SOUTH KNOX VOL. 2 NO. 35 1
IN THIS ISSUE
Dogwoods are coming South
The 2015 Dogwood Luncheon will be held at Ijams Nature Center on Wednesday, April 8. This bit of good news comes courtesy of Lisa Duncan, executive director of the Dogwood Arts Festival. With Chapman Highway as the featured Dogwood Trail for 2015, this makes the honor – and responsibility – for South Knox a double one where Dogwood days are concerned.
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www.ShopperNewsNow.com |
September July 29, 3, 2013 2014
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TSD projects …
Read Betsy Pickle on page 3
Meet Lisa Light Lisa Light has taught in four school districts in two states, but she has already discovered what’s special about Gap Creek Elementary School.
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The new principal of South Knoxville Elementary School says she didn’t know much about the community or the school previously. What has surprised her has been “just how passionate people are about the South Knoxville community and the school and the pride for both,” she says. “It’s really inspiring. “People from here don’t say, ‘I’m from Knoxville.’ They say, ‘I’m from South Knoxville.’ And I love that.” Meet the new principal on page 6
Angelic Ministries Angelic Ministries served more than 5,000 families in crisis last year, and now founder Betsy Frazier and her dedicated staff of volunteers are planning a fundraiser.
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Read Nancy Whittaker on page 7
Mike Lowe back in the news When Tommy Schumpert ran for county executive in 1994, Mike Lowe made his move. He ran for trustee as a reformer and promised to depoliticize the office, institute an anti-nepotism policy and end the practice of dunning employees for campaign contributions.
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By Betsy Pickle
Meet the new principal on page 6
Meet Tanna Nicely
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keep education, safety in mind
Read Betty Bean on page 4
7049 Maynardville Pike 37918 (865) 922-4136 NEWS news@ShopperNewsNow.com Sandra Clark | Betsy Pickle ADVERTISING SALES ads@ShopperNewsNow.com Shannon Carey Jim Brannon | Tony Cranmore Patty Fecco | Wendy O’Dell
Anyone who’s driven past the Tennessee School for the Deaf lately knows that changes are happening on campus. But the bulldozers, graders and other machines hard at work – even on weekends – give only a hint of the exciting transformation underway. Phase one includes what passersby see: a new road around the perimeter of the property that will divert traffic away from the center of the campus. It’s a move to increase safety, says Alan Mealka, superintendent of the school. “That leaves the middle carfree and pedestrian-friendly,” Mealka says. Completion of the perimeter road is expected around the beginning of October. Changes that haven’t been visible are improvements to bring facilities up to fire code and ADA requirements, as well as new floors for the gymnasium and
Alan Mealka and Elaine Anderson stand in front of an under-construction section of perimeter road heading toward Island Home Avenue on the Tennessee School for the Deaf campus. Photo by Betsy Pickle
swimming pool and new amenities for the residential cottages that missed out on the last round of renovations. Still to come are infrastructure renovations such as electric, water and sewage to prepare for phase two: a new high school building. The new building was envisioned 25 years ago as part of a master plan. Money has only now become available for the upgrades to the state-run boarding school, which serves children from age 3 to 22. About 100 of the 200 students are in high school. Having a new high school building on the site currently occupied by Poore Hall will make a huge difference, Mealka says. “Right now the high school is spread out over several different buildings, so we’ve got kids going all over the place, and it’s just not a good academic environment,” he says. “What we really want to do is put our high school with
the academic and the CTE in one building, and our campus library in that building also. “The four or five buildings that are housing high school students are (from the) 1950s. If nothing else, the technology has changed tremendously.” Poore and the other existing high school buildings will be demolished, Mealka says. There are also plans for a new central dining hall. Many on campus have been involved in envisioning the new facilities. “They engaged a person at Gallaudet University in Washington who knows deaf space, and he came down and worked with our faculty and our students,” says Elaine Alexander, director of instruction and point person on the revamp. “The architects took our recommendations and combined them into four different possibilities and then reduced it down to two, and then the two
were combined, using the ideas from the kids and from the staff. “It’s still very preliminary, but their ideas were taken into consideration. Our fifth-graders will be the first ninth-grade class in the new building if it goes on schedule. We definitely wanted them involved in what they would like their high school to look like.” Mealka and Alexander expect a lot from the changes. “We hope to have the most up-todate technology available for our students at that time, things that have not been invented yet – that’s what the teachers want,” says Alexander. The tech revolution has improved life for TSD students. “All the technology has been a tremendous benefit for our kids and the deaf community at large,” says Mealka. “Everything we’re doing is to increase the educational opportunity for our students.”
The destruction of Coach Roach By Betty Bean
On election night in Grainger County, supporters of longtime state Rep. Dennis “Coach” Roach got together to await the 35th House District Republican Primary returns. Their candidate fought hard to overcome a tsunami of negative advertising financed by as much as $500,000 from out-of-state special-interest groups blasting Roach for “ghost voting” (the common and fairly innocuous practice of seat-mates pushing the voting button for neighbors who have stepped out to use the restroom or take a smoke). The ads painted it as dangerous and lazy, but Roach’s supporters were cautiously optimistic that Roach, a popular teacher and basketball coach who had served since 1994, would survive. “We thought Jerry was going to get his showing, but it turned out we got our showing,” said Grainger County Commissioner James Acuff. When the final tally was in, Roach lost by nearly 1,000 votes
Coach Roach
Jerry Sexton
to opponent Jerry Sexton, a preacher turned furniture manufacturer whose Facebook page describes him as “More pro-life than your pastor, more for the Second Amendment than Davy Crockett, and more for traditional marriage than Adam and Eve.” The real issue that got the attention of 501(c)(4) groups like the Koch brothers’ Americans for Prosperity and the Tennessee Federation for Children wasn’t ghost voting at all. “It all came down to my vote on the vouchers,” said Roach, whose district includes Grainger and parts of Union and Claiborne counties.
Roach was particularly disappointed in his Union County showing, where he lost 670-320. “We thought we might do a little better than that after saving them $497,000 (by pushing to keep the K12 Inc. Virtual Academy open against the wishes of Education Commissioner Kevin Huffman). We helped (Union County) save that revenue, and they ran a thank-you in the News Sentinel. “But I guess what we did didn’t impress them enough to overcome those ads. They were good ads but just about 99 percent false.” Roach cast the fateful vote on March 5 in the House Finance Ways & Means subcommittee (aka “the Black Hole”) opposing a school voucher bill that would have directed taxpayer money to private schools. “I could have very easily voted for them and saved myself this trouble, but I’ve been in education all my life, and it’s not a real good time to be taking money out of public education,” Roach said. “I’ve run 10 times before but spent
more money in this race than in all my other contests combined. “We raised about $57,000, and we spent it. The TEA did a mailer or two that didn’t cost me, spent about $7,500 or so, but you compare that to $400,000-something … And they did radio, too. We came back and did what we could, but you spend what you’ve got and no more.” Final contribution tallies won’t be disclosed until October. Several of Roach’s colleagues chipped in campaign contributions in an attempt to fend off the onslaught, including Rep. Ryan Haynes, who says he’d like to dam the flow of outside money. “Coach is exactly right. The voucher bill is what got him, and there’s way too much money in politics. I’ve never had a constituent come up to me and tell me they wish they could get more money in my hand. The public is right to be concerned about this, and I think it’s incumbent on voters to start saying, ‘Hey, where’s this coming from?’ ”
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