Student Scene


Normal Park Makeover "Brings Together" The Community

Monday, April 14, 2008

Bring It Together, sponsored by Suntrust Bank and the Community Foundation, is a renovation project for Normal Park Museum Magnet School that is literally bringing together hundreds of community volunteers from across the city, officials said.

They will spend one week to make over the Chattanooga Middle School building, which will be the upper school for Normal Park Museum Magnet in the fall.

The official kick-off for the project was today, and it gave teams a chance to survey their spaces and start making their plans.

“While on a tour of Normal Park several weeks back, I learned that no funds would be available from the county for rescuing the dilapidated Chattanooga Middle School facility, so I had this idea,” said Josh McManus, project coordinator. “I thought, what if money isn't really the answer? †What if we already have everything we need amongst us to bring that old building back to its original grandeur and possibly go beyond? And that’s exactly what Bring It Together is all about.”

On June 23 at 8 a.m., more than 25 teams of volunteers will meet at the 78-year-old building on the corner of Dallas and Mississippi Avenue and spend the next six days painting walls, building shelves, refurbishing floors and creating an exciting and inviting space for the students who will be attending in the fall. The culmination will be a community open house on Sunday, June 29.

“What made this project particularly appealing to us is that the parents and community are taking charge and making these improvements – we are helping people help themselves, and that is very exciting to us,” said Mike Butler, president and CEO of Suntrust Bank.

In December 2007, the Hamilton County School Board unanimously passed an expansion plan that would grow Normal Park Museum Magnet from Pre-K to 5th, to a Pre-K to 8th program. That included creating a two-campus scenario that would use the current Normal Park school as the lower campus, and the current Chattanooga Middle School as the upper campus.

“We want this building to reflect the dynamic and creative nature of the instruction and we want our students to be inspired and motivated by each space in the school,” said Jill Levine, principal of Normal Park Museum Magnet. “The moment these kids walk in the building they will know this is a special place, and that people care about them and the environment around them.”

Ms. Levine added that next year the upper school building will house the 6th to 8th grades, but in future years it will be 4th through 8th. She expects the Normal Park student body to double in size over next three years, and noted that there is already a waiting list for next year’s 6th grade class.

Currently, more than 30 builders and designers are signed on for this project. Builders include The Strauss Company, Sexton Construction, HGH Construction, Blaine Construction, Collier Construction, Humphrey’s & Associates, Kuebler Builders, Inc., The Counts Co., Blue Hammer, Eastman Construction, Hudson Companies, Inc., Eady Construction, SKH Construction, P&C Construction, Dimensions Design, and EMJ Corporation.

Designers include Franklin & Associates, Artech Design Group, Kevin Vaughn, Elemi, Ann Weeks, Interior Environments, Brooke Bradley-King, Ivan Allen Workspace, Derthlick, Henley & Wilkerson Architects, Sean Thompson, Yessick’s, May May McGuire, Heather Adams, Katie Pratt, and Nena Locascio.

Additionally, many area businesses and civic groups are adopting spaces or providing volunteers for the week, including the North Chattanooga Chamber of Commerce, Hunt Nissan, the Blister Sisters, Northshore Fellowship, and students from the UTC School of Design.

“I am truly overwhelmed by the generosity of the Chattanooga community,” said Ms. Levine. “People are really stepping up and proving that they care about our public schools and care about the future of our children. It is really the most amazing gift any school administrator could hope for.”

For volunteer or sponsorship information on Bring It Together, contact Susan Taylor at 290-5912, or email taylor_susan@hcde.org.


Alexander: “President Should Turn Around His Higher Ed ‘Race to the Top’ And Head It Toward Washington”

In a speech on the Senate floor Thursday, Senator Lamar Alexander (R-Tn.) said President Obama’s higher-education Race to the Top was headed “in the wrong direction” and urged the President to “turn [it] around…and head it in the direction of Washington, D.C., to help the federal government compete for ways to stop adding mandates and costs on States that are soaking up dollars ... (click for more)

Center For Creative Arts Prepares For Upcoming Auditions

The Center for Creative Arts, Hamilton County School’s Performing and Visual Arts Magnet School, are holding their annual auditions for hopeful young artist writers and performers.  The school, recently named one of the four top Performing and Visual Arts schools in America by the International Network of Arts Schools, admits students in five arts areas. The areas ... (click for more)

Judge Hollingsworth Rules Littlefield Recall Effort Invalid, Cancels August Mayoral Election

Circuit Court Judge Jeff Hollingsworth on Friday afternoon ruled that the effort to recall Mayor Ron Littlefield was invalid and he canceled a planned special mayoral election in August to replace him. He said the city had not properly enacted the recall provision in its charter and said, even if it had, the city did not have power to set up a two-step recall provision instead ... (click for more)

12 Attorneys In The Running For Judge Appointment

Twelve attorneys have applied for an interim appointment as judge in General Sessions Court. The deadline was noon today. Attorneys Valerie Epstein and Ron Powers were the latest to enter their names.  David Norton and Mike Acuff applied on Thursday. Others to apply are attorneys Bryan Hoss, Lloyd Stanley, Gary Starnes, Rob Philyaw and Patricia ... (click for more)

In Defense Of Discretionary Spending

Dear Roy,   I am flattered that you and I think a lot alike and that we both use the same 'Rule Book.'  I also agree with you that it is healthy to offer differing opinions.  However, I disagree with you on the issue of discretionary spending.   I did not see you at the Hamilton County Pachyderm Club meeting on Monday.  Sorry that I did not see you ... (click for more)

Roy Exum: Stop The Emissions Hoax

Eva Milligan, just one of very many across the state who are fed up with Tennessee’s ridiculous auto emissions effort, wrote a letter to Chattanoogan.com last week that painfully told how she had spent over $1,000 to get her 1997 Ford Ranger through the scam and how she was still unsuccessful. She also pointed out such testing is fruitless – except to government coffers – and ... (click for more)