Thursday, February 24, 2005
We got a call today from Kay Edwards of Crossroads
Electric Company in Halls. We thank Kay for what she
and her company have done and encourage other groups to do the
same. They have adopted a section of McCloud Road and a
little section of Andersonville Pike as part of the Knox
County Adopt-A-Road program. Anyway, Kay received an anonymous
letter criticizing her company for not doing a good job on their
cleanups. (For the record, McCloud Road and Andersonville Pike are
heavily littered roads and could accumulate new litter soon after one of
the twice-a-year required cleanups). We say this anonymous letter
is outrageous. I am going to assume the letter writer has not
participated in a litter cleanup. Unless you have done a cleanup
on a busy road you have nothing to say about whether or not someone is
doing a good job cleaning up. Hang in there Kay.
- posted by KKB staff at 10:45 PM
Wednesday, February 23, 2005
This morning I toured the target cemeteries with Robert McGinnis.
They are Shieldstown in East Knoxville, Flenniken
in South Knoxville and Longview in West Knoxville.
The work on March 19th will consist of light cleanup at Shieldstown,
significant brush removal at Flenniken and a major litter removal at
Longview. Longview has a significant number of discarded tires,
roofing shingles and litter. Here are some images from the tour:


After the cemetery tour, Emily Ditty and I met with Doug
McGill of Waste Connections. Doug is a former board
member from back in the Beautification Board days. We hit
Doug up for a Great American Cleanup™ sponsorship. He
told us some great stories of Keep Knoxville Beautiful back in
the early 1980's.
- posted by KKB staff at 2:30 PM
Tuesday, February 22, 2005
Today was a pretty long day. The Cemetery Preservation
Association (actually a group of interested people who are trying to
form a Cemetery Preservation Association) met today at Knox Heritage
and discussed plans for the three cemetery cleanup on March 19th. Keep
Knoxville Beautiful is committed to getting some trash containers,
volunteers and equipment donations. Let's keep our fingers
crossed. Pictured below is Robert McGinnis, Knox County
cemetery information guru who brought a slide show of the cemeteries
targeted for the cleanup.
After that meeting I returned to the KKB office at The Emporium
to get ready for the donor renewal and new donor phone banking. We
got five cell phones donated by US Cellular and lots of prospect
lists from our own database. Board members participating included David
Collins, Gary Loe, Mary Lou Horner, Page Pratt-Greene, Terry Faulkner
and Cassandra McGee. Emily Ditty and Tom Salter
also made calls. We've gotten about $1,500 in pledges from about 3
hours of phone calls. Pictured below are Gary Loe, David Collins
and Mary Lou Horner.

- posted by KKB staff at 9:30 PM
Monday, February 21, 2005
After a long weekend of sitting around the Dogwood Show, we got to
attend Mayor Ragsdale's Education Summit. My table was about 200
feet from our booth at the Knoxville Convention Center. I got to
sit at a table with Mary Kerr, Marty Iroff, Donna Deichart of United Way
and Jamey Dobbs of Our Community Schools. It was a very
encouraging meeting. Several substantial gifts were made to a new
education foundation.
- posted by KKB staff at 9:30 AM
Thursday, February 17, 2005
We had the meeting today with Mayor Ragsdale and Law
Director Mike Moyers. It looks like the tarp law will be
modified a little but the biggest discussion was about a County trash
container law. Right now, you don't have to keep your trash in a
container in Knox County - by law. If you look around you can tell
this is not a law (please excuse the cynical editorializing). This
should make it easier to get people to clean up dirty commercial and
residential properties.
Today was the start of the annual Dogwood House and Garden Show
and Keep Knoxville Beautiful has an information booth in the Community
Activities Section. It is always a lot of fun and you
typically see a lot of people you know. Mary Lou Horner
volunteered and she sees more people than anyone. Other KKB board
members included Sarah Surak (pictured below with her boyfriend Eric),
Edythe McNabb, Terry Faulkner, Gary Loe and Susan Rudell.
Other volunteers included Tom's wife Joyce Hausman and daughter Larissa.
Larissa brought her boyfriend Ryan Justice. (What's with
all these boyfriends?) We also saw Ken Eckert of Natural
Resources Recovery and a bunch of other people. We were right
between the booths for Knox County Solid Waste and the City of
Knoxville Recycling Office. Rodney Rockett and Mr.
Solid Waste John Evans hung around with us for a while. John
Homa of City Recycling took pity on our tip jar for Don't Throw Down
stickers and threw us a nice bone. Sarah's boyfriend Eric invented
a new logo for EarthFest (see below). Here are some
pictures from the event:





