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2014 Election: Mayoral candidates ‘bicker’ over tax hikes, lawsuits

Posted at 3:59 pm July 30, 2014
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Anderson County Mayor Debate

The three candidates for Anderson County mayor are pictured above at a debate moderated by radio talk show host Hallerin Hilton Hill, left. Starting at center, the three candidates in the August 7 mayoral election are Terry Frank, the incumbent and a Republican; Democrat Jim Hackworth; and Independent Bradley Rickett.

CLINTON—She’s attacked him over a 24-year-old tax hike. He’s blasted her over lawsuits and turmoil in the Anderson County Courthouse.

The two candidates, Anderson County Mayor Terry Frank and her challenger, Jim Hackworth, will face off in the August 7 election.

Frank, a Republican, was first elected mayor in a special election in August 2012. Now she is running for her first four-year term.

Hackworth, a Democrat, is a former state representative and Anderson County commissioner.

The two have battled in forums, on radio shows, and through ads and flyers. Their political squabbles have largely ignored the third candidate, Independent Bradley Rickett. [Read more…]

Filed Under: 2014 Election, Anderson County, Anderson County, Government, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County Commission, Anderson County Courthouse, August 7 election, bickering, bond rating, Bradley Rickett, civility, Democrat, early voting, Independent, Jim Hackworth, jobs, lawsuits, legal fees, Nature's Marketplace, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, property tax rate, Republican, sales tax, tax hike, tax increase, Tennessee House of Representatives, Terry Frank, unemployment, uranium processing facility, wages

Iwanski announces re-election campaign for County Commission

Posted at 1:09 pm July 5, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff 1 Comment

Myron Iwanski

Myron Iwanski

Myron Iwanski is seeking re-election to Anderson County Commission in District 8, which includes the Woodland, Emory Valley, and Hendrix Creek precincts in Oak Ridge.

Iwanski was appointed in 2011 to serve as mayor by County Commission early in his current term on County Commission. This was a 19-month appointment until a mayor could be elected for the remaining two years of former Mayor Rex Lynch’s term.

“It was an honor to be selected by my peers on County Commission to serve as chairman of County Commission for three terms and then as mayor during a difficult time for our county government,” Iwanski said in a press release.

“We had to work together to make some tough decisions,” Iwanski said. “We put several initiatives in place that will expand our retail and industrial tax base, promote tourism, and create jobs. This included setting funds aside for industrial land and infrastructure and creating a public/private partnership to hire a retail recruiter. We also put initiatives in place that are slowing the growth in the county jail population while helping reduce the crime rate. [Read more…]

Filed Under: 2014 Election, Anderson County, Government, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County Commission, Budget Committee, crime rate, David Gengozian, District 8, Emory Valley, Emory Valley Center, fund balance, General Sessions Court, Hendrix Creek, industrial land, jail population, jobs, Kari Iwanski, mayor, Myron Iwanski, Oak Ridge, retail, Rex Lynch, Roane State Community College, Senior Center, spending, tax base, tax increase, Tennessee Valley Authority, tourism, Woodland, Woodland Town Center

In final vote, City Council again rejects tax increase for schools

Posted at 8:58 pm June 16, 2014
By John Huotari 3 Comments

Oak Ridge City Council Budget Meeting

The Oak Ridge City Council on Monday again said “no” to a property tax rate increase to give more money to Oak Ridge Schools. Council is pictured above during a June 9 budget meeting.

 

Note: This story was last updated at 11:15 a.m. June 17.

Two last-minute attempts to pass smaller-than-requested tax increases for the Oak Ridge Schools failed on Monday, and the City Council voted 4-2 to approve a budget that does not raise taxes in the fiscal year that starts July 1.

The decision to not raise taxes for the seventh year in a row came after a parade of residents in two meetings this month asked Council to fully fund the schools. Many said they moved here because of the schools, and they said the educational system is Oak Ridge’s primary asset. School teachers, administrators, and school board members also said they support a greater investment in the schools.

“Flatline budgets will eventually produce flatline results,” said Steve Reddick, an eighth-grade social studies teacher at Jefferson Middle School and co-president of the Oak Ridge Education Association.

The schools had requested $17.9 million from the city, but the no-tax-increase budget lowered that amount to $14.6 million. School officials had previously said they will have to “go back to the drawing board” and make cuts if Council did not approve the tax rate increase. It’s not clear yet what cuts might be made. The Oak Ridge Board of Education could discuss changes to the school system’s budget, which was approved in May, during a Monday evening meeting.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Government, Government, K-12, Oak Ridge, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: 1:1, Affordable Care Act, Anne Garcia Garland, budget, Charlie Hensley, Chuck Hope, Jefferson Middle School, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Education Association, Oak Ridge Schools, pay raise, property tax rate, property tax rate increase, Steve Reddick, tax increase, tax rate, technology initiative, Trina Baughn, Walter Zobel

Guest column: Yes to one device per child, no to property tax increase

Posted at 2:38 pm June 15, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns 6 Comments

Aditya "Doc" Savara

Aditya “Doc” Savara

By Aditya “Doc” Savara

On June 2, Dr. Bruce Borchers, the superintendent overseeing Oak Ridge Schools, presented a 2015 school budget plan to City Council, which included a request for a property tax increase of about 15 percent. Landlords would presumably pass this increase onto renters as well.

