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January

Friday, Jan 30th Tennessee’s EFS application window open Tennessee’s Education Freedom Scholarship (EFS) application window for the 2026–2027 school year is open. Families who are already EFS beneficiaries and wish to renew for the 2026–2027 school year can begin submitting their renewal applications now. On Jan. 13, 2026, the application window opens for students who are not currently receiving an EFS scholarship. All applications must be submitted by Jan. 30. For questions related to all available school choice programs, call 615-741-5158 and select the prompts for Office of Programs and School Choice or e-mail EFS.Questions@tn.gov
Saturday, Jan 31st Snowflake Ball The CAC Office on Aging’s Senior Companion Program will host its annual Snowflake Ball on Saturday, Jan. 31, from 6 to 9:30 p.m. at the Rothchild Conference Center, 8807 Kingston Pike in Knoxville. Dance the night away at this fundraising event benefitting the Senior Companion Program. The Snowflake Ball will feature the Ensemble Swingtime Band, dinner and a silent auction. Attendees also vote for their favorite Snowflake Ball king and queen nominees and watch the crowning to close out the evening. For tickets and more information, visit knoxseniors.org.

February

Sunday, Feb 8th The Ends We Seek The Farragut Museum has partnered with WordPlayers, a Knoxville nonprofit theatre organization, for a production of The Ends We Seek, by Ethan Norman on Sunday, Feb. 8 at 1:30 at the Farragut Community Center, 239 Jamestowne Blvd.
Saturday, Feb 21st Town of Farragut Quilt Show The public is invited to the Town of Farragut Quilt Show, which will take place at the Farragut Community Center Saturday, Feb. 21 through Sunday, Feb. 22. This free event is open to the public from 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday and 1-4 p.m. Sunday. To apply to submit a quilt for the show, complete the application at townoffarragut.org/townevents. Deadline to apply is Friday, Jan. 23.

March

Tuesday, Mar 3rd Tennessee Artists Association scholarship Tennessee Artists Association is offering a $500 scholarship to a deserving senior to be used at any two-year or four-year technical school, college or university or independent study toward a certificate or degree in the arts. Applications now are available and are due by Tuesday, March 3. The Official TAA Scholarship application form is available from: taa.findout@gmail.com/scholarship. Additional information can be found at Tennessee Artists Association website: tnartists.org or by e-mail at TAAfindout@gmail.com.
Saturday, Mar 28th Sunshine Open Sunshine Services invites golfers, businesses and community partners to participate in and sponsor the Sunshine Open: $1,000,000 Hole-in-One Challenge & Golf Tournament on Saturday, March 28, at Avalon Golf & Country Club. This inaugural event raises funds to support Sunshine Services’ mission of providing person-centered supports for individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Team and corporate sponsorship packages are available. Visit www.sunshineservicesknox.org for registration and sponsorship details.

April

Wednesday, Apr 1st “Farragut Focus: A Creative Community” The Farragut Museum has opened a new temporary exhibit on Farragut artists titled “Farragut Focus: A Creative Community.” The exhibit features local artists including visual, performing, musical, etc., and will be open through April. The Farragut Museum is open Tuesday – Saturday 11 am – 2 pm, and admission is free.

Mayor reflects

Nearly 10 years into his service to the town, Farragut Mayor Ron Williams said the job has centered on steady improvement — often slow, sometimes frustrating, but measurable. “My job was to roll up my sleeves and get to work on fixing everything that needed to be fixed,” Williams said of his time in office. As he approaches the end of his term in August 2026, the mayor said there still are projects he hopes to see completed. “There’s things I’d like to see done before I’m gone,” he said. “But everything has to go through the public discussion.” Williams was first elected in 2016 as an alderman, then two years later, he was elected mayor in 2018. His first task was the corner of Kingston Pike and Campbell Station Road. “There’s been a lot done in the past 10 years,” Williams said, reflecting on what the town looked like when he first took office. He credited former Vice Mayor Louise Povlin, now a Farragut Municipal Planning Commission member, with focusing on ordinances and zoning reforms while he concentrated on roads and building improvements. “I worked on the building portion of it and the roads,” Williams said. “When we were first elected, we had 16 substandard roads. Now, what we have left is four, and two of those have been partially done; one of them is under way and another has a grant to fix it.”

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Concord UMC helps neighbors in times of need

Concord Methodist Church was on a mission this month with a bevy of 25 projects to help its community during its 12th Annual Mission Blitz. “It’s a way to honor the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy of serving,” CUMC missions director Jane Currin said. “We had 27 projects going on from Friday, Jan. 16, to Monday, Jan. 19. “We want to love and serve our neighbors, and a response to Jesus’ love for us, we encourage our members to participate in serving and helping us love our community,” she said. While 500 signed up, more people came to lend a hand. “[Friday] night, we had 97 people here, sorting and bagging sweet potatoes for the crop drop, and we had 18 here decorating spider plant pots and gifts for nurses at East Tennessee Children’s Hospital,” Currin said. “They’re making Valentine’s Day cards for [the nurses] later this weekend. “We packed 40,000 pounds of sweet potatoes into 10-pound bags, and they’re going to 47 pantries and feeding ministries in eight counties and a place in Kentucky,” the director said. For the children at ETCH, volunteers made a craft activity bag and hygiene toiletry kits. “Lots of times kids who come in don’t have anything, so they give them a little brush, toothbrush, shampoo and a small deodorant,” Currin said. “Just those small necessities you need when you end up some place unexpected. The hospital can’t afford to provide those things anymore so we make those kits.”

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News

Town earns ‘clean’ audit for 2025  Read More

Board retreat charts 2026 vision  Read More

Golf simulators may soon tee off in Farragut’s office district  Read More

Farragut BOMA backs brick rule amendment  Read More

Museum tour group  Read More

KCSO police reports  Read More

Farragut Museum donation  Read More

School

Tennessee Scholars Bowl airs new season  Read More

Business

Apex Bank invests in Farragut market  Read More

Provisions offers unique, quality apparel, gifts for all  Read More

Community

Mayor reflects  Read More

Concord UMC helps neighbors in times of need  Read More

Rotary Club inducts new members  Read More

Sports

Lady Admirals deliver win no. 300  Read More

Admirals clamp down, move on  Read More

Hazelbaker throws a haymaker  Read More

Ads rally to clip wildcats  Read More

Halls halts Farragut  Read More

Bearden’s guards fire up 24th win  Read More

Bulldogs blaze past hawks  Read More

CAK programs rout CCS on Senior Night  Read More

McNealy magic: Lady Ads beat HVA in 2OT thriller  Read More

Vining leads Ads past HVA  Read More