The new Happi Hostess Café & Bakery will open at 11 a.m. Thursday (Feb. 13) at 365 Market St. in the former location of Cork & Cover, owner Taylor Bingham said. Initially, only the bakery side of the business will be open, offering freshly baked goods such as muffins, cupcakes, cookies, and more. A week later, Feb. 20, the café side will open, providing “a small array of lunch options including homemade soup, sandwiches, salads, and small bites,” according to the business’ website, happihostess.com. Bingham, who also offers catering services, said the downtown business location will operate from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. This is the third of five new downtown restaurant businesses planned for opening early this year in Clinton. Last week, Little Bird Macarons opened in the former location of Evans Candy Company at 226 N. Main St., and the Vista De Rio Mexican restaurant opened on Oak Ridge Highway in the former location of the River View BBQ & Seafood restaurant, which most recently had been the Rice Kitchen Sushi and Hibachi restaurant. Little Bird owner Molly Bookout said her store is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, offering her signature treats – which she calls “classic French macarons handmade with Southern charm and flavor,” along with other desserts and “grab-and-go lunches.” “Our main thing is macarons, which are gluten-free French sandwich cookies, made of almond flour, egg whites and sugar,” Bookout said. “They are sandwiched together with fillings such as chocolate ganache (fudge), butter cream, banana pudding, cream cheese and more, and there is frosting on some.”
Read MoreRental rates for use of Norris city facilities in the Community Building and the downtown Lions Club Pavilion are expected to be raised by the City Council during its next meeting, at 6:30 p.m. March 4.. The council held a public workshop on the proposed changes in rental fees and associated rules on Monday evening, prior to the council’s regular meeting, then discussed the changes again during the meeting. Although no vote was taken Monday evening, the five-member council seemed to be in favor of the proposals, which City Manager Adam Ledford said he would put into a resolution for the council to approve at the March meeting. The new rates, proposed by Ledford, would be $125 for a five-hour period for use of the Community Room or gymnasium in the Norris Community Building, plus $20 an hour for each additional hour. Use of the Lions Club Pavilion would remain $60 for the first five hours, but would add a $20 per hour charge for additional time.
Read MoreNorris residents will be required to pay an additional $3 a month added to their utility bills beginning in April to help fund the city’s new Stormwater Utility Department. After a public hearing on the issue prior to Monday night’s City Council meeting, the council passed on second and final reading Ordinance 689, which sets up the fee structure to support the new department. The measure passed on first reading Jan. 13. Also passed on second and final reading Monday night, after a public hearing, was Ordinance 692, which modifies the Norris Tree Commissions’ rules on what trees are allowed on city right-of-way, and how close they may be placed to sidewalks and utility lines. A last-minute change in the Tree Commission ordinance, proposed by City Manager Adam Ledford, also cut the number of members on the commission to five from the previous seven. That will include at least one and no more than two members of the City Council, appointed by the mayor, with the rest being Norris citizens. Councilman and longtime Tree Commission Chairman Chuck Nicholson complained that it has sometimes been hard to have a quorum of the seven commission members in attendance at meetings – at least four – so the board can officially conduct business.
Read MoreWeather alert systems exist for the different areas of Anderson County. Clinton Clinton City Manager Roger Houk said the city of Clinton has a “Code Red” system for which all Clinton Residents are signed up. It automatically sends alerts through the National Weather Service with a special message from the city. These go out to mobile devices and landlines. You can go to the city of Clinton website (clintontn.net/) to learn more. Oak Ridge Oak Ridge shared a National Weather Service in Morristown post on its Facebook page that citizens have multiple ways to get warnings from weather.gov, including wireless emergency alerts and weather apps telling smart speakers to turn the alerts on, as well as local television and radio, NOAA weather radio and from friends and family. The Oak Ridge Communications specialist Lauren Gray added that the Everbridge Alert system sends out notifications from the NWS automatically based on the location data shared with the platform. While warning sirens exist for disasters connected to Oak Ridge’s nuclear sites, Gray said there is no warning siren that goes off for weather in general or tornadoes specifically in Oak Ridge. Brice Kidwell, director of the Anderson County Emergency Management Agency, said this siren is the only one in the county. Oak Ridge fire and police departments and city administrative staff “monitor the conditions with assistance from the state and NWS Morristown,” Gray added.
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