Monday, January 12, 2009

Monday updates from www.bartowheadlines.com

Click www.bartowheadlines.com

The Buzz of Northwest Georgia:

-Shopping centers: Two in trouble, two (or more) on the way.

-Restaurants: One expansion due, another opens, a third due soon?

-Economic stimulus: The old college try--times three.

-'Rating' the NAIA economic impact numbers (we say they're too low)

-2010 governor's race: Cagle in Gordon, Oxendine in Rome

-Closer look: Cartersville booming as Highlands, civic center grow

-Peaks & Valleys: Foul ball by A-Braves; A-plus for 'indy' schools

Tellus Northwest Georgia Science Museum Grand opening Monday for Tellus: Northwest Georgia Science Museum: The public gets its first official chance to tour the new museum beginning Monday at 10 a.m. Museum officials expect more than 150,000 guests by Dec. 31. For more on the museum, hours and membership> Tellus

-More Tellus: Chamber ribbon-cutting set for 10 a.m. Monday.

General Assembly convenes Monday:

You can track much of the session online, including Webcasts. Your best starting point: Legislature

-For background/bio pages on local lawmakers: Northwest Georgia Links

-For daily updates, check Georgia Political & Policy Digest> Link

-Closer look at what to expect this session> AJC

-Another recommend media: Georgia Public Broadcasting> GPB

Tonight/Cartersville school leaders to vote on 2009-10, 2010-11 calendars> Detail

Busy week-plus ahead for Bartow County schools:

-Today's work session agenda: Work agenda

-Today's called meeting agenda: Meeting Agenda

-Jan. 20 business meeting agenda: Business Meeting

>Bartow schools set recruitment fair for Saturday, Jan. 24> Details

Weather Center / Brought to you by Roman Court

-Weather week: Flood warning ends; now get ready for cold blast.

-Sunny today, high of 51, low of 28 tonight. Upper teens by Thursday night.

-Extended forecast: Please click WeatherCenter

-Flood warning canceled; final rivers check.

River Feet Time Up or down?
Oostanaula/Rome 19.54 5:45 a.m. Dropping
Oostanaula/Resaca 12.0 5;15 a.m. Dropping
Etowah/Rome 19.29 6 a.m. Dropping

Norman Arey's Sports Roundtable / brought to you by Riverside Toyota

-Best game, biggest flop, best player, teams on the rise and early hot seats For more, click Arey

Sports:

-A banner year for Shorter College athletics: "A national champion, national rankings, All-Americans, conference championships and dozens of post-season honors -- Shorter's teams, student-athletes and coaches can look back and see that the 2008 calendar year has put the college on a high plateau of the NAIA ranks."> Shorter Hawks

Downtown Headlines

-RACA receptions, annual Hot Stove Gathering, Art of Chocolate highlight coming weeks in downtown Rome> Downtown

Three-Dot Buzz . . . :

New CVS at Berry Crossing in a photo shot Jan. 5/Photo by Jack Druckenmiller

Two retail centers down, two on the way up? So this is a recession. We have Etowah I shopping center (former Kroger, East Rome) in foreclosure, Mount Berry Square in receivership and national chains (Office Depot, Goody's) closing stores with one more possible, Circuit City. But there is a flip side: Berry Crossing continues to rise, and quickly, at Martha Berry and the Bypass. The CVS store (above) is going to be a very impressive anchor, especially from an architectual perspective. And we're upgrading the recent Publix/Mathis Building rumor from exactly that to "possible," based on some recent legal documents. Also on the way: a new CVS off U.S. 41 in Cartersville . . .

Something to chew on: Local restaurants also are said to be reeling from the troublesome economy. We've seen a few closings and more are likely. But ... we'll have details on a restaurant upgrade within two weeks and the new Bennett's Steakhouse & Grill is just about open on the Cave Spring square. We're also hearing about a possible restaurant announcement near I-75 as well . . .

