Quantcast
Channel: Kingsport Times-News Latest News Feed
Viewing all 2029 articles
Browse latest View live

UPDATE: Wreck at I-81, I-26 interchange leaves Johnson City woman 'battling' for her life

$
0
0

Updated at 9:25 p.m.

KINGSPORT — Police said a woman who was ejected from a Jeep in a single-vehicle rollover accident Sunday evening on I-81 was “battling” for her life Sunday night.

The southbound lanes of Interstate 81 were closed at the I-26 interchange in Kingsport while the Jeep’s passenger — identified as Brenda Fatherree, 47, of Johnson City — was flown to Holston Valley Medical Center via rescue helicopter.

The driver of the Jeep, Albert Fatherree III, 49, of Johnson City, was not ejected and was taken to HVMC via ambulance.

He was listed in stable condition Sunday night.

The KPD Traffic Unit was dispatched to the single-vehicle rollover Sunday at 6:07 p.m.

KPD Traffic Unit Supervisor Sgt. Joe Earles said the investigation revealed that a 2001 Jeep Wrangler was traveling south on I-81 when the driver, Albert Fatherree, “made a maneuver for an unknown reason to the right near mile marker 56.8 and lost control.”

The Jeep reportedly exited the roadway on the right side into the grassy area near the off ramp to Johnson City via I-26.

Earles said the Jeep then rolled and Brenda Fatherree was ejected.

Kingsport Fire Department Chief Deputy Jim Everhart told the Times-News that Mrs. Fatherree appeared to have life-threatening injuries at the time she was flown from the scene.

“He’s in stable condition,” Earles told the Times-News. “She’s injured much worse. She’s still battling.”

Southbound I-81 was reopened to one lane during cleanup after the rescue helicopter took off from the scene around 6:30 p.m.

Earles said the investigation by the traffic unit is ongoing.

----------------

Updated at 8:25 p.m.

The southbound lane of Interstate 81 at the Interstate 26 interchange was closed for a short time Sunday while one of two occupants of a vehicle that rolled near the off ramp was flown out via rescue helicopter.

The single-vehicle accident was dispatched at 6:08 p.m. Sunday.

Kingsport Fire Department Deputy Chief Jim Everhart told the Times-News that a female occupant of the vehicle was ejected and was flown to Holston Valley Medical Center.

Everhart said the female appeared to suffer life-threatening injuries. A male occupant of the vehicle was transported via ambulance to HVMC, and Everhart said he didn’t appear to have live-threatening injuries.

The accident remains under investigation by the Kingsport Police Department.

The southbound lane of I-81 was reopened to one lane after the rescue helicopter took off from the scene around 6:30 p.m.

The Times-News will release more information as it becomes available.

----------------

The southbound lane of Interstate 81 at the Interstate 26 interchange was closed for a short time while an occupant of a vehicle that rolled near the off ramp was flown out via rescue helicopter.

The single-vehicle accident was dispatched at 6:08 p.m. Sunday. The condition of the occupant is not known at this time, but according to police radio communications one woman was ejected from the vehicle.

Southbound I-81 was reopened to one lane after the rescue helicopter took off from the scene around 6:30 p.m.

The Times-News will release more information as it becomes available.


DEA Drug Take-Back Day set in Southwest Virginia

$
0
0

After collecting more than 1,000 tons of unused prescription drugs nationwide, the Drug Enforcement Administration has scheduled another National Prescription Drug Take-Back Day for April 27 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Local events in Lee, Wise and Scott counties, sponsored by the Concerned About Our Community Coalition, Frontier Health and Planning District One Behavioral Health Services, will be held at Food City in Big Stone Gap, Coeburn, Pennington Gap, Weber City and Wise; the Walmart in Norton; and Wildcat Pharmacy in Pound.

The 2007 National Study of Drug Use and Health found that 70 percent of people who abuse prescription pain relievers indicated they got them from friends or relatives, and the National Institute of Drug Abuse reports that more than 9 million people use prescription medication for nonmedical purposes. Locally, prescription drug abuse has reached epidemic levels. Hundreds of deaths have led to economic decline, higher than state average crime rates and the destruction of Southwest Virginia’s stronghold — the family.

National Prescription Drug Take-Back Day highlights the dangers of prescription drug abuse and provides a nationwide day of disposal of unused, unwanted and expired medicine each year.

For the fifth time in two years, Americans emptied medicine cabinets, bedside tables, and kitchen drawers of unwanted, unused, and expired prescription drugs and took them to collection sites located throughout the United States as part of the Drug Enforcement Administration’s (DEA) National Prescription Drug Take-Back Day.

Other community partners are the City of Norton/Wise County Coalition for Substance Abuse Prevention & Treatment, Concerned Citizens for Lee County Coalition, U.S. Department of Justice Office of Diversion Control-DEA, Local Law Enforcement of Lee, Wise, Scott counties and the city of Norton, Virginia Department of Health, Southwest Virginia Medical Reserve Corps, Wellmont Residency Program, Walmart and K-VA-T Foods-Food City.

The 2012 event in September held nationwide saw more than 5,263 locations participate to collect 488,395 pounds (244 tons) of prescription medications from members of the public. When added to the collections from DEA’s previous four events, more than 2 million pounds (1,018 tons) of prescription medications were removed from circulation.

According to the 2011 Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration’s National Survey on Drug Use and Health, more than 6 million Americans abuse prescription drugs. That same study revealed more than 70 percent of people abusing prescription pain relievers got them through friends or relatives, a statistic that includes raiding the family medicine cabinet.

The National Prescription Drug Take-Back Day aims to provide a safe, convenient, and responsible means of disposal, while also educating the general public about the potential for abuse of these medications.

