tennessee daily news clips, sept. 18, 2013

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  • 7/29/2019 Tennessee Daily News Clips, Sept. 18, 2013

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    WEDNESDAY,SEPTEMBER18, 2013

    Grantsgo to 6 GibsonCountycities (JacksonSun)Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam was in Trenton on Tuesday to award $2.2 million in grant money to six towns inGibson County. The Gibson County Community Development Block Grant is part of a series of grants that focuseson the infrastructure needs of the towns and communities around the state. The Federal Department of Housingand Urban Development awarded Tennessee $25.6 million for improvements, and the local communities makeapplications for improvements. This is actually a very competitive process, Haslam said. There is way more needthan there is ability to fit those needs. The needs that were submitted I think are real ones and really will helpimprove the quality of life in each one of these communities.http://www.jacksonsun.com/article/20130918/NEWS/309180009/Grants-go-6-Gibson-County-cities (SUB)

    HaslamAnnouncesTransportationGrant for City of Dickson(Clarksville Online)Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam and Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT) Commissioner JohnSchroer announced today the award of a $595,461 transportation alternative grant to the City of Dickson for PhaseIII of the Downtown Revitalization Project. The project will add improvements to sections of West College Streetand Main Street, and is a continuation of the overall downtown revitalization that began in 2008. Phase III includessidewalks with brick pavers, new pavement, new crosswalks, and ADA compliant sidewalk ramps, parking areasand signage. The project will also add decorative street lighting, landscaping and pedestrian amenities. Thisproject will help Dicksons efforts to give its downtown a more vibrant, inviting appearance, Haslam said. Ourdowntowns are the hearts of our communities, and when complete, the project will make downtown areas moreaccessible to residents and visitors and can have positive impacts on the local economy.http://www.clarksvilleonline.com/2013/09/18/tennessee-governor-bill-haslam-announces-transportation-grant-city-dickson/

    WorkforceDevelopmentGrant Announcement(State Gazette)Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam announced on Tuesday a $589,000 workforce development grant for Dyersburg StateCommunity College to help meet the advanced manufacturing needs of the area. An array of state and localpolitical figures, business people, educators, and students joined Haslam in the Learning Resource Center atDyersburg State Community College for the announcement. This $589,022 grant will help the college establish twoadvanced manufacturing labs -- in Dyersburg and Tipton County -- and move forward with its proposed Associateof Applied Science degree in Advanced Manufacturing. The program will have industry-recognized certificatesembedded in the curriculum including: the certified production technician and four mechatronics certificates.http://www.stategazette.com/gallery/16868

    HaslamCites ManufacturingBoomin Grants(MemphisDaily News)

    Armed with a $16.5 million fund approved by the General Assembly, Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam has lots of WestTennessee stops this week as he awards grants that will provide workforce training equipment to state schoolscertifying workers or training them for associate degrees. And Haslam kicked off the set of announcementsMonday, Sept. 16, with checks totaling $2.7 million in the hangar of the Tennessee College of Applied TechnologyAvionics School near Memphis International Airport. The school was awarded two grants totaling $1.2 million forequipment that includes a Aeroism Boeing Virtual Procedures Trainer as well as upgrading its advancedmanufacturing equipment and building a new lab. Haslam specifically cited the growth in the citys manufacturingsector in making the grants.http://www.memphisdailynews.com/news/2013/sep/18/haslam-cites-manufacturing-boom-in-grants/

    http://www.jacksonsun.com/article/20130918/NEWS/309180009/Grants-go-6-Gibson-County-citieshttp://www.clarksvilleonline.com/2013/09/18/tennessee-governor-bill-haslam-announces-transportation-grant-city-dickson/http://www.clarksvilleonline.com/2013/09/18/tennessee-governor-bill-haslam-announces-transportation-grant-city-dickson/http://www.stategazette.com/gallery/16868http://www.memphisdailynews.com/news/2013/sep/18/haslam-cites-manufacturing-boom-in-grants/http://www.jacksonsun.com/article/20130918/NEWS/309180009/Grants-go-6-Gibson-County-citieshttp://www.clarksvilleonline.com/2013/09/18/tennessee-governor-bill-haslam-announces-transportation-grant-city-dickson/http://www.clarksvilleonline.com/2013/09/18/tennessee-governor-bill-haslam-announces-transportation-grant-city-dickson/http://www.stategazette.com/gallery/16868http://www.memphisdailynews.com/news/2013/sep/18/haslam-cites-manufacturing-boom-in-grants/
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    HaslamDisappointedin Superintendents'Petition(AssociatedPress)Gov. Bill Haslam says he was disappointed to hear of a petition signed by nearly half of the states' schoolsuperintendents that raised serious concerns about Education Commissioner Kevin Huffman. The Republicangovernor in a letter to superintendents released Tuesday stood by Huffman and the initiatives he has championed,saying that the commissioner has brought a "new perspective and dynamic energy to education reform inTennessee." The petition originated with Dan Lawson, director of the Tullahoma City Schools, alleges that

