Wednesday, July 9, 2008
Shoppes of Edge-O-Lake begins second section
Restaurants, businesses open in street-level units, and more space and residences to follow
By SUZANNE NORMAND BLACKWOOD • Staff Writer (Tennessean) • July 9, 2008
MURFREESBORO PIKE — The visibility, access and connectivity at the Shoppes of Edge-O-Lake are "every developer's dream," said project developer Mark Marshall.
The street-level units are something Marshall Development has touted in marketing the mixed-use development since its inception.
Also, said Marshall, "Not only do we have great visibility, we're building these buildings like you would see in Brentwood or Cool Springs. We're using higher-end products — stone, brick."
Tenants that have moved into the first phase of the center are Images Salon/Barber Shop; Fish Wings & Thangs; Subway; Automation Personnel Services, Inc.; and Tennessee Urgent Care Associates.
"So far, I think this is a good location," said Tunecia Johnson, manager of Fish, Wings & Thangs.
"I'm still growing, of course. Every day I get new customers."
Customers continue to find out about the restaurant, said Johnson, adding visibility from Murfreesboro Pike is good. "I can only see the business expanding."
An O'Reilly Auto Parts store will soon be opening next door on an out parcel.
"We sold that last year, said Jenny Pollard, Realtor for Marshall Real Estate Properties and leasing manager for the center. "We have two more outparcels for sale."
Space is being built now in a second section of the development that will include a Chinese restaurant and a Greek gyros shop, as well as office and retail space. Pollard said those businesses would likely be ready to open in the fall.
Phase 2 of the development, expected to begin later this year, will include 35 single-family homes that will be behind O'Reilly Auto Parts off Dover Glen Drive.
They will be all-brick and between 1,500 and 1,800 square feet.
Phase 2 also will consist of a convenient store and a 40,000-square-foot retail center that will include office and medical space.
Pollard said Marshall Development would soon be installing signage out front to further publicize the existing portion of the development.
"It's gone really well," she said about the marketing of the development.
Nashville schools rezoning plan passes
By JAIME SARRIO • Staff Writer (Tennessean) • July 9, 2008
The Metro Nashville Board of Education passed a massive rezoning plan Tuesday after months of emotional arguments that it would adversely affect racial balance at several schools.
Supporters prevailed 5-4 in front of a packed audience. It will take effect in the 2009-10 school year and includes plans for $4 million to $6 million in enhancements for schools that will be filled mostly with poor, black students.
The plan was approved after two attempts by board members to delay the vote or exclude certain schools from the rezoning. One board member, Ed Kindall, took to the podium and presented his own plan while another, George Thompson, asked some board members not to vote because of allegations that they were lobbied by the Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce.
In the end the plan passed, but concerns linger about how the district will be able to provide the promised additional resources and whether segregated schools will really be equal.
"I don't think it will be funded," Kindall said after the meeting. "I think when we look at the sustainable cost, we're talking about a huge amount of money that we don't have to spend."
Challenging the legality of the rezoning in court could be a next possible step, he said.
The plan was drafted by a community task force, which was organized six months ago. Each board member and the mayor were permitted to pick someone to sit on the committee.
2 areas at heart of issue
Changes are coming across the district, but at the heart of the issue are the Pearl-Cohn and Hillwood communities.
Since desegregation, students from the predominantly black Pearl-Cohn area have been zoned to attend schools in the affluent, predominantly white Hillwood community.
Some students still would have the option to attend Hillwood under the new plan, but they would technically be zoned to attend Pearl-Cohn, which will be given more money for smaller classes and additional resources.
Black leaders including the NAACP spoke against the plan, and in a last-ditch effort to block new zones in those neighborhoods, board members at Tuesday's meeting asked they be excluded from the plan.
The board vote was nearly divided along racial lines. Karen Johnson, who represents the Antioch area, was the only black board member who voted for the proposal. Gracie Porter, Kindall, Jo Ann Brannon and Thompson voted against the plan.
"We say we want to desegregate the schools, but we need to desegregate our minds and our neighborhoods," said Lynn Green, a fourth-grade teacher at Eakin Elementary who opposed the rezoning. "We fiddle around with the children because we can, but it is the grownups that need to do the soul searching."
But supporters say a rezoning was long overdue. Many of the district's schools are not full, and supporters including board Chairwoman Marsha Warden argued the district is spending millions on bricks and mortar rather than education.
Chamber of Commerce President Ralph Schulz said he believes the plan will prove to stakeholders that the district is a good steward of taxpayer money.
