If you like blogs, YouTube, facebook, and other social media,
you won’t like SOPA and PIPA if they become law, because they
will enable big copyright holders such as movie studios to
force websites to remove links to entire domains on suspicion
of copyright violation.
In a refreshing changes from “jobs, jobs, jobs” as everything,
Andrea Schruijer,
Executive Director of the Valdosta-Lowndes County Industrial Authority (VLCIA),
told the Lowndes County Democratic Party meeting, 5 December 2011,
that it wasn’t her job to create jobs, jobs, jobs; it was her job
to create an environment that let jobs be created.
Towards that end, she announced several new jobs at VLCIA,
including a PR and marketing position.
VLCIA Chairman Roy Copeland also spoke and helped answer questions
from the audience, including about
wages,
workers, and
green industries.
Perhaps not shown is her answer to my question about what does
VLCIA do to promote new local industry.
I believe she said VLCIA looks to the Chamber of Commerce for incubation,
and helps once local businesses are established.
My job: create environment for jobs —Andrea Schruijer of VLCIA @ LCDP 5 Dec 2011
Andrea Schruijer Executive Director of VLCIA,
Monthly Meeting, Lowndes County Democratic Party (LCDP),
Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia, 5 December 2011.
Videos by John S. Quarterman.
I’ve made these same comments before. It’s just part of the attitude that
is popular with some elected & appointed officials “We’ve been chosen. Now
go away & don’t ask any questions about what we are doing until it’s time
to vote again.” I don’t think all the individuals share the attitude,
but some do & over time it has become standard procedure. Hopefully,
as more citizens pay attention & ask for more insight procedure will
adjust. There is a reason for open meetings & sunshine laws & it’s not
so citizens can listen to or read about decisions based on information
they are not allowed to hear or observe.
Today is the third Tuesday of the month, so the Valdosta-Lowndes County
Industrial Authority Board of Directors
meets tonight.
A list of specific projects, a PR position, and a strategic planning presentation
are on their agenda.
I see they held a special called meeting 16 December 2011,
but at least they listed it on their web page.
Maybe they’ve got control of their
technical glitches.
Appended is the schedule for 2012,
and the agenda for tonight’s meeting.
All Meetings will be held at 5:30pm in the Industrial Authority Conference
Room, 2110 N. Patterson Street, unless otherwise notified.
Special Called Meeting
**December 16, 2011**
Meeting Schedule for 2012
January 17, 2012
February 21, 2012
March 20, 2012
April 17, 2012
May 15, 2012
June 19, 2012
July 17, 2012
August 21, 2012
September 18, 2012
October 16, 2012
November 20, 2012
December 18, 2012
issue another Executive Order and STOP the jail deaths in the Valdosta,
Lowndes County Jail. (30 Jail deaths from 1994-2009) Today the general
public is told that the public does not have a right to know under
the law.
In
this video
George goes into many years of evidence regarding jail violations.
Requesting such a hearing before January 24 would give the opportunity
to have all this information presented and for questions to be asked
and answered.
Except that’s not the way it works around here.
Public hearing locally means the chairman or mayor or whoever says
“Who wants to speak for?”
and maybe somebody speaks.
And then “Who wants to speak against?”
and maybe somebody speaks.
It doesn’t mean that the Commission or the Council or the Authority
presents anything for the public to consider.
Witness the
hearing the Lowndes County Commission
held in December on the documents related to the Comprehensive Plan.
The only reason the public knew anything about what was in those documents
was that Gretchen got them from somewhere else after the Commission
refused to supply them in response to an open records request.
The Commission never distributed any of the relevant documents
to the public.
Only one citizen spoke, perhaps because nobody else knew what
to speak about.
Almost none of the local municipalities or boards or authorities
routinely present to the public the information that is in the
packets they see before the discuss or vote.
There are rare exceptions, such as the VLMPO
and other organizations or projects administered by the
Southern Georgia Regional Commission (SGRC).
