A usually reliable source tells me that this morning at 8AM
VLCIA will hold a special called board meeting to consider
a specific dollar offer from Sterling Planet for the site
of the proposed biomass plant.
I see nothing in the public notices online.
The Industrial Authority’s
own online calendar has today marked,
although it doesn’t say for what.
The VDT’s online calendar
does have it listed:
Valdosta-Lowndes County Industrial Authority Special Called Meeting
When
Friday
Jul. 8, 2011
8:00 AM
Description
Purpose of meeting is to discus real estate. Call 259-9972.
Where
Authority Offices
2110 N. Patterson St.
Valdosta, GA
The VDT calendar doesn’t say what real estate, but the source
has usually been correct before.
Since it’s about real estate they’ll probably go directly into executive
session, which means the public can’t attend that part.
However, public can attend the public street outside.
Welcome
Andrea Shuijer Schruijer to a great opportunity as the new Executive
Director of the Valdosta-Lowndes County Industrial Authority (VLCIA)!
For a year I’ve been asking for a list of jobs attracted by the
Authority. We welcome your marketing expertise so we’ll know
the Authority’s successes!
We welcome your communications expertise to inform the community
affected by the process of bringing new jobs. VLCIA could publish
its agendas, minutes, and videos of its meetings, events, and
new jobs on its web pages, and facebook, maybe even twitter.
We welcome your stewardship of the Authority’s $3 million/year in taxes.
Maybe some
Harrisburg City Council member Brad Koplinski is seeking to introduce a
resolution that will allow the council to prepare paper work that might
become necessary should a majority of the council decide to file for
Chapter 9 bankruptcy.
Koplinski said the urgency of being prepared escalated Thursday when
state Sen. Jeffrey Piccola introduced legislation that called for a
state takeover of Harrisburg should the distressed city fail to adopt
the Act 47 plan it was presented Monday.
It seems Harrisburg applied for Act 47, which is apparently a state
bankruptcy protection plan last October, but now:
Continue reading →
The finances of Harrisburg, Pa., are so desperate that local officials are
considering a deal they fear will ultimately make the city more miserable.
A state-appointed panel, charged with crafting a financial recovery plan
for the city, announced this week that Harrisburg must pursue the sale of
public assets to help resolve its fiscal crisis. The nearly-bankrupt state
capital, weighed down by debt more than four times the size of its budget,
“is not in control of its own destiny,” the state team said in a report.
Three years ago, confronted with a similar budget shortfall, the city
considered leasing parking garages and meters in exchange for quick
infusion of cash, but that deal was never approved. Last month, the offer
resurfaced when New York-based developer LambdaStar expressed renewed
interest. Some city leaders harbor a growing fear that Harrisburg will
be forced into a deal that will bleed its coffers over the course of
decades, after it surrenders valuable assets to a profit-driven company
with the power to raise rates on a captive base of customers.
But those misgivings may not matter, as a budget crisis chokes Harrisburg
into submission.
“This is a situation where Wall Street will get paid, and the little
guys on Main Street, taxpayers, are going to get stuck holding the bag,”
Harrisburg City Council Member Brad Koplinski said.
The capital city Pennsylvania is broke and will be skipping this month’s
multi-million dollar bond payment.
On Sept. 15, Harrisburg, Pa., was scheduled to make a $3.29 million
payment on the bonds it issued to build a trash plant. But, the
cash-strapped city doesn’t have the dough.
“The city’s budget is in deficit,” said Chuck Ardo, spokesman for
Harrisburg Mayor Linda Thompson. “We’re looking for ways to trim the
budget just to keep services going.”
“Now the chickens have come home to roost,” the mayor said in a statement
released Wednesday.
At an event this afternoon at UT-San Antonio, Mayor Julian Castro
announced a suite of green energy projects that he said would position
San Antonio as the nation’s “recognized leader in clean energy technology”
and help fulfill his aggressive environmental goals.