Tuesday, July 8, 2008
Metro invites anonymous tips on fraud
Efficiency suggestions also wanted
By MICHAEL CASS • Staff Writer (Tennessean) • July 8, 2008
Metro Nashville wants your help exposing its ugliest warts.
The city recently set up an Internet- and phone-based system to solicit anonymous tips about government fraud, waste and abuse from Metro employees and citizens. The system, called SilentWhistle, also accepts suggestions to make the government more efficient.
Metro Auditor Mark Swann said his office decided to launch the program because of general concerns about fraud and waste — Metro is a large organization, and complaints may not always work their way up the ladder — but not because of any specific tips or suspicions.
"There's always a certain amount of fraud that goes on," Swann said Monday.
He said the city has received more than 30 tips and suggestions since employees started getting an e-mail about the program with an endorsement by Mayor Karl Dean on Wednesday.
The suggestions have covered employee benefits, places for ID card readers and other issues. As for the waste and fraud tips, Swann said nothing has made his hair stand up yet.
"It's all allegations, so it's hard to say," he said.
But that doesn't mean the program won't pay off over time. The Association of Certified Fraud Examiners reported in 2006, "Our data supports the use of confidential hotlines and other reporting mechanisms as a fraud detection tool.Occupational frauds are more likely to be detected by a tip than by other means such as internal audits, external audits or internal controls."
Metro expects to pay $10,000 to $12,000 over the course of a year to Allegiance Inc., the Salt Lake City-based company that hosts SilentWhistle, Swann said. Metro will decide whether to renew the contract once it expires next spring. Clay Osborne, director of SilentWhistle, said Allegiance started the phone hotline in 1992; the Web-based reporting system got going in 2000. Osborne said the company has about 100 government clients, including the federal departments of homeland security and transportation, among 2,200 clients in "every industry you can imagine."
To report a problem or make a suggestion, call 888-484-6976 or visit http://nashville.silentwhistle.com. The Web site says the reporting process takes five to 10 minutes.
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Monday, July 7, 2008
Metro asking for anonymous tips about fraud, inefficiency
By MICHAEL CASS • Staff Writer (Tennessean)• July 7, 2008
Metro Nashville has started using an Internet- and phone-based system to solicit tips from employees and citizens about government fraud, waste and abuse, as well as ways to run the city more efficiently.
The SilentWhistle program allows people to submit tips anonymously to a toll-free phone number or at http://nashville.silentwhistle.com. Metro Auditor Mark Swann said the program, run by a company called Allegiance Inc., has received about 30 tips since city employees started getting an e-mail with an endorsement from Mayor Karl Dean on Wednesday.
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Metro is paying Salt Lake City-based Allegiance $8,400 for a one-year pilot program, Swann said.
Saturday, July 5, 2008
Davidson County firefighters vote no confidence in chief
Union firefighters announced a vote of no confidence in Nashville Fire Chief Stephen Halford.
With more than half the members of the Nashville Firefighters and Fire Service Employees Association Local 140 voting Thursday, 88 percent said they've lost confidence in Halford.
Members say that they're frustrated with how he has managed the budget and that he doesn't listen to their concerns.
Doug Conquest, president of the local union, said a decision to cut some engine companies from four-man teams to three creates safety concerns.
Although the vote is largely symbolic and Halford won't be fired, Mayor Karl Dean said the vote sends a message that can't be ignored.
Still Dean said he has confidence in Halford's management, and all city departments have been asked to make do with budget cuts.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
New truancy center addresses problems beyond academics
By NATALIA MIELCZAREK • Staff Writer (Tennessean) • July 5, 2008
Starting this school year, Metro students picked up by police for cutting classes will have an extra resource to help them stay in school.
A new $500,000 attendance center will offer counselors on staff to assist them — and their families — in addressing problems that extend beyond academics, from poverty to addiction to neglect.
The central goal of the program is to boost Metro's 70 percent graduation rate by catching kids before they leave the school system for good.
"A lot of times we put the blame on schools, but students come to school already with a lot of problems," said Bob Ross, director of intake, parentage and family services at the Davidson County Juvenile Court. He has been involved in setting up the center.
"We're trying to treat this in a more proactive, helping manner than in a punitive manner. Right now, when those (loitering) citations get sent to us, we set a court date, they pay $120 and go on. We'll try to establish more of a link among various agencies so we can work on a plan."
The idea to create an attendance center came out of Mayor Karl Dean's dropout prevention initiative he launched last winter. The program will be housed in the former East Police Precinct off Trinity Lane in East Nashville.
Students and their families will get on-site help from counselors and social workers from Metro police, the school district and juvenile court, and get referrals to agencies for further help. Loitering citations may be retired if families choose to get assistance, Ross said.