The justification for this tax increase is to pay for thousands of touchscreen tablet computers and notebook computers: one for each child in our school system for most age ranges. The idea is bold and expensive. The revolutionary change is based on the following three premises:

  1. Our children need to be “technology-ready” for the future with sufficient experience to make such technology feel “ordinary” to them.
  2. These devices may have educational benefits in our schools.
  3. When parents are trying to decide where they will live, parents might choose a city that follows a one-device-per-child policy.

I taught at Northwestern University, where I won department-wide and college-wide teaching awards. Based on my teaching experience, I was initially against one device per child, because I did not think such devices would improve learning, certainly not enough to justify such an expense (my experience is that better teachers and better students result in better learning). [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Government, Guest Columns, K-12, Oak Ridge, Opinion Tagged With: Aditya "Doc" Savara, Bruce Borchers, computer devices, curriculum, notebook computers, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Schools, one device per child, property tax increase, school budget, tax increase, technology ready, touchscreen tablet computers, videos

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: Self-perpetuating politics

Posted at 11:42 am June 8, 2014
By David Allred 21 Comments

By David Allred, June 4, 2014

I got a phone call tonight that bothered me. The content of the message wasn’t so much an annoyance as the delivery system. You see, our schools sold us a bill of goods some time back about automated phone dialing. They said it would assist us in the event of emergencies, public service announcements, and other items of communication that might be pivotal to parent/school relations.

They were right. It’s a great system, probably worth the tax dollars, but I am no expert on its worth by any stretch of the imagination. Still, when that same taxpayer system of communication is used to solicit more taxpayer funds, I confess to being put on edge.

You see, I was one of hundreds, probably thousands of households, asked to fork over a little bit more money for a little more technology: tablets for all our students.

It’s a grand idea, I suppose. I mean, it is probably money that could be spent on an extra teacher or two or 12 or 20, but let’s face it—the tablet prepares our students for the modern world and there’s hardly anything more true of the modern world than replacing people with machines. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Guest Columns, K-12, Opinion Tagged With: automated phone dialing, phone call, political agenda, political message, political viewpoint, tablets, tax increase, tax payment, taxpayer funds, taxpayer phone system, teacher raises, technology

City recommends budget with no tax increase, Council votes Monday

Posted at 6:14 pm June 3, 2014
By John Huotari 25 Comments

Oak Ridge City Council

The Oak Ridge City Council is pictured above during an August 2013 meeting. (File photo)

Note: This story was updated at 7:40 p.m. June 4.

Oak Ridge City Manager Mark Watson on Monday recommended a budget that does not raise the property tax rate, setting up a potential conflict with school officials, who have requested a 37-cent tax increase to avoid cuts.

The Oak Ridge Board of Education already approved its budget in in two meetings last week. That budget, which was scaled back from an earlier proposal, could include an extra $3.3 million to start implementing a technology initiative known as 1:1 that would provide electronic learning devices to all students over three years, add five technology positions, and give 2 percent pay raises to staff.

But the budget is still subject to the amount appropriated to the schools by the city. Oak Ridge provides a little less than one-third of the school system’s funding.

While the schools have approved a budget for the fiscal year that starts July 1, the city has not. The Oak Ridge City Council will consider the municipal budget in two separate meetings this month, one on June 9 and the second on June 16. The city budget also includes a 2 percent pay raise for employees.

It’s not clear that Oak Ridge City Council members will agree to raise taxes to accommodate the school system’s request. In his budget presentation to Council on Monday, Oak Ridge City Manager Mark Watson said Council members have endorsed keeping the tax rate unchanged for the seventh year in a row.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Government, Government, K-12, Oak Ridge, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: 1:1, 1:1 devices, Anderson County, Bruce Borchers, budget, city budget, electronic learning devices, engineering, Mark Watson, mathematics, municipal workers, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Convention and Visitors Bureau, Oak Ridge Public Schools Education Foundation, Oak Ridge Schools, pay raises, property tax rate, Ray Evans, sales tax revenues, school board, school budget, school staff, science, STEM, Steve Jones, tax increase, tech initiative, technology, technology initiative

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

Schools scale back tech initiative, could ask for 37-cent tax increase

Posted at 9:39 pm May 28, 2014
By Sara Wise Leave a Comment

Doug Cofer and Oak Ridge Board of Education

Doug Cofer, left, director of the Oak Ridge Schools Technology Department, shows the Board of Education a Powerpoint presentation on Wednesday that outlines changes in the budget proposal that were made at the request of the board. (Photo by Sara Wise)

 

School officials scaled back the rollout of a digital technology initiative that would provide every student with an electronic device before approving a budget that could require a 37-cent tax increase to avoid cuts in staff or programs.