Berry's residence halls behind Hermann Hall open in August/Photo byJack Druckenmiller

New stimulus gets the old college try: In the story below on Georgia Highlands, writer Natalie Simms quotes GHC's Dr. Randy Pierce as saying, "One way to spur growth is to have more capital projects." He's hoping that spurs construction of a major addition to the Bartow campus. Two other collegiate projects are under way on the Berry campus: the new residence halls. They literally are flying up with significant progress marked each week as the photo above shows. Also don't forget the tweaking under way at Riverbend Center as it welcomes Shorter's expanding nursing program . . .

Closer look at those NAIA numbers: We believe the report that the NAIA game left a $1.54 million economic impact on Rome/Floyd County last month are low. The problem is: we can't prove it. The reason is we don't have the ratings from the national broadcast from CBS College Sports. For some reason, the ratings folks aren't tracking the CBS cable network, at least in traditional ways. So we have no idea how much of the network's national audience tuned in that Saturday before Christmas. As tangible as the local sales and impact figures are--and they're significant given by the fans spotted across the community Dec. 18-22-- there's a potential bigger impact to come thanks to the extremely postive TV coverage. . .

Campaign 2010 comes to Northwest Georgia, Cagle v. Handel: A vivid preview of the 2010 campaign season was laid out last week by Hometown political columnists, Dixon and Clemons.We're adding a sidebar about two chamber annual meeting speakers on Jan. 22. The Republican frontrunner, Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle, will do the honors for the Gordon County Chamber of Commerce (details). The Greater Rome chamber has Karen Handel, Georgia's secretary of state and presumed to be interested in the title run. What's of special interest: Both will be speaking in what's considered to be "Gingrey Territory" assuming four-term Congressman Phil Gingrey decides to make another statewide run (he flirted with a U.S. Senate bid a few years back) . . .

Georgia Highlands' Bartow campus, adjoining sites ready to boom

By Natalie Simms

With current enrollment figures projected to triple within the next six years, Georgia Highlands' officials are planning more growth at the Bartow County campus. With almost 200 acres off Ga. 20 in Cartersville, there are lots of possibilities.

"Our master planning process is ongoing now for a draft of the proposed campus by the year 2015," said Dr. Randy Pierce, GHC president. "It is really like a ball of clay that is not formed; the possibilities are endless."


Opened in August 2005, GHC's growth plan calls for a clone of this complex. GHC photo.

Up next: a second building adjoining the 100,000-square-foot complex that opened in August 2005. "It will be a mirror image of what is there now with half of the building for academics and the other half housing a student center," says Dana Davis, Director of College Relations.


Current plans call for a 2011 groundbreaking but Pierce says the timeframe could be moved up if Gov. Sonny Perdue passes his own "stimulus" package.


"One way to spur growth is to have more capital projects," Pierce says, "and if he (Perdue) did that, it could move this project up."

The building would open by 2012, just in time to provide the space needed for the estimated enrollment increase.


"Based on the projections we have for the Cartersville campus, there will be 6,000 students by 2015 in that campus alone," Pierce says. Last fall, enrollment was 2,373 at the Cartersville campus, a 34 percent increase over last year. The campus opened with 1,200 students.


"That campus has really exploded and far exceeds Rome right now," Davis says. Enrollment at the Floyd Campus last fall was 1,595, which was a 10-12 percent increase over the previous year.


The I-75 Effect

Officials attribute the Bartow increase to overall growth of the I-75 corridor.

"While both of our campuses (Bartow and Floyd) are experiencing growth, Cobb, Bartow, Cherokee and Paulding counties are growing at a higher rate than Floyd County," says Pierce. "A lot of students are coming our way because Cartersville is going against the Atlanta traffic. It's easier to get to."


Another project that is expected to bring more growth is the construction of the new Bartow County Civic Center that will be across Ga. 20 from the campus. (See map from Google)


"Bartow County has 25 acres to construct a civic center," Pierce says. "The synergy that is being created by that space next to the campus has lots of possibilities." There could be joint activities between the campus and civic center, he adds.

Voters approved the $20 million SPLOST project as well as a new public safety complex on the site.

'The Highlands' and GHC


Rendering from Henderson Properties Inc.

Also, developers of the other land adjoining GHC would like to create their own "village" around the college.