    Huffman's office "has no interest in a dialogue" with local officials and the superintendents' efforts to improve theirschools are being thwarted by low teacher morale because of policy changes on the state level. Haslam called for"a fresh approach to communication" between the school districts and state education officials.http://www.memphisdailynews.com/news/2013/sep/18/haslam-disappointed-in-superintendents-petition/

    Haslamasks schoolleadersto back off fromcriticizingHuffman(Tenn/Fingeroot)Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam took a flattering and conciliatory tone with irritated schoolleaders this week, but stilltold them to back off public criticism of beleaguered Education Commissioner Kevin Huffman. In a letter sent byemail Monday, Haslam told school superintendents that he appreciates the hard work they have done to implementeducation changes in their own districts and is grateful for their help. However, he told them to find new ways tocommunicate and collaborate with Huffman. The bottom line is that we are at a critical point in the implementationof key reforms that I believe will lead to continued progress in education, and this work is simply too important to

    get sidetracked, Haslam wrote. I was disappointed when I learned from the media about a letter that was signedby some superintendents and apparently is making its way to me. Tullahoma Schools Superintendent DanLawson says at least 60 superintendents from around the state have signed a letter asking Haslam to put thebrakes on Huffmans education reform policies and assess progress before moving ahead.http://www.tennessean.com/article/20130918/NEWS04/309180126/Haslam-asks-school-leaders-back-off-from-criticizing-Huffman?gcheck=1&nclick_check=1(SUBSCRIPTION)

    Haslam'disappointed'by criticismof educationchief KevinHuffman(TFP/Sher)Gov. Bill Haslam says in a letter to school superintendents that he's "disappointed" by their open criticism of hiseducation chief Kevin Huffman and wants them to take a "fresh approach to communications" with thecommissioner. "The bottom line is that we are at a critical point in the implementation of key reforms that I believewill lead to continued progress in education, and this work is simply too important to get sidetracked," Haslam saysin the letter, dated Monday. He adds, "That's why I hope you'll join me in taking a fresh approach to communicationbetween the state and school districts and work together as partners as we seek to build on the momentum that'sbeen generated." Educators said about 60 superintendents have signed a letter criticizing Huffman, saying theyfeel Huffman "considers school teachers, principals and superintendents impediments to school improvementrather than partners." The letter, drafted by Tullahoma Schools Superintendent Dan Lawson, also takes Huffman totask, saying they believe his department "has no interest in a dialogue with those of us providing leadership forschool systems."http://www.timesfreepress.com/news/2013/sep/18/haslam-disappointed0010by-criticism-of-huffman/?local

    Haslam'disappointed'by criticismof Ed CommissionerHuffman(N-S/Humphrey)Gov. Bill Haslam has written the states school superintendents to declare hes disappointed with open criticism ofEducation Commissioner Kevin Huffman by some of them and saying they should not get sidetracked fromimplementing education reforms. The Haslam letter, dated Monday and released to media Tuesday, comes with

    Tullahoma City Schools Superintendent Dan Lawson circulating a letter calling on the governor to re-evaluate theleadership at the state Department of Education. The Lawson letter says the state Department of Education hasno interest in a dialogue with superintendents, adding, We feel that we are not respected or valued and that theunique culture of our state is not valued. Haslam appears trying to refute that contention of an uncaringadministration in his letter, urging the superintendents to join me in taking a fresh approach to communicationbetween the state and school districts and work together as partners. I value the input I receive fromsuperintendents and I plan to continue those meetings and will also sit down with appropriate leadership in thenear future to better understand any concerns you may have, Haslam wrote.http://www.knoxnews.com/news/2013/sep/18/haslam-disappointed-by-criticism-of-ed-kevin/(SUBSCRIPTION)

