News
DeKalb Angel Tree Signups October 26th
October 25, 2023
By: Dwayne Page
The 29th Annual DeKalb County Angel Tree Project signups are coming soon. Thursday, October, 26th has been chosen as the application date. There are NO EXCEPTIONS. Application time is from 9:00 am until 6:00 pm at the First Baptist Church Life Enrichment Center under the carport.
Applicants must be DeKalb County residents. Children from birth to no older than age 12 by December 25, 2023 are eligible. You must bring photo identification and a bill with the correct current DeKalb County address of the person applying. You must also provide social security cards and birth certificates (Mother’s copy is okay) for all children listed on the application. Guardian paperwork for temporarily placed children is acceptable. Documents are returned to the applicant, only the application is kept. Please make sure you fill out the application as completely and accurately as possible.
If an applicant cannot appear in person, their application can be submitted by someone else as long as all of the required information and documentation is presented. Come prepared with all of the necessary documentation to complete your application between 9:00 am and 6:00 pm on Thursday, October 26th. This is the only day that applications will be available and accepted. NO EXCEPTIONS. Due to continued COVID 19 issues, face coverings are required and social distancing practices will be observed. For additional information please contact Laura Stone (text only please) at 615-464-7135. Remember you only have Thursday, October 26th to complete and turn in your application.
Is Infrastructure Keeping Pace with Residential Growth in DeKalb County? (View Video Here)
October 25, 2023
By: Dwayne Page
Is Infrastructure Keeping Pace with Residential Growth in DeKalb County?
DeKalb County has grown in recent years with new residential developments, especially around the lake but with it has come rising concerns about adequate infrastructure access to these subdivisions.
County Fire Chief Donny Green addressed the county commission about these concerns during Monday night’s regular monthly meeting. He has also met with the planning commission to discuss the matter.
Among the issues is fire truck and ambulance access to these developments in the event of a fire or some other emergency because of many narrow and steep county roads leading to them. Water line infrastructure is also an issue in some places causing concerns about sufficient water pressure to fight a fire.
Chief Green said his intention in raising this matter is not to point fingers at anyone, any developer, or any public official but to merely bring awareness to what appears to be a growing public service and public safety concern and to find ways to mitigate it going forward working with the planning commission and county commission.
First District County Commissioner Tom Chandler, former member of the County Planning Commission also expressed his concerns.
“Donny talked to us the other night about a development with 38 lots, all of which have been sold, with road access that is pretty bad. I have property on Caplinger Hollow and as far as county roads go, its actually a pretty good road but I wouldn’t want to see 38 homes built at the end of it. One of the things that has happened in the planning committee is there has been a discussion and action taken to put a warning on the deeds and property descriptions that tells the buyer, for example that there is no power on this property. My concern for the county is that maybe we already have some situations where we (planning commission) have approved what they were going to do on that piece of property but we really didn’t think through, particularly the access to that property for fire and emergency services that could put us at liability if something happens and then the homeowner or landowner comes back and says you approved this and yet my house burned down or somebody died because you didn’t provide proper access. That would be my concern from a county perspective,” said Commissioner Chandler.
The following are Chief Green’s talking points from the meeting with the County Commission Monday night:
Rural Access for Lake Developments
Purpose
• To bring awareness to access challenges for emergency service providers for responding to emergencies.
• The concerns that I am sharing are absolutely NOT directed at any certain development or project, or anyone currently or previously involved with infrastructure management. And, I certainly am not opposed to growth and prosperity for our county.
• However, we must be aware of the challenges and responsibilities that lie ahead of us so that we can plan to address public safety concerns.
Background
• Prior to the recent surge of lake developments on Center Hill Lake, access issues were fairly limited because these areas were sparsely populated.
• Most residents understood that access to their property was limited by one-lane roads and roads that had steep grades. That has traditionally been the trade-off for privacy.
• I have met with the Planning Commission and the Health, Education, and Public Safety Committee and expressed my concerns and suggestion for open communications so that we can move forward with a proactive plan to do everything possible to promote public safety.
Issue
• In recent years, we have seen a surge of residential developments/subdivisions particularly in areas around the lake.
• I have recently toured some specific subdivision development areas that have given me cause of serious public safety concern.
• Let me be clear, not all of my concerns lie with what I’ve seen inside these developments.
• A lot of my concern is the roadway access and water supply limitations that connect these developments and is part of infrastructure that has worked for many years.
• Even though the Regional Planning Commission has rules that address access and water supply inside such areas of development, it seems the current process does not consider access and infrastructure considerations that connect these areas.
