North/East Shopper-News 080614

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NORTH / EAST VOL. 2 NO. 31 NEIGHBORHOOD BUZZ

SEEED sets the Green Tie Event

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Kids blossom in the garden

Socially Equal Energy Efficient Development (SEEED), an environmental initiative of the city of Knoxville, will celebrate its graduates and the progress made over the past year with The Green Tie Event, 6-8 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 14, at Remedy Coffee House, located at 125 W Jackson Ave. in the Old City. Tickets are $20 and include refreshments, fellowship and fun. The graduates will share their stories; news and future plans will be revealed. Tickets can also be purchased at the SEEED office at 1617 Dandridge Ave.

Jared Guffey shows ECO campers how electricity can be made from fruit to power a digital clock.

Replacing Indya Knox County Commission has set a time frame for those seeking appointment to the Knox County school board, replacing Indya Kincannon who resigned to be with her family abroad. Send resumes by noon Friday, Aug. 8. Commissioners will interview candidates at 4 p.m. Monday, Aug. 18, and make the appointment at 2 p.m. Monday, Aug. 25. Info: 865-215-2534 or commission@knoxcounty.org/.

IN THIS ISSUE Bean’s election predictions “This time next week, Stacey Campfield’s going to be cleaning out his Nashville office. He and Steve “Extra Crispy” Hall can discuss their future plans on the way back to Knoxville because Hall’s going to lose his primary, too.” Ouch! Betty Bean’s not mincing words with her predictions for Aug. 7.

Read Betty Bean on page 4

A-B-C’s of politics Have you got what it takes to run for office? Larry Van Guilder tells you the A-B-C’s: “For your supporters: Always Bring Cash. “Let’s recap. Be a man, raise the voting bar, get a family, off with their heads, guard the border and cash is king. See you in Nashville!

Read Van Guilder on page 5

Interns finish Shopper-News interns finished the summer with a picnic at Oakes Daylilies. They will start high school next week, but on this day they were still kids.

Read the recap on pages 8-9

7049 Maynardville Pike 37918 (865) 922-4136 NEWS news@ShopperNewsNow.com Sandra Clark | Patricia Williams ADVERTISING SALES ads@ShopperNewsNow.com Shannon Carey Jim Brannon | Tony Cranmore Patty Fecco | Wendy O’Dell

August 6, 2014

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ECO camp kids examine the growth of vegetables in the garden at Knoxville Botanical Garden.

By Patricia Williams Young minds blossomed in the gardens of Knoxville Botanical Garden and Arboretum, 2743 Wimpole Ave., in East Knoxville, during the Every Child Outdoors Garden Camp summer program for children ages 6 to 12.

There By Cindy Taylor

The children met each Tuesday in July for five sessions. Fun lessons included making a tie-dyed T-shirt using dye they made from vegetable plant juices. Healthy lunches were served, and the children prepared their own afternoon snacks. One snack

a bit too fresh for some young palates; but they all seemed to enjoy the cherry tomatoes they picked right off the vine. You can take your tots for free to “Story Thyme in the Garden” from 1 to 2 p.m. each Wednesday through October. Story Thyme integrates nature into education, crafts and physical activities. Preschoolers must be accompanied by a parent or guardian. To reserve a seat, contact Wendy ProthroHoward, program coordinator, at 279-9998 or whoward5@utk.edu. was a “plant-part” salsa from a The ECO and Botanical Garrecipe they took home to make and den programs are also available share with family. Each ingredient for teacher workshops, field-trip was a lesson within itself. Did you destinations, home-school groups know tomatoes are a fruit, (black) and summer camps. It is a volbeans are seeds and capers are unteer opportunity for youth and flower buds? To page 3 Tasting raw corn on the cob was

is a free lunch!