    Governordefendsed. commissionerunderfire fromsuperintendents(CA/Locker)Gov. Bill Haslam has written Tennessees local school superintendents a letter defending his state education

    http://www.memphisdailynews.com/news/2013/sep/18/haslam-disappointed-in-superintendents-petition/http://www.tennessean.com/article/20130918/NEWS04/309180126/Haslam-asks-school-leaders-back-off-from-criticizing-Huffman?gcheck=1&nclick_check=1http://www.tennessean.com/article/20130918/NEWS04/309180126/Haslam-asks-school-leaders-back-off-from-criticizing-Huffman?gcheck=1&nclick_check=1http://www.timesfreepress.com/news/2013/sep/18/haslam-disappointed0010by-criticism-of-huffman/?localhttp://www.knoxnews.com/news/2013/sep/18/haslam-disappointed-by-criticism-of-ed-kevin/http://www.memphisdailynews.com/news/2013/sep/18/haslam-disappointed-in-superintendents-petition/http://www.tennessean.com/article/20130918/NEWS04/309180126/Haslam-asks-school-leaders-back-off-from-criticizing-Huffman?gcheck=1&nclick_check=1http://www.tennessean.com/article/20130918/NEWS04/309180126/Haslam-asks-school-leaders-back-off-from-criticizing-Huffman?gcheck=1&nclick_check=1http://www.timesfreepress.com/news/2013/sep/18/haslam-disappointed0010by-criticism-of-huffman/?localhttp://www.knoxnews.com/news/2013/sep/18/haslam-disappointed-by-criticism-of-ed-kevin/
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    commissioner, Kevin Huffman, the target of a petition signed by about half of them. The petition criticizes Huffmanfor what they say is his unwillingness to listen to their concerns about the rapid pace of change in state educationpolicies. In the letter, Haslam said hes very grateful for ... Huffmans vision and leadership. He has brought a newperspective and dynamic energy to education reform in Tennessee, and while you may not always agree withsome of our administrations specific initiatives, there is no doubt that were improving the future for moreTennessee children. The bottom line is that we are at a critical point in the implementation of key reforms that Ibelieve will lead to continued progress in education, and this work is simply too important to get sidetracked. Thatswhy I hope youll join me in taking a fresh approach to communications between the state and school districts andwork together as partners as we seek to build on the momentum thats been generated. The governors letter,dated Monday, comes in response to news reports of a petition highly critical of Huffman being circulated amongthe states 137 school superintendents, the chief executive officers of local school districts.http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2013/sep/17/tennessee-governor-defends-state-education-under/(SUB)

    TN GovernorPreparesFor Battle With Right And Left Over CommonCore (WPLN)Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam finds himself in a political crossfire over Common Core. He says this weekslegislative hearing on the new education standards will show both liberals and conservatives are upset, for theirown reasons. Speaking at an education event in Washington organized by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce,Haslam was asked how hed help other governors stay the course on Common Core. Tennessee has movedahead while some states have gotten cold feet. But Haslam suggests he still has plenty of work to do inTennessee, where the Senate Education Committee holds a hearing to listen to critics on Thursday and Friday. It

    will be a real battle. Its one of these interesting political deals where you have folks on the far right who you hearits Obama-core and all the stories out there about what Common Core is. And then you have folks on the far leftwho dont like the fact that teacher evaluations are being tied to students test scores. So you have this fairlyunique push coming from both ends. http://nashvillepublicradio.org/blog/2013/09/17/tn-governor-prepares-for-battle-with-right-and-left-over-common-core/

    Council approvesUBSincentives(Tennessean/Cass)Swiss financial services giant UBS will receive up to $500,000 a year for five years as a taxpayer incentive forbringing up to 1,000 new jobs to downtown Nashville under a deal the Metro Council approved Tuesday. Thearrangement, negotiated by Mayor Karl Deans administration, calls for UBS to receive a $500 annual grant foreach new operations support job it creates. UBS can decide when the grant starts as long as it does so withinthree years of moving into the 98,000 square feet of space it plans to occupy in the Regions Center building, which

    will be renamed UBS Tower. The council supported the mayors plan by a 34-2 vote. UBS already has 240 workersdoing similar support jobs in Nashville among a global workforce of 62,000, according to an analysis by the counciloffice. The company also has about 70 wealth management employees, who will continue to work in a West EndAvenue office. Councilman Ronnie Steine, chairman of the Budget & Finance Committee, said UBS plans to spendabout $36 million to renovate the Regions Center building at 315 Deaderick St. These are good-paying finance,human resources and IT jobs, Steine said. In the competitive environment of job creation and attraction, to investwith a company that is already located in and committed to our city is one of those kinds of issues that isparticularly attractive to us as we try to retain and grow existing businesses.http://www.tennessean.com/article/20130917/NEWS/309170140/Council-approves-UBS-incentives?gcheck=1(SUBSCRIPTION)

