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Free government contracting seminar on Thursday

Posted at 1:15 pm February 14, 2018
By Jutta Bangs Leave a Comment

The Tennessee Small Business Development Center at Roane State Community College and the University of Tennessee-PTAC will offer a free seminar to introduce business owners or managers to the diversity of government purchasing on Thursday.

The seminar is scheduled from 9 a.m. to noon Thursday, February 15, at the Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce, which is at 1400 Oak Ridge Turnpike.

There is no cost to attend, but registration is required. Call (865) 483-2668 or email [email protected].

This press release was submitted by Jutta Bangs.

Filed Under: Business, Front Page News Tagged With: contracting, free, government, Roane State, small business, Tennessee Small Business Development Center

Seminar on how to do business with the government

Posted at 10:12 pm March 18, 2017
By Jutta Bangs Leave a Comment

The Tennessee Small Business Development Center at Roane State Community College is offering a free seminar on how to do business with the government.

The seminar is from 9 a.m. to noon April 4 at the Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce at 1400 Oak Ridge Turnpike.

To register, call (865) 483-2668 or send an email to [email protected].

Filed Under: Business, Front Page News Tagged With: contracting, entrepreneur, government, Roane State Community College, small business, Tennessee Small Business Development Center

Free seminar on government contracting, GSA schedule

Posted at 10:05 pm March 18, 2017
By Jutta Bangs Leave a Comment

The Tennessee Small Business Development Center at Roane State Community College is offering a free seminar on how to get on the GSA Schedule to do business with the government.

The seminar is from 1-4 p.m. April 4 at the Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce at 1400 Oak Ridge Turnpike.

To register, call (865) 483-2668 or send an email to [email protected].

Filed Under: Business, Front Page News Tagged With: contracting, government, GSA, Roane State Community College, seminar, small business, Tennessee Small Business Development Center, training, workshop

DeVol to discuss getting ‘better control’ of AC government on Tuesday

Posted at 1:35 pm September 7, 2015
By Oak Ridge Today Staff 1 Comment

Mark DeVol

Mark DeVol

Getting “better control” of Anderson County government will be the focus of an Anderson County Tea Party meeting on Tuesday, a press release said.

Mark DeVol will be the featured speaker.

The monthly meeting is scheduled to start at 7 p.m. Tuesday, September 8, at the Clinton Church of God at 635 Hillcrest Street in Clinton. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Front Page News, Government, Meetings and Events Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County Tea Party, Clinton Church of God, government, Mark DeVol

Alexander: Spending bill includes $440 million for ORNL supercomputer, UPF at Y-12

Posted at 11:55 pm December 13, 2014
By John Huotari 1 Comment

U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander

Lamar Alexander

The $1 trillion spending bill passed by the Senate on Saturday night includes more than $400 million in funding to support two Oak Ridge projects—building the world’s fastest supercomputer at Oak Ridge National Laboratory and the Uranium Processing Facility at the Y-12 National Security Complex, U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander said.

The appropriations legislation avoids a government shutdown and funds most of the government through September. The Senate approved it in a bipartisan 56-40 vote, and it now goes to President Barack Obama, who is expected to sign it into law.

The spending bill cleared the House on Thursday. Liberals sought to strip out a policy provision that eases a Wall Street regulation, and conservatives tried to slow action on immigration. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Federal, Government, National Nuclear Security Administration, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy, Y-12 National Security Complex Tagged With: appropriations legislation, Appropriations Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development, Barack Obama, Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013, Budget Control Act of 2011, Congress, Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act, discretionary spending, Energy and Water Appropriations, Environmental Protection Agency, EPA House of Representatives, Ernest Moniz, government, House, illegal immigrants, Internal Revenue Service, IRS, Lamar Alexander, mandatory spending, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Omnibus, Red Team, spending bill, supercomputer, Thom Mason, Titan, U.S. Senate, uranium processing facility, Y-12 National Security Complex

Guest column: 2014—The year that Oak Ridgers take back their government

Posted at 12:57 pm October 12, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns 10 Comments

Trina Baughn

Trina Baughn

By Trina Baughn

Did you know that most of our local elections have historically been decided by less than 20 percent of our population? In fact, one of the biggest financial decisions ever made in our city’s history—the high school renovation project—was determined by only 11 percent (3,198) of our residents.

A number of factors have empowered the establishment for decades. If they have their way again this year, half of your elected officials will come from the most affluent neighborhoods in Oak Ridge, with half of them living on the very same street of McMansions! Given that the our average household income is $48,716, this is not even close to a true representation of the people in our community.

This year, though, the establishment is nervous and they should be for three very big reasons. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns, Opinion Tagged With: Board of Education, City Council, early voting, election, establishment, government, November 4, single shot, Single Shot Strategy, single shot vote, social media, Trina Baughn, vote

Letter: Chinn a hard worker with proven track record of dedication

Posted at 12:32 am October 6, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Letters 1 Comment

Mike Marsh

Mike Marsh

To the Editor:

Our city deserves a lot more attention from you and me than it usually gets. The mayor and City Council have substantial influence on our everyday lives, more than you would thank. The political decisions they make effect our neighborhoods and our private homes. Oak Ridge government has a responsibility to provide public safety and essential infrastructure along with fire, police protection along with many core services.

Now you might ask who’s best qualified to lead our city, a businessman or a politician. Norma Damashek wrote: “At its best, local government provides a stable, lawful, structured environment for the business sector. Commerce can thrive where government provides good infrastructure, education, health, transportation, and stability.

