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Wise County

Wise County school consolidation sparks battle with county supervisor

Photo by House of Sims

The Wise County Board of Supervisors will soon decide whether to support the school district's consolidation plan by providing funds to build three new schools. If the new buildings are not funded, School Superintendent Jeff Perry has indicated that the district move ahead with a backup plan. The backup plan calls for closing three small schools and making improvements to existing larger schools to accommodate students -- at a cost of $2 million.

The discussion has grown heated, with Board of Supervisors Chairman J.H. Rivers suggesting that $2 million could be cut from the school budget as a means of preventing consolidation. Rivers has said he has abandoned the idea.

Read more in the Kingsport Times-News....

Posted on Thursday, June 10, 2010 - 1:07pm

Wise County budgets under discussion -- no tax hikes expected

The Wise County Board of Supervisors is reviewing budget proposals for next fiscal year for the county and the county’s school division. A public hearing on the spending plans will be held June 6.

The proposed county budget is $52.87 million, an increase of just over $300,000 for the current fiscal year. No tax increases are proposed, and real estate taxes are slated to remain at 57 cents per $100 valuation.

The school division’s proposed spending plan is for $70.3 million.

Read more in The Kingsport Times-News....

 

Posted on Wednesday, June 2, 2010 - 11:22am

Power plant in St. Paul on track for 2012 startup

Dominion PowerDominion Power's Virginia City Hybrid Energy Center is more than 60% complete, and officials say it's on track to power up in 2012. The facility is a 585-megawatt coal-fired power plant, and 1,550 people are working on the construction site.

Homeowners in Wise County can look forward to benefitting from increased development made possible by the power generated at the plant. New development creates jobs and increases property values.

Read more from the Briston Herald-Courier....

Posted on Monday, April 19, 2010 - 11:54am

School budget decisions made across the state

Bruno GirinCounties across the state are finalizing decisions about their school budgets. Read about local outcomes below:

 

Posted on Tuesday, March 23, 2010 - 3:12pm

Local Government Program Helps Families Escape Grip of Poverty

Two programs in Bristol and Abingdon are helping families escape poverty, according to the Bristol Herald Courier.

The efforts of Find a Way and People Inc. are helping to change the lives of families who want to move-up.

The work these programs are doing helps everyone in the region because as more families are able to escape the grips of poverty, the stronger and safer communities become. Homeowners can appreciate this type of work that adds great value to their community.

"Find a Way is a program of the Bristol Redevelopment and Housing Authority that assists public housing residents who want to move out and move up. With 35 families now enrolled, the program stresses goal-setting, employment and life-skills training.

People Incorporated, based in Abingdon, Va., provides a similar service: a Transitional Housing Program that requires participants to work or pursue education while living in assisted housing and progressing toward a stable living situation. The program has 22 families and 69 individuals enrolled.

'I absolutely believe that individuals can come from impoverished situations and limited educational skills and be able to come and use our resources' and improve their lives, said Ginger Henderson, transitional housing coordinator for People Inc.

Using financial support and grants from the Virginia Department of Housing and Community Development, and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, both programs work with a small number of the 62,000-plus Southwest Virginia residents who receive government assistance, mostly in the form of food stamps.

The two programs serve a region where the number of people living at poverty levels or below ranges from 15.7 percent in Washington County to 20.3 percent in Wise County, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

Henderson said the first step to moving those residents from welfare to self-sufficiency is helping them recognize the difference between wants and needs.

There’s a long waiting line for the nonprofit agency’s program, she said, including 104 families and 322 individuals, but all of its clients have found employment within two to three weeks of enrolling.

And last year, People Inc. reports, 75 percent of its clients were able to reduce their debt and meet savings goals.

'What we want to see is the client transition from the program to a stable living environment,' said Bryan Phipps, People Inc.’s vice president for development.

David Baldwin, executive director of the Bristol Redevelopment and Housing Authority, said his agency’s program and others like it, including People Inc., are based on one critical belief.

'There are a lot of folks who have been in difficult circumstances for a lot of their life that just don’t feel like they have the energy and the willpower to improve,' Baldwin said."

Read the full story.

Posted on Wednesday, December 2, 2009 - 11:42am

Leaders Hope New Business Park Will Mean Big Things For Wise’s Economy

A new energy center is coming to the Lonesome Pine Regional Business and Technology Park, according to the Bristol Herald Courier.

The Appalachia America Energy Research Center is under construction and has many community leaders excited about the possibilities it will bring to Wise. In addition to boosting the local economy, the energy center could provide career opportunities for UVA-Wise graduates and keep them in the region.

This type of economic news is important for homeowners because the addition of new businesses to the area will increase the tax base, which will keep property taxes down. Also, the creation of new jobs and a growing local economy while make the area more marketable to new residents, which will increase home values.

"On Thursday, the Lonesome Pine Regional Business and Technology Park was a construction site full of heavy equipment and populated by energized dignitaries.

But one day, UVA-Wise Chancellor David Prior said, 'this may be a Los Alamos, this may be an Oak Ridge. It may be a mini-Research Triangle.'
Prior, who leads the college that sits almost adjacent to the industrial park site, was among a dozen or so local, state and business officials participating in Thursday’s formal ground-breaking ceremony for a $7.7 million energy research center at Lonesome Pine.

Funded with grants and loans from the Virginia Tobacco Commission and the Virginia Coalfield Economic Development Authority, the Appalachia America Energy Research Center is expected to energize the region’s economy. Local leaders also said the work expected at the center could lead the way for scientific breakthroughs of global significance."

Read the full story.