    Footwearplant to open in JeffersonCity, bringing109 jobs (News-Sentinel/Marcum)

    Merchant House International Group announced Tuesday it will move production of a line of footwear from Chinato Jefferson City, creating 109 jobs. The Footwear Division of the company has bought a 40,000 square-footbuilding in Jefferson City Industrial Park and will start making a line of mens leather boots and shoes. Theoperation, known as Footwear Industries of Tennessee Inc., represents a $5.4 million investment and is to beginproduction in March. We understand this is probably going to mean 109 jobs or more and those are dearlywelcomed into our community, said Jefferson County Mayor Alan Palmieri. We are looking forward to providingthem with top notch employees. Garrett Wagley, director of economic development for the Jefferson CountyChamber of Commerce, said local officials played a role, but much credit for bringing the company to JeffersonCounty lies with the Tennessee Department of Economic and Community Development. And I think maybe thething that really convinced them to come to Jefferson City is that there was an experienced apparel workforce,Wagley said.http://www.knoxnews.com/news/2013/sep/17/footwear-plant-to-open-in-jefferson-city-109/(SUBSCRIPTION)

    http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2013/sep/17/tennessee-governor-defends-state-education-under/http://nashvillepublicradio.org/blog/2013/09/17/tn-governor-prepares-for-battle-with-right-and-left-over-common-core/http://nashvillepublicradio.org/blog/2013/09/17/tn-governor-prepares-for-battle-with-right-and-left-over-common-core/http://nashvillepublicradio.org/blog/2013/09/17/tn-governor-prepares-for-battle-with-right-and-left-over-common-core/http://www.tennessean.com/article/20130917/NEWS/309170140/Council-approves-UBS-incentives?gcheck=1http://www.knoxnews.com/news/2013/sep/17/footwear-plant-to-open-in-jefferson-city-109/http://www.knoxnews.com/news/2013/sep/17/footwear-plant-to-open-in-jefferson-city-109/http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2013/sep/17/tennessee-governor-defends-state-education-under/http://nashvillepublicradio.org/blog/2013/09/17/tn-governor-prepares-for-battle-with-right-and-left-over-common-core/http://nashvillepublicradio.org/blog/2013/09/17/tn-governor-prepares-for-battle-with-right-and-left-over-common-core/http://www.tennessean.com/article/20130917/NEWS/309170140/Council-approves-UBS-incentives?gcheck=1http://www.knoxnews.com/news/2013/sep/17/footwear-plant-to-open-in-jefferson-city-109/
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    MTSUreportslargest freshmanclass for TBR(Daily NewsJournal)Middle Tennessee State University has the largest class of new freshmen and the largest population of newtransfer students among the six universities in the Tennessee Board of Regents system, according to preliminarycounts released Monday. MTSUs new freshman population increased by almost 2 percent over last year, growingto 3,179 as of the 14th day of classes, the date TBR uses as the systems enrollment snapshot. The university

    welcomed 1,907 new transfers, the most of any TBR school. We are pleased that our number of new freshmenhas increased, said Deb Sells, vice president for student affairs and vice provost for enrollment and academicservices, in a news release. This is good news since, nationally, the number of high school graduates is down,and demographers have predicted a smaller high school graduate population in Tennessee. The WesternInterstate Commission for Higher Education, a resource for universities in admission forecasting, predicted adecline in Tennessees high school graduating class between the 2012-13 and 2015-16 school years. MTSUsoverall enrollment declined by 5.96 percent compared to fall 2012 totals. The university reported a headcount of23,881 for fall 2013, down 1,513 students from fall 2012.http://www.dnj.com/article/20130917/NEWS/309170029/MTSU-reports-largest-freshman-class-TBR(SUB)

    Early VotingOpensin State HousePrimary(MemphisDaily News)Early voting opens Wednesday, Sept. 18, in the Democratic primary special election for State House District 91.