"Henderson Properties is under contract with the property and they would like to create a 'live, work and play' model community using the campus," Pierce says. "They have tree-lined medians and shops planned… a very different area."


The one issue hindering this model community is the heavy traffic from I-75.
"Highway 20 is a main artery to I-75. If they build the 411 Connector, that would take some traffic off Highway 20 and allow us to create a very different area," Pierce says.

Henderson's Web site details a "planned, traditional neighborhood development featuring a variety of commercial, residential and civic activities in a mixed-use setting."


The wild card in all of this is the economy. Pierce says the college has not experienced "a direct impact" and he's not sure what to expect.

"Right now, we are growing and that lessens the impact on us because our enrollment is higher than projected," says Pierce. "If we maintain our growth, I think we will be fine."


PEAKS & VALLEYS: The highs and lows of Northwest Georgia

Valley to the Atlanta Braves organization. Ron Zook only thought he had it bad on the Internet when angry Gator fans launched www.fireronzook.com. Now comes Frank Wren who is being blistered for failing to re-sign Atlanta Braves icon John Smoltz. There are a dozen "Fire Frank Wren" groups on Facebook and other Internet sites already. We understand that baseball is a game of dollars and sense but to fumble so badly on Smoltz? Injuries or not, he's worth $5 million a year just to have him on the payroll. (Photo courtesy of Mills Fitzner, shot during Smoltz's rehab stint with the Rome Braves last season. More photos> Click)

Peak to Rome/Floyd's independent schools: On Jan. 25, an "Independent School Fair" featuring representatives from Berry Elementary and Middle schools, Darlington School, St. Mary's Catholic School and Unity Christian School will hold a group information fair at the Rome Civic Center (1-4 p.m.) This is a wise idea by the independent educators and, we hope, another key step in mutual assistance among them. It baffles us that the community's secondary and collegiate education options don't receive the same star status as our local health institutions. Rome and Floyd are lucky to have both solid education and health foundations.

Peak to Chanceley Book and Rebecca Moye: The student and administrator at Unity Christian School were featured in an article from Focus on the Family's Citizen Magazine. It profiles the American Heritage Girls troop organization and, in particular, the work Chanceley and friends at UCS do for the Rome Pregnancy Center. For more, click Article.

Friday, January 9, 2009

Friday updates from www.bartowheadlines.com

Click www.bartowheadlines.com

Flood & River Watch

-Flood warning scheduled to expire at 9 this morning> Warning

-The Oostanaula was at 22.99 feet and dropping at 5:45 a.m.

-The Oostanaula near Resaca was at 24.21 feet at 6 a.m.; appears to be cresting.

-The Etowah River was dropping, at 22.74 feet at 6 a.m.

-More county, city roads reopening> WeatherCenter

-See nearly two dozen flood photos, courtesy of Mills Fitzner. Click Focus

Weather Center / Brought to you by Roman Court

-Friday: Sunny and 56.

-Tonight, low of 36 with partly cloudy skies

-Saturday: 90% chance of rain, high of 63; 40% rain chance that night.

-Extended forecast: Please click WeatherCenter

Business Buzz:

-UGA analyst/Now is a good time to grow your business: In his monthly column in Georgia Trend, Dr. Jeffrey Humphreys urges entrepreneurs and other business people to get ahead of the recovery wave expected in midyear. Writes H: "If you have good credit and a solid business plan, 2009 will be a good time to borrow money at attractive rates. By 2010, it probably will be too late to get cheap money."> Column

-Polk chamber offering five-part 'Small Business University' courses> Polk Headlines

-Booth rental begins for Bartow chamber's annual health and wellness expo> Bartow Headlines

-Gingrey among Georgia Trend's '100 Most Influential Georgians': U.S. Rep. Phil Gingrey is among the 100 power people in the state as selected by Georgia Trend. The 11th edition of the state's A-list is includes Gingrey and 23 other politicians--including those considering a run for governor in 2010. Says the article on Gingrey, 68: "Dr. Gingrey delivered more than 5,200 babies in his 26 years as a practicing obstetrician, then became a U.S. congressman in 2002, breezing to re-election three times since in his heavily conservative district. A member of the Armed Services Committee, he strongly supported the invasion of Iraq but opposed expanding the G.I. Bill (which passed last year)." Click Trend

Adairsville man gets eight years in child porn possession case> Sentencing

Chamber Health & Wellness Expo booths available starting today: Exhibitors must sign up in person at the chamber and the payment must accompany registration. The Expo is Thursday, Feb. at The Church at Liberty Square. Click  registration or e-mail Tara Currier.

