Farragut Shopper-News 040616

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VOL. 10 NO. 14

www.ShopperNewsNow.com |

BUZZ

April 6, 2016

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Meet the wordsmiths Book Fest is time for dressing up for parade, sitting down with authors By Carolyn Evans Little Cinderellas and Batmans will be parading through Founders Park on Campbell Station Road soon. At 10:30 a.m. Saturday, April 9, to be exact. Parents are encouraged to bring their children in costume to the ninth annual Farragut Book Fest for Children from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The free event takes place in the park next to the Farragut Branch of the Knox County Public Library and features cookie decorating, art activities, face painting, storytelling, acting and the meeting local authors. The popular parade of characters begins at 10:30 a.m. Farragut resident Susan Weaver Jones is looking forward to the event. The children’s author will be there for the fourth time, bringing her three books with her. She will be one of seven authors on hand to talk about her writing and to sign books. Authors scheduled include Weaver Jones, David Boyce, Bonnie Cadotte, Gayle Green, Thelma Hartigan, Charles Haun, Jennifer Madison and Adele Roberts. Weaver Jones teaches English

Illustration by Timothy Bush

S.O.R. Losers It was good enough for Charles Dickens and Alexandre Dumas, so we think Shopper News parents, grandparents and certainly children will like it, too. Today the Shopper News introduces a 14-week serial story, “S.O.R. Losers.� The serial story – made famous by “The Pickwick Papers� and “The Three Musketeers� – is a complete book that is published one segment at a time. “S.O.R. Losers,� the story of a misfit sports team, is written by Newberry Award Winner Avi and illustrated by Timothy Bush. The first chapter begins today and will be followed by 13 more chapters, bringing the story to its conclusion on July 6. Each segment can be read in five to six minutes. Sit with your child as he or she reads about the antics of Ed and Saltz. Or read the story to them, so you all can enjoy it! –Sherri Gardner Howell

By Wendy Smith In a special called meeting held last week, the Farragut Business Alliance (FBA) board voted in favor of a proposed budget that would enable the Shop Farragut initiative to continue year-round and eliminate an annual community event that has historically lost money. After board president David Purvis proposed two 2016 budget options, each based on a $70,000 grant from the town, the board voted in favor of the option that eliminates the Red, White and

Ed and Bob’s Night Out is coming to Karns. Everyone is invited. Knox County at-large commissioners Ed Brantley and Bob Thomas will be at We’re Cookin’ at 7664 Oak Ridge Highway from 5-7 p.m. Tuesday, April 19, to meet the people of the Karns community and listen to their concerns.

Victor and Joan Ashe have just returned from Cuba. Victor writes ... “(we) joined a Yale Alumni Tour of Cuba for 10 days. It was fascinating. As Joan says, it was a trip not a vacation. “Also on the trip was another Knoxvillian, Dr. Anne McIntyre, who is a retired UT professor of psychology and lives in Sequoyah Hills.�

(865) 218-WEST (9378) NEWS (865) 661-8777 news@ShopperNewsNow.com Sandra Clark | Sherri Gardner Howell ADVERTISING SALES (865) 342-6084 ads@ShopperNewsNow.com Patty Fecco | Tony Cranmore Beverly Holland | Amy Lutheran CIRCULATION (865) 342-6200 shoppercirc@ShopperNewsNow.com

Blues Pre-Independence Day Picnic and focuses resources on the Farragut Food Festival. Red, White and Blues has lost money each of the past five years. The Farragut Food Festival netted over $10,000 each of the past five years, except last year, when poor weather resulted in a $2,700 loss. The change will allow entertainment to be added to the Farragut Food Festival if sponsors already committed to Red, White and Blues agree to sponsor the fall food event instead. Having an entertainer with name recognition

