SOUTH KNOX VOL. 32 NO. 51
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Off-road triathlon
NEIGHBORHOOD BUZZ
Island Home Avenue closure A stretch of Island Home Avenue will be closed in a few weeks for a period of several months to allow for utility work and road widening. The project comes in anticipation of the creation of a new greenway along the Tennessee River and a new apartment complex being built on Island Home Avenue. Jim Hagerman, the city’s director of engineering, says the closure will begin just east of the entrance to Allied Toyotalift, 1640 Island Home Ave. People traveling to and from Island Home Park will have to choose alternate routes. The city is still determining the official detour. The length of the closure also is still being decided. A public meeting is being set up prior to the road closure to share information with the public and to get feedback. “Our role is trying to figure out how to minimize the impact of the shutdown,” Hagerman says.
inspires festival of mountain sports
The triathlon will include a three-quarter-mile swim at Mead’s Quarry lake.
IN THIS ISSUE Cleaning up Betsy Pickle talks “trash” as the South Knoxville Alliance readies plans to clean up South Knoxville before spring. The first cleanup will be 11 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 21. Teams collecting the most trash will have their pictures printed in the Shopper-News. Plus, Vice Mayor Nick Pavlis has volunteered to pay for pizza for participants.
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See her story on page 3
What happened to the low bid? For old-timers, the kerfuffle over the E-911 board’s rejection of its evaluation committee’s recommendation for a new radio system begged this question: Whatever happened to taking bids and accepting the lowest one?
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See Betty Bean’s story on page 5
Oscar contenders A couple of films with an Oscar spotlight on them are due to arrive in Knoxville on Friday. Marion Cotillard, who won the Best Actress Oscar for playing Edith Piaf in 2007’s “La Vie en Rose,” is nominated in the same category for “Two Days, One Night,” a film from Belgian directing brothers Luc and Jean-Pierre Dardenne.
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See more reviews on page 6
7049 Maynardville Pike 37918 (865) 922-4136 NEWS news@ShopperNewsNow.com Sandra Clark | Betsy Pickle ADVERTISING SALES ads@ShopperNewsNow.com Patty Fecco | Tony Cranmore Wendy O’Dell | Sara Whittle
February July 29, 4, 2015 2013
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By Betsy Pickle The XTERRA Off-Road Triathlon will return to the Urban Wilderness in June, and this time it’s going to be a party. The triathlon will be the “backbone” of the Knox Mountain Sports Festival planned at Ijams Nature Center for Saturday-Sunday, June 6-7, according to Ryan Roma of Dirty Bird Events. “When Ijams and River Sports (Outfitters) approached me about being part of the Mountain Sports Festival, I thought, ‘That’s the coolest thing I’ve ever heard,’ ” says Roma, whose company started organizing XTERRA events in Knoxville and Hamblen County last year. Roma says the success of last year’s triathlon was the catalyst for the festival, which will be family friendly. “There’ll be live music,” he says. “There will be food trucks at Mead’s Quarry and the nature
XTERRA Knoxville Off-Road Triathlon participants will face grueling conditions in the Urban Wilderness.
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center. There’ll be family activities as well as athlete activities. It’s basically a weekend full of outdoor activities. River Sports is going to be doing paddle boarding and guided hikes, and there’s going
to be rock climbing. There’ll be a hold a trail run in two distances, kids’ scavenger hike.” 4.2 miles and half-marathon, at 9 In addition to the 8 a.m. June a.m. June 6. 7 triathlon (three-quarter-mile “There’s going to be a whole swim, 16.5-mile mountain bike and 4.2 mile-run), Dirty Bird will To page 3
Understanding Insure Tennessee By Wendy Smith Gov. Bill Haslam came to town last week to educate state legislators before a special session being held this week regarding Insure Tennessee, his proposed Medicaid expansion program.
Analysis Legislators aren’t the only ones who need to be educated. Citizens need to have a basic understanding of the program so they can pass their thoughts on to their elected officials. Haslam spent two years crafting Tennessee’s program to specifically address the spiraling cost of healthcare. It leverages federal dollars to provide health insurance to those whose income is less than 138 percent of the poverty level, which translates to approximately $16,000 for an individual and $27,000 for a family of three. The program is expected to cover roughly 280,000 people. Over half
of them have jobs. This group falls into a coverage gap because they don’t qualify for Medicaid and they either don’t make enough to qualify for tax credits to help them buy coverage or can’t afford it even with tax credits. Bill Haslam The controversy surrounding the plan comes from its utilization of federal dollars. Affordable Care Act (ACA) funds would cover 100 percent of the cost of the expansion through 2016. By 2020, the federal contribution will drop to a permanent rate of 90 percent, but Tennessee hospitals have committed to covering the state’s contribution once federal funding drops below 100 percent. Some fear that Tennessee taxpayers will be left on the hook if federal funding dries up or hos-
pitals don’t follow through with their commitment. In the event of an emergency, Haslam has packed a parachute. The two-year pilot program will automatically terminate in either case. Tennessee Attorney General Herbert Slatery and the head of the federal health department agreed last week that the state could legally opt out. Haslam says he’s not a fan of the ACA because it didn’t do anything to address the rising cost of healthcare, as his plan does. Here are the nuts and bolts of his plan. Those eligible for Insure Tennessee would have two options. Under the Volunteer Plan, participants would receive a fi xed contribution voucher that will enable them to buy into private health insurance offered by their employer. The voucher would go toward out-of-pocket expenses associated with the coverage. The benefits of private insurance coverage include a broader range of providers and possible
participation in Health Savings Accounts, which encourage healthy choices, Haslam says. The other option, the Healthy Incentives Plan, differs from Medicaid because it has premiums and co-pays. But participants get credits for healthy behaviors, like regular screenings, and using the health system appropriately, such as going to a clinic rather than the emergency room. If participants make good choices, they can cover their healthcare costs with credits. But they can also be disenrolled if they don’t cover copays or premiums, Haslam says. From his perspective, Insure Tennessee is a win-win because it’s a step toward true healthcare reform and provides insurance to 200,000 residents who wouldn’t otherwise have it − without raising taxes. Detractors say Haslam is supporting Obamacare by taking advantage of federal funding. You decide.
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