Posted on Friday, October 2, 2009 - 6:34pm

Southwest VA Residents Could See Improvements in Health Services

The Kingsport Times-News recently reported about efforts to improve the health of residents in Southwest Virginia. As of now, individuals who live in Southwest Virginia have a premature mortality rate that is 26 percent higher than the state average, in addition, to having higher rates of obesity, high blood pressure and high cholesterol.

Adapting health services to better suit area residents can result in a great improvement in their quality of life, and also make the area more attractive to businesses and new residents, which will improve property values.

"The Southwest Virginia Health Authority has unveiled a plan to improve the region’s health care network and access to health care that includes a push to establish a medical specialist training facility in the region and permitting an expanded role for dental hygienists.

The Blueprint for Health Improvement and Health-Enabled Prosperity is the first strategic plan developed to address health disparities residents of Southwest Virginia face, said Delegate Bud Phillips, D-Clintwood.

Phillips is chairman of the authority, which was created by the Virginia General Assembly in 2006.

Residents of Southwest Virginia have a premature mortality rate that is 26 percent higher than the state average and have higher rates of obesity, high blood pressure and high cholesterol. The “blueprint” identifies those issues and needs and sets short-term, intermediate and long-term goals and objectives to address those needs, Phillips said.

'We believe the authority’s approach is a model for the nation to follow because it was developed by the people who know health care and what Southwest Virginia’s needs are,' he said. 'By improving health care, we improve the quality of life in Southwest Virginia.'

Some of the blueprint goals include allowing dental hygienists to provide preventive care. Another goal — establishing a dental school/clinic in Wise County — is under way. The plan also proposes as an immediate goal establishing a Medical Specialist Training Center in the region so residents won’t have to travel long distances to see health care specialists.

Read full story.

Posted on Wednesday, September 2, 2009 - 3:03pm

Wise County Residents Will Still Get New Power Plant, Despite Current Flawed Permit

The state Air Pollution Control Board erred in not setting a firm limit for mercury emissions for the Dominion Virginia Power Plant being constructed in Wise County, according to the Richmond Times-Dispatch last night. A Richmond Circuit Judge struck down a state-issued permit for the coal-burning plant.

According to a Dominion spokesperson, the ruling will not stop them from completing the project and enhancing utility services to the Wise County area. This is a win-win situation for area homeowners who will have a reliable source for energy, experience a boost in the local economy, a new employer all while being ensured that the emissions from the coal-burning plant comply with the Clean Air Act to protect the health of residents.

"Richmond Circuit Judge Margaret P. Spencer struck down a state-issued permit for a coal-burning power plant under construction in Wise County. The judge said the state Air Pollution Control Board erred in not setting a firm limit for mercury emissions from the $1.8 billion Dominion Virginia Power plant.

The ruling, dated Monday but released today, means the board must craft another permit for the plant.

The board set a mercury limit, but the permit allowed the limit to be loosened if the plant had trouble meeting the original requirement.

The Southern Environmental Law Center filed the challenge on behalf of four other environmental groups — the Southern Appalachian Mountain Stewards, Appalachian Voices, Chesapeake Climate Action Network and the Sierra Club.

The environmentalists challenged two permits issued by the air board in 2008. On the second permit, the environmentalists said that the board should have issued a limit for carbon dioxide emissions, which are linked to global warming. The judge rejected that, saying the federal Clean Air Act does not require the board to set a carbon limit.

The environmentalists also challenged the permits on a handful of other points. They won on the one."

Read full story.

Posted on Wednesday, August 12, 2009 - 8:34am

Old Dominion Power Seeks Rate Increase in Norton and Surrounding Counties

The Kingsport Times News recently reported that the State Corporation Commission of Virginia will be holding a meeting this November as requested by Old Dominion Power Company, who wishes to increase electric base rates to its Virginia customers.

Homeowners affected by these proposed rate increases can voice their concerns to the SCC in a number of ways.

-  A hearing in Norton will be held on November 18th at 4pm and reconvene at 7pm J.I. Burton High School auditorium to receive testimony from the public. Any person wishing to comment should arrive early and notify the SCC bailiff.

-  The SCC will also hold a public hearing in Richmond on Jan. 6 in the commission’s second floor courtroom in the Tyler Building at 1300 E. Main St.

-  Written comments must be submitted by Dec. 30. All correspondence should be sent to the Clerk of the State Corporation Commission, Document Control Center, P.O. Box 2118, Richmond VA 23218-2118 and refer to case number PUE-2009-00029.

-  Comments can also be submitted electronically at the SCC Web site. Click on the Public Comments/Notices link and then the Submit Comments button for case number PUE-2009-00029.

"The State Corporation Commission of Virginia (SCC) has scheduled a public hearing in Norton on Nov. 18 on a request by Old Dominion Power Co. to increase electric base rates to Virginia customers.

A subsidiary of Kentucky Utilities, Old Dominion serves about 30,000 residential customers in Lee, Wise, Scott, Russell and Dickenson counties.

Kentucky Utilities spokesman Cliff Feltham said Wednesday Old Dominion seeks an additional $12.2 million annually from its Virginia customers, an overall 21 percent increase over current annual revenues. That rate hike percentage depends on household usage, but the SCC said the proposed rate increase would raise the monthly bill of a typical residential customer using 1,000 kilowatt-hours (kwh) from $70.05 to $91.64, an increase of more than 30.8 percent.

Feltham said ODP determines an average customer uses about 1,424 kwh per month, so an average bill would go up by another $24 or $25 a month."

Read full story.

Posted on Friday, July 31, 2009 - 10:08am

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Posted on Monday, June 15, 2009 - 12:00am