lee county Archive

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Pork barrel in Lee?

Well, think about it. I’ll define pork barrel politics as approving something that has overall merit, but contains a few items that are questionable or downright objectionable. Is this about to occur with Lee County SPLOST on March 15?

For example, the conference center that the commission has demanded no more discussion about, is on the SPLOST.  Is the commission waiting until SPLOST is approved before anything more is discussed about this ill conceived conference center idea that has no business plan?

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Lee County Georgia censors free speech

By Jeff Sexton

This past week at the Lee County Board of Commissioners meeting, a policy was implemented without it being on the Agenda – at least the online version of it, as it exists at the moment I type this, nearly a week later.

I’m working on getting the video right now – like I did with the Tifton Forum, my plan is to put the SWGAPolitics.com logo in the bottom corner, then cut it for upload to our youtube account – but one of the last items discussed at the meeting was use of the Opal Cannon Auditorium for candidates running for public office. Basically, the policy says (apparently, I haven’t seen a copy of it yet) that candidates running for public office can’t use the building – yet Nathan Deal did back in August! Per County Administrator Alan Ours’ comments during the meeting, the proposed (at the time) policy is “consistent with County policy for other buildings”.

As soon as Mr. Ours finished describing the policy, Commissioner Rick Muggridge tried to discuss it, but Chairman Ed Duffy noted that a motion and second was needed before discussion could be opened. Commissioner Dennis Roland made the motion to approve, with Commissioner Betty Johnson seconding it. Next, Commissioner Muggridge began discussing his concerns, saying that “If the Republican Party of Lee County or the Democratic Party of Lee County wanted to sponsor a debate, I think that would be a great venue for that.” Commissioner Muggridge noted that Deal had already used the facility before noting that even if a candidate came in that the Commissioners absolutely did not agree with, as long as they follow the rules, it should be allowed.

Commissioner Muggridge also noted “If I had a wish, I’d wish that more people would be involved in politics and understand what is going on. I think that by opening this venue up to politicians, which I don’t think is automatically a dirty word, that the public could have more access to those folks.”

After a bit more discussion about the end time of events, Commissioner Muggridge made a motion to strike the policy item in question that died for lack of a second. When the policy – with the item in question still in place – was then voted on moments later, all four voting commissioners voted to approve it, including Muggridge.

According to comments made to Carlton Fletcher Thursday, both Commissioner Muggridge and Chairman Duffy plan to bring this issue back to the Commission at their Jan 12 meeting, with Muggridge quoted as saying, “It’s important enough to the citizens of Lee County to bring up again not just because I support it, but because it opens up a lot of possibilities for the county.” and Duffy saying “I intend to suggest that we make county facilities available to political candidates of all parties, so long as they meet all other requirements. We just have to do it across-the-board.”

As many of you know, I am the chairman of the Libertarian Party of Southwest Georgia. I am also the South Georgia representative on the Libertarian Party of Georgia Executive Committee. Obviously, I have a vested interest in this issue – but my beliefs here are NOT partisan, as I genuinely believe ALL parties should have equal access to the public. Indeed, I started a Facebook group over the summer regarding ballot access where I put in the description “working to allow a level playing field for ALL political parties in Georgia.” Furthermore, my record running this site is proof of my claim, as the only comments we censor here are personal attacks and gratuitous profanity. As long as it remains political and decently clean, I honestly don’t remember Tom or I ever deleting a single comment.

I truly, genuinely believe in the “Top of My Lungs Principle” in regards to free speech. It states that, “You want free speech? Let’s see you acknowledge a man whose words make your blood boil, who’s standing center stage and advocating at the top of his lungs that which you would spend a lifetime opposing at the top of yours.” (Yes, it is a line from The American President.)

Apparently, the Lee County Board of Commissioners – outside of Chairman Duffy and Commissioner Muggridge – does not

jeffsexton

Jeff Sexton.

Written by Jeff Sexton. Jeff Sexton co-owns the political blog SWGAPolitics.com and is a candidate for the Leesburg City Council.

Tags: lee county
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Leesburg has a sign ordinance?

Apparently so, and on the night of my defeat, a new war began.

Not much happened at the Leesburg City Council meeting this week. It started out with a public hearing on a $500K grant the city got to repair some stormwater drainage from the Stonegate apartment area out to Robert B Lee drive. One property owner in the area asked if it covered improvements along the other side of the railroad tracks and was told it did not.

During committee reports, Councilman Bob Wilson asked the chief of police to say a few words about an arrest they made last week. A married man from Alpharetta was busted at McDonald’s after an Internet sting where he thought he was coming down here to meet and have sex with a 13-year-old girl.

Also during committee reports, the city engineer asked the council to consider creating a stormwater utility that upon first glance appears to be a back-door way to raise our taxes. I’ll need to look into this a bit more, but that was my honest impression when I was sitting there listening to him.