For more information or to get involved, contact Frontier Health Prevention Services at (888) 443-1804 or email prevention@frontierhealth.org. Frontier Health’s prevention services in Lee, Scott and Wise counties and the city of Norton are funded in partnership with Planning District One Behavioral Health Services. Frontier Health is the region’s leading provider of behavioral health, mental health, substance abuse, co-occurring, intellectual and developmental disabilities, recovery and vocational rehabilitation services, and has been providing services since 1957.

Stories you may have missed

$
0
0

The following are a variety of interesting stories you may have missed this past week on timesnews.net

Kingsport mall theater set to reopen on May 17
It’s been more than two months since Marquee Cinemas closed shop and moved out of the Kingsport Town Center. Since then, people have been asking when the theater in the mall would be re-opening.

Local dieticians: Breakfast key to a healthy weight
We’ve heard for years that breakfast is the most important meal of the day. Turns out this old adage is really true and that eating a healthy, well-balanced breakfast can provide a host of health benefits, including maintaining a healthy weight.

Kingsport's city manager says state annexation moratorium could hamper development
Kingsport City Manager John Campbell is worried about the economic future of the state if an annexation moratorium is enacted, which he said would curtail a very progressive growth policy over the years.

April showers bring May cicadas
Virginians may be showered with more than rain this spring, according to the Department of Forestry, they may be inundated with the sound of cicadas that will be coming out after 17 years in hiding.

THP focuses on texting while driving, reckless driving and seat belt usage
The Tennessee Highway Patrol’s Fall Branch District will conduct a special traffic safety enforcement effort on April 16 and April 26. The enforcement will focus on texting while driving, reckless driving and seat belt usage.

KEDB extends relationship woth Frank Theatres
The Kingsport Economic Development Board voted Tuesday to extend its working relationship with a Florida-based entertainment firm planning to reopen the Kingsport Town Center's movie facilities next month and eventually build an IMAX theater on the property.

Facebook's Zuckerberg lauches political group

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and other Silicon Valley leaders have formally launched a political group aimed at revamping immigration policy, boosting education and encouraging investment in scientific research.

A country song, assumptions -- and a racial outcry
Southern white men don't usually drive racial dialogue. For as long as race has riven America, they have been depicted more often as the problem than the solution.

Tony Award-winning actor Been Vareen to appear at ETSU

Tony Award-winning actor and motivational speaker Ben Vereen will speak at East Tennessee State University at 7 p.m., Friday, April 19, in the D.P. Culp University Center’s Martha Street Culp Auditorium.

Local youth to perform alongside Broadway professionals in benefit for Niswonger Children's Hospital

Sixteen local youth, along with four special guests straight from the Broadway stage, are preparing for an evening of “sensational” entertainment to benefit Niswonger Children’s Hospital.

Woman dies after being ejected in Kingsport crash

$
0
0

A Johnson City woman has died after being ejected during a Sunday evening crash at the Interstate 81 and Interstate 26 interchange.

On Monday morning Kingsport police said Brenda Jean Fatherree, 47, succumbed to her injuries overnight at Holston Valley Medical Center in Kingsport. She was flown from the crash to the hospital in critical condition.

At approximately 6:07 p.m. Sunday the KPD Traffic Unit was dispatched to the single-vehicle rollover incident. Preliminary investigation revealed Brenda Jean Fatherree was the passenger in a 2001 Jeep Wrangler traveling south on I-81, driven by Albert Fatherree III, 49, also of Johnson City.

KPD Sgt. Joe Earles said Albert Fatherree appears to have, "made a maneuver for an unknown reason to the right near mile marker 56.8 and lost control." The Jeep reportedly exited the roadway into the grassy area near the off ramp to Johnson City via I-26, rolling and ejecting Brenda Fatherree.

Albert Fatherree was transported to Holston Valley Medical Center for treatment of injuries in stable condition.

On Monday morning Kingsport police said an investigation into the crash in continuing.

Blotter: Arrestee challenges officer to 'stop in alley' and fight

$
0
0

The blotter is derived from recent central dispatch records and incident reports of area police agencies.

Wise County Sheriff's Office

April 10

A woman advised a man wearing only his underwear was outside of her home in Wise, attempting to get in through a window. When the woman asked what he was doing he reportedly left for a few minutes, wandering from neighboring trailer to trailer, then returned to sit down in the woman's driveway. Police responded and located the suspect, who advised that he and Ace Ventura were checking ditch lines in the area. He was determined to be under the influence and arrested for public intoxication.

Kingsport Police Department

April 11

Dispatch alerted police to a vehicle reportedly traveling south on Lynn Garden Drive with three flat tires. A pickup matching the description was located on West Stone Drive and a stop was conducted, finding the driver was under the influence. Further investigation revealed he had struck a utility pole on Carter's Valley Road, then continued on to hit an unoccupied vehicle on Lynn Garden. Three syringes, a bottle of hydrocodone and substance believed to be crack cocaine were found in his vehicle, prompting additional drug charges.

April 12

Several people — including a woman armed with a "big stick"— were reportedly fighting on Bays View Road.

Police were alerted to an argument in the parking lot of an East Stone Drive restaurant, where a man and woman were allegedly, "really going at it." The officer located a man standing beside a car occupied by two females, with the suspect allegedly making a "gesture of disgust" while motioning for the officer to go away. Police elected to investigate further, at which point the man reportedly became disrespectful and tried to instigate an argument with the officer. He then accused the officer of having a bad day, adding that he was just, "driving around until you found a black guy." Due to continuing to raise his voice and causing a disturbance among the restaurant's patrons, the man was arrested for disorderly conduct. On the way to jail he allegedly challenged the officer to "stop in an alley" so he could, "(mess) you up." He also said the only reason he didn't "(expletive) slap" the officer was because of his badge, categorizing him as a, "racist redneck."