State web site reports Cedartown's Marathon Ashland at 1325 S. Main St. ordered to make restitution in gas gouging investigation> Gas

Today on Dining & Drink

-Limited public health restaurant inspection scores from our area

-Winter Wine Dinners begin at Barnsley; tasting tonight in Acworth

-Annual Georgia Wine Country is June 6-7 in Dahlonega

Improv comes to Legion Theatre Saturday night: The Pumphouse Players will be kicking off the New Year with an Improv Night at the Legion Theatre beginning at 7:30 p.m. Admission is $3 for both participants and audience members. There is no pressure to participate but all are welcome. Light refreshments will be served and, as always, donations for adult beverages are appreciated> Pumphouse

 

Norman Arey's Sports Roundtable / brought to you by Riverside Toyota

- Georgia without Stafford. Moreno: How about Falcons without Ryan, Turner? For more, click Arey

Sports

-Smoltz, Braves part ways after 21 seasons; Boston next: Likely Hall of Fame pitcher John Smoltz gets a tater from Rome Braves' coach Bobby Moore last summer following a rehab game in Rome.  Smoltz is expected to play for the Boston Red Sox this season thanks to a deal that has stunned local fans. Photo by Mills Fitzner> The Globe

-Gators, Tebow win third national championship since 1996 season> The Sun

-Rome Braves announce staff promotions> Sports

Thursday, January 8, 2009

Thursday updates from www.bartowheadlines.com

Click www.bartowheadlines.com

Cartersville City Council meets tonight at 7: For updates, click Agenda

>Council meetings have been changed for the month of January because of the New Year's Day holiday.  City Council meetings will be held on Thursday, Jan. 8, and Thursday, Jan. 22, at 7 p.m. >Hear both meetings live: You can hear both City Council meetings live on WBHF 1450 AM and on the Webcast here on Bartow Headlines.    

 

Flood & River Watch

-Flood warning in effect until 8:30 this morning> Warning

-The Oostanaula has crested; at 25.24 feet, above flood stage, at 5:45 a.m.

-The Oostanaula near Resaca was at 23.7 feet at 6 a.m. with a crest of 24.3 feet, above the 22-foot flood stage, at 1 a.m. Friday.

-The Etowah River was dropping, at 25.56 feet at 6 a.m. Flood stage is 32 feet.

-More county, city roads reopening> WeatherCenter

-Polar Bear Paddle delayed two weeks by flooding> Healthy Living

-See nearly two dozen flood photos, courtesy of Mills Fitzner. Click Focus

Weather Center / Brought to you by Roman Court

-Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 51. Gusts to 25 mph.
-Thursday night: Mostly clear, with a low around 31.

-More rain Friday night, Saturday.

-What's up this weekend? Please click WeatherCenter

Politics:

Today's Focus/Campaign 2010 and what to expect

-Hometown political columnists Graham Dixon and Dr. Adam Clemons begin

a three-part look at the 2010 campaigns. Dixon, left, a Democrat, has a potential gubernatorial showdown in place. Clemons, right, a Republican, diagrams an interesting game of dominoes, depending on who does what.

>Click Dixon & Clemons

-Sen. Preston Smith, R-Rome, retains judiciary chair: Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle announces state Senate appointments.

-Final 2008 state campaign finance reports due: Over the next few days, both winners and losers from Campaign 2008 will file their final reports with the State Ethics Commission> Politics

Business Buzz

>More storefronts going dark: The liquidation of Goody's means three more storefronts will open in Rome, Cartersville and Calhoun. For Rome, it is another major closing on Shorter Avenue as Office Depot shut its doors last month. The former West Rome Kroger site remains vacant as well as do a handful of smaller sites. In Cartersville, Goody's exit also opens another spot on Main Street, the first being the soon-to-close Office Depot.

