News
Labor of Love Fundraiser Upcoming to Help the Homeless Through The Extended Arms Project
February 6, 2020
By: Dwayne Page
The Extended Arms Project is excited to announce its second annual “Labor of Love” fundraising event in DeKalb County with a goal of helping the homeless and less fortunate.
The non-profit will host a dinner and auction on February 22 at the County Complex located at 712 S. Congress Boulevard starting with a meal of soup and chili at 4 p.m. and an auction at 5 p.m. Admission is $5.00 for adults and $3.00 for children ages 10 and younger.
The Extended Arms Project, a division of Young Harmony, Inc., is a non-profit organization with a mission of aiding the underprivileged with physical, emotional and inspirational needs.
“We inspire and give hope by reminding others of their self-worth, one individual at a time. For those who need help, we provide necessities such as sleeping bags, hygiene products, gift cards for food, temporary shelter and more,” said Wanda Redmon, Grant Director for the Extended Arms Project.
“You may show your support for the effort by donating or helping to sponsor the event. We are seeking support through donations, goods, McDonalds gift cards, etc as well as food for the dinner including chili, soup, and desserts. All items or monetary gifts donated go entirely toward the Extended Arms Project to help others,” added Redmon.
Donations may include toboggans, backpacks, gloves, scarves, bath towels, washcloths, shampoo, bath soap, toothpaste, toothbrushes, hand lotion, razors, shaving cream, chap stick, socks, combs, brushes, and spoons, and more.
All donations are tax deductible.
Extended Arms currently operates in Atlanta, GA., Knoxville, Chattanooga, Nashville, TN., Smithville TN, Cincinnati Ohio and Lexington, KY .
To purchase tickets for the dinner please contact Wanda Redmon at 615-351-1119.
For more information on the Extended Arms Project visit, www.ExtendedArmsProject.com
Susan Hinton to Represent DeKalb County in the Ms Tennessee Senior America Pageant
February 8, 2020
By: Dwayne Page
Beautiful ladies from across Tennessee including one from DeKalb County will be gathering at the historic Palace Theatre in Crossville this spring to participate in the annual Ms. Tennessee Senior America pageant which serves as the preliminary to the Ms Senior America Pageant.
Susan Hinton of Smithville will represent the DeKalb County Fair in the pageant as the Ms. Senior Grandpa Fair of the South.
The reigning Ms Tennessee Senior America is Susan England of Sparta.
The Ms. Senior America Pageant is the world’s first and foremost pageant to emphasize and give honor to women who have reached the “Age of Elegance.” It is a search for the gracious lady who best exemplifies the dignity, maturity and inner beauty of all senior Americans. The Ms. Senior America philosophy is based upon the belief that seniors are the foundation of America, and our most valuable treasure. It is upon their knowledge, experience and resources that the younger generation has the opportunity to build a better society.
Contestants must be at least 60 years of age and a Tennessee resident. Prior entrance in other pageants is not required.
The three judges will be looking for the woman who best exemplifies the “Age of Elegance.” Volunteer work is considered.
Judging is based on interview, philosophy of life, talent presentation and evening gown appearance.
“My philosophy of life platform will be about literacy education and that you are never too old to learn because it is not where you start but where you finish that counts,” said Hinton, a longtime educator.
The winner of the pageant will receive flowers, sash, crown and a paid trip to Atlantic City, NJ, to represent Tennessee in the National Competition, along with $500 to assist with personal expenses.
The Ms Tennessee Senior America Pageant will be held Saturday, April 18 in Crossville where contestants will meet individually with the pageant judges for the interview portion. Judges hope that during the personal interview they will be able to select a woman whose charm, personality and conversational ability meet the ideals of Ms. Senior America. Saturday evening will be full of excitement with entertainment from past queens, and each of the ladies in the pageant performing their own unique talent. Afterward, the ladies will be in evening gowns; the evening gown portion allows each judge to see the contestants poise and grace on display, along with their fashion style. The contestants “philosophy of life” will be presented individually along with the evening gown portion of the pageant.
Before the evening is over, the new Ms Tennessee Senior America will be crowned. And the next journey begins — Atlantic City in October for the national pageant.
Hinton said she is thrilled to have this opportunity and is proud to represent DeKalb County and the Fair in the Ms. Tennessee Senior America Pageant.