Next, Councilwoman Debra Long asked the council to consider moving its regular meeting time to 6 p.m., which was unanimously adopted after being motioned and seconded by other Council members. This will go into effect with the next meeting, Dec 1.

Finally, three people spoke during the public forum at the end of the meeting. I was up first fulfilling the one campaign promise I made – mentioning some problems people in Indian Oaks were having with stormwater flowing off the parking lot at the high school and creating mini-lakes in their yard. Mayor Quinn said that this is a known issue with the council, and that there was nothing the Council could do about it.

Next, the owner of Leesburg Barber Shop stood up to inquire about Leesburg’s own sign ordinance. I wasn’t even aware we had one – and not only do I think they are completely illegal and immoral, I’m honestly not sure why the city of Leesburg even thinks we need one. The Barber Shop is struggling, as are most other businesses in this time, and the owner has had to drop his prices twice recently. He paid $6,800 for this sign three years ago, and it has yet to pay for itself.

At that time, he called someone with either the city or county government – he’s not sure who now, three years later – and was given verbal approval before he bought it. Apparently, in recent weeks this sign has brought him a bit of business, and he hopes this continues. But he also has employment opportunities over at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center (FLETC) in Brunswick, and if he is forced to remove this sign he may well have to close his shop and leave town. Mayor Quinn and several Council members spoke in favor of the sign ordinance, with Quinn in particular telling this business owner that his sign was “clearly illegal”.

Tom’s issues with the Albany sign ordinance are well known, and now it appears that I have a similar fight of my own. The Barber Shop’s sign is nothing to be concerned about – it is a simple scrolling LED message board (roughly 6-inches tall by call it 6-foot wide?) placed inside his window facing out. You basically have to be staring right at it to even know it is there – even when waiting on the traffic light to turn on to Walnut Ave from the Courthouse at night, as I have done.

Let’s go a bit further with this one though, shall we? Leesburg has three gas stations, two of which are directly across the road from each other. The FlashFoods has an LED sign for their gas prices. This is easy to change from inside the store in any weather and at a moment’s notice. When the Chevron across the street asked to be allowed to put a similar sign up, they were told they could not, per the sign ordinance. This means that an employee of the Chevron must manually go out to the sign and change the plastic numbering, no matter what the weather is like when the price change is ordered.

I can tell you from personal experience working in a gas station several years ago that this sucks! Not to mention the fact that it causes a competitive disadvantage on the Chevron vs. the FlashFoods. Thus, local government favors one business over another, even though the two businesses are literally across the street from each other! This should not be! I urge the council to repeal this ordinance at their next meeting, or at a bare minimum revise it significantly.

Finally, Foxie Harper asked the council why the change was made in the billing process to move from a post card to a full envelope with a return envelope, asking for both the reasoning and how much extra it cost the city. Told that it was the result of a federal privacy law, she dropped her objection.

The next meeting of the City Council will be on Dec 1 at 6 p.m. I’ll be there, and if you live in Leesburg I hope to see you there!

jeffsexton

Jeff Sexton.

Written by Jeff Sexton. Jeff Sexton co-owns the political blog SWGAPolitics.com and is a candidate for the Leesburg City Council.

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Ramp, equipment hot Lee topics

Last week’s Lee County Commission meeting was dominated by the proposed boat ramp and discussion of four bids for heavy equipment purchases by the Public Works Department.

Don Windham, a resident of the Canuga subdivision just across the road from the proposed boat ramp, spoke against building it, citing traffic, trash, safety, gangs, and teenagers, among other things. He left before I could speak with him but I asked another person who will be speaking with him to contact me about possibly putting his thoughts on SWGAPolitics.com.

Leesburg Councilman Betty Johnson also spoke against the ramp, citing traffic concerns and maintenance costs. She had spoken with Chief Harris of the Lee County Sheriff’s Office and apparently there have been almost double the number of wrecks in that area this year as compared to the prior two years. Chairman Ed Duffy also spoke against the ramp, again citing traffic and safety concerns. Ultimately, Commissioners Muggridge, Williams, and Roland voted for the ramp while Commissioner Johnson did not. Chairman Duffy asked that it be put on the record that although he did not have the opportunity to vote on the measure (as the Chairman only votes to break ties), he also opposed it.

Ultimately, I also oppose it, and while traffic is certainly a concern – that could be alleviated by putting the ramp on Highway 32 just outside the Leesburg city limits – my objection is the amount of money involved and who is paying for it. County Manager Alan Ours told the board that because the state planned to pay for it using boat motor fuel taxes, it had to have motorized boat capability or the State could not pay for it. I still say Lee County could pay for a canoe ramp if that is what we really wanted, and volunteer effort could be used to build out the rest of the park, not counting the ramp itself and parking areas. This would both save quite a bit of money and instill a sense of civic pride, meaning it is a “win-win” scenario here. This is NOT a park with a truly state or federal purpose, and the state and federal governments should not be asked to pay for it.