A man was arrested for shoplifting at the Walmart on West Stone Drive, where he allegedly attempted to walk out of the store with more than $1,300 in baby formula.

April 13

A female was caught stealing more than $600 in clothing from Belk, while a search of her belongings located several pills. She was arrested for felony theft and drug possession.

Sullivan County Sheriff's Office

April 11

A Canton Road resident reported their mail was stolen by neighbors.

April 12

A Kingsport resident advised that an unknown man with two tear drop tattoos on his face came to their door, "talking out of his head."

April 13

Police were called to a party on Bristol Caverns Highway, where witnesses told officers that one man had become combative and needed to go, "sleep it off." The suspect agreed to leave with a sober driver and was assisted towards a car by family. He then allegedly turned around and took a swing at the deputy, prompting a take down to the ground. While being restrained by officers he reportedly spit several times, striking one deputy in the face. He was arrested and charged with assault, public intoxication and resisting arrest.

April 14

On Little Oak Road campers reported a "ruckus" near their campsite. They claimed to have spotted something big with their flashlights, believing it to be either a bear or a wolf.

Hawkins County Sheriff's Office

April 12

An officer was dispatched to a fight at a Bulls Gap residence, locating a naked woman inside the home. She was allegedly "cursing at everyone" —including police — and ignored commands to calm down. She was arrested for disorderly conduct.

April 13

A Rogersville woman claimed her ex-boyfriend had hit her in the face, pinned her down and pinched her on the cheek. Meanwhile, the man said she punched him in the stomach and tried to burn him with a cigarette. Police observed no signs of a physical altercation and took no action.

April 14

A Rogersville man claimed to have video evidence of two individuals driving by his home while making obscene gestures. He said that on one day it had occurred more than 20 times.

A deputy was dispatched to a Church Hill residence after a woman and her boyfriend began arguing over who would clean the home. When the man refused his girlfriend threw his property out a kitchen window, with the officer noting the residence was "in complete disarray" upon police arrival. Both parties agreed to separate for a 12 hour cooling off period.

A Webster Valley Road resident reported one of her peacocks as being attacked by a neighbor's dog.

For past entries visit the Times-News blotter page.

Drugs allegedly found on woman wanted on child support warrant

$
0
0

CHURCH HILL — A Kingsport woman wanted in Hawkins County for failure to pay child support reportedly required a burst of pepper spray to subdue Thursday afternoon in Church Hill.

Amy Lynn Lane, 34, 1469 East Sevier Avenue, Kingsport, was reportedly standing in the driveway of a Church Hill residence shortly before 5 p.m. Thursday when deputies recognized her as being wanted on an outstanding arrest warrant.

While attempting to take Lane into custody HCSO deputies Kenny Lunsford and Nathan Simpson reportedly attempted to take her purse from her hands.

It was later allegedly revealed that the purse contained a variety of drugs and paraphernalia. Lunsford said Lane ran from him around a car and threw the purse into the car through an open window.

"When I tried to get the purse she pushed me and gained control of the purse again," Lunsford said in his report. "Lane was ordered several times to stop resisting but did not follow commands."

Lunsford said he administered a one-second burst of "Freeze Plus P" chemical spray to Lane’s face while trying to handcuff her against the car. He said Lane continued to resist and was taken to the ground and cuffed.

Among the drugs allegedly recovered from her purse were a small amount of marijuana, 5.5 Alprazolam pills, two hydrocodone, and a small glass bottle containing a nasal tip used for snorting powders which contained a crushed hydrocodone.

Lane was treated at the scene fro the pepper spray and was lodged in the Hawkins County Jail where she remained held at the time of her arraignment Monday in Sessions Court.

She is charged with possession of marijuana possession of Schedule IV narcotics, three counts of possession of Schedule III, possession of drug paraphernalia, resisting arrest and tampering with evidence.

Former Pratt's employee charged with embezzling nearly $140,000

$
0
0

A former office manager at Pratt's BBQ in Kingsport has been charged with embezzling nearly $140,000 from the business, allegedly using the stolen funds to pay off credit card debt.

According to Kingsport police, a warrant was issued March 27 for the arrest of Samantha Miller, 45, of 401 Thomas Acres Road. She then turned herself into police and was charged with theft of more than $60,000.

KPD Det. Chris Tincher says Miller was employed by Pratt's, 1225 East Stone Drive, from 2003 through 2011. An affidavit in Kignsport court says that over that time Miller had "complete control over the company's account."

Miller reportedly resigned in October of 2011, but it wasn't until November of last year that Tom Pratt, the owner of the restaurant, reported the missing funds to police. Court records state his secretary discovered the unauthorized transfer of money from a business account to Chase E-Pay, an online service for the payment of credit card bills.

Subsequent investigation by detectives reportedly found "several" such unauthorized transactions, with the total amount coming to $138,275.81. The alleged embezzlement occurred between January of 2007 up through November of 2012, approximately a year after Miller's resignation.

Court records say the stolen money was used to pay a Chase E-Pay account in the name of Miller's husband. When interviewed by police she allegedly admitted to the embezzlement.

Miller's next court appearance is scheduled for May 30.

Piney Flats man recounts explosions at Boston Marathon

$
0
0

Richard Meyers, a 46-year-old Piney Flats resident, was breathing a sigh of relief this afternoon after explosions rocked downtown Boston just after he’d crossed the finish line.

