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Anchor Fabrication Coming to Smithville

June 8, 2023
By: Dwayne Page

A new industry is coming to Smithville!

Anchor Fabrication has acquired an existing building across from Tenneco Automotive in the Industrial Park on Highway 70 east and will soon open as a metal fabrication operation serving the heavy truck industry.

Gary Parsons, Human Resources Manager for the company told WJLE Wednesday that the building is being prepared for Anchor Fabrication to move in but applications are already being accepted from anyone looking for a job. Although it may take a while, Parsons said the company hopes to eventually have up to 200 employees.

Anchor has another location in Tennessee at Lavergne along with plants in Texas and Mississippi. The Tennessee plant, dating back to the early 1970s, was at that time owned by Quality Industries of Nashville but was purchased by Anchor Fabrication in 2019.

“We have been in the Nashville area since the early 1970s. We started out in the food service and heavy truck industry as a metal fabrication company. We moved to Lavergne in the early 1980s and that is where our present location in Tennessee is now. In 2019 the company (Quality Industries) was bought by Anchor Partners and we have a plant in Fort Worth Texas and Mississippi as well as a plant in Denton Texas along with the one in Lavergne,” said Parsons.

“We are glad to be moving into the Smithville area. Its new business for our company and it is an extension of our Laverge plant to start a new facility here,” Parsons continued.

“It is very much a startup right now. The building is being prepared now with equipment being moved in and we are excited to get moving forward. We are working on hiring now. We offer a full benefits package including medical, dental, vision and 401 K. Over the next couple of years, we plan to maybe have up to 200 employees. We’re having to build up production in stages. Right now, we need welders, MIG and TIG with aluminum and steel. We will later need powder painters, assembly operators, material handling, shipping, quality control, and all the standard needs you find in a manufacturing facility. We will be building this team as we go forward,” said Parsons.

To apply, visit www.anchorfabsmithville.com.




DCHS Fishing Teams to Participate in Nationals

June 7, 2023
By: Dwayne Page

Three fishing teams from DCHS competed last weekend in the Tennessee Bass Nation High School & Youth Tournament held at Lake Douglas in Dandridge Tennessee and two of the teams will advance to the Strike King Bassmaster High School National Championship on Lake Hartwell, in Anderson, South Carolina in July. The three-day tournament will take place July 27-29.

“We sent 3 teams to the state championship on June 2nd and 3rd,” said DCHS Fishing Team Coach Jeff Taylor. “Those teams were made up of Mason Taylor and Wesley Kent, Jaxon Humphrey and Hasten Waggoner, and Emma Johnson and Tyler Dunn. The teams fished on Lake Douglas in Dandridge Tennessee. All three teams worked in brutal heat and brought 5 fish limits into the scales on Saturday. We are very excited and proud of our teams. Two teams are going on to the nationals. The Strike King Bassmaster High School tournament will be held on Lake Hartwell in South Carolina in July. The two teams going are partners Mason Taylor and Wesley Kent and partners Jaxon Humphrey and Hasten Waggoner. We are soon going to be actively fundraising for this. If you would like to make a donation, please contact Coach Jeff Taylor at 615-428-6107,” said Taylor.

The State Championship two-day totals for the DCHS teams were:

•Team 1 Emma Johnson & Tyler Dunn 16.09

•Team 2 Mason Taylor & Wesley Kent 14.57

•Team 3 Jaxon Humphrey & Hasten Waggoner 13.85




Budget Committee Recommends Passage of New Consolidated County Budget and almost 27 Cent Property Tax Increase

June 6, 2023
By: Dwayne Page

Your county property taxes may soon be going up!

The county budget committee completed its work on the proposed 2023-24 fiscal year budget Tuesday night and voted unanimously (7-0) to recommend to the full county commission that the property tax rate be increased by almost 27 cents (0.2692 cents) from the current level of $1.7308 cents to $2.00 per $100 of assessed value and that all the increase go into the county general fund. The committee also voted unanimously to recommend to the commission approval of all county budgets in consolidated form.

Steve Bates, the county’s financial advisor/fiscal agent at a previous meeting said that the county needed more revenue to help offset higher costs of operation due to inflation and other factors that have taken a toll on the county general budget in recent years.

“With the 0.2692 cent property tax increase (if approved by the county commission) revenues will exceed expenditures in the county general fund now by $15,946 so you are still balanced and the fund balance as a percentage of revenues and expenditures is 30% and that is a good number,” said Bates.