>Franchise operations endangered: 10,000 franchise locations across the USA could close this year because of the faltering economy, according to a study released by the International Franchise Association. What to watch: automotive, real estate and lodging franchises. On the up side: " Fast-food restaurants, full-service restaurants may see moderate gains this year."> Chronicle

>Trouble for Ruby Tuesday's chain continues; 70 store closings planned: The second quarter financials are out, with a net loss of $37.4 million and a 10.8 percent dip in same-store sales vs. a year ago. Ruby Tuesday once had plans for a store in Rome but they evaporated more than a year ago. The chain has stores in Cartersville and  Calhoun.

What's ahead:

Norton's '2009 Native Intelligence Real Estate Forecast' report due Jan. 22: Gainesville-area Realtor Frank Norton Jr. puts on an evening presentation each January, focusing on trends he forecasts for the north metro market mostly around Lake Lanier. Some predictions from January 2008 were dead on:

-"The market and regional economy get a hard dose of reality."

-"Green takes root: The movement toward ecological-based business decisions has taken root and is spreading like kudzu."

-"Foreclosure. If you're an individual investor, don't expect a great windfall.

-"Land in an era of repricing: As development and rampant speculation are evaporating raw land prices, prepare for a reset."

-This year's event is at Gainesville's Georgia Mountains Center with doors opening at 4:30 p.m. and the presentation at 6 p.m. You can listen live at www.accessnorthga.com

 

Norman Arey's Sports Roundtable / brought to you by Riverside Toyota

-By the numbers (say, $400 million), a BCS playoff might not equal bowl payoffs. For more, click Arey

Sports

-Rome Braves announce staff promotions> Sports

Thursday updates from www.bartowheadlines.com

Click www.bartowheadlines.com

Cartersville City Council meets tonight at 7: For updates, click Agenda

>Council meetings have been changed for the month of January because of the New Year's Day holiday.  City Council meetings will be held on Thursday, Jan. 8, and Thursday, Jan. 22, at 7 p.m. >Hear both meetings live: You can hear both City Council meetings live on WBHF 1450 AM and on the Webcast here on Bartow Headlines.    

 

Flood & River Watch

-Flood warning in effect until 8:30 this morning> Warning

-The Oostanaula has crested; at 25.24 feet, above flood stage, at 5:45 a.m.

-The Oostanaula near Resaca was at 23.7 feet at 6 a.m. with a crest of 24.3 feet, above the 22-foot flood stage, at 1 a.m. Friday.

-The Etowah River was dropping, at 25.56 feet at 6 a.m. Flood stage is 32 feet.

-More county, city roads reopening> WeatherCenter

-Polar Bear Paddle delayed two weeks by flooding> Healthy Living

-See nearly two dozen flood photos, courtesy of Mills Fitzner. Click Focus

Weather Center / Brought to you by Roman Court

-Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 51. Gusts to 25 mph.
-Thursday night: Mostly clear, with a low around 31.

-More rain Friday night, Saturday.

-What's up this weekend? Please click WeatherCenter

Politics:

Today's Focus/Campaign 2010 and what to expect

-Hometown political columnists Graham Dixon and Dr. Adam Clemons begin

a three-part look at the 2010 campaigns. Dixon, left, a Democrat, has a potential gubernatorial showdown in place. Clemons, right, a Republican, diagrams an interesting game of dominoes, depending on who does what.

>Click Dixon & Clemons

-Sen. Preston Smith, R-Rome, retains judiciary chair: Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle announces state Senate appointments.

-Final 2008 state campaign finance reports due: Over the next few days, both winners and losers from Campaign 2008 will file their final reports with the State Ethics Commission> Politics

Business Buzz

>More storefronts going dark: The liquidation of Goody's means three more storefronts will open in Rome, Cartersville and Calhoun. For Rome, it is another major closing on Shorter Avenue as Office Depot shut its doors last month. The former West Rome Kroger site remains vacant as well as do a handful of smaller sites. In Cartersville, Goody's exit also opens another spot on Main Street, the first being the soon-to-close Office Depot.