Parents of students in selected North and East Knox schools will be among 52 schools countywide to serve free breakfast and lunch to all students this year. One principal estimated a savings of $720 per child per year to families who buy both meals each day. Community Eligibility Provision (CEP) will make it easier for schools to serve breakfast and lunch at no charge to all students by eliminating the need for schools to collect paper

applications. There are no qualifiers for students who attend a qualified school regardless of income. “CEP is funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which provides criteria to assess which schools qualify,” said Jon Dickl, executive director of school nutrition for Knox County Schools. “Through this federally-funded program, all students in the qualifying schools receive meals at no charge.” To take advantage of the breakfast, students will need to be in

(and breakfast, too)

their seats no later than 7:30 a.m. as the meal will be served in the classrooms. Lunch will be served in the lunch room as usual. Knox County qualified schools are Adrian Burnett, Austin-East High, Bearden Middle, Beaumont, Belle Morris, Career Magnet, Carter Elementary, Middle and High schools, Central High, Chilhowee, Christenberry, Copper Ridge, Corryton, Dogwood, East Knox County, Fair Garden, Fort Sanders, Fountain City, Fulton High, Gap Creek,

Green Magnet, Gresham Middle, Inskip, KAEC, Lonsdale, Maynard, Mooreland Heights, Mount Olive, New Hopewell, Northwest Middle, Norwood, Paul Kelley Volunteer Academy, Pleasant Ridge, Pond Gap, Powell ES, Richard Yoakley, Ridgedale, Ritta, Sam E. Hill, Sarah Moore Greene, South-Doyle Middle and High schools, South Knoxville, Spring Hill, Sterchi, Sunnyview Primary, Vine Middle, West Haven, West Hills, West View and Whittle Springs Middle.

Reinstated teacher hopes for new beginning By Betty Bean They called him “Big Rich” when he was an All-American basketball player at Maryville College, and Richard Suttle, who stands 6-7, remembers those years as the happiest of his life. Now that he’s won back his job with Knox County Schools, he’s ready to turn the page on his worst year and is looking forward to going back to simply being called “teacher.” Suttle believes he has been publicly labeled a bad teacher, despite hearing officer H. Scott Ream’s reversal of Superintendent James McIntyre’s decision to fire him. Ream was scathing in his criticism of the McIntyre administration for pursuing a tenure revocation and made a point of complimenting Suttle’s ability to explain basic algebra in a way math-phobic students could understand. Last week, he got his first paycheck in 10 months – a year’s salary minus a 90-day suspen-

Richard Suttle breaks down TVAAS Photo by Betty Bean

sion without pay (a punishment he doesn’t believe is deserved), and he is relieved to end a year of stress and financial hardship. But here is some of what he believes has been lost in the discussion: He taught repeaters at Gibbs High School – sophomores, juniors and even seniors who had failed freshman algebra, sometimes

more than once. Often, these students became so frustrated with standardized tests that they gave up trying to answer questions and bubbled in answers in haphazard fashion, just to get through them. Administrators argue that these are the students with the potential to show the most improvement, which Suttle says ignores the realities of kids who may be dealing with family crises, financial, health or relationship trouble, or simply the frustration of not “getting” math anymore. “I was told by my numeracy coach, ‘If you have a class of 20, and three of them don’t try and just “Christmas tree” the answer sheet, there’s no way to recover from that,’ ” Suttle said. Simply put, Suttle’s argument is a direct challenge to the system of teacher evaluation now in use.

The early years

gut High School’s class of 1976, the last graduating class at the “old” high school. He didn’t play team sports but always loved basketball and played recreationally every chance he got, especially after he went on to the University of Tennessee. He was playing a pickup game when he caught the eye of coach Tom Deaton during the summer after his freshman year. Deaton, who coached at Bearden High School and also assisted UT coach Don DeVoe, offered Suttle the opportunity to walk on at UT, but before he made a decision, he heard from Maryville College head basketball coach Rick Byrd (now at Belmont), who invited him out to the school and offered him a place on the team. By fall, he was enrolled at Maryville College, majoring in physical education, minoring in math and thriving on the basketball To page 3

Suttle was a member of Farra-

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