Recent Graduate, Experienced Journalist and Competitive Fly Fisherman

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Gatlinburg wastewater treatment leakage halted

Contaminated water from the Gatlinburg wastewater treatment plant is no longer flowing into the little pigeon river. Last night at around 7:30 p.m. wastewater treatment was restored and sewage is no longer heading for the Little Pigeon River.

Following the early morning of April 5 rainfall across the South, two Veolia Water North America employees, John D. Eslinger, 53 and Donald A. Storey, 44 died in a basin wall collapse at the Gatlinburg sewage treatment plant.

Four employees from Veolia Water were attempting to perform a high flow routine; a standard procedure where workers make adjustments to valves in a wastewater basin that helps equalize the contents of each basin. A wall holding untreated wastewater collapsed around 9 a.m.

Around 2.61 inches of rain fell at the nearby Gatlinburg visitor center, leading some to believe the tank could not disperse the treated sewage into other tanks, to balance out the load.

The cause of the collapse is still under investigation, both internally and by the Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Development. Other agencies are performing individual investigations.

“The Department of Labor has been on the scene since early Tuesday morning. They will conduct interviews with other employees, review logs and the companies disaster mitigation strategy,” says Jeff Hentschel. From the Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce,

Gatlinburg Mayor Mike Helton asked the community of Gatlinburg to join him in keeping the deceased in there thoughts and prayers. He praised the city and Veolia Water for “pulling together an excellent team to determine what happened and move forward.

It typically takes around 6 to 8 weeks to perform a complete and thorough investigation, which will then be made public. The Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation is investigating the environmental impacts of the spill. The Environmental Protection Agency has also been on site to investigate.

“This does not impact the drinking water supply”, John West, of TDEC says. There have been warning signs posted by the river for bacteriological contamination, but as West explained this is posted every swimming season. It does not change activity on the river.

The city has requested that businesses and individuals conserve water.

“The number one priority now is to mitigate the environmental impact and to work to bring the waste water treatment plant back online, ” says Cindy Ogle, Gatlinburg City Manager.

According to Dale Phelps, Utilities Manager for the City of Gatlinburg, a chlorination process began where liquid bleach is added as a disinfectant to the sewage discharge. This started last night, April 6 at the recommendation of TDEC and is ongoing. “We have sampled stream flow to determine the correct amount of disinfectant and have adjusted accordingly,” says Phelps.

Bob Miller, National Park Service Management Assistant stated, “to my knowledge the Little Pigeon River has never been sampled in the park. This does not affect the native brook trout, which reside in high elevation streams. It could affect the rainbow and brown trout which are not native to the area.” No one from the National Park Service has gone to check on the fish habitat in the Little Pigeon River.”

Keavin Nelson, President of Veolia Water North America, East Region stated that the company takes this situation very seriously.

“We have extended support to the families and made grief counseling available to them and the affected employees.”

Andrew Brown Feature Story

I’ve got a few more edits to make, but they are minor. I think the story looks and sounds pretty good.

I’ve gotten to know Andrew pretty well over the last few months and he is a great kid.

http://www.facebook.com/#!/video/video.php?v=1599885562476&comments

I hope you enjoy it.

Best Regards,

Tucker Horne

Ski Story

Hello All,

I’ve been job hunting recently and have been happy with the results, although I still haven’t found that “Dream Job”. I’m confident that I will find something that will suit my tastes for the next few years, I’ve had some great feed back from potential employers around the United States, and around the world.

I’ve been working hard on my demo reel preparing it for the Journalism jobs i’m applying for.

Here is my latest story:

http://www.westerncarolinian.com/photo-galleries-video

The video is the top one!

The semester has started off well, and i’m excited that I will be done in May. It looks like I will be learning a ton, and it won’t be an easy semester.

I’m excited to be traveling to several big fly fishing tournaments in the coming months.

Best Regards,

Tucker

National College Media Convention-2010

I just returned from Louisville, Ky. with 3 TV62 staff members. We all went to numerous sessions about a number of media topics.

I benefited the most from a session about FBI interviewing stratagies. I learned 4 things that will help get more information out of sources. We talked about the psychology of these 4 things:

1. Mirror how they are acting- If you are interviewing someone about something that they are comfortable with, the interviewee will remain close to you and appear unphased. If you are sitting down and they cross your legs and lean forward, it is a good idea that you cross your leg, subtly. Subconciously, it will make them feel more relaxed. If they lean forward, they are probably trying to tell you something that they want to be made very clear, allow them to get into this space by leaning forward. You don’t want to do this in a mocking fashion, and you want to give ample time between these gestures so they don’t think you are.