- posted by KKB staff at 11:15 PM
Tuesday, February 15, 2005
Mr. J.C. Lay dropped by the office today to review what we are going
to say to County Mayor Mike Ragsdale on Thursday. Mayor
Ragsdale called us both to a meeting with him and County Law Director
Mike Moyers about Mr. Lay's litter ordinance recommendations and
what needs to be done to clean up litter in Knoxville and Knox
County. Mr. Lay believes (correctly) that much of the roadside
litter is escaping from private and commercial trucks and that if they
were tarped properly the amount of trash would be drastically
reduced. We reviewed a model ordinance from Sevier County
and talked about ways to get more citations written. We think we
are ready for the meeting with Mayor Ragsdale.
- posted by KKB staff at 12:00 NOON
Friday, February, 11, 2005
The biennial conference of KTB and TDOT wrapped up
today with some very informative sessions on Cigarette Litter Prevention
presented by Carrie Sussman of Keep America Beautiful and other
sessions on current trends in recycling and solid waste disposal.
The finale was a magic show and waste free lunch.
- posted by KKB staff at 5:30 PM
Thursday, February 10, 2005
More than 100 Litter Grant administrators from across Tennessee
joined us today for more sessions and the awards luncheon. The
first session was an overview from TDOT staff on the billboard control
program and the highway beautification program. TDOT's Shawn
Bible and Rod Boehm addressed the group. This was
followed by an awareness session on the extent of meth labs in Tennessee
and cautions about how contaminated material used in the production of
meth has been found during roadside cleanups. Cleanup workers and
volunteers should be alert regarding cold medicine packaging, cylinders,
thermos bottles, glassware, tubing, odd "camping gear", coffee
filters (without coffee) and ice chests - especially if these items are
found together and in significant quantities. More meth labs have
been discovered in rural areas, but can be found virtually
anywhere. Residue from the meth making process can remain on these
items and could be harmful if touched or inhaled. If you discover
anything like this during a cleanup you should alert local law
enforcement officials.

Next we went to the 2005 Awards of Excellence luncheon. Keep
Knoxville Beautiful won three major awards from KTB and TDOT.
They were: First Place for Litter Prevention involving the Media
for the Mayor's Radio Campaign, First Place for litter prevention
involving Higher Education for development of the "Don't
Thrown Down on K-TOWN" campaign and First Place for the Most
Comprehensive TN Great American Cleanup™. Our speakers
included TDOT commissioner Gerald Nicely, TDOT administrators
Ed Cole and Shawn Bible and Keep Tennessee Beautiful
executive director Edith Heller.


Following the awards luncheon I attended a breakout session called Myths
and Realities of Community Development presented by Jim Howe,
executive director of the Central & Western New York Chapters of
The Nature Conservancy. He talked about ideas from his book
that dispel myths about development and the environment. He
provided concrete examples of how communities have prospered when
putting greater controls on growth (planning, orderliness, etc.), how
communities have come back after major plant closings by focusing on
natural and cultural resources and more. One myth is that the
property taxes collected from new housing rarely cover the increased
cost of infrastructure needed to service those new homes creating a net
drain on the tax base. Mr. Howe was introduced by Diana Fedinec
of Keep Tennessee Beautiful.

The last session was a "roundtable" sharing where the Awards
of Excellence winners answered questions about their winning
projects. Below: Allison Teeters of Keep Sevier
Beautiful and Rod Boehm of TDOT, Green County
KAB coordinator Candy Adams explains to Tom Leonard, Allison
Teeters and Bryon Fortner of Keep Sevier Beautiful how
to properly run a local KAB affiliate, Kristi Falco of Keep
Blount Beautiful, and John Evans of Knox County Solid
Waste with Jennifer Brewster from Keep Loudon County
Beautiful.


Finally, the day was topped off with a great dinner and a super
presentation of the play "The Wartville Wizard".
Members of the audience were tapped to participate in the play. It
was a lot of fun.

- posted by KKB staff at 11:15 PM
Wednesday, February 9, 2005
Today is the start of the Keep Tennessee Beautiful/Tennessee
Department of Transportation biennial conference in Nashville.
It was held at The Preston Hotel near the airport. It was a
pretty nice hotel. Edith Heller opened the meeting followed
by a Great American Cleanup™ update from KTB staff Gordon
Wilson.

Brad Gray, trainer with the Center for Nonprofit Management
led a session on Power. He first had us differentiate between
"management" and "leadership". In a nutshell,
you "manage" things and you "lead" people. He
then took us through the various types of power we possess starting with
"coercive" power - the only inherently negative power and that
leadership is the WISE use of power. A theme through the
entire presentation was that we only have power because the people we
lead give it to us. Other forms of power include: connection power
(who we know), legitimacy power (the job we hold), reward power (our
ability to give promotions or recognition), reputation power (self
explanatory), ability power (self explanatory), direction power (being
goal directed and having a strong, internalized sense of purpose),
confidence power (having positive self-esteem and self-confidence) and
relationship power (people accept power to continue a
relationship). Pretty interesting!
Then we had a presentation by Sue Smith, Keep America
Beautiful's best trainer about "the promise of
belonging". Sue's presentation was so good I couldn't take
notes. Sue also brought us up to date on KKB's online Toolbox
for Community Change.

