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Public encouraged to comment on Corps of Engineers' plans

By Jim Scarbrough
Executive technical assistant, Gwinnett Co. Department of Water Resources
Special to GwinnettForum

LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga., Oct. 10, 2008 -- The Mobile District of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (COE) published a "notice of intent" in the Federal Register on February 22, 2008, of their intention to prepare a draft Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) and prepare updated Water Control Manuals for the Apalachicola-Chattahoochee-Flint (ACF) River Basin.


Scarbrough

For the average lay person, this means that the Mobile District of the COE will be revising the procedures under which they operate water releases from Lake Lanier and the complete ACF basin from Buford Dam to the Apalachicola River below Jim Woodruff dam at the Florida state line. They will be seeking input from the public at meetings in the metropolitan Atlanta area. The schedule is as follows:

  • October 22, 5 to 8 p.m. at the Callaway Center at West Georgia Technical College, 220 Fort Drive, La Grange. The telephone is
    706.756.4622.

  • October 23, 2008, from 4 to 7 p.m. at the Cobb County Government Civic Center, Hudgins Hall, 548 South Marietta Parkway, Marietta. That phone is 770.528.8450.

  • October 29, 2008, from 5-8 p.m. at Georgia Mountain Center, 301 Main Street SW, Gainesville. That phone is 770.534.8420.

Those interested in how the Mobile District operates or has operated Lake Lanier and the ACF system in the last few years should come to the meetings and express their opinion to the representatives of the Mobile District. There will be informational booths and COE personnel in attendance to whom the public can address questions. Members of the public will have the opportunity to obtain information on the process of revising the water control plans for the individual reservoirs and the Water Control Manual for the ACF system.

Written comments may also be submitted to the Mobile District on the manual revisions or the EIS between October 20, and November 19, 2008. The requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act require that Environmental Impact Statement's look at alternatives for whatever the federal decision is that is being evaluated (in this case how the reservoirs in the ACF are operated).

Anyone interested in how the COE operates Buford Dam and the other three federal dams on the ACF system (basin) should attend one of the meetings to express an opinion in person, in writing, or both.

Or they could contact the Corps of Engineers at their Mobile office. The contact there is Brian Zettle. The address for the Mobile District is P.O. Box 2288, Mobile, Ala. 36628-0001. Their telephone is 252.694.3815, and his email is brian.a.zettle@usace.army.mil.


Be pleased with difference from Research Triangle counties
By Elliott Brack
Editor and Publisher

OCT. 10, 2008 -- This week you need some good news.


Brack

Sometimes we don't realize just how good we have it, when it comes to local government.

A delegation of Gwinnett leaders visited the Raleigh-Durham area of North Carolina recently, to be alert to what one of our natural competitors is doing. You may remember that both Gwinnett and the Triangle area were early leaders in establishing distinct areas for industrial growth, with North Carolina having its Research Triangle and Gwinnett's establishment of its Technology Park/Atlanta. From the very get-go, the two areas were in competition for location of companies, and still are today.

Each area has its own attractions. The key element for North Carolina is four major universities (Duke, North Carolina, N.C. Sate and North Carolina Central University.) Gwinnett competes through its location in Metro Atlanta with Georgia Tech, Emory, Georgia State, the Atlanta University System, and even includes in its war chest the University of Georgia, just down the University Parkway from Gwinnett.

Both places have moderate weather, and both places have generally good government. The two North Carolina counties (Wake and Durham) added together are larger than is Gwinnett. Wake County has a 786,522 population and Durham County has 246,896 residents. However, that is the majority population in that area, while Gwinnett alone has about 800,000, and is located within the larger Metro Atlanta area with 5.3 million people.

But consider this: we maintain Gwinnett has better government than does North Carolina. One element of this is in the way North Carolina funds schools.

School boards in North Carolina do not have the authority to tax their constituents, as they do in Georgia. Their county school boards must get approval of the county commission before a school budget can be approved. And visitors to North Caroline found last week that it sometimes takes up to three months of wrangling between the School Board and the county commission over the tax levied for school purposes.

As a contrast, Georgia school boards are independent from the county commission, and can directly levy up to 20 mills for school operations, and under special circumstances, can levy more. That takes out fighting with the local county commissioners over a budget. This is only one difference, but wow! Is it a major difference between the communities of two states.

There are no doubt many minor differences, that sometimes can take on wider proportions, in the way the two areas govern themselves. The school funding one is a big difference, where in this case, Gwinnett comes out on top.

* * * * *

A story this week out of Macon also made us think of another way that Gwinnett is blessed. There, Bibb County is parrying with the City of Macon over stray dogs. When you have two large size governments operating within the near-same geographic bounds, such fights are bound to happen. You can only pray that squabbles don't break out. Gwinnett, in contrast, has one big government, where 80 percent of the people live…..with 20 percent living within its 15 cities. While county government could be "heavy handed," this has not been the case in Gwinnett.

Here's another consideration: Gwinnett's government runs smoothly, with little open contention about its policies. That is primarily because of the relatively high quality of public officials in office, who realize the need to get along with one another.

Sometimes we don't realize….

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Party parrying

The latest great cartoon from Bill McLemore:


Feels we should not take Florida smokescreen on water

Editor, the Forum:

Please consider reprinting Mr. Charles Krautler's op-ed piece for your readers. While the piece did run in a recent Atlanta Journal Constitution, it is still worth as a conversation starter in response to the efforts by downstream interests to pull the wool over the eyes of local readers. You have done an excellent job of tracking this issue (you printed Chick Krautler's op-ed that was distributed in early August by the Georgia Public Policy Foundation). In any event, please consider.

My thought on sharing the piece with your readers was that your readers may not be the same as the folks who read the AJC.

That said, I am a fan of your writing (such as your 7/25 piece regarding the Gwinnett straw vote on transit). Let me to encourage you to write on the subject of water and what is at stake for Gwinnettians with respect to the tri-state water wars.

Much of what is "understood" about metro Atlanta outside our region with regards to water comes from quotes from Alabama and Florida politicians. Further, I have continued to be confounded by those within our region who have been lulled into believing Florida's story and questioning Metro Atlanta regional leaders while taking Florida's lines hook, line and sinker.

-- Michael Halicki, Atlanta


Emory Eastside spine-joint pavilion has open house today

Emory Eastside Medical Center will open its new Spine and Joint Pavilion, on Monday, October 13. This unit will have community tours on Friday, Oct. 10, from 2 p.m. until 3 p.m. The public is invited. This 11-bed specialty unit is dedicated to elective joint replacement and spinal surgery patients.

The Joint and Spine Pavilion features a unique concept, catering to the needs of elective surgical procedures' patients. Entering the Pavilion feels like walking into an upscale hotel or spa. There is little evidence that medical equipment and technology are present to monitor and treat these patients, who though needing a new joint or a spine procedure, are otherwise in good health.

This unit has the latest technology for pain management, rehabilitation, and surgical techniques. There is a dedicated physical therapy/rehab center, gymnasium and private dining room within the center. The Pavilion's nurses have specialized orthopedic and neurosurgical training and experience. The Joint and Spine educational program focuses on explaining the processes and procedures surrounding the surgery and teaching the steps for recovery from surgery to return patients to their former activities in the speediest manner.

From the concierge to turn-down service, from the flowers in the room to the chef-inspired meals and coffee bar, this unit looks more like a hotel than a medical center. The patients are treated as guests and invited to bring their own personal coach--a spouse, friend or relative--with them for the procedure. Together, with the patient, they will eat meals from the private dining room. The coach will stay at the Pavilion offering moral support and encouragement as the patient recovers from the surgery, by using rehabilitation techniques and modalities.

Black Gwinnett Magazine sponsors forum at Hopewell Church

Black Gwinnett Magazine is sponsoring two political forums at Hopewell Baptist Church in Norcross. These will be non-partisan forums aimed at introducing the candidates face to face to voters who may not have had a opportunity to meet them during this campaign season. All are welcome to attend.

The forums will be on Tuesday, October 14 for statehouse candidates, and again on Tuesday, October 21, both at 7 p.m. for county-wide candidates at Hopewell's Faith Hall. Co-hosts include Gwinnett Unity Group, Gwinnett Ebony Society, Gwinnett NAACP, Alpha Kappa Alpha of Gwinnett, and Norcross High African-American Leadership Roundtable.

Taste of Suwanee fund-raiser for cage program is Oct. 18

Whether your taste buds lean toward spicy or sweet, Italian or Cuban, standard or creative fare, the Taste of Suwanee is sure to have something to satisfy all appetites. The second annual Taste of Suwanee will serve up samples from some 30 restaurants from noon-5 p.m. Saturday, October 18, at Suwanee's Town Center Park.

A fund-raiser for the North Gwinnett High School basketball program, the event also features children's rides and activities, free entertainment, an artists' market and cooking demos. Admission to Taste of Suwanee is free. Food samples, rides, and activities require a specified number of tickets, available for 50 cents each.

Local favorites performing on the Town Center stage include Andy Velo as well as the North Gwinnett High School drumline, step team, chorus, dance troupe, and drama club. In addition to parking available in and around Town Center, off-site parking and a free shuttle, will be available from Shadowbrook Baptist Church, 4187 Suwanee Dam Road.

Gwinnett Technology Forum addresses new Web media Oct. 21

Online networking interface meets traditional business development goals at the October 21 Gwinnett Technology Forum. Once considered a fad for high school and college kids, it is now evident that tools like Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and a dozen more are not only here to stay, but essential mediums for conducting business and reaching younger talent.