    From Wednesday through Sept. 26, early voting is limited to the Shelby County Election Commission office at 157Poplar Ave. From Sept. 27 to Oct. 3, voters in the Memphis district can also vote early on weekdays from 10 a.m.to 7 p.m. at any of three satellite locations: Glenview Community Center, 1141 S. Barksdale St.; Greater MiddleBaptist Church, 4982 Knight Arnold Road; and Riverside Baptist Church, 3560 S. Third St. Election day in theDemocratic primary is Oct. 8. The winner in the seven-candidate primary advances to a Nov. 21 special generalelection to face independent candidate Jim Tomasik, who filed his qualifying petition as a Libertarian. Nocandidates filed in the Republican primary.http://www.memphisdailynews.com/news/2013/sep/18/early-voting-opens-in-state-house-primary/

    TennesseesSpent $70MOn BiofuelsResearch(WPLN-RadioNashville)In 2007, the state gave the University of Tennessee $70 million to pioneer a way to turn switchgrass crops intobiofuel for cars. Now the exact payoff could rest in the hands of oil companies. The state chipped in $40 millionbefore the recession to build a plant-based bio-refinery, and tens of millions more for things like farmers growingthousands of acres of tall switchgrass. With that money now spent, a committee of lawmakers asked Tuesdaywhat the state has to show for it. They made clear theyre not impressed with pure research. Rather, theyrelooking for commercial success, turning the talk to who might pay for biofuel technology. The likely answer is fuelcompanies, which are federally required to blend in more and more ethanolNot that theyre thrilled about that,says Steve Mirshak, with UTs industry partner, the chemical company Dupont. Mirshak says right now fuelcompanies with deep pockets are campaigning against the Environmental Protection Agency rule, but he expectstheyll come to accept it, and could end up at the bargaining table.http://nashvillepublicradio.org/blog/2013/09/17/tennessees-spent-70m-on-biofuels-research-lawmakers-ask-whats-it-getting-us/

    ObamasTVA plan makesstrangebedfellows(MemphisBusinessJournal)When President Barack Obama floated the idea of selling the Tennessee Valley Authority to private hands as part

    of his budget proposal in April, the idea earned a swift rebuke from Tennessee Sen. Lamar Alexander. He calledthe proposal one more bad idea in a budget full of bad ideas. It was only days later a chorus of fellowRepublicans joined Alexander in decrying the idea of taking the government-owned TVA into the private sector.Alexander even invoked the spectre of national security in his opposition to the proposal. In a hearing in late April,Alexander asked U.S. Energy Department official Neile Miller if the government could find another source ofweapons-grade nuclear material outside of TVA. The TVA has not been on the healthiest financial footing recently,posting a $12 million loss for its third quarter in August.(5) The utility reported that power sales in the spring were 5percent below year-ago levels, putting revenue at $2.6 billion, down from $2.74 billion in 2012 when TVA posted a$23 million quarterly loss. http://www.bizjournals.com/memphis/news/2013/09/17/obamas-tva-plan-makes-strange.html

    http://www.dnj.com/article/20130917/NEWS/309170029/MTSU-reports-largest-freshman-class-TBRhttp://www.dnj.com/article/20130917/NEWS/309170029/MTSU-reports-largest-freshman-class-TBRhttp://www.memphisdailynews.com/news/2013/sep/18/early-voting-opens-in-state-house-primary/http://nashvillepublicradio.org/blog/2013/09/17/tennessees-spent-70m-on-biofuels-research-lawmakers-ask-whats-it-getting-us/http://nashvillepublicradio.org/blog/2013/09/17/tennessees-spent-70m-on-biofuels-research-lawmakers-ask-whats-it-getting-us/http://www.bizjournals.com/memphis/news/2013/09/17/obamas-tva-plan-makes-strange.htmlhttp://www.bizjournals.com/memphis/news/2013/09/17/obamas-tva-plan-makes-strange.htmlhttp://www.dnj.com/article/20130917/NEWS/309170029/MTSU-reports-largest-freshman-class-TBRhttp://www.memphisdailynews.com/news/2013/sep/18/early-voting-opens-in-state-house-primary/http://nashvillepublicradio.org/blog/2013/09/17/tennessees-spent-70m-on-biofuels-research-lawmakers-ask-whats-it-getting-us/http://nashvillepublicradio.org/blog/2013/09/17/tennessees-spent-70m-on-biofuels-research-lawmakers-ask-whats-it-getting-us/http://www.bizjournals.com/memphis/news/2013/09/17/obamas-tva-plan-makes-strange.htmlhttp://www.bizjournals.com/memphis/news/2013/09/17/obamas-tva-plan-makes-strange.html
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    VolkswagenPlant in Tennesseeis Front-Runnerfor NewSUV (AssociatedPress)Volkswagen AG says its factory in Tennessee is the front-runner to build a new SUV. Marc Trahan, executive vicepresident of quality for Volkswagen in the U.S., said Tuesday that Volkswagen will decide by the end of this yearwhere to build the seven-passenger SUV, which the company believes it needs in the U.S. market. Trahan wouldnot discuss efforts by the United Auto Workers to organize workers at the plant, or say whether those efforts are

    part of the discussion about where to build the new SUV. The UAW said last week that a majority of workers inChattanooga have signed cards seeking union representation. The plant currently has two shifts of workers makingthe Passat sedan. Trahan said if the SUV doesn't go there, something else will.http://www.memphisdailynews.com/news/2013/sep/18/volkswagen-plant-in-tennessee-is-front-runner-for-new-suv/