2. Ask “how” questions, not “why” questions- How questions

3. Go into the interview with no objectivity, not no clue!

4. Revisit questions that aren’t answered in a “tight” manner

Best Regards,

Tucker Horne

Chancellor Search

I went to the chancellor search forum for students and community members. I was very happy to leave a mark and make an impact on the chancellor search. I want to see the best for Western Carolina University.

http://www.citizen-times.com/article/20101123/NEWS/311230043

Best Regards,

Tucker Horne

Photo’s on the Parkway

I went up during the meteor shower to take some pictures. I was unsucccessful in capturing any of the meteor shower but I did snap these pictures.

The Source from Nov. 5th

I’ve been working very hard trying to get the news show back up and running this semester. We’ve had a lot of staff turnover at TV62 and i’m proud to have this going once again.

http://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=1507339248876&oid=256223313180

Print Story, College of Arts and Sciences Awards

Western Carolina University College of Arts and Sciences honors 5 distinguished alumni

Tucker Horne

Reporter

A glass plaque was awarded to 6 former students, from a variety of departments within the college of arts and science to kick off the Western Carolina homecoming celebration.

Five came to the ceremony and talked with students and faculty about their success after graduating from Western Carolina. In the group of recipients, five of the eight recipients went on in their educational journey to obtain a doctorate degree.

The awards were given to alumni in Math, Geosciences, Chemistry, English, History, Modern Foreign Language, Political Science and Biology.

Dr. Carl Mummert, a 2000 graduate of the Math and Computer Science program has held post-doctoral positions at Appalachian State University and the University of Michigan. He authored a book about “Reverse Mathematics”. This book is used in upper level mathematics classrooms around the world. He has served multiple terms on the WCU Honors College advisory board.

“I’m grateful for what Western Carolina has done for me, and the region” says Mummert. “ I got a quality education for a fair price”.

Dr. Craig Harper is a 1990 graduate of the wildlife management program at WCU. After graduation, he obtained a masters degree in Biology from the University of North Carolina at Wilmington and then later went on to receive his post-doctorate degree from Clemson University. He is currently a professor of wildlife management at the University of Tennessee. He specializes in White-tailed deer management.

 “Western Carolina provided me with a place to go and explore my surroundings, which was just the beginning to what I’d consider a successful career,” Harper told the audience after accepting his award.

The recipient for the chemistry and physical science department was Dr. James L. Breece. Breece graduated in 1967 with his bachelor’s degree in Chemistry.  He currently resides in Waynesville, North Carolina, which is home to Holston Fuel Company, the first of many companies he would later start. Before he became an entrepreneur he served in the military.

English major and author, Nick Taylor graduated from Western Carolina University in 1967 and has since written, John Glenn: A Memoir, a book that was once on the New York Times Best- Seller List. Taylor found writing success in non-fiction writing. He has written about the history of the laser, including the intricacies of the 30-year patent war that ensued after its success. Taylor’s most recent novel, American Made is relevant to the current economic times. It is a novel that talks about how the Works Progress Administration put Americans back to work in the 30’s.

Jesse Lankford, North Carolina State Archivist, graduated from Western Carolina University in 1969. He has helped the state make the transition to digital record filing.

 “the process has been long and tedious, but it is the way of the future,” Lankford said

North Carolina has been considered a leader in arranging, describing, preserving, and making accessible digital records.

The recipient for the department of modern foreign languages, Dr. Laura Klatt House later went on to obtain her Medical Doctorate from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She also completed a Masters degree in Public Health Leadership. She is a Fellow in the UNC Department of Family Medicine.

The Political Science Recipient, Leslie Anderson graduated from Western Carolina in 1985 with a Masters degree in Public Affairs. She was included in the Asheville Citizen-Times “Western Carolina’s 50 most influential people of the century”. She was responsible for securing investments, establishing the Asheville downtown association, and administering the annual festivals and special events in downtown Asheville.

Dr. Paul Barton, recipient from the biology department led a long and distinguished career as a professor of cellular biology at the University of Kansas. Barton was unable to attend the ceremony.

Some Graphics

I’ve been doing a lot of work to spruce up the TV62 news show, The Source. Here are some components of the graphics package that I’ve created.

This is all new to me. I’m somewhat familiar with photoshop, but this is a new application of my skills. The graphic will receive a bit of tweaking.

I’m pleased with the overall look.

That is a stock image under the graphics, it isn’t me.

Fall Fishing

I’ve been lucky the last week. I’ve been pretty busy, but have had enough time to squeeze some fishing into my routine. This past Tuesday, the Tuckaseegee river was stocked. This was the first year I’ve been able to experience a brute stock. A brute stock is done in delayed harvest waters once every four years. The fish are bigger, and most are more aggressive. On most days over the past week, I’ve been able to catch a slam (A brook, brown and rainbow).

Thats about a 24 inch rainbow trout with very nice color.

I took a close friend, Shannon Christy fishing today. She caught her first trout on a fly rod, I think she’s hooked.

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