“There are always people smarter, prettier, and more intelligent but there is nobody who could win that would love people and have a heart for Tennessee like I do,” said Hinton.
“This pageant is about inner beauty for our age, the age of elegance, and that outside beauty should be a reflection of your inside beauty. It is to show that senior Americans are still a vital part of the world and that they are the foundation of America and one of the most valuable treasures of America,” added Hinton.
Susan is no stranger to pageants. As a teen, she competed in the DeKalb County Fair and Harvest Festival pageants and while in college represented Belmont University in the Miss Tennessee pageant. Hinton has also judged and been an emcee for beauty pageants over the years.
The Ms Tennessee Senior America Pageant also champions worthy causes through fundraising activities of each contestant.
“We sell ads for the Ms. Tennessee Senior America program and the person who wins the ad competition gets a portion of that money which goes to their favorite charity and mine is for Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library, which is a book gifting program that mails free, high-quality books to children from birth until they begin school, no matter their family’s income, but each county has to support the effort by donating a certain portion of money,” said Hinton.
Button Willow downtown Smithville is also hosting a benefit concert featuring Susan on February 28 from 7-9 p.m. in a program called “A Night of Elegance”. The public is invited to attend.
Which School Building Plan and How to Fund it Under Consideration
February 8, 2020
By: Dwayne Page
How much can the county afford for new school construction and what will be built?
The budget committee and full county commission will soon have to answer those questions.
During an informal work session Thursday night, the budget committee and the Board of Education met jointly to discuss the standing proposal for two new Pre-K to 8 grade schools and converting Northside Elementary to a Pre-K to 8 complex. They also talked about the possibility of funding the board’s original and less expensive plan to build a new Pre-K to 2nd grade school to replace Smithville Elementary School. Some say the Pre-K to 2 plan could be completed quicker and paid off over a shorter period of time which would make starting another project, maybe a new high school, a more realistic goal in the foreseeable future.
According to Upland Design Group, the Board of Education’s architect, the cost of building the Pre-K to 8 schools (capacity of 700 students each) totals at least $48 million versus $30 million for the Pre-K to 2 school (capacity of 900 students)
The budget committee will meet with the county’s financial advisor Steve Bates in the coming days to determine if the county can afford to fund the school board’s current request.
“I want to support the vision that the Board of Education wants to support. I am an education girl but as a commissioner I want to find a way to fund what they want. If we can’t fund it our job as a commission is to figure out what we can do but I want to drive on their vision,” said second district county commissioner Sabrina Farler who is also a member of the county budget committee.
Dennis Slager, first district commissioner and Chairman of the Budget Committee, asked School Board Chairman Danny Parkerson if the Board of Education would be satisfied with the county funding the Pre-K to 2 option if it met immediate school needs.
“It would serve our needs but that is a board decision (whether to revise the request for a Pre-K to 2)”, said Parkerson.
“I leaned toward the Pre-K to 2 to begin with. I am not saying I am against the Pre-K to 8 but as a matter of time, efficiency, taxes, and everything if you are asking if I am amendable to the $30 million (Pre-K to 2 project) my answer is yes,” said School Board member W.J. (Dub) Evins, III.
Although the budget committee has not yet voted on any construction funding, Slager said the county can’t currently afford the Pre-K to 8 plan without a sizeable property tax increase.
“Financially we can only do so much. We don’t have a lot of money and we went into cash (reserves) over $700,000 this year. In my opinion we cannot afford a $48 million building project. It would involve a tax increase and long term financing,” he said.
However, Slager said the county might be able to pay for a Pre-K to 2 school without a tax increase by securing USDA financing with a repayment schedule of 12-15 years.
“This committee will have to decide whether we fund a project we can pay for now and not have to raise taxes or raise taxes and fund a larger request,” he said.
“I think there is a way to fund a Pre-K to 2 by using a portion of school funds without raising property taxes. I will present this to the committee in great detail at a later meeting but USDA offers financing we could pay off at anytime over 12-15 years. As we roll off debt from other bond issues retiring in 2025 and 2029 we can apply that money to this project. This is something we could afford. There are several steps we would have to jump through including getting approved for financing which requires some time but it can all be done in a reasonable period of time. I don’t see why this (school) board and this (county) commission cannot move quickly to resolve this. We are willing to help fund this and move forward,” he continued. “The more information we can get about what we are funding and the amount we are funding then I think this board can move quickly but I truly believe we can finance this without a tax increase over a shorter period of time and get the school system to the next phase of what they want to build,” said Slager.
