SOUTH KNOX VOL. 2 NO. 44 1
IN THIS ISSUE
Hospital site developers to meet public
The developers of the old Baptist Hospital site, Blanchard & Calhoun, will meet with community members to discuss their design and requested variances for the Bridges at Riverside project on the South Waterfront. The South Knoxville Neighborhood & Business Coalition and the city of Knoxville’s Office of Redevelopment will host the meeting at 6 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 13, in the multipurpose room of Flenniken’s Landing, 115 Flenniken Ave.
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Read Betsy Pickle on page 3
Next is depression Superintendent James McIntyre appears to be in the third stage of grief (denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance) in coming to terms with the loss of his 8-1 majority on school board.
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Read Betty Bean on page 4
Smokin’ Butz BBQ
You won’t see 18-wheelers at Parton’s Smokin Butz BBQ, 10211 Chapman Highway, but don’t bother if you expect white tablecloths and candlelight. Your snobbery will only cause you to miss one of the top-three best-tasting smoked brisket sandwiches I’ve ever eaten. And the beans? No. 1, hands down.
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Read the Mystery Diner on page7
Mike Hammond tackles new job
Mike Hammond said he’d clean up the Criminal, General Sessions and Fourth Circuit Court Clerk’s office, and two months after taking office, he’s well on his way. It used to take hours, days or even weeks to locate documents in the dead file office, he says. But after filing approximately 200,000 documents, staff was recently able to locate the record of a 1992 traffic violation, which allowed a resident to pay his fine and renew his driver’s license.
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Read Wendy Smith on page 5
Holiday artists
As we head into the holiday season, it’s a good idea to take a look at ways to make giftgiving more meaningful. Many of us are considering options other than the plastic and the prefab – original art, for example.
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Read Carol Shane on page7
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November July 29, 5, 2013 2014
Dogwood puts spotlight on all of South Knoxville By Betsy Pickle With apologies to Halls, South Knoxville has it! The Dogwood Arts Festival has announced that all of South Knoxville will be promoted during its 2015 event, not just the Featured Trail, the Chapman Highway Dogwood Trail. “As the South Knoxville area continues to grow and revitalize in the wake of the reopening of the Henley Bridge, Dogwood Arts staff and the Trails Advisory Board are of the belief that this sector of Knoxville as a whole deserves recognition and publicity,” says Lisa Duncan, Dogwood Arts Festival executive director. “In addition to the Chapman Highway Dogwood Trail, South Knoxville has the Island Home Garden Byway, Ijams Nature Center, High Ground Park, Candoro Marble and the 62 miles of biking and walking trails in Knoxville’s Urban Wilderness and much more. It has been decided that the entire area be promoted rather than singling out the Chapman Highway Trail. “We are very proud of the efforts of the South Knoxville residents, businesses, garden clubs and homeowners associations to continue the beautification project that began 60 years ago.” Duncan says her office will be getting the word out at Dogwood time. “Various areas and attractions in SoKno will be promoted in our Dogwood Arts Printed Guide that is distributed through the Knoxville News Sentinel and throughout town at various businesses,” she says. “All of our promotional efforts are duplicated on our website, www.dogwoodarts.com,
Cyclists enjoy the trail at Mead’s Quarry, part of Ijams Nature Center. Photos submitted
The Lake Forest neighborhood likes to think pink in the spring.
and via social media. During the month of April, Dogwood Arts gets great face time with local radio and TV to promote our events as well.” Open gardens and camera sites at participating homes and businesses will have identifying signs April 8-26, and the city of Knoxville will provide signs directing drivers to the Chapman Highway Trail. The DAF office has talked to the city about placing Dogwood Arts banners on the Henley Bridge. “They are currently testing various materials/dimensions to determine what materials, etc., are best suited for those poles,” says
Duncan. Peggy Tubbs, chairman of the Chapman Highway Dogwood Trail, and her assistant chair, Molly Gilbert, started visiting South Knoxville organizations in July to promote getting the trail ready and beautifying all of SoKno. Gilbert says this shows how well South Knoxvillians have responded to the call. “I see it as a reward for all the efforts in revitalization that are happening in South Knoxville,” says Gilbert. “The designation recognizes the collaborative effort by all groups … particularly the South Knoxville Neighborhood & Business Coalition and the South
Knoxville Alliance. It really has been a strong grassroots effort from multiple entities in South Knoxville.” While the Lake Forest and Colonial Village neighborhoods are the site of the Dogwood Trail, now all of South Knoxville will play host to thousands of Dogwood visitors. Duncan says it’s time for the area to put its most beautiful foot forward. “Our efforts at the moment focus on encouraging the neighborhoods and their residents to plant flowering trees, bulbs and shrubs now in the fall so that they bloom in the spring,” she says.
KCEA presidency could be next political fray By Betty Bean Political junkies worried about going into withdrawal after the Nov. 4 elections can rest easy – there’s a fi x waiting right around the corner. The Knox County Education Association will be choosing a new president this winter, a biennial event that doesn’t usually attract a lot of attention outside the professional circle of teachers who are participants. But this year could be different. School news has been big news in Knox County in 2014. High-profile administrators have been taken down by high-profile scandals while Superintendent James McIntyre has come under increasing scrutiny, the glittering state and national “report cards” notwithstanding. School board races attracted more attention than county com-
Hopson
Coats
mission races in August, and one candidate in this week’s special District 2 Board of Education race will probably set a new record for school board fundraising. McIntyre has remained relentlessly upbeat even while drawing increasingly harsh criticism from Mayor Tim Burchett. During this time, KCEA president Tanya Coats has represented Knox County’s teachers and has sat through some long, conten-
tious meetings. Throughout the year, her tone has been respectful of McIntyre and his supporters. Recently, however, she has expressed dissatisfaction with the way the superintendent has slowwalked the collaborative conferencing process, which began in October 2011, shortly after the General Assembly stripped teachers of their collective-bargaining and tenure rights under the Professional Educators Collaborative Conferencing Act, which ordered school boards and teachers’ representatives to produce a Memorandum of Understanding regarding teachers’ pay and benefits within three years. Knox County was one of the first local districts to begin the process but will not meet the state’s deadline. The spark that kindled the explosion of attention to all things
KCS was a speech given by Halls Elementary School third-grade teacher Lauren Hopson, who went before the board last October and gave voice to teachers’ dissatisfaction with local, state and federal laws that she and others believe have burdened children, blamed teachers for societal and environmental factors affecting student performance and loaded educators down with increasingly unreasonable and often counterproductive requirements. A month after Hopson’s “Tired Teacher” speech went viral on the Internet, more than 300 of her colleagues, sympathetic parents and students showed up at the November school board meeting wearing red to back her up. Coats will be seeking a second term as KCEA president. Hopson has been nominated, as well.
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