“I had just come across the finish line in my first Boston Marathon,” Meyers said from his hotel. “My wife and 8-year-old daughter had just taken pictures of me. She left and began following me. She had been standing right at the spot where the first explosion went off.”

That move may have saved their lives.

Read more at the Johnson City Press.


'Total chaos': Kingsport runner describes scene at Boston explosions

$
0
0

Kingsport's Scott Horton, 50, has been running competitively for more than 20 years, and says it was a "dream come true" to cross the finish line at the Boston Marathon.

But approximately four hours later, while sitting in his locked down hotel adjacent to Monday's fatal explosion, he conceded the event had turned into a nightmare. He said ATF agents were swarming the building while he and his wife, like the rest of the nation, attempted to glean what information they could from media reports.

"At first we didn't know what it was, but it sounded like a bomb could have went off," Horton said of the explosions, which as of late Monday had killed two and injured more than 100. "When we saw the people running we knew something had happened. People were crying, all the sirens started. Total chaos."

Horton, a mechanic for Wellmont Health Systems, completed his run in three hours and 50 minutes. He said that just as he and his wife were reuniting in a family meet-up area the explosions rocked downtown Boston.

"We were still outside when the blast occurred, probably about a block and a half from it," said Horton. "We heard both blasts. We were behind the hotel that divided us from the finish line. Especially after just running 26 miles, I was hobbling to the hotel about half sick. It was all quite traumatic."

"This has been my goal to qualify to run the Boston Marathon. All this puts a damper on it; people dying here."

The Boston Athletic Association's online entrant list for the marathon included two additional Kingsport residents; David Lively Jr., 43, and Brandon Raff, 29.

Lively's mother, Barbara Lively, told the Times-News that her son had finished the Boston Marathon prior to Monday's explosion, and was on the way back to his hotel when the incident occurred.

Attempts to reach Raff were unsuccessful, with other media outlets reporting he was OK.

Speed camera firm makes presentation to Sullivan County Commission

$
0
0

BLOUNTVILLE — Sullivan County Mayor Steve Godsey invited a speed camera company to give a presentation to the Sullivan County Commission on Monday.

Sheriff Wayne Anderson spoke up from the audience to make clear he would in no way support the use of speed cameras in the county.

“They’re speed traps,” Anderson said.

David Shepherd, Tennessee account manager for Maryland-based Optotraffic, suggested the county could use revenue generated by portable speed cameras — which could be set up in school zones — to fund school resource officers (SROs) for county schools.

According to information distributed by Shepherd: If a child is hit by a vehicle at 20 miles per hour (mph), there is a 5 percent chance it will be fatal, and that increases to 45 percent at 30 mph and to 85 percent at 40 mph. Also, according to Shepherd’s information, 15.1 percent of fatal crashes in Tennessee were caused by excessive speed, and in 2012 there were 7,064 speed-related crashes in the state.

Shepherd said Optotraffic would foot the bill for setup costs and not charge the county any monthly fee — and would not expect a multi-year contract, instead offering a commitment of as little as 60 or 90 days.

Shepherd said increased public safety, not revenue generation, is the primary goal of Optotraffic — which he said is the only company that offers a speed camera based on a portable platform.

That means it can be moved easily, allowing for enforcement in multiple zones with just one system.

“Speed-related fatalities will come down,” Shepherd said, also describing use of the cameras as a way to “re-educate” the community.

Nothing regarding speed cameras is officially being considered by the Sullivan County Commission.

Sullivan County Director of Schools Jubal Yennie attended the commission meeting and said he would meet with Shepherd later. Yennie said he had not discussed the proposal with Shepherd before the meeting.

“He’s going to get on my calendar and I’ll take a look at it,” Yennie said Monday afternoon of the speed camera proposal. “I know nothing more than what he said this morning.”

Unless the speed cameras are placed in school zones, Yennie said they would be in the domain of Anderson, not the school system.

“Steve (Godsey) gave me the heads-up the guy was coming today,” Yennie said. “I would probably defer to the sheriff.”

Staff Writer Rick Wagner contributed to this report

Cruelty charges pending against Hawkins County man in horse neglect case

$
0
0

CHURCH HILL — A criminal summons was issued last week for a Hawkins County man accused of neglecting four horses on his property on AFG Road near Church Hill.

When a Hawkins County horse rescue agency went to the get the horses Sunday at the request of the Hawkins County Sheriff’s Office, the horses had reportedly been removed from the property.

Hawkins County Sheriff Ronnie Lawson told the Times-News Monday that a criminal summons for five counts of animal cruelty has been issued against Timothy Lee, 35, 753 AFG Road, Church Hill.

Lawson said that summons is active and hadn’t been served as of Monday afternoon.

On April 8, HCSO Deputy Josh Byrd was dispatched to Lee’s property on AFG Road in reference to horses not being cared for.

Byrd stated in his report that he observed four horses on the property that appeared to be underfed.

He then contacted University of Tennessee Agricultural Extension Agent Bob Moncier, who responded to the AFG Road pasture and evaluated the horses.

Moncier told the Times-News Monday that based on the guidelines he must follow for livestock as set out by state law, his opinion was that the horses were underweight and not being fed or cared for properly.

Byrd added, “There has been several complaints in the past in which there has been an ongoing investigation. The property appears to lack a food source for the horses.”

There was no explanation Monday why there were five counts of animal cruelty but only four horses.

On Thursday, the HCSO requested that TEARS horse rescue based on Route 66 north of Rogersville take custody of the four horses. When TEARS went to Lee’s AFG Road property to get the horses Sunday, however, they were gone.

A court date for Lee can’t be set until the HCSO serves him with the criminal summons.

Hawkins County school budget $3 million in red

$
0
0

ROGERSVILLE — Hawkins County Schools finance director Myron Dale told the Board of Education he needs more than $3 million to balance the 2013-14 school budget as it was presented during Monday’s workshop.

That’s equivalent to about 30 cents in property tax revenue.

Following Dale’s budget presentation Monday, BOE chairman Randy Collier told Dale to “crunch some numbers” and come back to the BOE in about two weeks with better alternatives.

No one expressed confidence Monday that the county commission would consider a 30 cent property tax increase for education.

Last year, the BOE used $1.3 million in reserve funds to balance the current 2012-13 budget so it wouldn’t have to ask the county for additional funding.

That puts Dale in a $1.3 million hole right off the bat in preparing a proposed 2013-14 budget.

Complicating matters is the fact that the Hawkins County school system’s revenue is projected to increase $474,000 in 2013-14, while its expenditures will increase $2.2 million.

Dale told the BOE Monday that without a source of new revenue the school system could be bankrupt in three years.

Dale’s proposed $53.4 million budget does include one major potential cut.

The addition of 17 new school resource officers (SROs) is included in this year’s budget. Cutting them saves $750,000 in recurring annual expenditure.

Dale said that without the SROs the school system’s budget deficit is still around $2.4 million.

School systems are required by the state to maintain a fund balance no less than 3 percent of the overall budget, which in the case of the Hawkins County Schools general fund, is $1.6 million.

If the 2013-14 budget was fully funded with $3 million in new revenue from the county, the fund balance is projected to be around $7.8 million as of June 30, 2014.

The bad thing about using reserve funds to balance a budget is that the expenses come back up the next year. Without a source of new revenue, eventually the reserve fund is depleted.

The BOE has already said that under no circumstances will it allow the reserve fund balance to dip below $5 million.

Salary and benefits comprise 83 percent of the school budget.

Dale said last year’s budget was cut as lean as he could get it without affecting salaries and benefits.

He said that cutting any further from non-personnel spending in the proposed 2013-14 budget will only result in the BOE dipping into the fund balance with budget amendments throughout the year.

Dale told the BOE there is no way to pay for the 17 new SROs without additional revenue from the county. But, he was going to recommend asking the county for new revenue, even if the SROs are cut, because expenditures are increasing faster than revenue.

Next year’s big ticket budget items aside from the SROs include an expected state-mandated 1.5 percent teacher pay raise which combined with a proposed pay hike for non-certified employees amounts to around $600,000.

The transportation department will need to buy seven new school buses for an estimated total of $595,000.

Dale is also anticipating an increase in employee health expenditures due to the implementation of new federal Affordable Health Care Act regulations.

Then there’s the purchase of new textbooks, technology upgrades to meet state standards, rising gasoline costs and along list of capital outlay project the BOE has placed on a priority list.

Collier said that without new revenue, the only places he sees where cuts can be made are in salary and benefits.

Collier said he polled some county commissioners who he felt were the most pro-education. He said none of them were optimistic about any proposed revenue increases for education coming from the county.

“Crunch some more numbers and come up with some (alternatives),” Collier told Dale.

The BOE will meet again in budget workshop in about two weeks with a date to be set later.

Hawkins County Commission Budget Committee chairman Gary Hicks attended Monday’s budget workshop. He told the BOE that the Budget Committee begins budget hearings for the 2013-14 budget May 22. Hicks added that he doesn’t anticipate a county budget being passed until after the current fiscal year ends June 30 to give them a complete picture of where they stand financially.

The BOE informally set a goal of having its budget approved and ready to submit to the commission’s Budget Committee in time for the late May budget hearings

Deadline Approaching for Kingsport City Schools Accepting Zoning and Tuition Applications for 2013-2014 School Year

$
0
0
KINGSPORT, Tenn. – Kingsport City Schools will accept zoning and tuition applications for students in grades K – 12 for the 2013-2014 school year until Tuesday, April 30, 2013.

Parents who would like to request their child attend a different city school outside the school zone their student is expected to attend must apply for a zoning exception. Parents of students who are not legal residents of the City of Kingsport must submit a tuition application to attend Kingsport City Schools. Parents or legal guardians must apply annually for their child's tuition and zoning status, even if they attended Kingsport City Schools in 2012-2013.

Applications are available in-person at KCS Administrative Support Center, 400 Clinchfield Street, second floor, downtown Kingsport or online at k12k.com until the April 30, 2013 application deadline.

The following are excerpts from the Kingsport Board of Education's policies and procedures for zoning and tuition:
- Parents or legal guardians must apply annually for their child's tuition and zoning status.
- Students who are not legal residents of the city of Kingsport shall pay tuition charges as approved annually by the Board of Education.
- Failure to pay tuition will disqualify a student's application for the next year.
- Tuition students are accepted and zoning exceptions are granted only if current enrollment permits.
- The system does not provide bus transportation to either tuition or zoning-exemption students, except in specific circumstances.

Criteria for zoning exceptions are as follows:
1. Documented medical reasons
2. Child care availability
3. An expected move to a different zone
4. Specialized school programs
5. A fifth or an eighth grade student with a previous zoning exception
6. A student whose family has moved to a different zone after November 1
7. Documented justifications related to the child's specific educational experience

The school system utilizes the following order when placing students:
1. Zoning exception reapplications
2. Tuition reapplications for school employees working at the requested school
3. New zoning exceptions applications
4. Tuition reapplications
5. New tuition applications for school employees working at the requested school
6. New tuition applications for system and city employees
7. New tuition applications for out-of-district residents

For more information, contact Peggy Everhart, student services office assistant at (423) 378-2142 or peverhart@k12k.com.