Most notably, Castro and leaders from CPS Energy, the city-owned utility,
pledged to shut down one of its coal-fired power plants 15 years ahead
of schedule. By 2018, the city would mothball the 871-megawatt J.T. Deely
Power Plant — a bold move in a growing state that’s seemingly addicted
to coal.
Leigh Touchton, president of the Valdosta-Lowndes NAACP,
says the local and state NAACP are opposed to the biomass plant
because the community that is most affected is the minority community.
She referred to her previous presentation of a letter from
Dr. Robert D. Bullard.
She also brought up an incident with Brad Lofton and recommended
that VLCIA hire an executive director who wouldn’t act like that.
And she said she deals with VSEB all the time:
I’ve taken men through there, I’ve signed them up.
She referred to me when she said that, so what I said before
is appended after the video.
The health of the community is way more important than the job —Leigh Touchton
Regular Meeting, Valdosta-Lowndes County Industrial Authority (VLCIA),
Norman Bennett, Roy Copeland, Tom Call, Mary Gooding, Jerry Jennett chairman,
J. Stephen Gupton attorney, Allan Ricketts Acting Executive Director,
Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia, 17 May 2011.
Videos by John S. Quarterman for LAKE, the Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange.
What I actually recommended regarding VSEB, in response to
a specific request from Leigh Touchton for recommendations,
was maybe schedule a meeting with Roy Copeland to talk about
VSEB and solar job opportunities:Continue reading →
City officials and staff gathered Wednesday night to discuss and review
the fiscal year 2012 budget. Public participation was advertised, but
no citizens presented any concern at the meeting. This is the first
budget hearing, with the final adoption of the budget taking place at
the upcoming regular City Council meeting on June 23 at 5:30 p.m.
That’s too bad, because among the items discussed was this:
Energy and fuel prices are a threat, since the private sector controls
the costs. Public Works, the Valdosta Fire Department and the Valdosta
Police Department use significant amounts of fuel.
And I bet the city spends significant funds air conditioning its buildings.
Costs that could be offset by investment in solar panels for those same
buildings.
Solar panels that would limit ongoing electrical expenditures,
and would also be a visible sign to residents and potential
investors that Valdosta means renewable and sustainable energy business.
According to Hanson, for every dollar spent by residents, $1.17 is spent
by non-residents.
And many of those non-residents would see those solar panels,
which would spread the green reputation of Valdosta back to whereever
they came from.
Karen Noll asked the VLCIA board to put a no-biomass clause
in any purchase agreement regarding the proposed biomass site.
She began with these words:
I’m Karen Noll.
I hope some of you already have seen my writing and
have read my letters to you in the past.
I’m obviously here on one issue.
I hope that in the future I can be talking to you about other issues.
But right now I’m talking to you about biomass.
And we celebrated that it was dead and it was gone and now it’s not.
Because we really don’t know … what the plan is.
Karen Noll made a pitch based partly on saving taxpayer money.
In addressing health concerns, she handed the board a letter from local doctor
Craig Bishop.
She handed the board a petition with “at least 700 signatures”
and she said for each signature there was probably at least one more
that didn’t sign.
Some of what she said appeared to be drawn from a letter
that is appended in this post after the video.
Mario Bartoletti, the first to carry a protest sign into a VLCIA board meeting,
said that as a member of WACE he wants to know
the hierarchy and to whom does VLCIA report.
Sticking to their current policy of never answering directly anything
said in Citizens to be Heard, the board did not answer.
(My opinion follows in a separate post.)
How does the hierarchy work? —Mario Bartoletti
Irregular Meeting, Valdosta-Lowndes County Industrial Authority (VLCIA),
Norman Bennett, Roy Copeland, Tom Call, Mary Gooding, Jerry Jennett chairman,
J. Stephen Gupton attorney, Allan Ricketts Acting Executive Director,
Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia, 14 June 2011.
Videos by John S. Quarterman for LAKE, the Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange.