Flagpole. (Athens, Ga.) 1987-current, April 20, 2011, Image 4
Monday April 25th SPECIAL EVENT with Jim Hightower 7pm Hightower Hour Sponsored by Foundry Park Inn & Spa Hosted by Tim Bryant 5pm Mixer and Volunteer Work Session RSVP Information www.tsplost.org More info & entry form: wwwiilmaxhens.net Sponsored by: Flagpole Magazine * Mama's Boy • TSAV FlickSkinny • Cine Bar Cafe Cinema Jittery Joe's Coffee • BabbSteel.com Transmission Merchandise J's Bottle Shop on Prince • Kindercore.com Terrapin Beer • Bel-Jean Copy/Print Official AthFest 2011 Affiliated Event SPROCKETSSIX MUSIC VIDEO COMPETITION THIS IS A CALC FOR ENTRIES INSIDE A DREAM noATm nr i rnBLD or smw A Doctoral Composition Recital by David Mitchell THURSDAY, APRIL 88™ at MO in UGA’s Dancz Center for New Music at Hugh Hodgson School of Music, Room 264. Free and Open to the Public. For more information call 706 546-7082 Film Athens is currently accepting submissions for the 6th Sprockets Music Video Competition! Selected entries to be shown at the Fabuious 40 Watt with “Best Of" and "Audience Choice" video screened and awarded at the Flagpole Music Awards Rebuild Georgia Railroads TSPLOST 2012 Presents at the Melting Point and Foundry Park inn Ballroom A REBUILD GEORGIA RAILROADS 38 Smoothies under 300 Calorie 1/2 OFF ANY; MEDIUM : Expires *-17/09 Some Restrictions Apply I Valid only at: 5 Points 4 Omni Club 706.613.0600 706.369.3111 in Public Forum Led by Russell Edwards with Special Guests Gordon Kenna and Jack Crowley Limited Capacity April 1 - Early Deadline Ap>ii lg—Ua»»-PeartiiHe April 29 - June 10 - Sprockets Snow June 23 - Flagpole Music Awards ATHENS NEWS AND VIEWS Support Local Parking?: The news that one of the retail tenants of the ACC/ Batson- Cook downtown parking deck structure will be a Waffle House is surely cause for some ambivalence, even among many of those who supported the mixed-use deck project from the get-go. The idea that anyone might have looked into the crystal ball and embraced the vision of our treasured downtown being enhanced by the epitome of bland, corporate restaurants seems pretty unlikely, especially if one reflects on how much of the college student trade—especially late-night—such a highly branded entity might stand to siphon from long-established, locally owned eater ies. Momma Goldberg's, the Alabama sandwich chain that is the other known retail tenant so far, presents a similar challenge to local busi nesses, if not so emblematic of one. There's not much we can do about it, of course; the deck was approved with SPLOST 2005 and the contract with Batson-Cook, the developer that controls the structure's retail and office components, was finalized last year. It's much too late to contemplate imposing restrictions on what kinds of businesses we want to be allowed to lease the retail spaces, even if anyone thought that might be a viable approach. Athens Downtown Development Authority Executive Director Kathryn Lookofsky says she hasn't heard any com plaints yet. But there are bound to be plenty once the usual cycle of gradually germinating public awareness starts to crank up. Whatever objections may be raised, it seems we'll have to trust the theory held by many supporters of the project that any increase in the concentration of retail business downtown is good for downtown retail on the whole. And Lookofsky boils the matter down to some simple, direct advice: "If local businesses are important to you, you should support them." Let's hope 35,000 UGA students can hear that message. This Oust In: When the M&Cs tentative agenda for their Apr. 21 Agenda Setting Session was released late this Monday morning, the Dope did a double-take: did the item titled "Downtown Parking Rates" really contain a proposal for a hike in metered parking from fifty cents to $2 per hour? Yup. The increase has been floated before as being necessary to bring on-street rates into step with those for the downtown decks, but has always been dismissed by commissioners, who have been understandably reluctant to approve a 400 percent increase in one fell swoop. Central Services Director David Ruck says the ADDA ordinarily gives staff a recommendation on such matters, but "they have not given us any yet." Staff thought it was appropriate, he says, "to bring it forward at this time, and we'll see what the Commission does with it." Commissioner Mike Hamby, who serves on the ADDA board, confirms that the ADDA "hasn't weighed in" on metered rates yet, and he thinks the item will be held from this month's agenda. He finds it "very hard to believe" that $2 meters are on the way. "I'm not voting for it," he says, "and I doubt any one else is." So there you have it. Georgiazona... Nice Ring!: Our Republican Legislature, in its infinite temperance and wisdom, last week passed H.B. 87, the second- most draconian anti-immigrant bill in the nation; our Republican Governor, the noted cheat and swindler Nathan Deal, has indicated he will sign it in the name of prioritizing "the rule of law." The Anti-Defamation League and other such radical left-wing organiza tions as the Georgia Farm Bureau, the Georgia Agribusiness Council and the Catholic Church had raised alarms at the legislation, over both its inhumanity and its certain detri mental effects on business, but shoot, that don't matter! As long as the Republicans can keep pinning the state's failing econc :iy -jn poor brown people (and believe it, they can!) instead of the fat-ass tax cuts they keep dol ing out to ever-more-powerful corporations while going medieval on schools, transporta tion, health care and social programs, every thing's working great for them. Stay classy, Georgia, and keep voting like a bunch of stupid, backwards racists. It'll be 1953 again soon enough, complete with the dirt roads and the sixth grade educations. Or, We Could Try Something Positive: The local nonprofit Whatever It Takes is using a federal grant it received last September and the tremendous energy and dedication of its staff and volunteers to build an infrastructure that will ensure that every child in Athens is on track to complete a post-secondary education by 2020, beginning with a focus on the Clarke County School District's Alps Road attendance zone. WIT has been hold ing a series of "Community Conversations" at which interested families are invited to share their thoughts on how that goal might be accomplished, as well as to hear what's being done already. The next such meeting is 6-8 p.m. Thursday, Apr. 21 at the Mount Pleasant Baptist Church, 1931 Old West Broad St. To learn more about WIT, or to donate or volun teer, visit www.witathens.org. Dave Marr news@flagpole.com If you’ve wondered whether the manhole covers sticking up two feet from the ground in the otherwise beautifully landscaped field in recently renovated Dudley Park are permanent, ACC Public Utilities Director Gary Duck says they are. The elevation brings the manholes above flood level next to the Trail Creek/ North Oconee River confluence, making service access easier and mitigating the possibilities for sewage overflows 4 FLAGPOLE.COM-APRIL 20,2011