During the meeting Tuesday night, the budget committee approved the County Highway Department operating budget for the 2023-24 fiscal year. Road Supervisor Danny Hale made no requests for additional local funding. He explained that his operation will be benefitting from a $2.5 million allocation from the State Aid Highway Program Investment fund made possible through the Governor’s Transportation Modernization Act which was approved earlier this year by the Tennessee General Assembly.

Hale said that the new money will be earmarked for state aid road and bridge projects to be spent over a three-year period.

“I have $191,000 in my state aid road (budget) right now. I also have $700,000 plus for state aid bridges. On July 1, I am getting $2,515,518 but this is one time money coming to the county from the state so when you put all those expenditures together its $3.7 million for state aid projects and from the $2.5 million allocation, I will have that to spend over the next three years for state aid roads and bridges,” said Road Supervisor Hale.

In other moves, the budget committee voted 6-1 to cut the $5,000 non-profit contribution to WCTE. Committee member Sabrina Farler voted no.

Also approved by the committee was County Clerk James L. (Jimmy) Poss’ request for the county to fund half of a new full-time position in his office. Restricted earmarked fees for his office generated from noting of liens and titling transactions will be used to fund the rest of the salary. The salary for the position including benefits is $43,600 for a first-year employee. The county’s portion will be half or $21,800. The vote to approve Poss’ request was 5-2. Committee members voting against were Sabrina Farler and Beth Pafford. Poss later said he might have enough earmarked funds to pay for more than half of the salary.

The county clerk’s office currently has four full time employees and one of them doubles as a deputy clerk and bookkeeper. Poss said his goal is to have this employee become a full-time bookkeeper and to hire a new deputy clerk.

The budget committee voted to restore $39,176 in funding to the line item for laborers at the convenience sites in the solid waste budget for 2023-24 which was previously cut in a cost-saving move by the committee on May 9. The vote to restore the funding was 4-3. Budget committee members Beth Pafford, Susannah Cripps Daughtry, and Daniel Cripps voted no.

County Mayor Matt Adcock had said at an earlier meeting that the budget cut was unnecessary because more than enough revenues from tipping fees are being generated to support the salaries. With the cut (from $394,176 to $355,000), Adcock said there would not have been enough funds budgeted to pay the laborers to work six days per week and he would have been forced to close the county’s convenience sites all day on Wednesdays, in addition to Sundays when they are already closed due to a policy decision he made last fall. With the funds restored to the $394,176 level for the 2023-24 fiscal year, the convenience sites will apparently remain open six days per week and the laborer’s hours will not be cut.

Committee member Larry Green made a motion to fund a previous request by County Fire Chief Donny Green for an expenditure of $50,000 from the capital projects fund to purchase a new SUV for the fire department. That request was first rejected by the committee on a 5-2 vote last month. The request was again denied Tuesday night but this time on a 4-3 vote. Committee members Beth Pafford, Greg Matthews, Daniel Cripps and Susannah Cripps Daughtry voted no.

Members of the committee tried twice unsuccessfully to include funding from the capital projects fund for a few new portable digital radios with dual band/multiband frequency capability for the county’s emergency services departments to replace soon to be outdated analogue radios. Member Larry Green moved to fund 10 new radios (only a portion of what the county will eventually need) from capital projects for a total of $36,000. Green said it would be smarter to buy a few new radios now rather than wait until they all are needed because of the exorbitant expense and that by starting now, the county might be eligible for state grant funding later to help purchase what is needed. The motion died for the lack of a second.

Following the vote, committee member Greg Matthews then made a motion to purchase five new radios for $18,000. This time the vote failed 5-2. Only members Matthews and Larry Green voted in favor of the purchase.

The county commission will take up passage of the budgets and property tax rate during its next regular scheduled monthly meeting on Monday, June 26 at 6:30 p.m. at the county complex in the auditorium of the Mike Foster Multipurpose Center.

If approved as recommended by the committee, the property tax rate would be divided as follows:

County General: $1.2583, up from the current level of 0.9891 cents

Highways/Public Works: 0.0326 cents (no increase)

General Capital Projects: 0.0733 cents (no increase)

Debt Service: 0.1060 cents (no increase)

General Purpose Schools: 0.5298 cents (no increase)

Total proposed tax rate: $2.00, up from current level of $1.7308 cents.

Members of the County Budget Committee are Chairman Jeff Barnes and members Daniel Cripps, Sabrina Farler, Susannah Cripps Daughtry, Greg Matthews, Larry Green, and Beth Pafford.




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