Sunday, October 28, 2012

Lakeland Community Cleanup Day this Saturday, November 3

Lakeland Community Cleanup Day, this Saturday, November 3, 2012!  Time to get ready for Winder!  Eligible items, information

November 2012 Schedule Changes


Schedule Changes/Special Events include:

-November 3, 2012:  Clean-up Day!  

-Monday, November 12, 2012:  Veterans Day (observed):  City Hall Closed

-Monday, November 12, 2012:  Park and Recreation Board meeting is canceled 

-Friday, November 16, 2012:  11:30 a.m., Senior Lunch

-Thursday, November 22, 2012 and Friday, November 23, 2012:  Thanksgiving Day, Day after Thanksgiving.  City Hall Closed

-Monday, November 26, 2012:  Board of Commissioners Work Session (rescheduled from Tuesday, November 27, 2012)

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

PUT LITTER IN ITS' PLACE-ADOPT A STREET!


Lakeland is inviting volunteer groups or families to assist us in cleaning up Lakeland.

Lakeland has implemented a new Adopt A Street Program to assist in cleaning up roadside litter.  This year, it is anticipated that over 5000 pounds of litter will be collected alongside Lakeland major roads and streets.  This exceeds last year figure of 3468 pounds.  An increase of 44 percent!

PUT LITTER IN ITS‘ PLACE!  Contact Jesse at the City of Lakeland (867-2717 Ext 408 OR JMccabe@lakelandtn.org) for specific information.  

PROGRAM SUMMARY

City of Lakeland Adopt a Street Program details:

  • Volunteers will be asked to conduct cleanups alongside roadways at least four times a year, specifically once during each season.
  • After one cleanup by the volunteers, the city will install a sign with the volunteers name proudly displayed along that corridor 
  • All roadside litter will be disposed of by the City of Lakeland
  • The city of Lakeland will provide all materials and safety gear necessary for the cleanup program.  A staff member will be present during the cleanup.
  • Recommended roadway cleanup projects will be about ½ mile in length. Both sides of the roadway must be cleaned up.  

Examples of roadways that may be included are as follows:
  1. Canada Road(Between Interstate Hwy 64 and Hwy 70)
  2. Stewart Rd. between Old Brunswick Rd. and Pleasant Ridge Road.
  3. Davie Plantation Road between Hwy 64 and interstate 40.
  4. Huff and Puff(Canada Rd to Seed Tick)
  5. Evergreen Rd between Hwy 70 and CSX RR tracks
  6. Evergreen Road between Memphis Arlington and Hwy 70
  7. Seed tick(Between Huff and Puff to Hwy 70)
  8. Memphis Arlington between Oliver Creek and Clear Creek
  9. Brunswick Road inside Corporate Limits of Lakeland
  10. Salem Road and Salem Terrace Road (Between Brunswick Rd. and Palomino Rd.)
  11. Chamber Chapel Road(I-40 to Memphis Arlington)
  12. Old Brownsville Rd. between Evergreen Rd. and Oliver Creek

PUT LITTER IN ITS’ PLACE-ADOPT A STREET!

Sunday, October 14, 2012

COMPUTER INSTRUCTION AVAILABLE AT LAKELAND SENIOR CENTER


“TECH TUESDAYS” - INTRODUCTORY AND IMMEDIATE COMPUTER LEVEL INSTRUCTION NOW AVAILABLE AT LAKELAND SENIOR CENTER 

55 and over?  Learn computer basics or advance your skills on Tuesday mornings at the Lakeland Senior Center, 4527 Canada Road.  Classes are limited to persons ages 55 or over.

Mavis Knight provides introductory computer basics at 10:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m.  on and immediate computer basics from 9:00 a.m to 10:00 a.m. every Tuesday!  The new schedule will begin Tuesday, October 23rd.  

The Introductory class includes such essential skills as getting online and setting up an email account.

The intermediate includes instruction in Microsoft Office, cleaning out all that garbage on your computer and what the toolbars mean!

Attend both classes if you wish!

Best yet, bring your questions to share with the instructor at the beginning of each class!  Mavis feels there is no such thing as a dumb question about computers!

Limited number of computers are available, bring your laptop if you can!  Call 746-8195 to reserve a laptop computer, when available.  Limited laptop computers are available.  Free Wifi is available.  There is no charge for these classes except for your time!