It could be one of the largest requests for a property tax rate increase in recent years. But it’s not clear if city officials, who have been working toward a no-tax-increase budget, will agree to any rate hikes.

The Oak Ridge Board of Education passed the budget for Fiscal Year 2015, which starts July 1, in a 5-1 vote on first reading on Wednesday. The vote came after amendments were made based on discussions by the school board on Tuesday night.

Board member Dan DiGregorio cast the lone vote against the proposal on Wednesday. DiGregorio said he couldn’t support a reduction in staff or more programs to make up for the tax increase, should the city not approve it. The board will ask the city for a tax increase of $0.37, down from the original proposed increase of $0.42.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Education, K-12, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: 1:1, 1:1 device integration, Bruce Borchers, budget, Dan DiGregorio, digital technology, electronic device, Fiscal Year 2015, K-12, Mike Mahathy, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge City Council, property tax rate increase, Richard Eby, School Administration Building, school budget, staff, tax increase

Guest column: Anderson mayor’s budget includes no tax increase

Posted at 8:06 pm May 23, 2014
By Anderson County Mayor Leave a Comment

Terry Frank

Terry Frank

CLINTON—Anderson County Mayor Terry Frank has presented her administration’s proposed budget for the next fiscal year, which begins July 1.

Frank’s proposed general fund budget, as recently presented to the Budget Committee, keeps most county departments at current-year spending levels and includes no tax increase. It was unanimously approved at a May 15 budget meeting.

The balanced $25,010,105 budget for the county’s general operating fund proposes maintaining a focus on stabilizing spending levels until we have full economic recovery. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Government, Guest Columns, Opinion Tagged With: Anderson County, Anderson County Schools, budget, Budget Committee, capital fund, Chris Phillips, Connie Aytes, county commission, Dusty Irwin, fiscal stability, fund balance, health insurance, mayor, operating fund, spending, Steve Mead, tax increase, tax rate, workman's compensation

Anderson County budget process moving along

Posted at 12:16 pm May 20, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Anderson County Courthouse

The Anderson County Courthouse on Main Street in Clinton is pictured above.

Information from WYSH Radio

As WYSH reported last week, the Anderson County Commission’s Budget Committee has approved County Mayor Terry Frank’s budget proposal for the fiscal year that begins on July 1. The proposed $25 million general fund budget keeps the property tax rate at current levels but does not include pay raises for county workers.

Previously, the budget committee had recommended keeping the funding for all county general fund offices at their current levels, and officials said that the budget does include provisions for a projected half-percent increase in the cost of health insurance and state-mandated salary increases for certain county officeholders.

When the various county departments submitted their initial budget requests, the total was about $2 million out of balance but “with understanding and help, we whittled that down,” according to Frank’s summary of the budget process released late last week. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Government, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County Commission, Anderson County school system, budget, Budget Committee, budget proposal, county workers, general fund, general fund budget, health insurance, pay raises, property tax hike, property tax rate, salary increases, tax increase, Terry Frank, WYSH Radio

School Board, City Council resolve high school debt dispute

Posted at 10:57 am March 10, 2014
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Oak Ridge City Council and Board of Education

A proposal to resolve a dispute over sales tax revenues and high school debt appeared to have majority support during a non-voting joint work session of Oak Ridge City Council and Board of Education on Friday.

Despite opposition from a few residents and municipal officials, the Oak Ridge City Council and Board of Education have resolved a dispute over Anderson County sales tax revenues and debt payments for the $66 million renovation of Oak Ridge High School.

The dispute, which started several years ago, centered on how to use the Oak Ridge school system’s portion of Anderson County sales tax revenues generated by a tax increase approved by county voters in a 2006 referendum. School officials had argued that they could keep their share of the revenues generated in the county outside of Oak Ridge, while city officials had said all the revenues, whether collected inside the city or outside of it, should be used for high school debt payments.

A resolution unanimously approved by the school board in February and the City Council in a 5-2 vote on Monday, March 3, allows the schools to keep its portion of the new Anderson County revenues collected outside the city. However, the resolution spells out how the money has to be spent: on technology enhancements, debt reduction, capital repairs and equipment, and grant matches and innovative educational projects. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Government, Government, K-12, Oak Ridge, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County, Anne Garcia Garland, Bruce Borchers, capital improvements program, Charlie Hensley, Chuck Hope, CIP, David Mosby, debt payments, high school debt, high school renovations, Jane Miller, Kroger Marketplace, mall redevelopment, Oak Ridge Board of Education, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge High School, referendum, Roane County School Board, sales tax revenues, school board, tax increase, Tom Beehan, Trina Baughn, uranium processing facility

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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...]

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

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