Find out which ones you need to know about, how top Gwinnett executives are currently using these tools, and how to establish your own Web 2.0 business strategy.

The Technology Forum will be held at the Scientific-Atlanta auditorium of Gwinnett Tech. To register for this event, visit www.gwinnettchamber.org/gtfregistration. For questions contact Heather Neilan at 678-957-4944 or by email at heather@gwinnettchamber.org.


Suwanee opens Sims Lake Park, first in western part of city

The City of Suwanee has opened its newest park---the fifth to be created through its award-winning Open Space Initiative. Sims Lake Park, 62 idyllic acres located at Suwanee Dam and Tench Roads, was opened over the weekend.

In addition to a seven-acre lake, Sims Lake Park features a 1.2-mile looping trail, well-fed streamscape, playground area, picnic pavilion, and two two-acre play meadows. The park also has public restrooms and parking for nearly 90 cars.

City Manager Marty Allen says: "This is the City's first new park to open on the west side of Peachtree Industrial, where many of our citizens live. That factor coupled with the stunning natural beauty of the property will, we hope, make Sims Lake a well-used park."

The City of Suwanee will host grand opening festivities for the park from 2-5 p.m. Saturday, November 8. Details about the event will be posted to www.suwanee.com in the near future.

In addition to voter-approved open space bond funds, SPLOST funds were used to provide equipment for the playground area.

Four new fire trucks for county paid with SPLOST funds

Four more new fire trucks will soon join the dozen that Gwinnett County bought during the past two years. Commissioners have approved a $1.7 million contract, to be paid with SPLOST funds, from North America Fire Equipment Co. Inc., of Decatur, Ala.

Fire stations 2, 10, 14 and 25 are slated each to get one of four new triple-combination rescue-type trucks that can pump 1,500 gallons of water per minute to douse a fire. During 2008, the county has received 12 similar fire engines ordered previously from the same company. Three of those were for new stations 28, 29 and 30. The other nine went to stations 4, 8, 9, 11, 12, 15, 20, 22 and 23.

Fire Chief Steve Rolader said, "These purchases not only equip our newest stations, which are also built with SPLOST funds, but they also upgrade and modernize our ability to fight fires from many of our existing stations as well."


The Flying Biscuit Cafe, Norcross

"My husband, Mark, and I had the enjoyable experience of eating at the just-opened Flying Biscuit Cafe on Peachtree Parkway across from the Forum, in the center with the county tag office. We both had a dinner for under $10. I had the warm chicken salad, which tasted great and came with one of their famous biscuits. Mark ordered a breakfast egg-stravaganza, complete with eggs, bacon, sausage and French toast! There were lots of people in the cafe having a nice night, so the word is out about this new location! We'll look forward to going back and trying their Georgia Peach Shortcake for dessert. Their information is: 5270 Peachtree Parkway in Norcross."

-- Cindy Evans, Duluth

  • An invitation: What Web sites, books or restaurants have you enjoyed? Send us your best recent visit to a restaurant or most recent book you have read along with a short paragraph as to why you liked it, plus what book you plan to read next. --eeb


Herschel Johnson played central role in sectional politics

Perhaps most famous as Stephen Douglas's 1860 vice presidential candidate, Herschel Johnson played an anomalous but central role in the heated sectional politics of the 1850s and 1860s. Taken as a whole, his contradictions encapsulate the intense ambivalence Georgians felt toward disunion, especially in the years before the Civil War (1861-65).


Johnson

Herschel Vespasian Johnson was born in 1812, in Burke County. Like most of Georgia's antebellum political lights, Johnson passed through the University of Georgia, graduating in 1834. He established a prosperous law practice.

After the Nashville convention of 1850, Georgia Governor George W. Towns called for a state convention that would meet in December to consider secession. Johnson and Towns led the Southern Rights Democrats, who were opposed by a powerful Constitutional Unionist coalition headed by Howell Cobb, Alexander Stephens, and Robert Toombs. However, sectionalist sentiment was not yet strong enough in historically moderate Georgia, and the Constitutional Unionists buried the states' rights men at the polls, guaranteeing that Georgia would not secede at that time and dampening enthusiasm for the separatist movement throughout the South.

Nevertheless, the 1850s turned out to be an extraordinarily active political decade for Johnson, one in which the man who had once plumped vigorously for Georgia's states' rights would undergo an astonishing conversion. In 1852 he served once again as a presidential elector, and in 1853 he was elected governor. He was re-elected in 1855. By mid-decade, the possibility of Southern secession was again being openly rumored. But this time Governor Johnson-disabused of his former belief in the vitality of separatism by the events of 1850-dismissed the idea that any sizeable number of southerners harbored ambitions to sever their region's ties to the Union.

This stance won Johnson a reputation for moderation, which led in turn to his nomination for vice president by the Douglas Democrats in 1860. When the secession issue emerged after the election, Johnson spoke out forcefully against disunion. Although he certainly embodied the Southern ambivalence toward the North, his path from secessionist in 1850 to unionist in 1860 inverted the trajectory of the South as a whole over the same period. Johnson changed his mind not out of any great fondness for the North but because he had become convinced that slavery was much more secure within the Union than outside of it.

Johnson served the rest of his career with quiet distinction. Once the decision for disunion was made, he reluctantly went along with his state, even serving as a Confederate senator from 1862 to 1865. After the war, he was elected, along with Alexander Stephens, to the U.S. Senate under Andrew Johnson's Reconstruction scheme, but like all of those elected to Congress from Georgia in early 1866, he was not seated. He then returned to Louisville and resumed his career as an attorney. After 1873 he served as a judge until his death on August 16, 1880.


Another good reason for purchasing hardback books

"This paperback is very interesting, but I find it will never replace a hardcover book -- it makes a very poor doorstop."

-- British movie director Alfred Hitchcock (1899 - 1980).

  • Another invitation: What's your favorite saying? Share with others through GwinnettForum. Send to elliott@gwinnettforum.com.


Send your thoughts, 55-word short stories, pet peeves or comments on any issue to Gwinnett Forum for future publication.

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© 2008, Gwinnett Forum.com. Gwinnett Forum is an online community commentary for exploring pragmatic and sensible social, political and economic approaches to improve life in Gwinnett County, Ga. USA.

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GwinnettForum.com
Number 8.56, Oct. 10, 2008

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TODAY'S FOCUS: Comment Period Opens For Corps of Engineer's Water Plan
ELLIOTT BRACK: Hey, We've Got A Lot Going for Us In Gwinnett County!
McLEMORE'S WORLD: Party Parrying
FEEDBACK:Wants Georgians To Stop Believing Water Stories Out of Florida
UPCOMING: Eastside Open House; Black Forum; Tech Forum; Suwanee Taste
NOTABLE: New Sims Park Open in Suwanee; County Gets New Fire Trucks
RECOMMENDED RESTAURANT: The Flying Biscuit Café, Norcross
GEORGIA TIDBIT: Herschel Johnson Key Figure in State in Mid 1800's
TODAY'S QUOTE: Why You Should Purchase Hardback Books


RECYCLE MORE. Norcross Mayor Bucky Johnson reads the proclamation accepting the Away From Home Event Recycling Grant from the State Department of Community Affairs that was implemented this weekend at Art Fest in Historic Norcross. The Mayor is flanked by Buster the Brown Thrasher, mascot of the state "Litter. It Costs You" campaign and Captain Recycle, super hero for Advanced Disposal, waste vendor for the city. Buster, (Anthony Kontaxis) and Captain Recycle (Art Geist) are volunteers with Sustainable Norcross, the new organization that supplied volunteers to distribute and collect the newly awarded special recycling containers for the city. Looking on, are Barbara and Jim Renz, volunteers who have given the most hours to date for Sustainable Norcross service projects. This is the first year for the festival and city to offer recycling.

NEW HISTORY. Reserve your copy of a great new history of Gwinnett that will be published in October. Save by purchasing in advance. Learn more about Elliott Brack's new history on Gwinnett County by clicking here.


FOR CHARITY. You can give "A Gift of Laughter," a new book of cartoons by Bill McLemore, to help raise money for Rainbow Village. At just $20, it's a fun way to help. To order, call 770 840 1003, or 770 446 3800, or email to info@gwinnettforum.com.


Click above image to find
lowest gas prices in Atlanta


"This paperback is very interesting, but I find it will never replace a hardcover book -- it makes a very poor doorstop."

-- British movie director Alfred Hitchcock (1899 - 1980).

12/5: Good barbecue found

12/2: Waste contract is good for county

11/25: Railroading on Amtrak

11/21: From bailouts to cold temps

11/18: "Recycling" and schools

11/14: New tunnel idea

11/11: Standing in voting line

11/7: Obama's win

11/4: Train tree limbs?

EEB index of columns

12/5: Harrell: Evermore CID working

12/2: Olson: Symphony starts Dec. 9

11/25: Wilson wins national award

11/21: Hardegree: Ballet is all in family

11/18: Miller: Vacationing out West

11/14: Long: Gwinnett Tree recipients

11/11: Langley: Waste plan

11/7: Griffith: Pervious pavement

11/4: Weathers: Walking to school

© 2001-2008, Gwinnett Forum.com is Gwinnett County's online community forum for commentary that explores pragmatic and sensible social, political and economic approaches to improve life in Gwinnett County, Ga. USA.

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