Saturday,
November 29, 2003
I don't care if we had our first dusting
of snow last night...spring is just around the corner and daffodils are
coming to South Knoxville. Bob Santore of the South Knoxville
Beautification Committee had their first bulb planting day today on
James White's Parkway. Bob has been putting this project together for a
while. Bob's #1 volunteer (and wife) Barbara explained to the
others which way the bulbs go - roots down. It was really rocky and the
power augers weren't doing the job. Volunteers switched to shovels.

- posted by KKB Staff @ 10:06 AM
Tuesday, November 25, 2003
I'm very glad I attended the
ribbon-cutting for the Market Square/Krutch Park re-opening.
Everybody was there. The project turned out real nice and I saw Ashley
Capps pick up some trash someone left in the new park. Way to go
Ashley! As many of you know, Dr. Paul Kelley has been promoting
the idea of a Zero & One Club. Members never litter (the zero) and
pledge to pick up one piece of litter every day. Ashley earned his
membership today. I spoke with Jim Cortese about the prospects
for the City or County hiring a real urban forester and we agreed it is
more possible now than in recent years. When I got back to our office at
World's Fair Park some tourists from Florida came in. The man
said his grandmother used to live in our office at 402 11th Street and
he used to stay here in the summers. He talked about going to Market
Square every day. I told them about the entertainment going on today and
they were going to head over there. Also...the Haslam Neighborhood
Services Committee meeting is set for Wednesday, December 10th at 11:30.
- posted by KKB Staff @ 1:49 PM
Thursday, November 20, 2003
Thought it was time for an update to the
blog. Some friends have been asking if we are really here. We've been
inteviewing applicants for the program coordinator position and have it
narrowed down to two very promising candidates. We are trying to do the
second interviews Monday. Scott Frith called me today (Scott is
the KKB board member who was behind the Halls Tribute Trees project) and
said another massive beautification project is on the horizon for Halls.
Stay tuned. I spoke with Bill Haslam at the Emporium "Upfitting"
last week and he said the neighborhood services transition committee
will meet very soon. In the meantime, he announced the city solid waste
department would be admininstered by a neighborhood services deparment
in the future instead of engineering. This sounds like a good move.
Solid waste issues may have been engineering problems in the past but
they are definitely quality-of-life issues today and solutions to solid
waste problems have a tremendous impact on improving neighborhoods.
Earlier this evening John Evans and I met with a group of
citizens from Vestal who want to address litter, dumping and waste
disposal issues in their neighborhood. They described a variety of
problems ranging from littering by residents, dumping by people from
Blount County, county residents not subscribing to litter pickup and
NEVER taking their trash to the convenience center, and a bunch of other
problems. The Keep America Beautiful system approach to community
improvement is this: 1) Get the facts, 2) Involve the People, 3) Plan
Systematically, 4) Focus on Results, and 5) Provide Positive
Reinforcement. Anyway, we are going to follow the process and on
Sunday, December 7, at 2:00 p.m. , John Evans and I are meeting with
some citizens for a neighborhood tour. This fact finding mission is the
first step to a solution. I'm bringing the digital camera so check back
for pictures - some of them may NOT be pretty.
- posted by KKB Staff @ 9:52 PM
Tuesday, November 11, 2003
The KKB Youth Advisory Board had
their regular monthly meeting and began their research on the
environmental impact of automobile ownership. YAB members used the
computers at the Fulton High School Library. We selected Fulton
because of its central location and the computers are filtered. The
results of this research project will be used to create a companion
curriculum for a litter ordinance awareness video for new drivers
produced by Memphis City Beautiful. The Knox County Schools
Driver's Education teachers have already agreed to use the video. The
additional material about automobiles and the environment will enhance
the litter lesson and reinforce the idea that the automobile has the
greater impact on the environment than anything else in the world. The
images below show the UAB members at work in the Fulton High library.
Three of the YAB schools participated in a campaign sign removal
project. After election day, YAB members from West, Fulton and Halls
High Schools collected campaign signs from the recent city council
elections. Halls won a pizza party by bringing in 451 signs. A total of
626 signs were collected.

