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COFFEE COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION Work Session / Special Called Meeting
COFFEE COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION
1343 McArthur Street
Manchester, Tennessee 37355
Telephone: 931-723-5150 Facsimile: 931-723-8285
TO: All Board Members
FROM: Brett Henley, Chairman
SUBJECT: Work Session / Special Called Meeting
DATE: July 1, 2019
TIME: 4:30 p.m.
PLACE: Coffee County Board of Education
WORK SESSION AGENDA
I. Call to Order
II. Agenda Items
1. Director of Schools Selection
SPECIAL CALLED MEETING AGENDA
I. Agenda Items
1. Director of Schools Selection
Coffee County CHS Cheerleaders Capture Honors at Summer Camp

Members of the Coffee County CHS Cheer squad[Photo provided]

Coffee County CHS All-American cheerleaders Paige Botts(left) And Ryan Green(right) [Photo provided]
Individually, Paige Botts and Ryan Green were selected as All-Americans. Brooke Gwinn and Emmalise Raymer were each recognized for their hard work and sportsmanship with the UCA Pin It Forward Award. The pins are selected by cheerleaders from other squads at the camp.
Sounds Let Lead Slip Away Late in New Orleans
After tying the game and building a lead late, the Nashville Sounds let it slip away, as the New Orleans Baby Cakes scored five runs in the bottom of the eighth to beat the Sounds 8-5 on Sunday afternoon at the Shrine on Airline. The five-game set now is even at two wins apiece.
The Sounds trailed 3-1 after five innings but rallied over the next three frames to take a 5-3 lead. In the sixth, Eli White doubled and scored on a wild pitch, and Tyler Pill nailed a game-tying RBI double off the wall in right to make it 3-3. Then Nolan Fontana blasted a home run leading off the seventh and drew a bases-loaded walk against Brian Moran in the eighth for a 5-3 advantage.
New Orleans turned the game upside down with a five-run eighth against Jake Petricka, who had combined with starter Tim Dillard for a perfect seventh. The Cakes knocked out six hits in the eighth and led 8-5 by the end of the frame. Dillard left in line for a win but got a no-decision with his third quality start of the year. He gave up three runs – all in the third – over 6 1/3 innings and walked none. Moran got the win, and Tyler Kinley saved it for New Orleans.
The five-game series concludes Monday night at 7:00 CT. Phillips Valdez (1-6, 5.88) will pitch for the Sounds (30-45), and Hector Noesi (7-3, 2.87) is scheduled for New Orleans (42-34).
Post-Game Notes
Carlos Tocci drove in a run with a sac fly but went 0-for-4, snapping his hitting streak at eight and his on-base streak at 20 games.
The Sounds have hit seven home runs through the first four games of the series, with Nolan Fontana homering in consecutive games
Matt Davidson went 0-for-5 to snap his hitting streak at six games
Tim Dillard is now tied with Seth Maness for the team lead in quality starts (3)
The 2019 season is the 42nd in Nashville Sounds franchise history and first as the Triple-A affiliate of the Texas Rangers. Single-game tickets are available now by calling (615) 690-4487 or by visiting www.nashvillesounds.com.
6/25/19 — Clark Wayne Weatherford
Mr. Clark Wayne Weatherford, 33, passed away
Friday June 21, 2019 in Henderson, Kentucky while traveling for his job. He
was born in Tullahoma, Tennessee on February 27, 1986.
He was preceded in death by his mother, Melissa Ann Clark Weatherford;
grandparents, John and Dorothy Clark, Howard and Joann Weatherford.
He was a LPN employed by Southern Health Partners. He was a member of
Trinity Baptist Church.
He is survived by his sister, Amy and her husband, Jason Vaughan, Medina,
TN; girlfriend, Sarah Smithbauer; nephew, Elliott Vaughan and niece,
Abigail Vaughan; aunt and uncle, Brenda and Charlie Sanders, uncle, Don
Clark; numerous cousins and friends.
Funeral services will be 2:00 PM Tuesday in the Central Funeral Home chapel
with Ministers, Clint Shrum and Brian Wimberley officiating with burial to
follow in the Hillsboro Memorial Cemetery. Visitation: 3:00 PM – 7:00 PM
Monday and Tuesday 12:00 Noon – 2:00 PM at Central Funeral Home,
Manchester, Tennessee. www.centralfuneralhome.com
Central Funeral Home has been entrusted with the arrangements
6/24/19 — Mildred Keasling
Funeral Services for Mrs. Mildred Keasling, age 92, of Hillsboro, TN, will be conducted at 2:00 PM on Monday, June 24, 2019 at Manchester Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Rose Hill Memorial Gardens in Tullahoma, TN. Visitation with the family will be from 11:00 AM until 2:00 PM at the funeral home prior to the service. Mrs. Keasling passed away on Thursday, June 20, 2019, at Horizon Health & Rehab surrounded by her loving family.
Mildred was born in Coffee County to the late Will and Viola Wimley. She was a homemaker and attended Shady Grove Church of Nazarene. She enjoyed playing bingo, reading her bible, going to cook outs, and most of all spending time with her family.
In addition to her parents, Mildred is preceded in death by her husband, Emerett Keasling; five brothers, Roy Wimley, Cardy Wimley, James Wimley, Bernice Wimley, and Willis Wimley; four sisters, Gladys Brinkley, Orene Hill, Anabelle East, and Lula Mae Broyles. She is survived by one son, Paul Sanson; four daughters, Ruth Naron, Linda Richards (William), Louise Thacker, and Emily Hillis; one brother, Kenneth Wimley; two sisters, Reba Jones and Pauline Harmon; 17 grandchildren; 13 great grandchildren.
Manchester Funeral Home is honored to serve the Keasling Family
More on Bonnaroo Related Arrests and Citations
The Coffee County Sheriff’s Department and Manchester Police reported that they wrote a combined 303 citations people during the 2019 Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival. That’s down from the numbers we reported from 2018, which were 381.
Officers, deputies and state troopers made 20 Bonnaroo-related arrests this year, down from 45 in 2018.
Despite some cooler weather during most of Bonnaroo 2019 medical transports were up.
Paramedics and medical staff transported 62 festival-goers to area hospitals, including two who were taken by helicopter during the four-day event.
The ground transports by Coffee County EMS were for a possible ankle fracture, muscle sprains, one complaint of chest pain, among others.
Last year, medics transported 44 people, including three taken by helicopter. The average is around 50 per year.
Wimberley Selected for SCORE Program

