Dear Commissioners,Continue readingThere seems to be confusion as to how long citizens get to be heard. The policy says five minutes.
Yet in at least a couple of recent examples, citizens were cut off at less than that,
4 and a half minutes for me on 28 June 2011
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJseMtJvJE8
4 minutes 39 seconds for Jessica Bryan Hughes on 24 May 2011
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ZxieSV6Yz8
You can see the times on the YouTube videos.
This timing confusion may be because
Category Archives: Transparency
The Bleu Owl: LAKE meeting at the Bleu Pub Tuesday PM
The Blue Pub is at 116 W Hill Ave in Valdosta, with the usual entrance
being from the parking lot off of Toombs Street.
Sign up in the
facebook event or come as you are.
If you follow this blog, you know there are many local issues, most having to do with transparency. And that’s the big issue: lots of small groups going at individual issues, and not getting very far. Let’s talk about that.
-jsq
Lowndes County could stop biomass plant
VDT is not quite right when it says Only city can stop biomass. The Lowndes County Commission could do it.
According to Ashley Paulk, a few months ago
VLCIA approached the Lowndes County government, asking them to ask VLCIA not to extend Sterling Planet’s contract for the biomass plant. Chairman Paulk refused to accept that hot potato and instead laudably told the community what was going on. Yet there was a bit of a good idea in what VLCIA was asking. Lowndes County could pass an ordinance such as VDT is suggesting banning the incineration of human feces.
Remember, Lowndes County rezoned the land for the plant. It’s time to review that rezoning to see if in light of new information it should be rescinded. According to the VDT, Wiregrass Power LLC supplied a fake timeline, so it wuld not be interesting to know what else they said wasn’t true?
For that matter, wasn’t the rezoning to build a certain biomass plant according to a certain plan which has no expired? Maybe the rezoning is already null and void and the Commission just needs to declare it so.
Short of that, the Lowndes County Commission could demand transparency from VLCIA:
Continue readingOnly city can stop biomass —VDT
VDT editorial yesterday: after the
Compelled? Give me a break! VLCIA has an attorney, and one of its board members is an attorney. If they can’t find a way to break a land purchase contract because conditions have changed, they need new legal counsel.In a recent Valdosta council meeting, longtime councilman Sonny Vickers asked if there was any way to put the biomass issue to rest once and for all. The good news, Councilman Vickers, is that there is and it’s all in the city’s hands.
The Industrial Authority signed an agreement with Wiregrass Power LLC which allows the company to purchase the land from the Authority and proceed with the project on its own. Although the Authority hasn’t yet voted on the issue, it appears that they don’t have a choice and may be compelled to honor the agreement.
Why didn’t they discuss that in their yet another special called meeting Thursday morning, in which they apparently discussed that offer from Sterling Planet to buy the proposed biomass plant site?
VDT continued:
And once the land is purchased, as long as the company complies with existing zoning laws, there is not a way to prevent the plant from being built.Continue readingOh, but there is.
Biomass plant land offer: Industrial Authority board meets this morning
I see nothing in the public notices online.
The Industrial Authority’s
own online calendar has today marked,
although it doesn’t say for what.
The VDT’s online calendar
does have it listed:
Valdosta-Lowndes County Industrial Authority Special Called MeetingThe VDT calendar doesn’t say what real estate, but the source has usually been correct before. Since it’s about real estate they’ll probably go directly into executive session, which means the public can’t attend that part. However, public can attend the public street outside.
When Friday Jul. 8, 2011 8:00 AM Description Purpose of meeting is to discus real estate. Call 259-9972. Where Authority Offices
2110 N. Patterson St.
Valdosta, GA
VLCIA Chairman Jerry Jennett previously said: Continue reading
Community Calendar —Jane F. Osborn
The latest update (5 July 2011) is online for the
community calendar
produced by
Jane F. Osborn
who organizes the
Valdosta Civic Roundtable.
She says:
…the calendar is not produced for civic roundtable, it is just a project of mine for the many counties that lost a source of information when 2-1-1 was discontinued.LAKE will attempt to remember to update new ones in this web page as Miss Jane sends them. We hope you, dear readers, will remind us if we don’t.
-jsq
we are to go home, never ask questions —Barbara Stratton
This is typical of all elected & appointed government bodies locally. The common opinion is citizens are only valuable for voting. After we vote we are to go home, never ask questions, never complain, & never comment until it is time to vote again. The common consensus is we are not capable of understanding what our elected/appointed officials are doing so we need to stay out of the process totally. This is nanny state government via local venues. We the people are reduced to you the unendowed & unimportant. John – Our political views are usually polar opposites, but we are always 100% agreed on shinning the light on government black-outs. Keep up the good work.
-Barbara Stratton
Deaf, dumb, and blind –George Boston Rhynes
Soon the people of South Georgia Will see that the old 1860 Valdosta City Chater Mentality is still in force but has been extended to all citiens. That is to keep all citizens deaf; dumb; and blind to what is really going on in South Georgia. But in the end truth, right and equal justice will most certainly win in the end as history always records! http://kvci.blogspot.com
-George Boston Rhynes
The truth?
Lowndes County has transparency issues —John S. Quarterman @ LCC 28 June 2011
No unfinished drafts will be published while Ashley Paulk is chairman,
or so he told us.
I asked him how he recommended citizens provide input to the budget process? He said at every meeting.
So I said I wondered why the county attorney seemed to be overbudget. No response.
Then I got to my main point, which was that the county seems to have
a number of transparency issues,
such as
the missing ordinances he’d just heard about,
or Vince Schneider’s Foxborough McDonald’s issues,
or the animal shelter issues,
or
the T-SPLOST list that the Commission approved
on the basis of a one page list of one-liner with no details
that turns out to include things like
$10 million to widen New Bethel Road to Lanier County.
I said I would like to compare the county’s submissions for T-SPLOST funding to the county’s Thoroughfare Plan and the Comprehensive Plan; if I could find those plans online. The Chairman said my five minutes were up. I said “Alrighty” and moseyed back to my seat. As you can see for yourself, it was actually 4 and a half minutes.
-jsq
Here’s the video: Continue reading
Yet in at least a couple of recent examples,
citizens were cut off at less than that,