Kingsport City Schools is a public school system located in Kingsport, Tenn., serving students in Sullivan and Hawkins county. The district is comprised of 13 schools, including a Pre-K, eight elementary schools, two middle schools, one high school and an alternative school; with total enrollment reaching 6,500 students. The vision of Kingsport City Schools is to be, Student Focused … World Class.

For more information on Kingsport City Schools (KCS), visit k12k.com, listen live on, WCSK 90.3 FM, The Voice of KCS, watch KCS Today on Charter Channel 16 at 6 a.m. and 6 p.m. or call (423) 378.2100. We're social too; follow us on Facebook, Kingsport City Schools and on Twitter, @KptSchools.

####

Unicoi Co. narcotics investigator resigns; investigation ordered

$
0
0

ERWIN — Unicoi County Sheriff Mike Hensley has requested the District Attorney General’s office and the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation conduct an investigation of the Unicoi County Sheriff’s Department’s drug funds and drug evidence following the resignation of one of the department’s narcotics officers.

According to Hensley, Unicoi County Sheriff’s Department narcotics investigator Matthew McNally resigned Friday, two days after McNally took a drug test requested by Hensley. The sheriff said the results came back positive.

McNally, who had worked at the sheriff’s department since August 2007, cited a higher-paying, non-law enforcement job that would take him out of the area as his reason for resigning, Hensley said. The sheriff also said McNally said he would need to begin the new job Monday when he spoke with Hensley on Friday.

Read more at the Johnson City Press.



Read more: http://johnsoncitypress.com/News/article.php?id=106353#ixzz2Qd0vUTz9

Foundation to offer free mobile health clinic in Sullivan, Hawkins

$
0
0

The Knoxville-based St. Mary’s Legacy Foundation hopes to reach out to uninsured and medically needy Northeast Tennesseans by offering them a free roaming mobile health clinic this fall.

"It will provide primary medical care on a regular, ongoing basis to the underserved communities of Northeast Tennessee,” John Deinhart, director of Stewardship and Strategic Planning for the Catholic Diocese of Knoxville, said of the mobile clinic. “This will be an active ministry. We will get the relationships started, the volunteers lined up and set a regular schedule. ... There will be an opportunity to keep up a relationship with a patient.”

A map of the clinic’s anticipated coverage area suggests it will be going through the Highway 11-W corridor in Sullivan and Hawkins counties.

The rolling clinic will set up in church parking lots, parks and other publicly accessible areas, Deinhart added.

A general practitioner will be available at the clinic, while community partners will be sought to offer lab and radiology services.

In establishing the need for the clinic, Deinhart cited Tennessee’s negative national health rankings: 44th in diabetes, 36th in smoking, 35th in obesity, 41st in cardiac health and 48th in high blood pressure.

He indicated the foundation was planning the mobile health clinic whether or not the state decided to participate in an expansion of TennCare, Tennessee’s Medicaid program.

Deinhart said a recent Tennessee Medical Association analysis estimated full implementation of the federal health care reform law could reduce the state’s uninsured rate by 10 percentage points.

“(But) even in the very best-case scenario, there’s still about six percent of the folks who are going to be uninsured or underinsured. The need is significant. ... Our goal is to be that gap filler,” Deinhart pointed out.

The foundation was formed in November 2011 following the sale of St. Mary’s Hospital to provide support for Catholic ministries begun by the Sisters of Mercy, which opened Kingsport’s St. Dominic School in 1946.

Within a year’s time, the foundation doled out more than $600,000 in grants to East Tennessee charities, including St. Anthony Bread in Johnson County.

The foundation says that while grants will continue to be awarded to Catholic institutions, the services provided by those institutions are not limited to serving only Catholics.

For more about the foundation, go to www.dioknox.org.


Boston bombs said to be made from pressure cookers

$
0
0

BOSTON (AP) — The two bombs that ripped through the crowds at the Boston Marathon, killing three people and wounding more than 170, were fashioned out of pressure cookers and packed with shards of metal, nails and ball bearings, a person briefed on the investigation said Tuesday.

The details on the apparently crude but deadly explosives emerged as investigators appealed to the public for amateur video and photos that might yield clues, and the chief FBI agent in Boston vowed "we will go to the ends of the Earth" to find those responsible.

A person who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the investigation was still going on said that the explosives were put in 6-liter pressure cookers, placed in black duffel bags and left on the ground. They were packed with shrapnel to inflict maximum carnage, the person said.

The person said law enforcement officials have some of the bomb components but do not yet know what was used to set off the explosives.

A doctor treating the wounded appeared to corroborate the person's account, saying one of the victims was maimed by what looked like ball bearings or BBs. Doctors also said they removed a host of sharp objects from the victims, including nails that were sticking out of one little girl's body.

At the White House, meanwhile, President Barack Obama said that the bombings were an act of terrorism but that investigators do not know if they were carried out by an international organization, domestic group or a "malevolent individual."

He added: "The American people refuse to be terrorized."

Across the U.S., from Washington to Los Angeles, police tightened security, monitoring landmarks, government buildings, transit hubs and sporting events. Security was especially tight in Boston, with bomb-sniffing dogs checking Amtrak passengers' luggage at South Station and transit police patrolling with rifles.

"They can give me a cavity search right now and I'd be perfectly happy," said Daniel Wood, a video producer from New York City who was waiting for a train.

Similar pressure-cooker explosives have been used in Afghanistan, India, Nepal and Pakistan, according to a July 2010 joint FBI and Homeland Security intelligence report. Also, one of the three devices used in the May 2010 Times Square attempted bombing was a pressure cooker, the intelligence report said.