    UAW'sunionizingeffort at ChattanoogaVW plant 'low key, low budget' (TFP/Pare)The United Auto Workers chief organizer in the region says the union's effort at the Chattanooga Volkswagen planthas been as low key and low budget as he has seen. "This is a home-grown deal," said Gary Casteel, a UAWregional director based in Lebanon, Tenn., who said there's been just two or three organizers on the ground inChattanooga. Senior managers for VW in Germany this spring engaged in talks with the UAW and met with UAWPresident Bob King and other union officials last month in Germany. Officials said those discussions are ongoing.Last week, the UAW said a majority of the Chattanooga plant's workers have signed cards authorizing the UAW to

    represent them. Karl Brauer, senior industry analyst at Kelley Blue Book, said Volkswagen officials appear to thinkit's best to leave the decision of a works council labor board and UAW representation up to employees. "They'll letthe workers decide their destiny," he said, noting that whatever the outcome "there's no room to complain about it."http://www.timesfreepress.com/news/2013/sep/18/vw-unionizing-effort-low-key-low-budget/?businesstnvalley(REGISTRATION)

    HeritageFoundationhelpsfuel Franklin's tourismindustry(Tennessean/Travis)In 1967, the old Corn House at the corner of Fifth Avenue and Bridge Street was torn down and a gas station wasbuilt. Preserving local landmarks wasnt always a top-of-mind concern in Franklin. But losing that historic homewas a wake-up call to a small group of people in this town that has since become nationally known for historicpreservation. They saw that we were losing our heritage, said Rick Warwick, who now uses his encyclopedicknowledge of Williamson Countys past as a historian for the Heritage Foundation of Franklin and WilliamsonCounty. In 1970, when then-schoolteacher Warwick moved to Franklin, the Heritage Foundation was just a toddler moving from a walk to an all-out run as its members found purpose and projects. Today, many give thefoundation credit for fueling the tourism industry and stoking property values and economic development throughpolitical advocacy, coalition building, and strategic fundraising and spending. It also has popularized preservationcauses. http://www.tennessean.com/article/20130918/WILLIAMSON10/309180124/Heritage-Foundation-helps-fuel-Franklin-s-tourism-industry (SUBSCRIPTION)

    Oak Ridgecouncil transfersmoneyto cover fundingfor schools(NS/Fowler)Oak Ridge City Council grudgingly transferred $250,000 to the school system in a called session Tuesday, endingworries of a state move to withhold a hefty chunk of its funding and a possible school shutdown on Oct. 1. With thetransfer and expected approval in back-to-back meetings Monday of the Board of Education the schools willcomply with the state-required maintenance of effort funding. State officials had earlier indicated some $1.87million a month in funding would be withheld unless the state requirement to meet last fiscal years funding level is

    met. School Board Chairman Keys Fillauer had earlier warned that without the money city schools would be forcedto close. Comments by council members before the vote sent the clear message that council and the Board ofEducation are still at sharp odds over a lingering controversy how to pay the massive debt on a $61 million highschool renovation. Council members maintain that all proceeds from a half-cent local option sales tax hikeapproved in a 2004 referendum to pay for the school project should flow into servicing the projects debt.http://www.knoxnews.com/news/2013/sep/18/or-council-transfers-money-to-cover-state-for/(SUBSCRIPTION)

    Boardwill pay Hopson$269,000, other perksin 3-year contract(C. Appeal/Roberts)Supt. Dorsey Hopson will earn $269,000 a year for running Shelby County Schools, $15,000 less than Kriner Cashwas making when he left last winter after running a district with 40,000 fewer students. The board approved athree-year contract Tuesday night that also includes a $500,000 life insurance policy, 20 days of vacation and a

