Post Tagged with: "changes"

NEW for 1/12: On Gwinnett’s changes; Insurrection; Charlotte Nash

NEW for 1/12: On Gwinnett’s changes; Insurrection; Charlotte Nash

Click here to read the latest issue. In this edition:
TODAY’S FOCUS: Gwinnett changes abound, evolutionary and revolutionary
EEB PERSPECTIVE: Wednesday’s insurrection threatened USA as never before
ANOTHER VIEW: Charlotte Nash ranks among Gwinnett’s best recent leaders
SPOTLIGHT: PCOM Georgia
FEEDBACK: President and his puppets need to be cleared out of office
UPCOMING: Lionheart performance of Orphans continues this week
NOTABLE: Lilburn Woman’s Club offers scholarship to 2021 female student
RECOMMENDED: Circe by Madeline Miller
GEORGIA TIDBIT: Georgia Museum of Agriculture located in Tifton at ABAC
MYSTERY PHOTO: Structure not built yesterday is today’s Mystery Photo

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by · January 12, 2021 · Full issues
2/27: On Rep. Coleman; Suburban changes; Extremism

2/27: On Rep. Coleman; Suburban changes; Extremism

TODAY’S FOCUS: After 26 Years, Brooks Coleman To Leave Georgia Legislature

EEB PERSPECTIVE: Suburban Gwinnett Changes, as More Multi-Family Units Arrive

ANOTHER VIEW: Some Corporations step up to counter the NRA’s extremism

SPOTLIGHT: Mingledorff’s

FEEDBACK: Parkland Shooting Will Bring Sociological Change in Next Few Years

McLEMORE’S WORLD: How Firm a Foundation

UPCOMING: Snellville civic dinners tackling issues of the day one meal at a time

NOTABLE: Winn DAR Chapter Announces Good Citizen Awards

RECOMMENDED: What Can I Do?  By Clyde Strickland

GEORGIA TIDBIT: North Georgia Mountain Land Now Valued in Tourist Dollars

MYSTERY PHOTO: This Nighttime Scene of a Skyscraper is Today’s Mystery Photo

LAGNIAPPE: More Evidence of Beautiful, Blooming Gwinnett

CALENDAR: Abstract Art Workshop Coming Soon to Kudzu Art Center

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by · February 27, 2018 · Full issues
BRACK: Suburban Gwinnett changes as more multi-family units arrive

BRACK: Suburban Gwinnett changes as more multi-family units arrive

By Elliott Brack, editor and publisher  |  As suburbs move toward maturity, they change, in that they are more welcoming to multi-family housing.

This comes about for several reasons.  First, as communities have more people in single family houses, land becomes more eaten up and therefore more valuable, since there is less open land in those communities.  As more jobs open up in suburban areas, more people want to live in those communities to be close to their work. Too, it’s more economical per unit to build multi-family housing.

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by · February 27, 2018 · Elliott Brack's Perspective