Date: Tue, 11 Jan 2011 21:05:59 -0500Continue reading
From: noll_family
To: apaulk@lowndescounty.com, jevans@lowndescounty.com, rraines@lowndescounty.com, cpowell@lowndescounty.com CC: noll_family@bellsouth.net, kay.harris@gaflnews.com, “John S. Quarterman” <jsq@quarterman.org>
Subject: Re: Tuesday’s MeetingDear Chairman Paulk and Commissioners.
I again would like to extend my invitation as President of WACE to the upcoming event this Thursday (see attachment).
The issue of the proposed biomass incinerator is far from over and concerned citizens of Lowndes County and Valdosta will use their constitutional rights to (respectfully) speak up at future meetings, as they have done in the past.
Tag Archives: Lowndes County
Tiny LAKE is flattered by mighty VLCIA!
Continue readingTo: Brad Lofton
From: John S. Quarterman
Cc: [see below]
Subject: Re: VDT EditorialHowdy,
Tiny LAKE is flattered to be asked to repost VDT materials for mighty VLCIA! But to answer your question, this is a blog, not a newspaper, nor a wire service for a newspaper. LAKE also hasn’t posted all of the letters to the editor of the VDT pro and con on this subject or others of interest to us.
More basically, you seem to continue to confuse “VLCIA answered” with “the answers satisfied the questioners” or “the answers actually addressed the content of the questions” or “nobody is questioning anymore”.
Questions continued to be asked at the VLCIA “Forum” of 6 Dec 2010. I ask again:
Glen Laurel (Old Pine Road) infrastructure at County Commission work session
That’s one thing on the
8:30 AM agenda for this morning.
Work sessions are where most discussion among the commissioners usually occurs.
The actual vote will be in tomorrow’s (11 Jan) 5:30 PM regular session.
Background on the contentious rezoning for the Glen Laurel subdivision is in the continuing series in this blog.
-jsq
Superdistricts on Lowndes County web pages
Update: the agenda for the 3 Jan 2011 special session
is posted on the county webpages.
Lowndes County staff have an update about the recent vote for adding two new superdistricts:
COMMISSION EXPANSIONThis is on the county’s front page, with links toOn Monday, January 3, 2011, the Lowndes County Board of Commissioners held a special called meeting during which the adoption of a resolution expressing the county’s desire to move forward with the expansion of the Lowndes County Board of Commissioners, as previously directed by the voters of Lowndes County, was unanimously approved.
- the resolution that was approved,
- a county-wide map of the new districts, which seems to answer my question about which map was correct: the one in the VDT, or the one then on the county’s own website. Looks like the VDT map was correct, and the one now on the county’s website matches it.
-
a map of the parts of the superdistricts within Valdosta.
What is not included Continue reading
Georgia Open Records Act
Valdosta’s web page sums up the situation: Continue reading
Tom Call: New VLCIA Board Member
Roy Copeland |
Tom Call |
Mary Gooding |
Norman Bennett |
Jerry Jennett, Chairman |
He’s on the board of Homeland Defense Corp., which does “Custom Automated Mosquito and Insect Misting Systems” and says this:
Thomas B. Call graduated from the University of Georgia with a Bachelor of Science in Agriculture. After a career in the agricultural chemicals industry, Tom branched out into real estate. Today, he is the owner of Coldwell Banker Premier Real Estate, and owns a number of successful businesses specializing in residential and commercial real estate development. www.Valdostarealtors.com(Also on that board are Continue reading
VLMPO Planning Meeting
A local planning organization that studies advertises frequent meetings
for input and studies facebook usage data to see what people care about?
That’s the Valdosta-Lowndes Metropolitan Planning Organization (VLMPO),
which holds frequent and repeated hearings on major projects.
Next week it’s having its regular
Policy Committee Meeting
1:30PM to 4:30 PM, Tuesday 11 Jan 2010,
at the SGRC office at 327 West Savannah Ave., Valdosta.
You can see what they’re up to
about traffic congestion, busses, trains, bicycles, Moody access, conservation, or other issues,
and voice your concerns.
Continue reading Who just voted for the new Districts for Lowndes County?
Ashley Paulk, Chairman |
Joyce Evans, District 1 |
Richard Raines, District 2 |
Crawford Powell, District 3 |
This is the Commission that as its first act held a special session to propose adding two new superdistricts.
The pictures for the two new Commissioners, Richard Raines and Crawford Powell, are from Valdosta Daily Times writeups while they were running, since the Commission’s own web pages do not yet have pictures for them.
-jsq
Harrisburg, PA loses solvency and trust over incinerator
Michael Cooper wrote in the New York Times on 20 May 2010 about
An Incinerator Becomes Harrisburg’s Money Pit:
HARRISBURG, Pa. — Officials here decided seven years ago to borrow $125 million to rebuild and expand the city’s enormous trash incinerator, which the federal government had shut down because of toxic air pollution.The Patriot-News Editorial Board wrote on 12 April 2010 about Harrisburg incinerator fiasco deserves an investigation to understand how it happened:But the incinerator burned through the money faster than the trash, leaving Harrisburg residents feeling like they were living through a sequel to the 1986 movie “The Money Pit.”
There were contractor troubles, delays, cost overruns and squabbles. The city borrowed tens of millions more, shoveling good money after bad into the job.
Over nearly a decade, officials at the Harrisburg Authority and City Hall made a series of decisions that sought to get the trash incinerator working and profitable, but which instead brought Pennsylvania’s capital to the brink of bankruptcy.The 2003 deal that took on $125 million in debt to repair the incinerator neglected to include a performance bond.
Something else sounds familiar about this situation:Inexperienced firms were hired. Fees were paid for work poorly done. Loans were taken on disastrous terms.
Officials were aided, or rather misled, by the advice of numerous attorneys, bankers and engineers apparently far more interested in collecting handsome fees than they were in protecting the interests of taxpayers.
As a result, there is a deep distrust of the fundamental institutions that created this fiasco.
While some of the seats have changed, many of the same people in government today had their fingerprints on these decisions.It’s the same old boy network locally as approved Sterling Chemical, and the chair of the county commission at that time is now on the Industrial Authority. And the VLCIA has taken on what is reputed to be a $15 million bond issue.
How big is Harrisburg? 50,000 people, same as Valdosta. What is Harrisburg considering? Bankruptcy. Who profited anyway? Local developers.
What’s the moral?
All of the guarantees proved worthless.What say we have the investigation now, before the fail-safes fail?All of the fail-safes failed.
-jsq
Seth Gunning LTE in the VDT
Continue readingRecently on Thursday December 16th, State Judge Ronit Walker denied air quality permits for a proposed coal plant in Sandersville, Georgia. Judge Walker cited the Georgia Environmental Protection Divisions failure to properly review permits, and their lack of enforcement of basic Clean Air Act standards for several hazardous emissions.
Flashback to April 27th in Valdosta Georgia when Environmental Protection Division Air Branch Manager Eric Cornwell openly admitted to having NOT READ the air permit application for Wiregrass Biomass LLC’s proposal to build a hotly contested 40mw power plant&emdash; during a Valdosta EPD hearing meant to evaluate those permits.
Today, the Valdosta Industrial Authority is hazardously entrenched