Dean has faith in program
Carol Nixon works with students who battle a variety of issues, from addictions to hunger.
"School-based resources reach kids where they are," said Nixon, director of evaluation and grants for Students Taking A Right Stand, a program that helps students overcome obstacles to learning.
"Of the kids who have substance abuse problems, nine out of 10 don't get the help they need. Having this centralized location, with people from different departments working together, you find out that it's not just one issue that contributes to the problem."
The collaborative approach to addressing truancy is the strength of the program, Dean said. "I'm optimistic about the success of the program because when I first became mayor … one of the issues we were confronting is the way schools have been keeping or not keeping good records," he said.
"Over the course of this past academic year, they really began to improve. We need to focus on truancy beginning in August and stick with it throughout the year. I think everybody's getting the message."
Thursday, July 3, 2008
Davidson County crime log for June 26-29, 2008
These are the most serious calls handled by the Metro police, listed by time, crime reported and address. Some reports may be unfounded. Police calls are listed by police precinct or town. When police cannot immediately determine the location of a crime, the address given is that of the police station or hospital where the crime was reported.
Antioch
1:54 p.m., residential burglary, 4500 block Hunters Green Circle
10:27 p.m., residential burglary, 500 block Piccadilly Row
Hermitage
2:22 a.m., cutting/stabbing, 400 block Rockwood Drive
10:44 a.m., residential burglary, 200 block Bonnafield Drive
2:01 p.m., residential burglary, 4500 block Brooke Valley Drive
6:23 p.m., residential burglary, 400 block Scotts Creek Trail
7:57 p.m., residential burglary, 1000 block Tulip Grove Road
Priest Lake
3:06 a.m., nonresidential burglary, 2900 block Murfreesboro Pike
South
1:37 p.m., residential burglary, 13800 block Old Hickory Boulevard
7:21 p.m., residential burglary, 13800 block Old Hickory Boulevard
8:09 p.m., residential burglary, 1900 block Dabbs Avenue
11:46 p.m., holdup/robbery, 1000 block Patricia Drive
Una
3:07 a.m., rape, Borowood Drive
Downtown
12:50 a.m., holdup/robbery, 100 block Second Avenue North
2:28 p.m., holdup/robbery, 900 block Rosa L. Parks Boulevard
Priest Lake
1:32 a.m., residential burglary, 700 block Holder Drive
South
1:28 a.m., residential burglary, 1900 block Murfreesboro Pike
11:11 a.m., holdup/robbery, 1100 block Murfreesboro Pike
8:27 p.m., holdup/robbery, 5300 block Mt. View Road
Antioch
11:20 a.m., residential burglary, 700 block Reeves Road
6:26 p.m., residential burglary, 600 block Cadogan Court
8:04 p.m., residential burglary, 1300 block Arbor Ridge Drive
Donelson
1:26 p.m., holdup/robbery, 500 block Donelson Pike
Downtown
3:25 p.m., holdup/robbery, 100 block Broadway
South
5:58 a.m., holdup/robbery, 2700 block Murfreesboro Pike
7:37 a.m., holdup/robbery, 900 block Murfreesboro Pike
9:18 a.m., residential burglary, 5700 block Cedar Ash Crsg
10:57 a.m., nonresidential burglary, 800 block Bell Road
12:17 p.m., holdup/robbery, 1500 block Heil Quaker Boulevard
1:16 p.m., holdup/robbery, Murfreesboro Pike and Smith Springs
6:33 p.m., holdup/robbery, 900 block Murfreesboro Pike
What is going on in Davidson County from July 4th through the 12th
Lots of things to do around the town this week....take a look a the ling below...
http://tennessean.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080702/COUNTY010403/807040318/1196/COUNTY01
Nonprofits struggle to make ends meet for others
Food banks and emergency services hit harder; other volunteer By ANGELA PATTERSON • Staff Writer (Tennessean) • July 2,
2008organizations hurt in other ways
As gas and food prices rise, many households are finding it increasingly difficult to make ends meet. So, some seek help from nonprofit services.
But rising costs also affect these organizations, impacting the amount and depth of services they can provide. Nonprofits are finding more people requesting what they offer, yet have less money and resources with which to supply the need.
"With the food pantry, we actually ran out of food from having to serve a surplus of clients from other food pantries due to a food donation shortage," said Jennifer Eldridge, the Salvation Army's marketing director.The Second Harvest Food Bank is feeling the same crunch."Second Harvest distributes over 2 million pounds of food per year through our Emergency Food Box Program.
With food drives collecting only 700,000 pounds, Second Harvest has had to purchase 1.3 million pounds of food at a cost of $225,000," said program services manager Kelli Garrett.