- posted by KKB Staff @ 7:05 PM
Friday, November 07, 2003
Today I attended the Tennessee Urban
Forestry Council annual state conference in Chattanooga. The conference
theme was Storm Water Problems: Urban Forestry Solutions. One session
featured a presentation of a study done on the decline Knox County's
tree canopy between 1989 and 1999. The study was done by American
Forests for the Knox County Storm Water Department. In those 10 years
areas with 50% or more tree canopy declined by 2.2%, areas with <20%
tree canopy increased by 9.8% and areas with 20-49% tree canopy
decreased by 42%. They estimate the storm water retention value of the
remaining trees at $1.48 billion (the cost of building structures to
accomplish what the trees already do). The also estimate the trees
remove 16.5 million pounds of pollutants (nitrogen dioxide, sulfur
dioxide, carbon monoxide, ozone and many particulates). The images below
are from the Urban Ecosystem Analysis for Knox County, Tennessee
produced by American Forests. There is a lot more information in the
complete report. If you want to learn more use the American Forests link
above or contact me by email. TUFC also presented its annual awards and
Sam Adams of Cortese Tree Service was named Urban Forester of the Year.
Go Sam!


- posted by KKB Staff @ 3:43 PM
Thursday, November 06, 2003
The committee planning Earthfest 2004
has just approved holding the event at World's Fair Park in
downtown Knoxville on Saturday, April 24, 2004. For the past few years
the event has been held at Concord Cove Park in west Knox County.
We consider this to be good news. World's Fair Park is more centrally
located than Concord Cove Park and should give better access to the
event to our neighbors in the east, south and north parts of the
community. World's Fair Park also has much better service by public
transportation and will be much more accessible for those who wish to
walk or bike to the event. For those who drive there should be more
options for parking. Finally, World's Fair Park has been beautifully
redesigned to accommodate large festivals with open space, seating,
electricity and restrooms. Kudos to the Earthfest 2004 planning
committee. Here is a picture (from our archives) of KKB's booth at
Earthfest 2003 with (l-r) board member Terry Faulkner, UT
Professor Charles Faulkner, volunteer Joyce Hausman and
former intern Mike Schoenberger.

- posted by KKB Staff @ 5:33 PM
Wednesday, November 05, 2003
The past two days have been somewhat
ordinary. We are getting a steady stream of applicants for the program
coordinator position and the auditor has been by twice and it looks like
our annual audit is finished except for printing. We have our regular
board meeting tomorrow and have just finished posting the minutes from
the last meeting to our website. If you are interested in that sort of
thing, our board meeting minutes from the past 2 and a half years are on
the site. Just click on the Keep Knoxville Beautiful button above, click
board and staff on the left menu and look for the minutes archive link
on the board and staff page.
- posted by KKB Staff @ 1:25 PM
Monday, November 03, 2003
I had a long conversation with Patty
Smith this morning. Patty is a long-time downtown resident and was
instrumental in getting the central business district "pooper
scooper" ordinance passed a few months ago. As you probably know,
KKB gave the Onion award to the little triangle park near the
intersection of Summit, Gay and Central. I want to clarify that the
award was intended for those who do NOT clean up after their dogs and to
those who have the power to enforce the new ordinance but choose not to.
I anticipate that when the Haslam/Jubran Transition Committee
looks at neighborhood services there will be a lot of talking about
ordinances and enforcement. This is a chronic issue in litter, dumping
and dirty lots because it involves "less serious" crimes that
have a tremendous negative impact on quality of life but don't directly
harm anyone or damage property. If you have any thoughts on this please
share.
- posted by Tom @ 1:52 PM
Sunday, November 02, 2003
The program coordinator position opening
is listed in today's News Sentinel and we have already received
two resumes by email. Please encourage anyone you know who is looking
for a fun, interesting part-time job to send a resume. Use the Keep
Knoxville Beautiful link at the top of the page and read
"employment opportunity".
- posted by KKB Staff @ 12:54 PM