By Betty Bean Two years out from the 2018 county elections, there’s half a gaggle of candidates thinking about running for mayor. Don’t look for County Commissioner Bob Thomas to run for re-election to his at-large commission seat in 2018, even though he’ll be finishing his first term. He’ll be too busy running for mayor. Thomas is making plans to succeed Tim Burchett, who is termlimited. He’s tearing a page from Burchett’s campaign book and will be the guest-of-honor at an old-timey baloney-cutting May 11. That’ll be on a Wednesday, starting at 11:30 at Powell Auction & Realty – the venue where Burchett kicked off his campaign for county mayor. “We’re expecting 1,500,� Thomas said. “The Chillbillies are playing and we’ll have R.C. Colas and Moon Pies. It’ll be a big party.� Thomas has had a long career in radio broadcasting, once owned a hockey team and has written

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at the food festival could draw out-of-town attendees who might return to a Farragut restaurant when they’re in town for a football game, said board treasurer Herc Ligdis. The new proposed budget includes $5,500 for two “off the Creek� events that would attract shoppers to the town’s small retail centers. There are four such retail centers in Farragut, and tenants could work together to create their own event, said Ligdis. A new town ordinance would be required for the events.

The proposed budget also includes $10,000 for a part-time employee to assist with events. Phil Dangel said he doesn’t understand why current staffing isn’t adequate. Ligdis said it would be impossible to grow the FBA if Executive Director Allison Sousa spends all her time on events. “If we don’t pay someone, we don’t accomplish our goals,� said Purvis. To page A-3

Prospects ponder race for county mayor

Victor goes to Cuba

Farragut children’s author Susan Weaver Jones gets some interest in her books from her dog, Sasha. Jones will have a larger audience on Saturday, April 9, at the Farragut Book Fest for Children. Photo submitted

FBA proposes end to Red, White and Blues

Ed and Bob coming to Karns

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as a Second Language at Cedar Bluff Elementary and has 30-plus years’ experience teaching reading. She has written three earlyreading books, primarily marketed to kindergarten and first-grade teachers and homeschooling parents. The books, published by Hameray Publishing, are 100 words or less with lots of pictures and repetitive word patterns. Her first book, ‘We Recycle,’ was published in 2011 and features a picture of the gazebo at Founder’s Park on the cover. It was followed by ‘Service Dogs’ in 2012. That book features Lucy, a Smoky Mountain service dog. Jones says she got help with the book from a blind, retired UT professor and from the Knox County Sheriff’s Office. Her third book, ‘Hide and Seek,’ was published in 2013. It is the illustrated story of a game of hideand-seek. The ‘seeker’ in the story can’t see all the hiding children, Jones says, but the reader can. She will have copies of the books available that day for $5 each.

Next leader?

Anders

Burkhardt

Haynes

TV shows. He stays in close touch with his son, Jake, a TV actor who lives in Los Angeles. He says he’s anxious to take on the challenge of promoting Knox County as a tourism destination and has big plans to move forward without a tax increase. Knox County Republican Party chair Buddy Burkhardt is also running wide open. He’s got a Facebook page, “Buddy for Knox Coun-

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ty Mayor,� that doesn’t have much information yet, but does display some spiffy-looking red “Vote for Burkhardt� T-shirts and shots of Burkhardt with GOP notables like Jeb Bush and Ben Carson. On Dec. 12, he asked, “Ready for your Buddy for Mayor Apparel and Yard Signs? Coming SOON!!!� Burkhardt is an electronics and information technology specialist in the Knox County Sher-

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iff’s Office – “Today, I’m wiring up water controls in the jail. Tomorrow it’ll be computers. I’m an electronics person.� Has he run for office before? “Lord, no. I’m still debating how sound I am for even thinking about this. “I’ve been involved in Knox County politics for a little while, but I’ve been anonymous for a lot of years, intentionally. I’ve worked on a lot of campaigns, helped as many people as I could. Mayor Burchett is term-limited, so this is a good time for me to give it my best shot. In eight more years, I’ll be too old.� Another county commissioner, Brad Anders, is also mulling a run for mayor. Anders, a former commission chair, is a lieutenant and a crisis negotiator in the Knoxville Police Department whose name used to come up as a candidate for sheriff, as well.

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