The member who hardly ever speaks at board meetings makes a strong case for openness.
Tom Call
called me back about the biomass plant,
and we talked about a number of other matters.
He remarked that he was not an appointed spokesperson for the Industrial
Authority, so this is just him talking.
Ashley Paulk agrees with my mother about
what the Industrial Authority should do.
At the Lowndes County Commission meeting last night, Chairman Paulk
discussed the biomass plant with Dr. Noll, and said:
Certain people won’t share it with you, and I don’t think it’s fair.
We were approached … almost three weeks ago by the Industrial Authority
and we were asked to … ask them not to extend the contract.
Well, it’s not our contract; we could do that, but … we didn’t.
And then last week the Tuesday of their meeting, I received a call
… on my way back fromm Atlanta and they had gone up
there to talk to Wiregrass Power,
because they’d written a letter asking for an extension.
My understanding was that they asked Wiregrass to write another letter
to remove that extension request.
These are things, I think should be public knowledge.
Regular meeting of the Lowndes County Commission, Lowndes County, Georgia, 26 April 2011
Video by Alex Rowell for LAKE, the Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange.
He told me several weeks ago about the commission being asked to vote not to extend.
Continue reading →
It’s a
very light agenda for the Lowndes County Commission;
so light the work session was cancelled.
However, the regular session is scheduled as usual for Tuesday evening.
They’ve moved Citizens Wishing to be Heard back to the middle of the meeting.
Historically, it’s been here and it’s been there in different places
in the agenda.
I still think at the end is a fine place for it, since then
more people may stay for the entire meeting.
I posted
my other thoughts on CWTBH
back when they changed to their current policy on that.
Groundwater sampling near a landfill is an item.
The same item was on the agenda last time, but didn’t get resolved.
Water is an issue throughout the region.
LOWNDES COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS
PROPOSED AGENDA
WORK SESSION CANCELLED
REGULAR SESSION, TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 2011, 5:30 p.m.
327 N. Ashley Street — 2nd Floor
Executive Director, Valdosta-Lowndes County Industrial Authority
(Valdosta, GA)
A very exciting opportunity with a successful industrial
authority with numerous assets.
Greater Valdosta is the business, cultural, educational, medical, leisure,
and retail hub for thirteen South Georgia and North Florida counties and
more than 1.2 million citizens. Valdosta and Lowndes County are quickly
becoming the fastest growing area in Georgia and are home to Moody Air
Force Base; two Regional Medical Centers; and Valdosta State University,
a regional university with over 13,000 students.
Digging around on cb-asso.com finds this detailed job description.
It’s four GIF images (copies
here)
of a VLCIA logo and three pages of a four-page flyer.
Can Council members answer in Citizens to Be Heard,
or can’t they?
One did; another says she can’t.
In Council Comments at the end of the
21 April 2011
Valdosta City Council meeting,
Sonny Vickers talked about bids.
Then Deidra White said she would attend any meeting
where she could hear and reply to citizens’ concerns,
but she can can’t say anything about Citizens
to be Heard because there’s a Council policy.
When VLMPO has a special called meeting,
it announces it well in advance
on its facebook page
and sends out messages to interested parties, which is how LAKE
got the appended agenda for that meeting.
Note the item “TIA Update”, where TIA is for the
Transportation Investment Act of 2010 which
implements
T-SPLOST.
There is a “Public Comment” item, as well.
-jsq
Valdosta-Lowndes MPO
Policy Committee
Special Called Meeting Agenda
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
1:30 PM
According to
Justia.com Dockets & Filings,
Catherine Leigh Touchton filed a federal civil rights lawsuit
30 May 2007 against John Fretti and the City of Valdosta
Georgia Middle District Court,
On 17 April 2009:
Court Opinion or Order ORDER directing judgment for defendants on federal
law claims. State law claims are dismissed without prejudice. Ordered
by Judge Hugh Lawson on 4/17/2009.
A dozen similar lawsuits
were filed the same day by
Karen Camion,
Faye Chachere,
Jesse Clark,
Callie Fielden,
Reggie Griffin,
Kathryn Harris,
Willie Head,
Joann Mosley,
George Rhynes,
Willie Roberson,
Floyd Rose,
and
Mary Sherman.
All appear to have had the same result.
Access to related documents is available by
registering with PACER.
They don’t charge until a user runs up a minimum amount of usage.
The case originally surfaced after 15 Valdosta citizens were arrested
and charged with violating statute 16-11-34 (a), which provides “a
person who recklessly or knowingly commits any act which may reasonably be
expected to prevent or disrupt a lawful meeting, gathering or procession
is guilty of a misdemeanor.” Charges came after the group allegedly
disrupted a Valdosta city council meeting in May 2005. Calle Fielden
and Leigh Touchton, two of those arrested, appealed to the courts on
the grounds that the statute under which the citizens were charged was
unconstitutionally vague and broad.
On April 21, 2005, Rev. Floyd Rose addressed the council
Leigh Touchton posted a comment with a report from
last night’s Valdosta City Council meeting:
I won’t stay to the end in the future because if they are going to
make public attacks on citizens and then go into Executive session so
they don’t have to hear a rebuttal, then I don’t care to listen to their
bombast. Yost apparently thinks
your public criticism of the activists not
staying (and also the Tea Party left right after one of their members read
from the Bible about how laws and regulation are a sin–I had difficulty
keeping from laughing out loud—we’re in a recession because laws and
regulation were thrown away and banks made a video called Banks Gone
Wild…but I digress)…apparently Yost thinks your criticism of people
not staying is something he can use to good effect to nullify the need
to publicly address citizen complaints. Here’s his position, distilled:
“You won’t stay to the end, I’m offended. You called our important work
boring, I’m offended. (much redness of face, some veins popping out)
You come in here and talk to us like that then I’m not going to address
your complaints, I’m offended.”
Well I’m offended that a grown man elected to represent Valdosta acts
like that.
Let me go back and educate the gentle readers out there who haven’t
Dr. Noll posted a comment today about last night’s Valdosta City Council
meeting, and we thank him for his report:
What I found most disturbing are actually the following things that
happened at last night’s meeting:
A Mayor in absentia because he is celebrating his birthday and decided
not to attend because of a lack of agenda items for the meeting.
A mother being harassed by Mr. Taylor who makes sexist comments when
her daughter is receiving an award for an essay contest.
A City Council and ALL of its members who continue to hide behind a policy
that supposedly does not allow them to respond during meetings. As if
they would respond before or after meetings.
City Council member Yost going into a tirade about my wife’s comment in
regard to “boring” meetings, when she is referring to the experience
of our children who have been sitting through quite a few of them by
now. Such meetings are indeed “boring” to a 9 and 12 year old.
Council member Yost then goes on to “thank” all of us for staying until
the end of the meeting so that we could witness the important work
they do. Like what? The replacement of two belt press sludge pumps, the
renaming of a street? If there is an important piece of work Mr. Yost
and his colleagues could impress us with, it would be a resolution to not
sell water to a biomass plant that threatens the health of our community!
-Michael Noll
Sometimes sludge replacement parts are boring,
but if we don’t replace them and the wastewater treatment plant
overflows, it may pollute your yard or your creek.
Best we take of it ahead of time and be proactive, rather than reactive.
Let’s take care of a problem before it happens!
-gretchen
PS: Don’t forget to go to the Planning Commission on Monday.