Farragut Shopper-News 010614

Page 1

VOL. 8 NO. 1

| pp www.ShopperNewsNow.com

IN THIS ISSUE

They who traveled far …

Resolutions?!

Sherri Gardner Howell says: I have nothing against self-improvement. I am not lazy or undisciplined or unmotivated. I thoroughly enjoy and embrace the closing of a chapter and the beginning of a new one. Matter of fact, you could dress me in a diaper and throw a sash around me with 2014 emblazoned on it and not get any less enthusiasm for the beginning of a new year than that New Year Baby exhibits.

January 6, 2014

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Read Sherri’s Wrap on A-3

The Doc is in Carol Zinavage scored an interview with band leader and trumpeter Doc Severinsen at his home in Blount County. She writes: The paint crew that’s working upstairs doesn’t know who he is. “He’s the nice guy who hired us to paint,” they say with grins and shrugs. They agree to Google him when they get home. Anyone who grew up watching The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson instantly recognizes the iconic bandleader.

Find Carol’s Corner on B-2

On tearing down Gibbs Hall Marvin West goes way back with UT’s Gibbs Hall. He writes: Down goes Gibbs Hall, well, soon. The old athletic dorm and Stokely Center will be mere memories as Tennessee clears the way for progress – parking garage, new dorm and three practice fields for football.

Read Marvin’s tale on A-5

First Tennessee to mark 150 years First Tennessee Bank’s promise is to be the best at serving our customers, one opportunity at a time. The bank was founded in 1864 when Abraham Lincoln was president, and employees have been practicing that promise ever since – even if it wasn’t written down. No financial institution could endure for a century and a half without dedicated employees earning the trust of generations of customers.

Read Pam Fansler on A-10

10512 Lexington Dr., Ste. 500 37932 (865) 218-WEST (9378) NEWS news@ShopperNewsNow.com Sherri Gardner Howell ADVERTISING SALES ads@ShopperNewsNow.com Shannon Carey Jim Brannon | Tony Cranmore Brandi Davis | Patty Fecco

By Sherri Gardner Howell The Magi in Matthew, chapter 2, are thought to have traveled more than 800 miles before the star of Bethlehem stopped at the place where Jesus was. The beautifully carved wise men and their camel at Farragut Presbyterian Church haven’t come that far, but they have made quite a trek through the church in search of the Christ

Child and the manger. Their journey ends today, Jan. 6, on Epiphany, the day Christians celebrate the coming of the wise men who acknowledged a baby as king. The traveling Magi at Farragut Presbyterian, 209 Jamestowne Boulevard, is just a way to add some more excitement at Christmas, says the church’s office administrator, Dawn Zilles.

Bearing his gift and leading his camel, this wise man has traveled throughout the church as he makes his way to the crèche, arriving on Epiphany, Jan. 6. To page A-2

Home for the New Year Vietnamese Catholics celebrate in church of their own By Betsy Pickle Everything feels new to the Church of Divine Mercy – new year, new building. Getting there, however, has taken a lot of old-style hard work. The church, which serves the area’s Vietnamese Catholic community, moved into it’s own building at 10919 Carmichael Road on Sunday, Sept. 1. “We had mass in the morning, and in the eveOlivia Dang, age 3, brought a party horn to church to help ning we started fi xing the church,” says Father with the celebration.

Hoan Dinh. Former home of Northstar Church, the building had been sitting empty for some time and had deteriorated. The pastor says church members pitched in and cleaned the whole building. “We remodeled the sanctuary to make it look like a Catholic church,” he says, adding that renovating the social hall was one of the biggest projects. Even now, the renovaTo page A-3

The star at the front of the Church of Divine Mercy shows the way to the new church building for the Vietnamese Catholic community. Photos by Sherri Gardner Howell

Legalizing Jim McClain By Sandra Clark James L. McClain was one of Knoxville’s hardestworking business owners with retail nurseries in various parts of town including a big one on Clinton Highway. In the 1980s, he started raising plants on 19.44 acres in the middle of nowhere. How was he to know that Lovell Road would surge to a 5-lane thoroughfare with an interstate interchange and subdivisions springing up like a field of daisies?

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In a case that’s been pending at the Metropolitan Planning Commission since 2009, McClain seeks to rezone his land to commercial. That’s what the county’s department of codes administration implied when it cited the John Deere Nursury (McClain’s tenant since 1996) for operating improperly for the land’s agricultural zoning. Yikes! Nearby homeowners are at peace with the ongoing nursery operation, but commercial zoning could open up the land to who knows what.

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Not so fast, says the MPC staff. “The site is completely surrounded by homes, and placing a commercial designation on 19.44 acres would be incompatible with surrounding land uses. ... Deny.” McClain is seeking both rezoning and an amendment to the county’s sector plan. Seymour points to West Knox Utility’s headquarters just north of McClain’s property. That Lovell Road site is zoned commercial and used for the utility’s office, shops and truck storage.

It’s back to business for the town of Farragut. ■ The Education Relations Committee will meet at 4 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 7, at Town Hall. ■ The Economic Development Committee will meet at 8 a.m. Wednesday, Jan. 8, at Town Hall. ■ The Board of Mayor and Aldermen will meet at 7 p.m. Thursdays, Jan. 9 and 23, also at Town Hall. ■ The Municipal Planning Commission will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 16, at Town Hall, 11408 Municipal Center Drive in Farragut.

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In November, MPC commissioners told McClain’s lawyer, Arthur Seymour Jr., that the day’s postponement would be his last. We’ll see, because McClain’ petition is back on the MPC agenda for this Thursday, Jan. 9, at 1:30 p.m. Seymour argues that Knox County can’t regulate the John Deere operations because the land use is consistent with state law. The storage and sale of nursery plants and related equipment is an accepted agricultural use, he says.

Farragut committees schedule meetings

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