News
WJLE’s Fearless Forecasters Debuts Thursday Afternoon
August 27, 2018
By: Dwayne Page
WJLE’s “Fearless Forecasters” are returning for another season of college pigskin prognosticating Thursday, August 30 at 4:30 p.m.
This season’s regulars are Dewain Hendrixson, Scott Brown, Chad Kirby, Jeff and Grant James, Ricky Atnip, John Pryor, Will Graham, and Darrell Gill.
The “Fearless Forecasters” pick who they believe will win in fifteen of the biggest or most interesting college football games of the week.
They also make an underdog selection each week.
The program is sponsored by Liberty State Bank, DeKalb County Ace Hardware, Middle Tennessee Natural Gas, Love-Cantrell Funeral Home, DeKalb County Insurance, Gill Automotive, and the Charles D. Atnip Realty & Auction Company.
Catch the “Fearless Forecasters” LIVE on WJLE weekly starting Thursday, August 30.
Ten Outgoing Members of County Commission to be Recognized Tonight
August 27, 2018
By: Dwayne Page
Ten members of the county commission will be attending their last meeting Monday night, August 27. Their terms expire Friday, August 31.
Five of them were defeated for re-election in the Democratic Primary in May and two others lost their re-election bids in the August County General Election. The other three members chose not to seek re-election this year.
County Mayor Tim Stribling will be recognizing and presenting plaques to the outgoing members during Monday night’s monthly county commission meeting.
The longest serving members leaving the commission are Larry Summers and Wayne Cantrell. Summers, a Democrat, lost his re-election bid in the August General Election. Summers has served for a total of 38 years from the seventh district including three terms from 1978 to 1990. Summers returned to the commission in 1992. He was appointed to fill an unexpired term and then was elected to six more terms from 1994 to 2018.
Cantrell, a Democrat, has served the fourth district since 1994. He is wrapping up 24 years and six terms on the commission. Cantrell was defeated in the May primary.
In the first district Mason Carter, a Republican, served 12 years and three terms. Carter did not seek re-election.
Second district members Joe Johnson, a Democrat, and Jimmy Midgett, an Independent, will be leaving the commission after 4 years and one term. Midgett did not seek re-election while Johnson lost his re-election bid in the May primary. Johnson previously served on the commission from the third district during the 1980’s. He was appointed to fill an unexpired term and then was elected to one term in 1986. Altogether, Johnson has put in 11 years on the commission.
In the third district, Bradley Hendrix and Jack Barton, both Democrats, will be stepping down. Hendrix, who did not seek re-election to the commission, is completing 8 years and two terms.
Barton, who was defeated for re-election in the May primary, has put in a total of almost eleven and a half years on the commission. He was elected from the second district in 2006 and 2010 but he resigned in January, 2014 after moving his residence outside the district. Barton was elected to the commission from the third district in August 2014
In addition to Cantrell, another fourth district member, Jonathan Norris, a Democrat, will be leaving the commission after 4 years and one term. He was defeated in the May primary.
Along with Summers, Kevin Robinson from the seventh district is stepping down. Robinson, a Democrat, served 4 years and one term. Robinson was defeated in the May primary.
Sixth district member Betty Atnip, a Democrat, will be stepping aside after 4 years and one term on the commission. She lost her re-election bid in the August General Election.
Four members of the commission will be returning September 1.
Julie Williams Young, a Democrat will be starting her first full 4 year term on the commission from the first district. She has been on the commission since September 1, 2016 after being elected to fill the remaining 2 year unexpired term of her predecessor Elmer Ellis, Jr. who resigned earlier that year.
Fifth District members Anita Puckett, a Democrat, and Jerry Adcock, a Republican were re-elected on August 2. Adcock will be starting his third term and Puckett her second.
Sixth district member Jeff Barnes has been on the commission for 16 years and will be starting his fifth term.
Board Weighing Options for New School Construction
August 25, 2018
By: Dwayne Page
Although the Board of Education has not yet reached a consensus on a specific school building construction plan to recommend to the county commission it may be getting closer.
During an informal workshop last Tuesday night, the School Board and Director of Schools Patrick Cripps focused primarily on two options:
*Building a new pre-k to 5th grade elementary school and adding on to Northside Elementary to make it a pre-K to 5th grade school, or
*Building two new pre-k to 8th grade elementary schools and adding on to Northside Elementary to make it a pre-K to 8th grade school.
Director Cripps asked each member of the Board to submit to him written pros and cons of each option for review at another meeting. The board could settle on either option, submit both proposals, or come up with another alternative for the county commission to consider.
“We are trying to get something before the next school board meeting as far as the plans so we can further our discussions,” said Director Cripps.
Last fall Upland Design Group, the board’s architect, presented six options for consideration but narrowed them down to three by April at the Board’s request.
According to Cripps the last available numbers from April showed estimated costs for the pre-k to 8 building project would run in excess of $30 million as opposed to $18 million for the pre-k to 5th grade plan. Neither option includes the cost of land purchase. Cripps said he has contacted Upland Design to provide updated construction cost estimates
“I have contacted the Upland Architectural group to talk to us about new numbers. They say the numbers (costs estimates) are changing constantly because of the (construction) demand that is going on (in the market). They (architects) are going to refigure the costs of building pre-k to 8 and pre-k to 5 schools and send me some updated numbers ,” said Director Cripps.
Either of these two options would require zoning meaning students would have to attend the elementary school within the zone where they reside.
“We would have to zone under these scenarios because when you have multiple schools with the same grade levels you can’t flood one school with all the students and the other with hardly any students in it so we would have to set boundaries in the county at that point,” Director Cripps said.
Whichever construction plan is presented , the county commission would have to approve it and authorize funding to pay for it over a period of years through a note or bond issue. After the first project is completed and paid for, Director Cripps said the school board wants a plan in place, working with the county commission, to move toward building a new high school.
“We see that we need three schools. The elementary and high school are the oldest buildings in the county and the middle school has some age on it. You can’t just look at this (first) building phase and say we’re done for 20-30 years. We must have in place what our next step is going to be. I think it is important that we have a plan in place. The next phase for other buildings to be built,” he said.
Director Cripps and members of the School Board spent part of the day Saturday traveling about the county looking for property that would potentially make suitable elementary and high school building sites.
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