"Placed carefully, such devices provide little or no indication of an impending attack," the report said.

The Pakistani Taliban, which claimed responsibility for the 2010 attempt in Times Square, has denied any role in the Boston Marathon attack.

The two bombs blew up about 10 seconds and around 100 yards apart Monday near the finish line of the storied, 26.2-mile race, tearing off limbs, knocking people off their feet and leaving the streets spattered with blood and strewn with broken glass. The dead included an 8-year-old boy.

"We started grabbing tourniquets and started tying legs. A lot of people amputated," said Roupen Bastajian, a state trooper from Smithfield, R.I., who had just finished the race when he heard the explosions.

Federal investigators said no one had claimed responsibility for the bombings, which took place on one of the city's biggest civic holidays, Patriots Day.

"We will go to the ends of the Earth to identify the subject or subjects who are responsible for this despicable crime, and we will do everything we can to bring them to justice," said Richard DesLauriers, FBI agent in charge in Boston.

He said investigators had received "voluminous tips" and were interviewing witnesses and analyzing the crime scene.

Gov. Deval Patrick said that contrary to earlier reports, no unexploded bombs were found. He said the only explosives were the ones that went off.

FBI agents searched an apartment in the Boston suburb of Revere overnight, and investigators were seen leaving with brown paper bags, plastic trash bags and a duffel bag. But it was unclear whether the tenant had anything to do with the attack.

A law enforcement official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release details of the investigation said the man had been tackled by a bystander, then police, as he ran from the scene of the explosions.

But he said it is possible the man was simply running away to protect himself from the blast, as many others did.

At a news conference, police and federal agents repeatedly appealed for any video, audio and photos taken by marathon spectators, even images that people might not think are significant.

"There has to be hundreds, if not thousands, of photos and videos" that might help investigators, state police Col. Timothy Alben said.

Boston Police Commissioner Edward Davis said investigators also gathered a large number of surveillance tapes from businesses in the area and intend to go through the video frame by frame.

"This is probably one of the most photographed areas in the country yesterday," he said.

At least 17 people were critically injured, police said. At least eight children were being treated at hospitals. In addition to losing limbs, victims suffered broken bones, shrapnel wounds and ruptured eardrums.

Dr. Stephen Epstein of the emergency medicine department at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center said he saw an X-ray of one victim's leg that had "what appears to be small, uniform, round objects throughout it — similar in the appearance to BBs."

Eight-year-old Martin Richard was among the dead, said U.S. Rep. Stephen Lynch, a family friend. The boy's mother, Denise, and 6-year-old sister, Jane, were badly injured. His brother and father were also watching the race but were not hurt.

A candle burned on the stoop of the family's single-family home in the city's Dorchester section Tuesday, and the word "Peace" was written in chalk on the front walk.

Neighbor Betty Delorey said Martin loved to climb the neighborhood trees, and hop the fence outside his home.

The Boston Marathon is one of the world's oldest and most prestigious races and about 23,000 runners participated. Most of them had crossed the finish line by the time the bombs exploded, but thousands more were still completing the course.

The attack may have been timed for maximum bloodshed: The four-hour mark is typically a crowded time near the finish line because of the slow-but-steady recreational runners completing the race and because of all the friends and relatives clustered around to cheer them on.

Davis, the police commissioner, said authorities had received "no specific intelligence that anything was going to happen" at the race. On Tuesday, he said that two security sweeps of the route had been conducted before the marathon.

The race winds up near Copley Square, not far from the landmark Prudential Center and the Boston Public Library. It is held on Patriots Day, which commemorates the first battles of the American Revolution, at Concord and Lexington in 1775.

Richard Barrett, the former U.N. coordinator for an al-Qaida and Taliban monitoring team who has also worked for British intelligence, said the relatively small size of the devices in Boston and the timing of the blasts suggest a domestic attack rather than an al-Qaida-inspired one.

"This happened on Patriots Day — it is also the day Americans are supposed to have their taxes in — and Boston is quite a symbolic city," said Barrett, now senior director at the Qatar International Academy for Security Studies.

___

Eileen Sullivan contributed to this story from Washington. Associated Press writers Jay Lindsay, Denise Lavoie, Steve LeBlanc, Bridget Murphy, Rodrique Ngowi and Meghan Barr in Boston; Julie Pace and Lara Jakes in Washington; Paisley Dodds in London and Marilynn Marchione in Milwaukee also contributed.

Gov. Haslam knows no reason for FBI's Pilot search

$
0
0

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam says he still doesn't know why federal agents searched the Knoxville headquarters of the Pilot Flying J chain of truck stops, owned by his family.

The Republican governor made an impromptu visit to the press suite in the legislative office complex Tuesday, a day after the FBI and Internal Revenue Service shut down the Pilot offices.

Haslam said he had spoken with his brother, Pilot CEO and Cleveland Browns owner Jimmy Haslam, but that he didn't have any further details on which records the agents were searching for.

The governor said he has not had a day-to-day role in managing the company in 15 years, and that he will concentrate on his role as governor while the investigation continues.

Haslam has declined to divulge his ownership stake in the private company.

Parents facing charges after 3-year-old apparently overdoses on pills

$
0
0

CHURCH HILL — The mother of a 3-year-old boy who nearly died after apparently overdosing on her medication last month was formally charged Friday with child neglect/endangerment.

The charge wasn’t pertaining to solely the drug overdose, however, but also due to the residence occupied by three small children allegedly being filthy and infested with insects crawling on food, dishes, and on a sleeping child.

Hayley Brooke Hamilton, 31, 220 Old Union Road Lot 6, Church Hill, was arraigned Monday in Hawkins County Sessions Court on one count of child neglect/endangerment and was subsequently released on $1,000 bond.

