair Keys Fillauer told City Council that a funding decision could be made Monday. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, High School, K-12, Middle School, Slider, Sports, Sports, Top Stories Tagged With: Allen Thacker, bids, Blankenship Field, Blankenship Revitalization Committee, bleacher replacement, Dant Clayton Corp., funding, Jack Armstrong Stadium, Keys Fillauer, Mike Mullins, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Schools, visitor bleachers, Wildcat Crossing

Schools seek bids to replace demolished Blankenship bleachers

Posted at 11:20 am March 8, 2014
By John Huotari 1 Comment

Blankenship Field Visitors Bleachers

Declared unsafe, the visitors bleachers at Blankenship Field have been removed, and the project to replace them has been put out for bids.

The visitors bleachers at Blankenship Field have been demolished, and the Oak Ridge Schools are scurrying to replace them by the start of the high school football season this fall.

Project bids are being accepted through March 21, although it’s not clear yet who will pay for the new bleachers and other improvements at Jack Armstrong Stadium. The bids could be considered by the Oak Ridge Board of Education on March 24.

The board could also make a funding decision then, School Board Chair Keys Fillauer told Oak Ridge City Council members during a Monday night meeting. There are a range of options that include city funding, school funding, and donations, among others. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Education, Government, High School, K-12, Middle School, Oak Ridge, Slider, Sports, Top Stories Tagged With: Allen Thacker, Blankenship Field, Blankenship Revitalization Committee, bleachers, Boosters Club, funding, Jack Armstrong Stadium, Joe Gaddis, Keys Fillauer, MBI Architecture, Mike Mullins, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge High School Athletic Department, Oak Ridge Schools, petition, Rick Chinn, Tim Waddell, visitors bleachers, Wildcat Crossing

Education Foundation accepting applications for international study scholarship

Posted at 9:33 am February 5, 2014
By Oak Ridge Public Schools Education Foundation Leave a Comment

The Oak Ridge Public Schools Education Foundation is accepting applications now from students for the Dr. Adrian R. Lawler Exchange Student Scholarship, offering students attending Oak Ridge public schools or recent graduates support for participating in international study programs.

Lawler, an Oak Ridge High School graduate who was the second student here to participate in an American Field Service international exchange program, established the scholarship to offer students opportunities to gain tolerance and understanding of people from other cultures through international study programs.

Lawler, who died more than a year ago, was a retired marine scientist living in Mississippi when he designated the Oak Ridge Public Schools Education Foundation to administer the scholarship with a five-member scholarship committee. The foundation awarded the first two Lawler scholarships in 2008 to college students who were participating in international study programs.

The deadline for submitting the application is March 7, 2014. Applications may be picked up at the Oak Ridge High School counseling office. Applicants may also call Jenna Whitney, executive director of the Oak Ridge Public Schools Education Foundation, at (865) 241-3667, or e-mail her at [email protected] to request an application. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Front Page News, K-12 Tagged With: Adrian R. Lawler, Dr. Adrian R. Lawler Exchange Student Scholarship, funding, international studies, international study scholarship, Jenna Whitney, Lawler scholarships, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge High School, Oak Ridge Public Schools Education Foundation, ORHS, ORPSEF, scholarship, schools

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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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