"When there is not enough food from food drives, or funds aren't available, then we have to reduce the amount of food that we distribute."Some nonprofits maintain that services will not be cut or lessened, but increasing costs may push others to close their doors.
Need increases for Salvation Army, Second Harvest
Record-level gas and food prices are bringing more people to the Salvation Army's doors. Eldridge said in April and May alone, the number of emergency assistance calls received increased from an average of 660 a month to 900 a month ending May 31.
"Too many of our clients have to pay the higher prices of fuel, which means less money to spend on needed expenses such as food, utilities and clothing," Eldridge said."With a reduced amount of money for these items, the need for assistance has increased greatly, impacting the services we provide," she said.
"The amplified volume of people needing some type of assistance has led to assisting all that apply as long as funds allow."The number of people that Second Harvest Food Bank has served over last year has increased by nearly 10 percent, said program services manager Kelli Garrett."More and more people are turning to the food bank to receive that assistance to get them by," Garrett said.Eldridge said for people on fixed incomes or government assistance, the rising costs create a vicious cycle."They only receive X amount of dollars and cannot afford the increases in fuel and food," Eldridge said.
"Others are in search for second and even third jobs. Some of the jobs seekers are wary of working more for fear of losing the food stamps they so dearly depend on. The more income, the less stamps, but due to the increase, people are stuck in a bind with no means of escape."
Fuel costs affect groups', volunteers' budgets
Even nonprofits that don't deal in necessities have to rethink their operations."We haul a fleet of bicycles to various schools for on-bike education with fourth-graders, and since we haul them in a trailer, fuel cost is sure to affect our budget," said Shannon Hornsby, director of Walk/Bike Nashville.
"Especially since this budget was based on fuel cost/federal reimbursement per mileage when the grants were written and the amount we have allocated for fuel is set. We'll likely have to make cuts to other areas of the budget to haul bicycles."Gas prices have left other nonprofits searching for volunteer manpower close to home.
"The rising costs of food and gas are directly impacting Better Tomorrows' services," said interim director Ashley Holland, whose organization provides adult literacy and GED classes."We rely heavily on volunteers to help us provide one-on-one attention for our students. We've lost at least one literacy volunteer so far because she could no longer travel from Franklin due to gas prices. That number may continue to increase."
Less funding could close Better Tomorrows
But the real impact on nonprofits comes from a growing demand and a decreasing supply. When sponsors and donors cut back, these organizations consider doing so as well.Garrett said some of the people who used to donate to Second Harvest have found themselves needing the organization's services in recent months.
For Holland, the drop-off in Better Tomorrows sponsorships affects staffing."We're now having trouble funding our budget because foundations, individuals, and other donors who are finding their resources stretched thin are unable to give as much as they have previously. That has not been a problem because our co-founders are passionate about Better Tomorrows' mission and have other resources, so they have been able and willing to work without pay. "Now, however, the two co-founders are leaving — one to focus on healing from cancer, another because of her husband's job transfer.
So the nonprofit must hire two permanent full-time employees."Therefore, the economic impact on funding may adversely affect not only our ability to offer services, but our ability to stay open," Holland said.Entities such as the Salvation Army and Second Harvest haven't had to cut services. But if they don't receive more money to fund salaries, smaller organizations like Better Tomorrows may have no choice but to close."That's sad because it means that our students, who are directly affected by high food and gas prices, will also lose an opportunity to get the education they need to improve their situation. (Our own graduate and) literacy tutor Larry Holt said it well, "If we have a literacy problem in this city, then places like this don't need to be closing."It's just going to keep the welfare system overloaded. A lot of people in this community are dependent on this program."
Dollar General Literacy Foundation gives reading program $40,000
Submitted by Donna Clark • FiftyForward Communications Director • July 2, 2008
The Dollar General Literacy Foundation has awarded $40,000 to Friends Learning in Pairs, which promotes literacy among elementary students in Davidson and Williamson counties.
FLIP is an intergenerational, volunteer tutoring program sponsored by FiftyForward. Since 1993, tutors have provided encouragement and assistance to children in grades K-4 who are experiencing difficulty with their reading skills.
"In April, we were faced with the possibility of having to cut 23 partner schools because of lack of funding. This would have resulted in the cancellation of services to approximately 350 students and the loss of many dedicated volunteers," said FLIP program manager Sandra Thomas. "Because of this generous donation by the Dollar General Literacy Foundation, students will continue to receive that needed support from a friend, and volunteers will continue to encourage and share in the excitement of learning."
