Gwinnett County. Real estate. Property. Foreclosure. Foreclose. Credit and credit cards. Travel. Florida panhandle vacations. Panama City Beach, Fort Walton Beach, Navarre, Destin, Pensacola Beach. Florida travel, hotel and resort reservations.
* Please submit news specific to the Stone Mountain, Snellville or Lilburn areas of Gwinnett County.

Monthly Meeting With Mike Beaudreau

Share this post by email - No Comments - Add A Comment »

In order to make county government more accessible to its citizens, Commissioner Mike Beaudreau opens his office to district residents on the second Saturday of each month.

His office is loacted in the Gwinnett Justice and Administration Center (GJAC) at 75 Langley Drive in Lawrenceville.

He wants to learn directly from citizens about the issues that are important to them. The informal sessions do not require making an appointment, and are first-come, first served.

Update (08/31/09)

Due to the closing of the GJAC on nights and weekends because of the Gwinnett budget crisis, Mike Beaudreau has had to make scheduling changes to his monthly meetings. The following are the currently scheduled times and locations:
Harbins Park Pavilion, 2995 Luke Edwards Road, Dacula
Sept. 12, 10 a. m. - noon
Oct. 10, 10 a. m. - noon

Five Forks Library meeting room, 2780 Five Forks Trickum Road, Lawrenceville
November 21, 10 a. m. - noon
December 12, 10 a. m. - noon

Mountain Park Depot, 5050 Five Forks Trickum Road, Lilburn
January 9, 10 a. m. - noon

Leave A Reply To “Monthly Meeting With Mike Beaudreau”

You must be a registered user and logged in to post a comment.


Stone Mountain Wal-Mart Gets Facelift

Share this post by email - No Comments - Add A Comment »

If you were wondering what was going on in our local Wal-Mart, wonder no more… The store will soon be sporting the latest and greatest shopping design and customer service experience that corporate Wal-Mart has to offer.

The new layout is directly based upon consumer feedback and will feature a brighter, more open floorplan in every department. Wider aisles, lower profile product shelving, brighter lighting and improved signage are all on tap.

It’s a mess right now, but the makeover is scheduled for completion this coming September.

Leave A Reply To “Stone Mountain Wal-Mart Gets Facelift”

You must be a registered user and logged in to post a comment.


Open Letter From Charles Bannister

Share this post by email - 2 Comments - View And/Or Add A Comment »

Please see the following letter from Gwinnett County Commission Chairman Charles Bannister to Gwinnett County taxpayers about proposed budget cuts. Additional details are available on the County’s website: http://www.gwinnettcounty.com/cgi-bin/gwincty/egov/ep/gcNavView.do?path=Home|Hidden+Page|Service%20Cuts.

July 13, 2009

Dear Fellow Gwinnett County Taxpayer:

Earlier this year, your Board of Commissioners approved a 2009 budget and a five-year financial plan designed to fund the Unified Plan and sustain and bolster our dynamic community. Despite incorporating $40 million in cuts and fee increases, that budget recognized the need for a millage rate increase, and in May we conducted three public hearings on that proposed tax increase. The public input we received directed the Board to task county staff with determining how to cut expenditures to avoid a tax increase.

Now we come to the hard work of making the service cuts required by a decision to hold the line on taxes, and I think we have a responsibility to detail for you the service reductions necessitated by these decisions. If implemented, the cuts identified and recommended by county staff will ripple through our budgets and services for many years to come.

As citizens, you will see the result of these decisions in a variety of ways, ranging from noticeable cutbacks in park maintenance to longer fire and EMS response times, as departments attempt to service a still-growing population with a static or reduced workforce. The recommended cuts are detailed in the accompanying tables, and the county commission is scheduled to vote on them on July 21.

If approved, we will eliminate more than 250 full-time positions by the end of 2009 and entirely phase out the Department of Corrections by July 1, 2011. Those state prisoners will be moved to state correctional facilities. Planned growth in our police, fire, and EMS operations will be delayed. The police department’s authorized strength of 740 will be cut back to 687, which provides coverage equivalent to our services level in 2003. As our county continues to grow, the impact of these cuts in public safety will inevitably be slower response times.

There will be no staff salary increases in 2010. At the same time, the county’s internal support functions - County Administrator, Finance, IT, Human Resources, Support Services, and Law - will be tasked to cut personnel by 15.4 percent and all costs by 9.6 percent. Parks and Recreation will have to cut staffing by 9.1 percent. The hold-the-line budget also means that the county will not be able to fund any new judgeships or expansions in the operations of our constitutional officers through 2014. We would also cut local transit operations by 21 percent and express service by six percent. If these reductions are insufficient to balance the budget in the coming years, we will consider even deeper cuts.

Obviously, these are not trivial decisions, and they will impact the quality of life and economic vitality of Gwinnett County for decades to come. I have been in public service for more than 34 years, as a mayor, a state legislator and, for the past five years, chairman of the county commission. In all that time, I have voted for only one tax hike, an increase in the state’s tobacco tax.

I am well aware of the public response generated by the proposed tax increase. I continue to believe it is necessary to meet the public needs of our county. That having been said, the challenge now is to make deep cuts in county operations and service delivery to balance lost revenues.

Respectfully,

Charles E. Bannister, Chairman
Gwinnett County Board of Commissioner

2 Responses To “Open Letter From Charles Bannister”

  1. j.q.public Says:

    The BoC is cutting essential services and making it sound as though we are the ones who asked for it. Had the BoC properly informed the public about the $60 million dollar Gwinnett Braves stadium deal chances are good that we probably wouldn’t be in this mess right now.

    It’s time the BoC drop the patronizing attitude, accept responsibility for their misappropriations and do their best to make amends.

    It’s up to fellow Gwinnettians to remember these deeds next election and ensure that history is not allowed to repeat itself.

  2. fwy545 Says:

    Now Bert Nasuti is claiming that he is being inundated with email from his constituents begging for a tax hike.

    He should be especially proud of how he hoodwinked us Gwinnettians and squandered our $60 million.

    Do these people not have a conscience?

Leave A Reply To “Open Letter From Charles Bannister”

You must be a registered user and logged in to post a comment.