    http://www.memphisdailynews.com/news/2013/sep/18/volkswagen-plant-in-tennessee-is-front-runner-for-new-suv/http://www.timesfreepress.com/news/2013/sep/18/vw-unionizing-effort-low-key-low-budget/?businesstnvalleyhttp://www.tennessean.com/article/20130918/WILLIAMSON10/309180124/Heritage-Foundation-helps-fuel-Franklin-s-tourism-industryhttp://www.tennessean.com/article/20130918/WILLIAMSON10/309180124/Heritage-Foundation-helps-fuel-Franklin-s-tourism-industryhttp://www.knoxnews.com/news/2013/sep/18/or-council-transfers-money-to-cover-state-for/http://www.memphisdailynews.com/news/2013/sep/18/volkswagen-plant-in-tennessee-is-front-runner-for-new-suv/http://www.timesfreepress.com/news/2013/sep/18/vw-unionizing-effort-low-key-low-budget/?businesstnvalleyhttp://www.tennessean.com/article/20130918/WILLIAMSON10/309180124/Heritage-Foundation-helps-fuel-Franklin-s-tourism-industryhttp://www.tennessean.com/article/20130918/WILLIAMSON10/309180124/Heritage-Foundation-helps-fuel-Franklin-s-tourism-industryhttp://www.knoxnews.com/news/2013/sep/18/or-council-transfers-money-to-cover-state-for/
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    district car for personal use. The contract does not include provisions for bonus pay as Cash requested when hearrived in 2008. Instead, Hopson will receive the same pay increase other staff get presuming he earns satisfactorymarks in his annual evaluation. In other action, the board seated new member Shante Avant, who replacesReginald Porter Jr. It elected Kevin Woods board chairman and Chris Caldwell vice chairman. Hopson, by tradition,serves as board treasurer. The board also defeated a resolution, 5-2, to place a two-year moratorium on newcharter schools here, offered by board member David Pickler. Voting in favor were Pickler and David Reeves.Pickler wanted the board to press the governor and/or the general assembly to halt the rise of charters in thecounty, arguing that the cost of supporting charter schools cripples the boards ability to educate students in itsschools.http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2013/sep/17/scs-board-approves-hopsons-contract/(SUB)

    HopsonThree-Year ContractApprovedBy SchoolBoard(MemphisDaily News)Countywide school board members approved a three-year contract Tuesday, Sept. 17, that makes Dorsey Hopsonthe superintendent of Shelby County schools through Sept. 2, 2016 at a starting base pay of $269,000 a year. Thedraft contract with Hopson, who had been general counsel to Memphis City Schools and then became interimsuperintendent of the two legacy school systems into their merger, was approved by the seven-member board lessthan two weeks after the board voted to pursue contract negotiations with Hopson. The terms provide for a oneyear extension through the 2016-2017 school year if the board takes no action by March 1, 2016. After the yearsextension, the agreement operates on a year-to-year arrangement. Hopson is evaluated and based on thatevaluation would get the same percentage pay raise as all other school system employees. Meanwhile, Hopsontold the board he wants to explore the school system taking over Shelby County governments Head Start program

    as a way to expand, align with the school system in curriculum and provide some consistency to the quality ofprekindergarten programs.http://www.memphisdailynews.com/news/2013/sep/18/hopson-three-year-contract-approved-by-school-board/

    OPINION

    Editorial: AVIDoffers goodboost to achieve'Drive to 55' (Daily NewsJournal)Earlier this year, Gov. Bill Haslam revealed his Drive to 55 initiative. Its a plan to get more Tennesseanseducated and trained beyond a high school degree. The number of people in the state whove earned associatedegrees or higher was at 32 percent when Haslam announced his plan; he wants to raise that number to 55percent by 2025. Its a smart goal designed to make the states workforce more attractive to potential businesses,and its a goal we fully support. Thats why we are so pleased to see Smyrna High School becoming part of theAdvancement Via Individual Determination program. AVID is a college-readiness program designed to preparefirst-generation students for post-secondary education and the workplace. First-year costs of nearly $35,000 will befunded entirely by grants. Most of that money, however, is for training; costs will decrease over time. "Eventually it

    will require about $5,000 to $6,000 to sustain the program," said AVID program district director Karen Meador."The entire school will be trained in the AVID strategies. This allows all students to benefit from the program."http://www.dnj.com/article/20130918/OPINION/309180007/OUR-VIEW-AVID-offers-good-boost-achieve-Drive-55-(SUBSCRIPTION)

