A
bit better reception than
he got last time.
of the regular meeting of the Lowndes County Commission, 25 Jan 2011
for LAKE, the Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange.
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A
bit better reception than
he got last time.
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Have the courage to be free
Open your eyes, you can fly!
Lizz Wright is a jazz singer and composer from Hahira, Georgia. You may have seen her on the Tonight Show with Jay Leno. Here’s that clip of Jay Leno welcoming “critically acclaimed singer” Lizz Wright on 24 Jan 2011; she sings:
I’ve really got to use my imaginationTopical words for our situation.
Got to make the best of a bad situation
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Matt Flumerfelt
compliments the commission on the good reception he’s gotten previously
and objects to the item in the
new rules
about the commission being able to close subjects.
He notes there is always resort to the law, but he hopes
things won’t come to that.
He concludes:
“The road of respect goes both ways.”
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You could hear this after
Matt Flumerfelt spoke in the previous post,
but let’s pull it out separately here.
This is Ashley Paulk recommending that people come in and talk
to their commissioners, and he says:
“I’m here every morning.”
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Matt Flumerfelt
compliments the commission on the good reception he’s gotten previously
and objects to the item in the
new rules
about the commission being able to close subjects.
He notes there is always resort to the law, but he hopes
things won’t come to that.
He concludes:
“The road of respect goes both ways.”
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Gretchen Quarterman applauds Chairman Paulk for increasing
the transparency of the government in the last few years,
then says:
I’m concerned that a barrier to dialog is getting higher, rather than lower. When the citizens make the effort to come to a meeting after a long day of work, or maybe they come in the morning when they don’t actually get to talk, it’s important for them to get a chance to be heard.She describes how the Zoning Board of Appeals (on which she is a county appointee) does it:
When you’re done saying stuff new, then everybody else that has something to say, they just raise their hand.And her main point:
I’d like to sort of suggest that hou have some dialog about this resolution that you just made. Maybe it could be modified so that people could continue to come, rather than three people could come.
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Here is Dr. Richard
speaking before the Valdosta City Council.
He summarized in
a comment on this blog:
as i endeavored to point out at the last city council meeting, our local gov’t officials are making decisions about things of which they have little knowledge. my example: the brain has two types of cells: neurons and glial cells. there are NO white blood cells; thus, the brain has no immune system, relying on the the tiny diameter of the capillaries themselves to keep infectious agents out. this is called the blood-brain barrier. BUT, as dr. sammons pointed out, PARTICULATE MATTER is small enough to make it through the body and into the brain. as dr. bob gannon (dept. head of biology at VSU) told me again the other night, this constitutes a major threat to health in the form of brain cancer.
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I didn’t get this questioner’s name.
He
wanted to know:
Georgia’s EPA standards are a lot lower than other standards and lower than federal EPA standards that are coming along. My question is what will the plant do when these new standards come along?A: Don’t know what you got; probably didn’t include studies. GA EPD issues a permit.
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She
asks about
preschools, apartment complexes, etc.
I am for green energy, but I am against infant mortality. To VLCIA, City Councillors, County Commissioners, try planning with the community in mind.A: It’s in an already-industrial area.
See also Phyllis Stallworth’s
previous letter.
See also VLCIA executive director Brad Lofton on
“some opposition has crept up”.
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