CULLMAN —
After reading the guest column in last Sunday's paper, I appreciate the writer's
concern for those who would be affected by a potential Duck River project, but I find it
sad that the writer seemed to have no such concern for the rest of the taxpayers of
Cullman County who have just seen their water system taken over by an unelected cartel.
The people's near-unanimous opposition to Wayne Willingham and Doug
Williams' actions has never been about Duck River or Smith Lake or even the
Tennessee River. People are angry because, in a backroom deal in the dead of night,
Willingham and Williams stole Cullman County's water system and $30 million in assets
from the people and handed it over to an unelected board.
The people of Cullman County have made their voices heard on this issue over
and over and over again: they are opposed to the GUSC and SCCD cartels controlling
their water. They are opposed to the way that this deal was set up away from the public
eye. It was illegal and it was dead wrong.
Now, Willingham and Williams are forcing the taxpayers to pay their personal
legal bills to the tune of $172,000 now and possibly millions down the road. They are
forcing the taxpayers to foot the bill for a contract of hundreds of thousands of dollars for
David Bussman as the head of the GUSC/SCCD. They are forcing the entire county to
purchase water from their unelected SCCD cartel, meaning they can jack up rates as
much as they want whenever they want. This is unacceptable.
This should have been a local issue decided by the people. However, the two
commissioners' decision to set up permanent unelected boards has made it a legislative
issue. I reaffirm my commitment to pass a constitutional amendment that will let the
people vote to take back their water and set things back like they were. It is not my job to
determine what our future water source will be, but it is always my job to protect
Cullman County taxpayers from people trying to milk the system for personal profit. This
corruption must be stopped. The opposition to this corruption goes across party lines:
both Democrat and Republican county commission candidates have taken a stand
against this water takeover.
I hesitate to guess what Wayne Willingham and Doug Williams have planned for
their special Commission meeting next Tuesday, Oct. 19 but their past actions suggest
that whatever it is will not be good for Cullman County. The people sent Willingham and
Williams a message at the ballot box, but they continue to ignore that.
Next Tuesday's meeting is a great chance to remind them of that message: give
back our water. The people of Cullman County should determine the future of our water
- not unelected boards, not two rejected County Commissioners, not judicial activists on
the Supreme Court. I, for one, will do whatever it takes to set things right and take back
our water.
‰ Zeb Little is a state senator from Cullman who serves as Senate Majority Leader.
Opinion
The people should decide future of our water
- Opinion
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Teamwork leads to great achievements
By Dr. Jan Harris
TEAM – Together Everyone Achieves More. Cullman City Schools is honored to be the only school district in the nation to receive the TEAM AWARD 2011 by the Consortium of School Networking (CoSN), Washington, DC, because of our students’ increased academic achievement due to teamwork. Our mission, in Cullman City Schools (CCS), is to work together as a team to inspire students for lifelong success through character, citizenship and scholarship.
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PLAYBACK: Will Hoge’s ‘Wreckage’ puts all the pieces together
On his sixth proper studio album, southern rocker Will Hoge is fitting nicely into the groove he has carved out over the previous decade, crawling from bar to bar across the nation playing mostly sold out shows.
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PLAYBACK:The Beach Boys' Pet Sounds a great summer album
No one could make a more pleasing sound for memorable summers than The Beach Boys.
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PLAYBACK: The Wallflowers saved the best for last
Known mostly for his famous father, Jakob Dylan built his early career simultaneously riding musical coattails, and trying to escape the thousand-foot shadow cast by his father.
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Playback: Songs about ... Talking Heads
Talking Heads came to life in the shadowy rubble of New York’s CBGB, where bands such as the Ramones found a welcoming audience.
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Playback: Blind Boys of Alabama return with reassuring sound, and a few guests
There’s something basic and reassuring about old-time gospel music. That statement is especially true of songs by the Blind Boys of Alabama, winners of six Grammys, including the 2009 Lifetime Achievement Award.
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Playback: Look past the drama, give Kanye a chance
Can we get much higher?” Before this year’s My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy, the instinctive response to Kanye West’s album-opening question would had to have been “no.”
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Black Lab keep the 90s alt-rock torch burning
What year is it? 2011? Well, don’t tell California-based rock band Black Lab, because as far as they know, flannel and Doc Marten boots are still in style.
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Introducing Peace Orchestra
So here's Peace Orchestra. There's no reason why anyone here or anywhere should have heard of Peace Orchestra. There's no snob factor or co-opting of pop esoterica in that statement—Peace Orchestra was never big here, and most people who know and love it found it by accident. One album was all we got, not counting the inevitable various-artists remix homage paid to that one-shot landmark disc. An eponymous cd, the largely instrumental set is a slow, ethereal burn — one laden with too much energy and surface tension to dismiss as mere chill-out music. It rewards casual, volume-down background listening, but that isn't where Peace Orchestra shines. Put on the headphones or, well, turn it up, man.
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Buying local — ‘the best value’
By Rickey Kreps
The Cullman community is in the solid position that we are today because we charted our future based on what we could do for ourselves. Take for example the foresight to purchase land and develop the industrial parks — not with a handout but with local funds. Responsible budgeting and expenditures prevented our community from taking on long term debts that we could not pay. We’re now hearing from our legislators in both Montgomery and Washington DC that severe belt tightening is on the horizon. We’ll need to figure out ways to do more for ourselves. - More Opinion Headlines
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Teamwork leads to great achievements