    Editorial: Internet tax bill really is about fairness(Knoxville News-Sentinel)U.S. Rep. John Duncan Jr. is waffling on whether hell support the Marketplace Fairness Act, which would requireInternet retailers to collect sales taxes just as bricks-and-mortar retailers must. In his Washington Report, Duncansays he originally supported the bill because he thought it was unfair to give large out-of-state companies sellingon the Internet nationwide an advantage over local small businesses. More recently, though, he says he hasgrown concerned that people feel they are taxed too much already. No doubt its tempting to make political hay

    http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2013/sep/17/scs-board-approves-hopsons-contract/http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2013/sep/17/scs-board-approves-hopsons-contract/http://www.memphisdailynews.com/news/2013/sep/18/hopson-three-year-contract-approved-by-school-board/http://www.memphisdailynews.com/news/2013/sep/18/hopson-three-year-contract-approved-by-school-board/http://www.dnj.com/article/20130918/OPINION/309180007/OUR-VIEW-AVID-offers-good-boost-achieve-Drive-55-http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2013/sep/17/scs-board-approves-hopsons-contract/http://www.memphisdailynews.com/news/2013/sep/18/hopson-three-year-contract-approved-by-school-board/http://www.dnj.com/article/20130918/OPINION/309180007/OUR-VIEW-AVID-offers-good-boost-achieve-Drive-55-
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    out of the tax issue. A poll of Republican voters showed 66 percent are opposed to changing the way Internet salestaxes are collected. Some political strategists naturally want to use the Marketplace Fairness Act againstcandidates who favor the bill. Tennessees Sen. Lamar Alexander is one Republican who faces such an attackhttp://www.knoxnews.com/news/2013/sep/18/editorial-internet-tax-bill-really-is-about/(SUB)

    Guest columnist:Tennesseevs. Germanyat VW (Wall Street Journal)Don't mistake a fight over a Volkswagen factory in Tennessee with the great episodes of labor history. The Flint

    Sit-Down Strike of 1936 it's not. The only sit-down relevant to VW's Chattanooga plant took place in Germany onAug. 30, in a secret meeting between the United Auto Workers union and German labor representatives onVolkswagen's supervisory board. Chattanooga is VW's only major plant without a German-style works council, inwhich workers and management consult on plant-related matters. The UAW had come to deliver a convenient redherring. It would be illegal under U.S. law, advised the UAW, which has no role in the Chattanooga plant or formaltie to its workers, to establish a works council at the factory without the UAW first being installed as the collectivebargaining agent for the plant's workforce. This is certainly a handy interpretation, since it would allow the UAW toslide into the Chattanooga plant on German politics, and allow Germany's giant IG Metall labor union to exportGerman practices to the U.S. under the red-white-and-blue aegis of the UAW.http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323527004579081032408682124.html?mod=ITP_opinion_0(SUBSCRIPTION)

    Guest columnist:Closebackground-checkloopholesin current fed. gun law (TN)If you want to purchase a gun in Tennessee, you have lots of options. You can visit your neighborhood gun store,stop by the hunting department at your local Wal-Mart, go to a weekend gun show or simply buy one on theInternet. Tennesseans trust that licensed gun retailers will use quick background checks to help prevent guns fromending up in the hands of criminals or the mentally ill. But unfortunately, under current federal law, all gun retailersare not created equal, and the requirement to complete a quick background check before commercially buying agun is not applied across the board. But it should be. Federal law requires your neighborhood gun store or localWal-Mart to perform a quick background check before an individual may purchase a gun, but if the same personwants to buy a gun at a flea market, for example, the background check requirement does not apply because ofloopholes in the current law. In fact, an estimated 40 percent of all commercial gun sales in the U.S. are occurringwithout simple background checks designed to help keep guns out of the hands of criminals.http://www.tennessean.com/article/20130918/OPINION03/309180084(SUBSCRIPTION)

    Guest columnist:Wherethe GoodJobsAreandWhy(Wall Street Journal)The American labor market is recovering from a painful recession. But the recovery is geographically uneven.While some parts of the country are booming, others are still stuck in a deep recession. Two groups of localitieshave been doing particularly well over the past two years. Both are supported by fast-paced technologicalprogress, but one has by far the bigger jobs-multiplier effect. The first group includes cities endowed with a largenumber of highly educated workers and innovative employersplaces like San Jose, Calif.; Seattle; Austin, Texas;Raleigh, N.C.; Washington, D.C., and Minneapolis. The recession had less impact on these areas, and job growthhas been brisk since the recovery began, thanks to sectors like the Internet, software, digital entertainment andbiotech. The most striking example is San Francisco, where the labor market for tech workers is the most dynamicit has been in a decade, average salaries are above their 2006 level, and housing prices have surpassed their pre-recession peak.http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324576304579072773954985630.html?mod=ITP_opinion_0

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