- posted by KKB staff at 9:15 PM
Tuesday, February 8, 2005
Judi Gaston, a super wearable art artist and one of our neighbors in
The Emporium dropped in with an idea to do a recycled art exhibit
as a fundraiser for KKB. We discussed a bunch of ideas and
I am sure these discussions will continue.
In the morning, Sarah Surak dropped by the office with two UT
students who needed to evaluate a non-profit program. We discussed
the possibility of evaluating the Youth Advisory Board which is
now in its 3rd year. They will present the idea to their professor
but this will likely be their project.
Next, the Great American Cleanup™ committee met at our
office. Attending were Goldie Simpkins, Mark Cawood,
Gary Loe and staff members Emily Ditty, Seed Lynn and Tom
Salter. 2005 GAC™ will include: a litter enforcement
awareness workshop for judges, DA's and law enforcement officials, a
celebrity cleanup and graffiti abatement, a student poster contest, the Greek
Challenge and of course lots of neighborhood cleanups. It will
all wrap up with a volunteer appreciation lunch. The kickoff will
be on March 11 with the workshop and the celebrity cleanup.
Posters will be due by April 15 and will be displayed the following
weekend at Earthfest for public judging. All neighborhood cleanup
and Greek Challenge reports are due by Monday, April 25th. The
volunteer Trash Bash will be held either April 30th or May
7th. Final date will be announced soon.
After that meeting Tom met with the Cemetery Preservation Association
at Knox Heritage. The cemetery cleanup demonstration
projects will be held on March 12.
Finally, Tom met up with up Allison Teeters, executive director of Keep
Sevier Beautiful and they headed off to Nashville for the
biennial Keep Tennessee Beautiful/Tennessee Department of
Transportation Conference: "First and Lasting Impressions".
When we got there we hooked up with
Keep Tennessee Beautiful Marketing Coordinator Diana
Fedinec, the new West Tennessee Developer for KTB Laura
Marzahl and KTB staffer Stine Cooperwood and
went out to Ruby Tuesday's for dinner. Below: Laura and
Diana at Ruby Tuesday's.
- posted by KKB staff at 10:00 PM
Monday, February 7, 2005
This was a really long day - but a great day. We had lunch
with members of Rock-Tenn Recycling. Present were Eddie Bales,
Clark and Abby Blackburn of Rock-Tenn, KKB board
member Sarah Surak and Tom Salter and Emily Ditty
of KKB staff. Rock-Tenn agreed to become a presenting sponsor of
the 2005 Great American Cleanup™.
Later, Tom made a speech to 15 members of the Council of Involved
Neighborhoods at the L. T. Ross building. Of course we
talked about litter, but there was also a discussion about how
neighborhoods groups are adopting guidelines or checklists of how
homeowners and residents are expected to maintain their property.
Such guidelines would cover vehicle storage, litter, grass height,
etc. Such guidelines would be developed by neighborhood leaders
with input from residents. They would be given to all residents
with the expectation that this is what the neighborhood expectations are
- not what the city codes department says. Photo below is the
C.O.I.N. meeting.

Finally, Tom gave a speech to the UT student group Students Promoting
Environmental Action in Knoxville (S.P.E.A.K.).
- posted by KKB staff at 2:45 PM
Saturday, February 5, 2005
Friends of the Fort (Fort Sanders) is getting back together.
They did a cleanup today in Fort Sanders with 16 volunteers who picked
up approximately 45 bags of litter. Thanks Friends of the Fort!
- posted by KKB staff at 2:45 PM
Friday, February 4, 2005
Tom Salter met with Mr. J. C. Lay today at Amber's
Restaurant in Halls to talk about more revisions to the
County litter ordinance. Later in the month Mr. Lay and Tom will
meeting with County Law Director Mike Moyers and Mayor
Ragsdale to "get to the bottom" of this litter ordinance
issue. KKB's position is that we need enforceable ordinances, but
they are just part of a law enforcement "system" including
officers writing citations, supportive DA's and judges who view litter
violations as serious. Here is a shot of an overflowing commercial
dumpster behind Amber's. With a good wind, a lot of this trash
could easily get to other property and even onto Maynardville Highway.

- posted by KKB staff at 2:45 PM
Thursday, February 3, 2005
The KKB board had its regular monthly meeting. What is
significant about the meeting was the fact the board made a commitment
to have a "telethon" after work at the Emporium
on Tuesday, February 22. We are thrilled and fortunate to have
such committed board members. They will be calling old KKB donors
to ask them to renew and to brainstorm and call new donors. We
still have to raise about $8,000 by June 30 to make our budget for the
current year.
- posted by KKB staff at 1:30 PM