>Franchise operations endangered: 10,000 franchise locations across the USA could close this year because of the faltering economy, according to a study released by the International Franchise Association. What to watch: automotive, real estate and lodging franchises. On the up side: " Fast-food restaurants, full-service restaurants may see moderate gains this year."> Chronicle

>Trouble for Ruby Tuesday's chain continues; 70 store closings planned: The second quarter financials are out, with a net loss of $37.4 million and a 10.8 percent dip in same-store sales vs. a year ago. Ruby Tuesday once had plans for a store in Rome but they evaporated more than a year ago. The chain has stores in Cartersville and  Calhoun.

What's ahead:

Norton's '2009 Native Intelligence Real Estate Forecast' report due Jan. 22: Gainesville-area Realtor Frank Norton Jr. puts on an evening presentation each January, focusing on trends he forecasts for the north metro market mostly around Lake Lanier. Some predictions from January 2008 were dead on:

-"The market and regional economy get a hard dose of reality."

-"Green takes root: The movement toward ecological-based business decisions has taken root and is spreading like kudzu."

-"Foreclosure. If you're an individual investor, don't expect a great windfall.

-"Land in an era of repricing: As development and rampant speculation are evaporating raw land prices, prepare for a reset."

-This year's event is at Gainesville's Georgia Mountains Center with doors opening at 4:30 p.m. and the presentation at 6 p.m. You can listen live at www.accessnorthga.com

 

Norman Arey's Sports Roundtable / brought to you by Riverside Toyota

-By the numbers (say, $400 million), a BCS playoff might not equal bowl payoffs. For more, click Arey

Sports

-Rome Braves announce staff promotions> Sports

Thursday updates from www.bartowheadlines.com

Click www.bartowheadlines.com

Cartersville City Council meets tonight at 7: For updates, click Agenda

>Council meetings have been changed for the month of January because of the New Year's Day holiday.  City Council meetings will be held on Thursday, Jan. 8, and Thursday, Jan. 22, at 7 p.m. >Hear both meetings live: You can hear both City Council meetings live on WBHF 1450 AM and on the Webcast here on Bartow Headlines.    

 

Flood & River Watch

-Flood warning in effect until 8:30 this morning> Warning

-The Oostanaula has crested; at 25.24 feet, above flood stage, at 5:45 a.m.

-The Oostanaula near Resaca was at 23.7 feet at 6 a.m. with a crest of 24.3 feet, above the 22-foot flood stage, at 1 a.m. Friday.

-The Etowah River was dropping, at 25.56 feet at 6 a.m. Flood stage is 32 feet.

-More county, city roads reopening> WeatherCenter

-Polar Bear Paddle delayed two weeks by flooding> Healthy Living

-See nearly two dozen flood photos, courtesy of Mills Fitzner. Click Focus

Weather Center / Brought to you by Roman Court

-Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 51. Gusts to 25 mph.
-Thursday night: Mostly clear, with a low around 31.

-More rain Friday night, Saturday.

-What's up this weekend? Please click WeatherCenter

Politics:

Today's Focus/Campaign 2010 and what to expect

-Hometown political columnists Graham Dixon and Dr. Adam Clemons begin

a three-part look at the 2010 campaigns. Dixon, left, a Democrat, has a potential gubernatorial showdown in place. Clemons, right, a Republican, diagrams an interesting game of dominoes, depending on who does what.

>Click Dixon & Clemons

-Sen. Preston Smith, R-Rome, retains judiciary chair: Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle announces state Senate appointments.

-Final 2008 state campaign finance reports due: Over the next few days, both winners and losers from Campaign 2008 will file their final reports with the State Ethics Commission> Politics

Business Buzz

>More storefronts going dark: The liquidation of Goody's means three more storefronts will open in Rome, Cartersville and Calhoun. For Rome, it is another major closing on Shorter Avenue as Office Depot shut its doors last month. The former West Rome Kroger site remains vacant as well as do a handful of smaller sites. In Cartersville, Goody's exit also opens another spot on Main Street, the first being the soon-to-close Office Depot.