“And at its best, business provides the public sector with strong economic engines and technologic advances. Local governments can thrive when economic opportunities, options, and benefits are enhanced for city residents and workers.

“It’s called symbiosis—Wholesome cooperation between government and business. It’s not only desirable, it’s necessary since neither one does well in the absence of the other.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: Letters, Opinion Tagged With: business, government, Michael Marsh, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge City Council, Rick Chinn Jr.

Guest column: Burying the facts

Posted at 1:46 am July 19, 2014
By Leslie Agron 4 Comments

In his guest column on July 4, Tennessee Representative John Ragan requests us to cast our ballots to hold government accountable. This is an excellent idea!

Hidden in Mr. Ragan’s rhetoric about IRS tyranny is the underlying economic policy he espouses: the notion that cutting taxes will lead us to prosperity in all circumstances. Our nation’s experiment with that fanciful notion has been a miserable failure for the last 30 years, causing incredible hardship on our people. It is now overwhelmingly discredited by economists from both sides of the aisle.

Mr. Ragan would likely be good enough with mathematics to have studied economics, but he seems to not have done so. In fact, it appears he learned his economics, not from the best in the field, but from politicians and the media. This has been greatly to the detriment of Tennessee.

In his 400-word column about government, Mr. Ragan mentions God four times—lest anyone be in doubt about his theory of governance. Despite the fact he lives in Oak Ridge and must surely know that this region is blessed by the diverse people drawn here from around the world by the scientific facilities, he chooses to represent only those who share his exact beliefs. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns, Opinion Tagged With: Democratic primary, District 33, economic policy, economics, gays, government, John Ragan, lesbians, Leslie Agron, Misty Neergaard, taxes, Tennessee House of Representatives, write-in candidacy

Guest column: Burying mistakes

Posted at 11:28 am July 4, 2014
By John Ragan 1 Comment

John Ragan

John Ragan

Our founders boldly asserted in the Declaration of Independence that our nation should exist because the “Laws of Nature and Nature’s God” entitle it to exist. They further held the God who authored these natural laws endowed everyone with certain, self-evident rights.

By these concepts, every individual has the same God-given equality before the law. There can be none with special, legal “privileges” such as royalty or aristocracy. Likewise, there can be no serfs inherently lacking certain rights.

An even more radical concept in that document is that government exists to protect these God-given rights. Furthermore, our nation’s founding document maintains that governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed, thus are accountable to them.

In other words, our founders insisted that government must answer to its citizens, not the other way around. However, events recently in the popular press have called this concept into question. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Guest Columns, Opinion Tagged With: aristocracy, citizens, Declaration of Independence, electronic records, equal rights, equality, God, government, Internal Revenue Service, IRS, rights, serfs, tax collectors, Tea Party

2014 Election: Frank says she’s kept her promise; Bates wants to focus on retail, housing

Posted at 9:40 am May 5, 2014
By John Huotari 3 Comments

Terry Frank

Terry Frank

Zach Bates

Zach Bates

CLINTON—She says she’s kept her promise to protect Anderson County from higher taxes and worked to make government more efficient while improving customer service.

He says the county needs a more targeted approach to bringing in new retail and rebuilding the housing market.

The two candidates, incumbent Terry Frank and her challenger Zach Bates, face off in the Republican primary in Anderson County on Tuesday.

Frank was first elected in a special election in August 2012. She is the first female mayor of Anderson County and running for her first four-year term. She is completing the unexpired term of former mayor Rex Lynch, who resigned in January 2011.

Bates is a one-term Anderson County Commissioner who is not seeking re-election to that seat. [Read more…]

Filed Under: 2014 Election, Anderson County, Government, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County Commission, Bradley S. Rickett, debt rating, economic development, fund balance, general election, government, growth, housing, Jim Hackworth, jobs, mayor, Republican primary, reserves, retail, revenue, tax cut, taxes, Terry Frank, Zach Bates

Letter: Thanks for Christmas gifts for children through courthouse Angel Tree

Posted at 9:26 pm December 26, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Letters Leave a Comment

To the Editor:

Employees of Anderson County government, as well as many local families and citizens, recently provided Christmas gifts to 34 children in Anderson County Schools through the Courthouse employees’ Angel Tree. It was truly a team effort, from our Maintenance Department helping to erect the tree and haul the gifts, to Mayor Terry Frank having the office serve as headquarters to organize the generosity, to David Crowley helping to deliver the gifts.

I am humbled by the generosity of the local community and the employees in making sure the children had a wonderful Christmas this year. And, I was endlessly blessed to see the precious smiles from youngsters and see the tears and hear words of thankfulness from their mothers, grandmothers, and fathers while delivering the Christmas gifts late last week. It was equally moving to see the smiles on the faces of those employees and citizens who contributed as they brought gifts to the Mayor’s Office. Each person gave so willingly while knowing very little about the child—beyond his or her first name and age—for whom they had purchased gifts. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Letters Tagged With: Anderson County, Angel Baker, Christmas, gifts, government, Leean Tupper

Free small business workshop to focus on doing business with the government

Posted at 5:24 pm December 23, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce

A free workshop at the Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce in mid-January will focus on how to do business with the government.

A free workshop in mid-January will focus on how to do business with the government.

It’s scheduled from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 15, at the Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce.

The workshop is offered by the Tennessee Small Business Development Center. Registration is required.

The Tennessee Small Business Development Center advises and assists entrepreneurs and small business owners at no cost to them. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, Front Page News, Oak Ridge Tagged With: business, government, Jutta Bangs, Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce, small business, Tennessee Small Business Development Center, TSBDC, workshop

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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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