The other item that caused much discussion was the heavy equipment bids for Public Works. Commissioner Roland questioned the need for both a track excavator and a wheeled excavator as well as the need for three motorgraders – all after being told that Public Works Director William Clark was unavailable due to his wife having a surgery earlier this week. (Our thoughts and prayers go to the Clark family for a speedy recovery for Mrs. Clark, btw.) Chairman Duffy said that he had complete faith in Mr. Clark, and that if Mr. Clark said he needed this equipment then he needed this equipment.

There happened to be a Caterpillar representative in the audience, and he asked if it was in order if he answer some of Commissioner Roland’s questions. Chairman Duffy invited him to proceed, and he noted that basically a track excavator can get work in muddy, non-paved areas that a wheeled excavator would get stuck in. Meaning that while the wheeled excavator can be driven anywhere in the County, it cannot work in areas where there has recently been heavy rainfall or burst pipes. Without the track excavator, this could cause delays in needed repairs. This sounded reasonable to me, and ultimately three of the four bids were approved unanimously, with Commissioner Roland being the only dissenting vote on the track excavator.

The Commissioners also approved a bid for repairs on New York Rd unanimously, and Commissioner Muggridge updated the Commission on the progress of the Complete Count Committee.

Finally, in the public forum, I spoke about my plans to organize a MLK Day of Service to clean and repair the park at Academy Avenue and 4th Street in Leesburg. I also told the Commission that it needed a name, and was informed by Commissioner Muggridge that it did, in fact, have a name – Leesburg Central Park. That was actually my fault for having bad information, though the information I had came from one usually highly reliable source in particular – who shall remain nameless at this point.

Tags: lee county
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Recreation important to Leesburg

As I walk around Leesburg talking to people, I keep hearing about recreation and the need for more safe recreation opportunities in town. Not just organized sports, such as baseball, softball, and soccer, but solo exercise such as a walking loop or a safe place for kids to play on a playground without fear of a baseball flying over a nearby fence.

The problem for these people is two-fold: 1) The City of Leesburg doesn’t have a Parks and Recreation Department, it is entirely run by the County. 2) Their City Commissioners don’t always show up for their own meetings, much less the County Commission meetings where recreation opportunities could be discussed.

Because the City of Leesburg doesn’t have a Parks and Recreation Department, one might think that City Councilpersons might take an interest in showing up to Lee County Board of Commissioners meetings, where they could at least keep track of what the county was doing in regards to such a major issue with their constituents. I’ve been doing that for two months, long before I decided to run for City Council myself. The problem is, I haven’t seen any city councilperson there with the exception of Mayor Jim Quinn. Furthermore, of the two City Council meetings I’ve gone to, only three councilpersons have been at both of them – Sydney Johnson, Bob Wilson, and Mayor Quinn.

The citizens of Leesburg deserve a councilman dedicated enough to seek out news and developments on the topics that concern them, as well as the topics that are boring to them but are equally important. They deserve a councilman professional enough to actually show up at the meetings where these issues are discussed. They deserve a councilman open enough to share his own analysis of the topic and the information he based his analysis on.

I created SWGAPolitics.com with those exact ideals nine months ago, and I will continue to uphold those ideals as the newest Leesburg city councilman.

jeffsexton

Jeff Sexton.

Written by Jeff Sexton. Jeff Sexton co-owns the political blog SWGAPolitics.com and is a candidate for the Leesburg City Council.

Tags: lee county
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Preacher gets 11 years for Lee County bank heist

James Albert “Jim” Creason now is officially a recession criminal – a bank robber with an honorable past whose dirty deed appears to be directly attributable to the crippled economy.

After pleading guilty to robbing Heritage Bank of the South in Leesburg, the 52-year-old former music minister at an Edison church and associate pastor at First Baptist Church of Leesburg was sentenced Thursday to 11 years and one month in prison. Creason was convicted of armed bank robbery and brandishing a firearm during a crime of violence. His sentence must be served in its entirety; there is no parole in the federal prison system.

Creason, armed with a .32-caliber handgun, robbed the Heritage bank of about $36,000 on Aug. 8, 2008. After emptying the bank teller’s cash drawer, Creason led two bank employees to the vault where he obtained more funds. Creason’s wife is a former employee of the same bank Creason robbed; Creason wore no mask and called some employees by their names during the heist.