>Franchise operations endangered: 10,000 franchise locations across the USA could close this year because of the faltering economy, according to a study released by the International Franchise Association. What to watch: automotive, real estate and lodging franchises. On the up side: " Fast-food restaurants, full-service restaurants may see moderate gains this year."> Chronicle

>Trouble for Ruby Tuesday's chain continues; 70 store closings planned: The second quarter financials are out, with a net loss of $37.4 million and a 10.8 percent dip in same-store sales vs. a year ago. Ruby Tuesday once had plans for a store in Rome but they evaporated more than a year ago. The chain has stores in Cartersville and  Calhoun.

What's ahead:

Norton's '2009 Native Intelligence Real Estate Forecast' report due Jan. 22: Gainesville-area Realtor Frank Norton Jr. puts on an evening presentation each January, focusing on trends he forecasts for the north metro market mostly around Lake Lanier. Some predictions from January 2008 were dead on:

-"The market and regional economy get a hard dose of reality."

-"Green takes root: The movement toward ecological-based business decisions has taken root and is spreading like kudzu."

-"Foreclosure. If you're an individual investor, don't expect a great windfall.

-"Land in an era of repricing: As development and rampant speculation are evaporating raw land prices, prepare for a reset."

-This year's event is at Gainesville's Georgia Mountains Center with doors opening at 4:30 p.m. and the presentation at 6 p.m. You can listen live at www.accessnorthga.com

 

Norman Arey's Sports Roundtable / brought to you by Riverside Toyota

-By the numbers (say, $400 million), a BCS playoff might not equal bowl payoffs. For more, click Arey

Sports

-Rome Braves announce staff promotions> Sports

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Tuesday updates from www.bartowheadlines.com

Click www.bartowheadlines.com

Soggy start to the new year: 3 inches of rain in 24 hours

Current Radar in GA - Columbus region

This map, from 6:45 a.m., shows the storm's size and path. Courtesy: intellicast.com

Weather Center / Brought to you by Roman Court

-Flood watch until Wednesday afternoon

-Weather service map: Deep green, flood watch; light green, flood warning.

-Rainfall from 7 a.m. Monday to 7 a.m. Tuesday: 3 inches
-Today: 100% chance of rain, high of 64.

-Tonight: 100% rain chance, low of 47.

-Wednesday: 50% rain chance, 51.

-Wednesday night: Clearing and colder, low of 33.
-For additional updates, please click WeatherCenter

Coosa Valley News won't appeal latest FCC ruling on Plainville station: The partners in Coosa Valley News have decided not to appeal a recent Federal Communications Commission ruling that sided with Howard Toole, who won the bid for the new station in Plainville. Almost two years ago, Toole had the highest bid for the FM signal now known as WRBF 104.9 FM. Coosa Valley News, including former K-98 minority owner Thom Holt, bid on the signal as well. Holt's group questioned Toole's ties to Paul Stone and Southern Broadcasting, owners of WRGA, Q102, South 107 and WGJK in Rome. Toole was general manager of Stone's Athens' radio stations at the time and had listed a Texas address on his bid. Those stations have since been sold to Cox Media. Subsequent appeals were shot down by the FCC (click FCC file). The station remains off air.

Business Buzz

-Receiver in command at Mount Berry Square; 'mall open for business'

Mount Berry Square remains in full operation as the property moves into the hands of a court-appointed receiver, Jones Lang LaSalle. The company will work with the local team to assess what's next including a possible sale. The mall's owner, the Lightstone Group, was rumored to be considering turning over Mount Berry and three other malls to its lenders (Click WSJ). For more on what receivership can mean, click here. Lightstone bought Mount Berry and five other retail sites from Pennsylvania Real Estate Investment Trust in December 2004 for $120 million background. The mall has added several name tenants including Hot Topic, Rue21 and AƩropostale but also has lost some, including Waldenbooks> Business

-Parent company of First National Bank of Polk County declares dividend: The Board of Directors of SouthCrest Financial Group Inc. declare a dividend of 13 cents per share, payable Jan. 30 to shareholders of record as of Jan. 16.

