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District 8 Commissioner Tim Boyd asks a question of County Mayor Jim Coppinger during a meeting in the Hamilton County Courthouse on Aug. 29, 2017. An attempt to revive Hamilton County commissioners $100,000 discretionary spending accounts failed Wednesday, but that doesn t mean the issue is forever dead.Commissioners tied 4-4, with Katherlyn Geter absent, on Tim Boyd s motion to pull the money from bond proceeds when the new fiscal year begins on July 1, 2019. We re going to get a lot of heat about bad policy, voter slush funds, Sneaky Six, but I m not worried about what the media says about me and my discretionary funds, Boyd said.With boots on the ground, commissioners know better than anybody in the county what our constituents are needing and asking for, he said.Commissioner Warren Mackey strongly supported Boyd s motion and didn t want to wait for the new fiscal year. I think we ought to commit the money now, for this year, and if we have to take it out of [the general fund], I d do that too, Mackey said. If you were to have gone with me t [url=https://www.dunks.fr]nike dunk[/url] wo weeks ag [url=https://www.adidassamba.com.de]adidas samba og[/url] o and seen the girls soccer team finish the game, come off the field and hand their T-shirts to the boys so they could play, you wouldn t want to wait until July, he said.But [url=https://www.campusadidas.it]adidas campus 00[/url] commissioners Greg Martin and Chip Baker, along with County Mayor Jim Coppinger, argued those constituents needs could be funded in the annual budget process. Would I like to have $100,000 Sure, Hrpw New Chattanooga clinic focuses on COVID-19 long-haul cases
DALTON, Ga. -- Dalton Utilities will continue to extend its sewers into northern Whitfield County to help handle growth into what utility officials expect will be one of the fastest-growing parts of Northwest Georgia.Dalton s Water Light and Sinking Fund Commission on Monday awarded a $1.6 million contract to KM Davis of Marietta, Ga [url=https://www.stanley-cups.com.de]stanley thermoskannen[/url] ., to build the third phase of a $6.2 million sewer line along Highway 201. When completed next year, the sewer lines along Highway 201 will link the Tunnel Hill treatment plant with Whitfield County s newest high school -- the Coahulla Creek High School scheduled to open in fall 2011. This area is predicted to be the center of population in Northwest Georgia by 2030, Dalton Utilities President Don Cope said. The area from the Dalton bypass north to the Tennessee border is predicted to be the fastest-growing population area in this region. Mr. Cope projected that 20 years from now, the [url=https://www.cup-stanley.us]stanley bottles[/url] new sewers will serve an area that could generate $10 million to $15 million a year in sewer fees from all of the new businesses and homes hooked up to the new lines.Dalton Utilities originally had a more ambitious plan to extend sewers to the north into [url=https://www.stanley-cups.ro]stanley cup romania[/url] more neighborhoods with more new sewage treatment plants. That plan changed when our revenues fell in 2007 and 2008, Mr. Cope said.Dalton Utilities came up with an alternative to connect with Tunnel Hill to ensure that sewers still could be laid to serve the new Coahulla Creek High School campus and to open up la