Deb Wimberley.. Photo provided
The Tennessee Educator Fellowship is a yearlong program that equips teachers, school counselors, interventionists, and librarians to learn about education policy and advocate for their students and profession. Since the inception of SCORE’s Educator Fellowship program, cohorts have led new education initiatives, advocated for high-quality instructional materials, engaged community stakeholders in conversations centered around literacy and post-secondary opportunities, along with amplifying the voice, presence, and support for educators.
Wanted Man Captured in Franklin County

Jacky Wayne Bean
The man was out of jail on probation after pleading guilty to felony reckless endangerment.
Bean was found late Thursday in Franklin County.
He was previously arrested and sentenced in 2017 after a deadly car chase in Grundy County. Bean was driving with 20-year-old Shelby Comer in the car when Grundy County Sheriff’s Deputy Mike Holmes tried to make a traffic stop. Officials said Bean failed to stop and led a chase. The TBI reported that Grundy County Deputy Mike Holmes fired on the vehicle several times as Bean drove past, and one bullet hit and killed Comer.
Bean was sentenced to probation after pleading guilty to felony reckless endangerment, this after he agreed to testify in a separate murder trial. Bean has agreed to testify, if necessary, in the state’s murder case against Daniel Chandler. Chandler is accused of killing his wife Samantha Kathleen Chandler. Her body was discovered in Grundy County.
Unemployment Up Slightly in Tennessee
Tennessee’s statewide seasonally adjusted unemployment rate for May 2019 inched up slightly to 3.3 percent after remaining at an all-time historic low for three consecutive months, according to data released by the Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Development (TDLWD).
May’s preliminary rate of 3.3 percent is 0.1 of a percentage point higher than the previous month’s rate. Since February, unemployment across the state had held steady at a record 3.2 percent.
When comparing year-to-year statistics, the current rate is 0.3 of a percentage point lower than it was in May 2018.
Total nonfarm employment in Tennessee grew by 3,900 jobs between April and May. The most significant amount of growth occurred in the accommodation/food services and nondurable goods manufacturing sectors.
In a year-to-year comparison, employers created 47,400 nonfarm jobs between May 2018 and May 2019 with the leisure/hospitality, trade/transportation/utilities, and manufacturing seeing the most jobs added.
Nationally, the unemployment rate remained unchanged at 3.6 percent.
Local High Schoolers go to D.C. to learn about the Political Process
Nearly 1,800 high schoolers from rural America packed their suitcases and boarded airplanes and buses bound for Washington, D.C., to learn about the political process, meet elected officials and gained an up-close understanding of U.S. history as they toured numerous monuments and memorials and visited renown sites in and around the D.C. area.
It’s all part of the Electric Cooperative Youth Tour, and DREMC sent students from its coverage area to the event, which ran June 14-20 for Tennessee participants. With around 2,000 national participants, including 10 from DREMC’s service area, and about 250 are adult chaperones, this year’s Washington Youth Tour (WYT) brought unforgettable excitement and education to these young adults.
Scout Bryan and Melanie McKelvey attended the event from Coffee County.