-United Community Banks Inc. is raising its fourth-quarter loan loss reserve, citing in part its "metro Atlanta residential construction portfolio," according to reports in the Atlanta Business Chronicle. Amount: $85 million. Fourth quarter results due Jan. 23> Click

Politics:

>Today's quote: "Some reports put the tax cut at 40 percent of the overall package — leaving 60 percent to come from increased federal spending. After the latest round of bailouts, many members of Congress, as well as most Americans, have concerns about the federal government spending hundreds of billions that it doesn't have." -- U.S. Rep. Phil Gingrey on Obama tax cut plan>Politico
>Final 2008 state campaign finance reports due: Over the next few days, both winners and losers from Campaign 2008 will file their final reports with the State Ethics Commission> Politics

>Rome's Davis to manage Poythress' gubernatorial campaign> Politics

State's new open records site delivers: The Open Georgia "transparency in government" site is pretty much just as promised. You can track salaries, travel expenditures and other costs. This includes state and local school board employees, those who serve on state boards and other offices> Details

Norman Arey's Sports Roundtable / brought to you by Riverside Toyota

-Coaching: Smith's close win; Jagodzinski's close call; Cowher's close enough on TVFor more, click Arey

Monday, January 5, 2009

Monday updates from www.bartowheadlines.com

The Buzz of Northwest Georgia:

-Three-Dot Buzz, political edition: Two chairs by the name of Lumsden? ... Another term for Wright? ...  Preston Smith: running again in 2010....

-Northwest Georgia's boom in cancer care services: New alliance for clinical studies, expanded care, coordinator highlight growth

-Peaks & Valleys: The highs and lows of Northwest Georgia

Holiday traffic death toll--20 people: The New Year's holiday weekend ended at midnight Sunday with 20 deaths reported to the Georgia State Patrol over the 102-hour period.  There were 17 fatal crashes and wet roads were cited as a major factor in overall accidents statewide, the state patrol reports> Details

Weather Center / Brought to you by Roman Court

-Flood watch in effect from Tuesday a.m. until Wednesday a.m.; snow possible, too

-Today: 50% chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, high near 56.
-Tonight:  100% chance of showers, low around 54.

-Tuesday: Occasional showers, with thunderstorms also possible after 1pm. Some of the storms could produce heavy rainfall. High near 68. Rain chance: 80%.
-Tuesday might: 100% chance of rain. Low of 48.

-Wednesday: More rain with a chance of snow overnight.
-For additional updates, please click WeatherCenter

Cartersville City Council shifts meeting dates in January: The Cartersville City Council meetings have been changed for the month of January because of the New Year's Day holiday.  City Council meetings will be held on Thursday, Jan. 8, and Thursday, Jan. 22, at 7 p.m. Details: City Manager's Office at 770-387-5616.

>Hear both meetings live: You can hear both City Council meetings live on WBHF 1450 AM and on the Webcast here on Bartow Headlines.   

Norman Arey's Sports Roundtable / brought to you by Riverside Toyota

-Final Norman's No-Nos for this college season: SEC v. Big 12; Tebow vs. Bradford. The loser is . . .  For more, click Arey

On our other pages today:

-Business: November jobless rate rises again in Northwest Georgia

-Campus Headlines: Georgia Power's Kaiser named to CVTC board

-Health: Marsha Atkins named latest Floyd Hero

-Healthy Living: Polar Bear Paddle Saturday; Berry Half Marathon March 7

-Jobs: Looking for a job? Try our partner, careerbuilder.com

-Politics: Floyd County Republicans set precinct mass meeting, convention

-Sports: Hot Stove Gathering features McCann, benefits Cancer Navigators

-Hometown Kids: Busy spring ahead for kids at Booth

-Dining: Wine series resumes at Barnsley; new regional winery links

-Arts: New exhibit premieres at RACA in January

-NW Georgia Ads: Paper Recovery & Greene's Jewelers

-Plus: Your link to Coosa Valley Classifieds (all free)