Tragedy struck a Kensington family Saturday afternoon when an 11-month-old died after being left more than two hours in a hot car.
Per multiple news reports, the baby was taken to church by its grandparents while the mother – a nurse who works a night shift – was asleep. When they returned home around 3 PM the grandparents, an aunt, and another child all exited the vehicle and left the baby behind.
The mother woke up after 5 and realized what happened. She gave the baby CPR and called 911, all to no avail. He was pronounced dead at Hutcheson.
Walker County Sheriff’s Office has ruled the death an accident, but is investigating how family members miscommunicated about taking the child inside. The baby’s remains have been sent for autopsy, as required by law any time a child dies.
The 11-month-old was the 19th child to die in a hot car this year, but the first in Georgia – and the first one in Walker, ever, that we know of. Prayerfully also the last.
More on Commissioner Heiskell’s latest financial shenanigans.
As usual, the Chattanooga Times gets to the heart of what’s going on: another loan, to repay a loan, which was taken out to pay a loan. The deal will cost Walker taxpayers $10 million in interest over a twenty year period and puts the Civic Center and other buildings at risk if payments aren’t made.
Heiskell says the plan will keep her from raising taxes, then immediately admits there will be a new tax from the Development Authority to pay for this non-raising of taxes.
WQCH Radio, 09/05/15: “THE DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY HAS THE ABILITY, ACCORDING TO STATE LAW, TO COLLECT UP TO 1-MIL OF PROPERTY TAX WITHOUT HOLDING A REFERENDUM. AND UNLIKE COUNTY GOVERNMENT, WHICH MUST PAY BACK LOANS WITHIN THE YEAR, THE AUTHORITY CAN ENTER LONG-TERM DEBT, SUCH AS THE PROPOSED 20-YEAR BOND ISSUE…
The county is prohibited from taking on long-term debt outside of bonds, and can’t sell bonds without voter approval. But the Development Authority CAN sell bonds without the voters, and can then levy a tax on the voters to pay those bonds back.
“THE CASH INFUSION FROM THE BOND SALE, IN ADDITION TO OTHER INCOME SOURCES – SUCH AS THE SALE OF THE COUNTY AMBULANCE SERVICE – WITH ALLOW THE COUNTY TO PAY OFF A 10-MILLION DOLLAR ‘LINE OF CREDIT’ WHICH IS DUE BY THE END OF THIS YEAR. ALMOST 5-MILLION OF THAT MONEY WAS USED TO HELP HUTCHESON MEDICAL CENTER, WITH THE REMAINDER DRAWN-DOWN TO FUND GENERAL OPERATIONS OF THE COUNTY. IT WILL ALSO FUND AN ESTIMATED 5.2 MILLION DOLLARS FOR WORK ON THE BUSINESS PARK AT NOBLE, IN PREPARATION FOR IT’S FIRST INDUSTRY: AUDIA INTERNATIONAL.
$5 million of the short-term loan being repaid by this 20-year deal was dumped into the county’s general fund, where it went to buy the Stearns Bank building and operate money-losing Mountain Cove Farms. Mountain Cove Farms will now be transferred, on paper, to the Development Authority so its losses won’t show up on the county’s financial reports. But it’ll still be operated by the county as usual.
“THE DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY WILL HAVE THE ABILITY TO SELL, LEASE OR OPERATE MOUNTAIN COVE FARMS, IF THE FINANCING PLAN IS APPROVED. COMMISSIONER HEISKELL SAID THE AUTHORITY WILL ALLOW THE COUNTY TO CONTINUE OPERATING MOUNTAIN COVE FOR SPECIAL EVENTS – SUCH AS THE UPCOMING COUNTY FAIR – AND AS A WEDDING VENUE.
“THE COMMISSIONER TOLD WQCH NEWS EARLIER THAT SHE PLANNED TO CUT THE COUNTY BUDGET BY 1.5-MILLION DOLLARS, BUT UPDATED THAT INFORMATION THURSDAY, SAYING THE BONDING AGENCY WOULD NOT ALLOW THAT REDUCTION.
“AGAIN, ACCORDING TO THE COMMISSIONER: THE NET INCREASE TO PROPERTY OWNERS WILL BE A 1-MIL INCREASE IN TAXES WHICH WILL GO TO PAY-OFF 20-YEAR BONDED DEBT THROUGH THE WALKER COUNTY DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY.”
The deal is still technically not done until a “public” hearing is held on September 15th at the Courthouse Annex. But according to the Walker County Messenger, members of the “public” who show up next Tuesday won’t be allowed to speak, only listen.
Heiskell isn’t just ignoring the public at large, she’s ignoring her own Walker County Republican Party. The party voted back in the spring to have Heiskell publish a line-item budget, but she tells the Times Free Press she doesn’t care what they say:
“Despite a resolution earlier this year at the Walker County Republican Convention, Heiskell said she will not release a line-item budget for the fiscal year that begins next month.
“Heiskell said she is not worried that her budget will upset the majority of the local Republicans.”
(Keep that in mind when you’re voting along party lines and blindly checking boxes for the R candidates.)
Heiskell also admits to the TFP she doesn’t really stick to a budget or hold her departments to budgets, either:
“..Heiskell she also doesn’t want to have to approve budget amendments every time county agencies spend money differently than they planned to at the beginning of the fiscal year. ‘That happens a lot,’ she said.”
That kind of fiscal responsibility is how we got to the point of needing a 20-year loan pushed through the back door to pay one year’s operating expenses. Now Bebe’s mortgaging away the next two decades so she doesn’t have to directly raise taxes before next year’s election.
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