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Clinton Police Department Incident Reports

• Shoplifting: Clinton police responded to Food City, 607 S. Charles G. Seivers Blvd., at 11:37 a.m. June 26 after a report of shoplifting.

• Theft: Clinton police responded to a Carriage View address at 9:34 a.m. June 27 after a report of theft.

• Theft of services: Clinton police responded to Sushi & Steak House, 922 N. Charles G. Seivers Blvd., at 9:52 p.m. June 27 after a report of theft of services.

Anderson County EMA adds satellite backup

In a major upgrade to local disaster-response capabilities, the Anderson County Emergency Management Agency is installing a satellite-based communications backup system for its emergency-vehicle fleet, according to a news release.

By pairing Starlink satellite terminals and multi-carrier LTE data routing with state-of-the-art tri-band mobile radios, the county is establishing a new level of voice and data resilience for first responders for the most remote areas of the county or in times of devastation when other communications fail, the agency announced.

This hybrid data system automatically senses network status and seamlessly shifts communications to the satellites when necessary.

If a severe storm, flash flood or technical outage cripples local cellular towers, each vehicle’s onboard router instantly transfers crucial data streams to the Starlink satellite network without interrupting operations.

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Budget committee meets Thursday

The Anderson County Budget Committee will meet on Thursday, July 9, at 4 p.m. in Room 312 of the county courthouse in Clinton to discuss its budget for next year.

Finance Director Robert Holbrook said if all goes well, he hopes the committee will finalize the budget and present it to the County Commission at its regular meeting on July 20. The budget by law will be due in August.

Finance director Robert Holbrook has presented a draft budget. The committee met on June 16 to discuss that draft but has yet to approve it.

At that meeting, Sheriff Russell Barker proposed a further raise than what the budget included for the Sheriff’s Office, totaling at least 15%.

But the committee tabled voting on that proposal so it could discuss ways to cut elsewhere to pay for it. The proposed budget even without that raise had a total deficit of $3,837,141.

“It’s about making sure we’re competitive in the market of law enforcement,” Barker said at the meeting.

“Maybe there’s some savings,” said Commissioner Chad McNabb at the June 9 meeting, regarding ways to pay for the raise. “Maybe there’s not.”

“When we get employee raises, it’s recurring expenses,” said Holbrook. “You can’t keep giving raises and not producing revenue.”







Submitted

Clinch River Quilts of Valor quilters (from left) Becky Massengale, Rosalyn Gardner, and Gwen Cole prepare quilts for presentation at June’s vetertans breakfast. With them is June’s breakfast sponsor, Ray Varner of Ray Varner Ford.

Market Street reopens

Traffic returns as Clinton nears completion of 17-month project


On Tuesday morning, five days after the ceremony celebrating the pending reopening of Market Street to motor vehicles, the barricades were finally down and traffic was again flowing after a 15-month shutdown for renovations. - G. Chambers Williams III
Clinton celebrated the rehabilitation of Market Street and its impending re-opening with a ribbon-cutting ceremony last Friday morning, after a shutdown lasting nearly a year-and-a-half.

Although the event was billed as the official re-opening of the city’s main downtown commercial street, the actual removal of barricades and allowing of traffic to resume was delayed until Tuesday morning, City Manager Roger Houck.

Those barricades, which were gone by Tuesday morning, were still in place on Monday as workers in a bucket truck completed installation and wiring of the new downtown clock. The clock stands on the south side of Market Street near the entrance to the new Pearl Alley pedestrian walkway that links Market to Commerce Street.

“Two weeks from today the [downtown] project should be completed,” Houck said. “We still need to put up the speakers on the lights poles to play holiday music, and there is still one crosswalk on Main Street to finish, along with repaving of Main.

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Clinton approves six-month hold on data centers

The Clinton City Council has approved a six-month moratorium on new data centers while city staff reviews how the facilities should be regulated under the city’s zoning ordinance.

The moratorium was approved unanimously during the council’s June 22 meeting.

Council member Wendy Maness made the motion, and Vice Mayor Larry Gann seconded it.

Members David Queener and Brian Hatmaker were absent.

City Manager Roger Houck said staff members have been discussing data center regulations and will continue working with the city’s Planning Commission on the issue.

Under Clinton’s current zoning ordinance, Houck said, data centers could locate only in industrial zones.

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Cross, Munro vie for Norris Council seat


Zach Cross
The Norris City Council plans to choose a replacement on Monday (July 13) for former Councilwoman Loretta Painter, who resigned in May.

That person would fill the remainder of Painter’s term, which ends in early December following the biennial City Council election on Nov. 3.

Two potential candidates have expressed interest in the short-term appointment – residents Zach Cross and Alex Munro.

And in a surprise announcement last week, nine-term Mayor Chris Mitchell said he would not be standing for re-election in November for another two years on the council, but that he would serve out his current term.

“I will not be entering into City Council Election process this cycle,” he said in an email to city officials, including council members. “I will be serving out my current term, and assisting in the transition process as requested.

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Jennings enters sheriff’s race


Colt Jennings
Colt Jennings has announced his candidacy for Anderson County sheriff, citing his military service, law enforcement experience and commitment to public service.

A graduate of Clinton High School, Jennings served in the U.S. Army from 2004-08 with the 82nd Airborne Division.

During his military service, he deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq as an infantryman and designated marksman.

“I’ve dedicated my life to serving my country and my community, and I’m ready to continue that service as sheriff of Anderson County,” Jennings said.

After working for a decade in the rail and marine industries, Jennings graduated from the police academy in Pensacola, Florida, before beginning a career in law enforcement and later returning to Tennessee.

Jennings has served as a patrol deputy with the Anderson County Sheriff’s Office for the past three-and-a-half years. During that time, he has completed specialized training, served as a field training officer and advanced through instructor development, helping train new deputies.

“I believe the sheriff’s office should be built on integrity, accountability and service to the people of Anderson County,” Jennings said. “My goal is to lead by example while supporting our deputies and keeping our communities safe.”

Jennings and his wife, Kenia, have two children, Elise and Wyatt.

Hagan seeks school board seat


Ray Hagan
Ray Hagan has spent his life in Anderson County, and now he’s asking for the opportunity to serve the families, students, and schools of District 1 on the Anderson County School Board.

A resident of District 1 for 60 years, Ray knows this community well. He knows the people, the values, and the pride Anderson County families have in their schools and in the future of their children.

District 1 is more than where Ray lives — it is home. It’s where he built his life, raised his family, and invested in the future of the community he loves.

Today, he is proud to see the next generation of his family putting down roots in the same place that has meant so much to him.

Ray believes strong schools are one of the most-important parts of a strong community. He understands that parents want safe schools, high academic standards, responsible leadership, and a school system that keeps students first.

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