• For example, you have a development that meets roadway specifications but there could be miles of roadway that leads to this development that does not meet the same requirements or specifications. Or, you might have fire hydrants on a 6” water line that is supplied by a 2” or 4” water main from outside the development.
• In essence, we are not accomplishing anything if our infrastructure outside the developments do not match what we are requiring inside these developments.
• As with anything else, “We are only as strong as our weakest link in the chain.”
Recommendation
• As our county grows, we must consider the priorities of infrastructure considerations for public safety measures that provide emergency responses to these areas. Not only must we consider safety for the public, but we must consider safety for the emergency responders who are trying to make someone’s worst day better.
• I would like to see the Planning Commission, the Health, Education, and Public Safety Committee, and the University of Tennessee’s County Technical Advisory Service (CTAS) collaborate to work towards a plan to address the critical infrastructure needs that must take place prior to continued development of such areas.
• My background is public safety. I think public safety is certainly an element of planning considerations that must be taken to make sure our growth is restrained by the capabilities we have to provide public safety.
New Senior Pastor Called to Alexandria First Baptist Church
October 25, 2023
By: Bill Conger
Middle Tennessee native Dan Coe is the new Senior Pastor at Alexandria First Baptist Church. While Coe grew up in Lebanon, Tennessee, returning to near his roots was a bit of a culture shock, especially after serving in Israel for the last several years.
“Culturally, it’s more different than I thought it would be, and I’m talking about just coming from Lebanon,” Coe said. “Now granted, you need to remember there is still a major part of me that’s been formed by my time overseas. And so there are going to be some significant cultural differences from overseas to here. But even from Lebanon and other parts of the Mid-State, this is just a different pace of life and ministry than what I have been used to.
“[Alexandria] is such a loving community, and I have received such a warm welcome from the church. People are going the extra mile again and again for my family, to help position us well to flourish here. We don’t take that for granted, so none of the other things are negatives.”
Coe, his wife, Julia, and four children had taken a break from their ministerial work in late 2021. At that time, they were uprooted from the Middle East when Julia, at that time 32 years old with a new baby, received an alarming diagnosis of breast cancer. The Coes returned to Tennessee within a week of the diagnosis, arriving in late-October 2021. In early 2023, well over a year into the breast cancer battle, the family made the decision not to return overseas.
Growing Up In Middle Tennessee
Coe’s youthful years started on a solid path. He grew up in a loving Christian home with two brothers. His dad, who served on staff at a church in Mt. Juliet in the early ’90s, baptized Coe at age 8. But by the time he was 12 years old, he began to rebel.
“I threw myself into the party lifestyle, which ultimately led to addiction,” Coe admits. “At one point all the fun kind of stopped. Then, I was just in bondage to the drugs. But I often tell people it was as much an addiction to a lifestyle as it was to a chemical substance.”
By age 22, he had hit rock bottom. He lost his girlfriend and the good-paying job that supported his addiction.
“I was not even able to enlist in our armed forces, some four million strong. They wouldn’t even allow me to come on board because I had some pending misdemeanor offenses at that time. You talk about being down in the dumps at 22, wondering ‘what in the world has happened in my life, what’s happened to these past 10 years? What have I done?’”
He voluntarily admitted himself into a drug rehabilitation facility in Dickson, TN, and that’s when he began to seek the Lord.
“I had taken with me a Bible that my mom had given me at my 14th birthday that probably just was caked with dust,” Coe recalls. “I remember going to the reading plan at the back of that NIV Student Bible, and it started off with the Gospel of Luke. And I remember reading about Elizabeth being barren, and about the Lord visiting her and granting her a child. And that whole story just gripped me with hope. Now, I didn’t know anything about John the Baptist or his prophetic significance. I didn’t know any of that stuff. But I knew that there was hope. As I kept flipping through that reading plan, I encountered Christ himself, and eventually I arrived at the cross. I began to undergo significant change even in those few weeks of inpatient rehab. Regeneration took place and I was born again. Man, he just gave me such a hunger for His Word, and a desire to minister.”
From Coe’s earliest years in the faith, God supplied opportunities for service and leadership in different ministries. Coe’s work has included ministry in halfway houses and jail ministries; college ministry leadership; church planting among unreached people groups; and work as a Family Ministry Coordinator alongside his wife.
“I just fell in love with doing ministry and fell in love with Jesus. I love to serve Him. I always loved to be involved in the ministry of the Word of God in whatever form it took.”
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