During the 2007-08 school year, FiftyForward FLIP volunteers tutored about 800 students at 47 elementary schools in Davidson and Williamson Counties. On average, 79 percent of students who received help from a FLIP tutor increased their reading and comprehension levels.
"Sometimes all a child needs is one person to believe in them and a few minutes of one-on-one instruction in order to achieve academic success," said Rick Dreiling, CEO, Dollar General Corp. "FLIP pairs a child who is struggling academically with a compassionate senior volunteer who is knowledgeable and committed to working one-on-one. We are proud to support FLIP's continued success."
FLIP coordinators in Davidson and Williamson counties will begin training current and new volunteers in August for the upcoming school year.
53 to graduate from police academy
By MATT MEDVED • Staff Writer • July 1, 2008
Fifty-three Nashville residents will graduate tonight from the Metropolitan Police Department’s Citizen Police Academy.
The 6 p.m. ceremony will take place in the community room of the Hermitage Precinct, located at 3701 James Kay Lane.
Mayor Karl Dean and Metro Police Chief Ronal Serpas will be in attendance to honor the graduates, who have completed the required 11-week course.Since its creation in 1995, 931 Nashville residents have graduated from the Citizen Police Academy.
Wednesday, July 2, 2008
July 4th Trash Pick-up Alert and July 4th Downtown Street Closings
Hello District 29 Neighbors:
Below are two important alerts directly from the Public Works Department to help make your July 4th holiday much easier to enjoy! Vivian
July 4th Holiday Trash Collection Alert
Metro trash and curbside recycling customers who normally have their brown and green carts emptied on Fridays will be collected on Saturday, July 5th, due to the July 4th holiday. All Metro Recycle Convenience Centers and the Bordeaux Mulch Facility will be closed on Friday, July 4, and re-open on Saturday, July 5, with their regular operating hours. Residents who have questions or need further assistance with their trash or recycling service can call 880-1000.
Downtown Traffic Alert for July 4th Festivities
Below are street closings for Nashville’s annual July 4th Fireworks Celebration at Riverfront Park on Friday:
Titans Way and Victory Lane @ LP Field
Closed Monday, June 30, until Saturday, July 5, at 5 a.m.
1st Ave N between Broadway and Church
Closed to thru traffic from 12 noon on Tuesday, July 2 until 4 p.m. on Friday the 4th
Shelby Street Pedestrian Bridge
Closed Friday, July 4, 7:30 - 10 p.m.
Beginning Friday at 8 a.m. until approximately midnight, the following streets will be closed:
@ 1st Avenue from Demonbreun to Union
@ 2nd Avenue from Demonbreun to Church
@ Bank Str from 1st Ave to 2nd Ave
@ Broadway from 1st to 3rd Avenues
@ Church Str from 1st Ave to 2nd Ave
@ Commerce Str from 2nd Ave to 3rd Ave
@ Gay Street and Gay Street Connector at 1st Ave N
@ Union from 2nd Ave N to Woodland St Bridge
@ South 1st Str from Victory Lane to S 2nd St
The Woodland Street and Korean War Veterans/Gateway bridges will be closed to vehicle traffic at approximately 8 p.m. and re-open after the fireworks demonstration. Pedestrians will be allowed on the Woodland Street Bridge to view the fireworks.
For more details and information regarding street closings, please visit the Public Works's website at www.nashville.gov/pw.
Tuesday, July 1, 2008
Signs, Signs, Everywhere there are Signs...
Please keep our district free of these signs. They will taken away if they are seen...
Early Saturday Morning, people volunteered their time to take down the signs...Let us keep our community sign free.......

Early Saturday Morning, people volunteered their time to take down the signs...Let us keep our community sign free.......
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New laws to take effect July 1
More than 4,000 bills were introduced during the legislative session on Tennessee's Capitol Hill over the last two years, but only a fraction of them officially become law on Tuesday, July 1.
Bills about budget cuts, cable TV competition and long-term care received plenty of attention this year.
Many other bills, like new sentencing options for judges in DUI cases, did not get that kind of attention.
Mothers Against Drunk Driving pushed through a measure where drunken driving offenders can now be ordered to listen to stories from DUI victims.
"The stories that they hear are absolutely gut-wrenching you will hear a father talk about the loss of his son or a mother talk about the loss of her daughter or her nephew," said Laura Dial of MADD's Middle Tennessee chapter.
As a condition of his DUI sentence and probation earlier this year, state lawmaker Rob Briley agreed to participate in what MADD calls a "victim impact panel."
Dial said 30 to 50 offenders take part monthly in its Middle Tennessee program.
The group hopes judges in other parts of the state will take advantage of the program.
Click HERE to view a complete list of the laws to take effect Tuesday.
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