According to the sheriff’s office, the charge was delayed so the child could have its mother with it during recovery. Hamilton is scheduled to appear in Sessions Court again on May. 1

The child’s father, Michael Christopher Hunley, 24, same address, was arrested shortly after the March 15 incident in which the child was taken to the Holston Valley Medical Center with a near fatal overdose.

Hawkins County Sheriff’s Office Narcotics Unit Sgt. Lynn Campbell responded the HVMC emergency room March 15 after being contacted by hospital personnel about the child’s condition.

Campbell said the child was brought to the emergency room by Hamilton with "an altered level of consciousness and shallow respirations from a possible overdose of Subutex and Valium."

The child was treated for both types of overdose and was later admitted to the HVMC Pediatric Intensive Care Unit.

Hamilton reportedly told Campbell she was home washing dishes that day and Hunley was outside working on a vehicle when she observed her son to "become drowsy and fall asleep in the floor."

"When she went to pick him up she observed him to be limp, had glassy eyes, and he was snoring," Campbell said. "Mrs. Hamilton stated she was unable to wake (the boy). She then observed her medication — Subutex and Valium — was missing from a non-childproof container that stays in her purse, which sits on the floor."

After interviewing Hamilton at the hospital Campbell went to her residence where Hunley was staying with the two other children ages 2 and 4.

Hunley reportedly gave verbal consent to search the residence, at which time Campbell allegedly observed the residence to be "unsanitary and unsafe." He said the children had "poor hygiene and appeared to be unkempt."

"While at the residence I observed cockroaches in and on food and food storage areas, on dishes including a child’s cup and bottle, and crawling on the 4-year-old while she was sleeping," Campbell said. "There was also trash, filth and clutter throughout the entire residence and outside."

Campbell added, "I also observed the flooring to be unsound and exposed electrical wiring, and (Hunley) made a verbal statement that he thought a ‘wharf rat’ was loose in the residence."

Hunley was arrested at the residence on March 15 on one count of child abuse/neglect. He was released from the Hawkins County Jail on March 18 on $10,000 bond and is will appear again in Hawkins County Sessions Court on April 24.

Status of federal contract for airport weather observers up in the air

$
0
0

BLOUNTVILLE — The human touch in aviation weather is up in the air at Tri-Cities Regional Airport.

Contract weather observers serve TCRA as they do at airports around the country.

They glean information from sophisticated automated weather stations and eyeball sky conditions, although they are not necessarily meteorologists.

The federal contract for airport weather observers expired on Sept. 30, 2012, but the Federal Aviation Administration extended the contract to May 31.

Following an inquiry, FAA didn’t say what’s going to happen to the contract after the end of May.

“The Federal Aviation Administration will ensure that weather information is available for pilots using Tri-Cities Regional Airport,” FAA spokeswoman Kathleen Bergen wrote in an email.

Bergen pointed out the contract expiration occurred at the end of the last fiscal year and before the March 1 federal sequester — automatic discretionary spending cuts approved by Congress in 2011.

Bergen didn’t have the number of contract weather observers working at TCRA.

While up-to-date weather information is always a safety concern, TCRA’s main general aviation operator didn’t think pilots or passengers would be affected if weather observers weren’t at the airport.

“I feel like the pilots would be able to get their information from the National Weather Service. ... I feel like most of the pilots also get (weather) information off other websites,” said Pam Phillips, owner and general manager at Tri-City Aviation. “Years ago, pilots would borrow our courtesy car and drive to the (FAA) tower and check the weather. ... Since technology has come so far, we haven’t had anyone go over there in years.”

Still, FAA is under continuing scrutiny amid federal spending cuts. On Tuesday, the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation held a hearing titled “Aviation Safety: FAA’s Progress on Key Safety Initiatives” to examine sequestration’s effects on FAA.

The Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association (AOPA), which lobbies Congress on behalf of the general aviation community, also has kept a close eye on tower issues at smaller airports, where everything from single-engine airplanes to business jets take off.

AOPA President and CEO Craig L. Fuller warns any decision to close control towers and scale back aviation services constitutes a risk to aviation safety.

“The White House budget office has forced troubling, and possibly dangerous, cuts on the FAA,” Fuller said in an AOPA release last month. “It doesn’t have to be that way. Rational savings can be found, and we are ready to work with the FAA and the Department of Transportation to build workable solutions. But closing more than 200 air traffic control towers, derailing certification, and allowing our navigational aid system to deteriorate just doesn’t make sense.”

For more about FAA go to www.faa.gov.

Benefit account created for injured Va. trooper

$
0
0

GATE CITY — An account has been set up at area New Peoples Bank locations to accept monetary donations for a Virginia State Police trooper injured last week during a high-speed pursuit through Scott County.

Trooper James C. Lawson is currently recovering from his injuries at Holston Valley Medical Center's Wilcox Hall.

Donations to the benefit account created for Lawson can be made at any New Peoples Bank location in Southwest Virginia or Northeast Tennessee.

Lawson sustained undisclosed head injuries April 9 when his VSP cruiser struck a parked vehicle head-on on Daniel Boone Road while he was attempting to apprehend the suspect who allegedly sparked the chase.

Lawson had to be transported to the hospital by Med-Flight and was listed in serious condition for over 24 hours after the wreck.

It is not know when Lawson will be allowed to return to work, or how long his treatment will last.

In addition to his role as a state police officer, Lawson also serves as the assistant fire chief for the town of Gate City's volunteer fire department.

Click here for a listing of New Peoples Bank locations.

Viewing all 2029 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images