Creason was apprehended in his Chevrolet Avalanche on Lover’s Lane Road by Leesburg police officers minutes after the robbery. The money, a gun and a video surveillance tape that Creason took during the robbery were in his car. Creason told the officers who arrested him that he was sorry for the crime and that he had fallen on hard financial times.

Creason is among a growing list of ordinary people-turned bank robbers who have blamed their actions on financial duress since the start of the recession in late 2007. The Federal Bureau of Investigation reported 1,617 bank robberies in the fourth quarter of 2008, up from 1,358 in the third quarter and 1,561 a year earlier.

Assistant U.S. Attorney K. Alan Dasher prosecuted the case before Judge W. Louis Sands, the U.S. District Court judge for the Middle District of Georgia. The case was investigated by agents with the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Leesburg Police Department.

written by staff reports.

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T. Page Tharp portrait unveiled

The Lee County Board of Commissioners opened the door Sunday to the newly renovated county offices with a dedication of buildings named T. Page Tharp Government Building, Beulah Forrester Administration, Parks and Recreation Department Offices and the Courthouse Annex.

The Tharp family commissioned Lee County artist Myric B. Hornbuckle for the oil-on-linen portrait of T. Page Tharp in honor of his love for Lee County and 40 years service. Tharp served as treasurer and then as county administrator from 1950 until 1989. Tharp served on the Chamber of Commerce board of directors. He was instrumental in the organizing and writing of the book, A Train Runs Through It , a collection of stories about early Lee County. He was active in the community and Leesburg United Methodist Church until his death in 2007.

“The painting of Mr. T. Page Tharp was an emotional experience,” said Hornbuckle. “I knew the family and wanted so very much to capture an accurate likeness and even more importantly to convey a sense of Mr. Tharp’s jovial personality. I was so pleased at the unveiling that the audience of his family, friends and so many of his co-workers collectively said ‘aah’ when the portrait was unveiled by Mr. Tharp’s sons, Tommy Tharp and Dr. Jeffrey Tharp. A portrait artist can receive no greater affirmation of the quality of a work of art than to witness a quick misting in the eye of the person’s family and friends.”

Hornbuckle is an accomplished pianist at the Lees burg United Methodist Church. While her degree is in music and she no longer teaches in public or private schools, she loves all forms of art. She painted the cover of Plantation Publishing Co.’s Albany Area Phone Directory 2009 and had a painting chosen for the Colson Co. Calendar. Two of her portrait works, Bubble Boy and Little Fire Chief, were juried in the Perry (Ga.) National Fair Fine Arts Division and are currently on display in Perry. Hornbuckle credits her success as a portrait artist as a gift from God. She studied painting in the old masters style from Joseph Sullo of Tifton and has studied with professional portrait artist D. Authur McBride.

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Lee County Taxpayers Association formed

Staff reports

To keep our local governments honest, taxpayers must be vigilant and committed. So says Lee County resident Mike Sabot, who is starting a new taxpayer watchdog group in the community.

“This month, most Sumter County taxpayers were blind-sighted not with a tax increase, though it might as well have been, but by a property reassessment,” Sabot said. “Most Sumter County taxpayers saw a 25 percent to 30 percent increase in the property assessment.

“A law was passed this year in Georgia, that prohibited a reassessment for the next 2 years, but with a loop hole, if the assessment process was done prior to June 1st, it was legal.”

Sabot says Lee County landowners need to unite to ensure that a scenario similar to the Sumter County situation doesn’t occur in Lee County.

“We are a small but deeply committed non-profit organization comprised of individuals seeking accountable government that truly represents the citizenry,” he said. “Some of our city, county and school board officials seem to have forgotten that they are elected by the people to serve the people. We want our community back. We are willing to challenge bad government in order to make this a better place to live. Lee County is worth saving.”

The new association will be unveiled, so to speak, at the July 28 Lee County Commission meeting, and later at Leesburg and Smithville city council meetings. The association’s e-mail address is LeeCountyTPA@googlegroups.com. Lee County taxpayers can join the association on the Web by accessing http://groups.google.com/group/LeeCountyTPA?lnk=iggc.

LEE COUNTY TAXPAYERS ASSOCIATION
MISSION STATEMENT

Our mission includes four important goals: education, activism, oversight and reform. To achieve this mission, we must:
· Educate the citizens of Lee County about their legal rights regarding how their property is taxed.
· Actively engage the citizens of Lee County in demanding accountability from their county government, to ensure that the property taxation process is administered fairly, uniformly and in compliance with the laws.
· Provide vigilant oversight to ensure that the citizens of Lee County can control how their tax dollars are spent, and to prevent waste, mismanagement and poor decision-making in County government.
· Achieve reform by successfully challenging the constitutionality and legality of the property tax system overall in Lee County, ultimately resulting in a fair, equitable and democratic governing process that truly represents the will of the people.

Tags: lee county
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