How to finance the purchase of land, for any building plan, has also become a consideration for the budget committee.
While he is not completely opposed to using a portion of the school districts over $9 million fund balance (reserves) to purchase land for new schools, Director of Schools Patrick Cripps said he wants to make sure there is sufficient money left to fund future local pay raises for teachers from that fund because it is recurring spending.
“Am I opposed to using some of our reserves? No, because it is there. But because of recurring costs in financing local (teacher) pay raises that are coming, if we use our reserve funds to purchase land then the raises would fall back on you (county commission). The Governor in his State of the State speech proposes to give a 4% pay raise across the board for teachers and increase their minimum salaries over time so some of this will be state mandated for BEP teachers with some local obligations for the rest if it is adopted by the state legislature,” said Cripps.
According to Cripps, DeKalb County has about 30 teachers more than required under the Basic Education (BEP) program.
More than two years ago Upland Design estimated construction costs for a Pre-K to 2 school at over $17 million. Updated numbers in November, 2019 put the figure at over $30 million. Fifth district commissioner and budget committee member Jerry Adcock asked why such an increase.
“We had not sat down with Mr. Cripps at that time to determine how big the building needed to be or how many classrooms it needed. We were just using that as a point of reference. The other factor was the cost per square foot was a lot less in 2017 than what it is today for school construction,” said Brian Templeton of Upland Design Group who was at Thursday night’s meeting.
“I also asked the architects to add 20,000 square feet to the original design to allow for growth and more classrooms should the state ever require mandatory pre-K. Also those quotes in 2017 did not include what our engineering fees would be or the costs of furniture and things of that nature. It was just for construction,” added Director Cripps.
Adcock also asked why a new school could not be built on the existing Northside property as was intended when the land was purchased more than twenty years ago.
“The first task the school board gave us was to try to fit a project there but the size of the new school did not fit. We looked at several ways to make it work but there is a drainage area in the front of the site that eats into the usability of being able to put a facility there and we were concerned with building over top of that so we tried to keep everything pushed to the back and stay out of it,” Templeton said. “Another issue was there wasn’t enough playground space for a new 120,000 square foot school there. We also had issues dealing with traffic and being able to provide stack space for both schools on the same site.”
He added that the Northside site would be suitable if adjoining property could be acquired.
“We looked at buying additional property to the back of the site and had an option that could work for the 120,000 square foot pre K to 2 design,” said Templeton.
Asked why property had not already been identified for purchase in preparation for school construction, Director Cripps said he and the school board needed to know from the county commission how much money they were willing to fund for a project.
“I have never gone to buy a car without knowing what money I had to spend. We just need to work together to come up with a plan that is going to be what is best for our kids and what is financially sound for our community,” said Director Cripps.
“We do not have a plan for the Pre- K to 8 drawn up because that cost money and I can’t go out and buy two pieces of property if I don’t know what we are going to build,” Cripps said. “Until we know what we are going to build I don’t see how we can go out and buy land or have plans drawn. Those plans are not cheap and to possibly have those drawn up and pushed to the side I don’t want to see that happen either.”
Director Cripps said while there are pros and cons with any building plan, the Pre-K to 8 proposal solves some issues but poses other challenges.
“The two Pre-K to 8 schools solves the elementary and middle school problems (by eliminating Smithville Elementary and DeKalb Middle School) but with that you create other problems as well. You would have zoning issues and where do we find the land for these schools?”
More administrative costs would also be incurred for serving students with special needs under the Pre-K to 8 plan.
“Right now in our system we have to move students that may have special needs from one Pre-K to 8 school to the Smithville area. If we do the two Pre-K to 8s this is something which would have to be addressed. We are seeing more and more students with special needs. Putting those figures together with our special education supervisor that will be an additional one million dollar cost probably to the budget each year,” said Director Cripps.
“We are four schools behind (on new construction) so any school is going to help,” added Cripps.
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