About 100 volunteers, from veterans to families and Scouts, arrived at Pleasant Forest Cemetery to lay wreaths on the graves of veterans as part of this year’s national Wreaths Across America program Saturday morning, Dec. 14. “We’re here to remember not their deaths, but their lives,” said Farragut operations manager Chris Sheffield, a retired Air Force officer. “Each wreath is a gift of our appreciation from a grateful America.” Participants were asked to step up to the grave, place the wreath, say aloud the name of the veteran and thank him for his service. Dave Stinton, Pleasant Forest Cemetery caretaker, along with cemetery board members provided cards, each with information about a veteran and where his grave is located in the cemetery, to those laying wreaths. Town Mayor Ron Williams said there were 278 wreaths being placed on veterans’ graves in Farragut. Along with Pleasant Forest, wreaths also were laid on veterans’ graves at Virtue Cumberland Presbyterian Church Cemetery along Evans Road and Grigsby Chapel Cemetery. Among those laying wreaths were Williams, District 5 Knox County Commissioner Angela Russell, District 5 Knox County Board of Education rep Lauren Morgan and Brad Hair, representing Knox County Mayor Glenn Jacobs’ Office.
Read MoreWith Town traffic congestion something most Farragut citizens must tackle, it was a local businesswoman and chair of Shop Farragut/Farragut Business Alliance asking a key question concerning technology originally scheduled to be completed earlier this fall, which would better time traffic light changes and help alleviate congestion. “What’s going on with the lights, the traffic and the craziness?” Candace Viox, owner of Water into Wine bistro and lounge, asked Town administrator David Smoak during the SF/FBA meeting in Farragut Community Center Wednesday morning, Dec. 11. “I see it at (North) Campbell Station (Road) on Grigsby Chapel (Road), especially at school time. And then everybody’s making a left (from Grigsby to North Campbell) trying to get on the freeway, and it backs all the way up. And I get to hear about it all the time,” she added. “So the contractor is five months behind schedule,” Smoak answered. “We are still waiting on them to finish their main work to get done. When they finish, then we will have a timing plan, all these other new things that are going to come with that we’ll be able to put in place. And then we’ll actually have access to it from a staff point to where we can make adjustments as we need to.
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