SGRC is a state agency, not a local agency.
Why does Lowndes County and all its municipalities and boards
avoid transparency?
Why can’t you, the public, see what’s in a rezoning request before
Continue reading →
When you call a company or government agency for help, there’s a
good chance the person on the other end of the line is a prison
inmate.
The federal government calls it “the best-kept secret in
outsourcing” — providing inmates to staff call centers and
other services in both the private and public sectors.
The U.S. government, through a 75-year-old program called Federal
Prison Industries, makes about $750 million a year providing prison
labor, federal records show. The great majority of those contracts
are with other federal agencies for services as diverse as laundry,
construction, data conversion and manufacture of emergency
equipment.
But the program also markets itself to businesses under a different
name, Unicor, providing commercial market and product-related
services. Unicor made about $10 million from “other agencies and
customers” in the first six months of fiscal year 2011 (the most
recent period for which official figures are available), according
to an msnbc.com analysis of its sales records.
The Justice Department and the U.S. Bureau of Prisons don’t
Two Southern Company coal-fired electric generating plants near
Atlanta are the biggest contributors to global greenhouse gases in
the United States, and a third Southern plant in Alabama is the
third-biggest emitter, an analysis of environmental data found
Wednesday.
The nation’s No. 1 producer of carbon dioxide — the
heat-trapping gas that is held chiefly responsible in models of
global warming — is Plant Scherer in Juliette, about 65 miles
southeast of downtown Atlanta, according to the Associated Press
analysis of data reported to the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency for 2010.
That’s the plant that supplies most of our power in south Georgia,
whether you get it through Georgia Power or Colquitt EMC.
The No. 2 producer is Plant Bowen, just west of Cartersville, about
50 miles northwest of central Atlanta, and the third-largest is
Plant Miller in Quinton, Ala., about 165 miles west of Atlanta near
Birmingham, the AP said.
The story also notes (as a picture caption):
Georgia Power recently installed pollution-control equipment, called
baghouses, to curb mercury pollution at Plant Scherer. EPA rules
that will regulate mercury likely will lead to the utility to install
additional baghouses at other coal-fired plants
Hm, that’s exactly what Southern Company said
it was incompetent to do.
Apparently it figured out to do what other power companies already knew how to do.
Anyway, pumping out CO2 from coal plants is what Southern Company is doing
instead of solar and wind.
Cobb EMC’s interest in building the coal-fired Plant Washington
appears to be dead, and the company has begun soliciting bids for
its future power supplies.
The electric cooperative has already spent $13.5 million toward
permitting for the coal plant, which would be a new direction for
the company from simply delivering electricity to also generating
it.
On Jan. 24, Dean Alford, a spokesman for the Power 4 Georgians
consortium of EMCs behind Plant Washington, is slated to address the
Cobb EMC board, presumably in an effort to save the plant, for which
his company, Allied Energy, got a no-bid development contract from
P4G.
The Cobb EMC board could decide at that meeting whether to put any
more money toward the project.
Many details of the 850-megawatt Plant Washington, including exactly
why it is needed and any firm idea of what it will cost to build and
operate, have been kept quiet, sparking critical questions from EMC
members and environmental groups. It was proposed under former EMC
head Dwight Brown, who is facing 34 criminal charges of theft and
racketeering relating to his leadership at EMC.
So can somebody come up with an 850 MW solar plant to propose by 24 Jan 2012?
On Tuesday, Deal issued his order prior to the Brooks County Board
of Education’s first meeting of 2012. Dr. Nancy Whitfield-Dennard,
Elizabeth Diane Thomas and Linda Faye Troutman were notified of this
suspension at approximately 4:30 p.m., according to sources.
Following the governor’s suspension this week, Brooks County school
board member Brad Shealy, who is also an assistant Southern district
attorney, was appointed to serve as president of the board with
board member Larry Cunningham serving as vice president. Shealy
served many years as the school board president prior to
Whitfield-Dennard being named president last year.