Monday, October 01, 2012

Harding Academy article about decision not to relocate in Lakeland


Harding Academy Renews Focus as School Turns 60
By MICHAEL WADDELL Updated 1:59PM



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Harding Academy of Memphis celebrates its 60th anniversary this year with a renewed focus on its main campus in East Memphis on Cherry Road.
The school is wrapping up the first wave of major renovations to the campus, and more are in the early planning stages for the next few years.
“Our vision has shifted within the past year as far as staying in Memphis and continuing to be a school that plays a role in the progress of Memphis,” said Allen Gillespie, Harding’s admissions and community relations director.
“We realized that what once was viewed as one of our greatest challenges is, in fact, one of our greatest strengths,” said Trent Williamson, who took over as president of Harding Academy in March. “We have a unique opportunity to continue providing a top-quality college preparatory education in a Christian context that will not only impact the students that we serve but our community as well.”
The academy had announced plans to move its main campus to Lakeland in 2005. They bought a large parcel of land and began to make preparations, but the economy tanked in 2008 and the project stalled.
“As time passed, we realized that it really was not the right move to make,” said Gillespie, who believes new proposed municipal school districts might have been a detrimental blow to a new school built in Lakeland.
So instead of building in Lakeland, in early 2011 the school began a $1.7 million first phase of renovations at its Cherry Road campus, working with Fleming/Associates/Architects PC and Linkous Construction LLC to redesign the lobby, main hallway, and some bathrooms and classrooms, as well as create a state-of-the-art chemistry lab.
“We are also finishing up work this week on a brand new entrance to the school that will replace designs that have been there since the late 1950s,” Gillespie said. “It should provide a fresh first impression when entering the campus. Additionally, this past summer our weight room was transformed into a one-of-a-kind strength training facility. You’re not going to find another high school in Tennessee that’s going to have quite the setup for strength training that we have.”
A grand opening dedication for both the new entrance and strength training facility is slated for Oct. 12 when Harding hosts its 60th anniversary homecoming game against Bishop Byrne.
Williamson is working with Fleming architects on preliminary plans to renovate the rest of the Cherry Road campus over the next few years.
Harding Academy’s rich history in Memphis dates to 1952, when it opened as Memphis Christian School (then the city’s only co-ed K-6 school) in the Highland Street Church of Christ building. In 1957 Harding College in Searcy, Ark., assumed control of the school and changed its name to Memphis Harding Academy. The following year the school moved to the Cherry Road location.
Much of Harding’s growth during the 1960s and 1970s is attributed to former school president Dr. Harold Bowie (president from 1961-1998), who had the idea to house elementary school classes out of various church buildings around town where Bible classroom space was not being used during weekdays.
“He developed a great business model where costs were really low, and classes were in neighborhoods close to where the families lived so they didn’t have to drive across town,” Gillespie said.
Bonnie Jamerson, head of Harding’s Lower School (first through sixth grades), was hired in 1973 – the tumultuous year court-ordered busing was instituted in Memphis to help integrate schools – as the school’s second African-American teacher.
In Jamerson’s initial job interview, Bowie asked her how she was going to handle any parents who might treat her differently because she was not white. Jamerson said, “I’m going to focus on teaching the children. I don’t have time to worry about the silliness of adults.”
Several years later she found out a handful of Harding families had withdrawn their children before the start of school when they found out an African-American teacher would be at Harding’s Whitehaven location.
“While we lost a handful of families, within five years we grew to become the largest private school in the country,” she said. “And during my 40 years at Harding I’ve only experienced a loving environment where the color of my skin was never an issue.”
The academy separated from Harding College in 1978 and became an independent school, Harding Academy of Memphis Inc., under the direction of its own board of directors.
By 1996 Harding had opened the first standalone elementary facility in Cordova and then expanded that campus in 2001 with the addition of a 54,000-square-foot building.
Today the academy’s total enrollment stands at 1,176 students in grades K-12 as well as an early childhood development program that starts at 18 months of age. The school employs roughly 105 full-time teachers at its Upper School (grades 7-12 at the Cherry Road campus) and Lower Schools (early development through sixth grade at its Cordova and East Memphis-Colonial Road locations).
The school currently touts standout achievements on both the academic and athletic fronts. For example, Alec Anderson, a Harding student since age 2 who is now a senior, just recorded a perfect score on the SAT. And recent grad Emilee McCurdy is headed into the aerospace engineering program at the University of Alabama.
In athletics, Harding was the only private school in Tennessee last year to finish in the Final Four in boys’ baseball, basketball and football.
Gillespie pointed out that about 30 percent of Harding’s students come from Churches of Christ while the rest are a mix of various denominations, including a few non-Christian religions.