The Daily Citizen, Dalton, GA

Local News

May 2, 2009

Eton looking forward to growth

ETON — Before Billy Cantrell was elected to the City Council in 2002, he said the small burg above Chatsworth was “financially distressed” and had to get TAN (Tax Anticipation Note) funding to pay its bills.

Since then the city’s budget has increased from $180,000 a year to around $1.3 million a year.

“There are mixed emotions about a small town,” Cantrell, now Eton’s mayor, told the Rotary Club of Chatsworth-Murray County recently. “Some people don’t want to see the city grow,” he said. “Some have said, ‘You’re bringing in schools (referring to Bagley Middle School and an effort to annex the new North Murray High), but you can’t run a city off residential taxes.’ But new residences will draw growth from businesses who come in to meet their needs.”

Cantrell said credit should be given to former sole commissioner (and now Chatsworth mayor) Tyson Haynes, who envisioned Eton as an area where growth could happen. In his first year on the City Council, Cantrell said he saw infrastructure stretched from Eton to the Franklin Corners area, where Highways 225 and 286 intersect and Bagley Middle and Woodlawn Elementary School are situated.

“We said, ‘Let’s take the sewage (lines) and capitalize on it’ for growth,” he said of the council. “We can grow for about two-and-a-half years on what we have now — land and infrastructure — but if we don’t plan now the growth will stop and that will hurt us. Tyson (as mayor) and (commissioner) David Ridley have agreed to put growth wherever possible, and I think we can capitalize on that.”

Cantrell said he plans to present the idea of annexation to property owners west of Eton, where lines of infrastructure are in place along Highway 286 to service the schools. He also hopes to offset a loss in revenue from the in-town carpet mills — in work force reduction and lower franchise fees — by luring retail businesses and restaurants.

“Super Saver (a grocery store chain) has signed a contract to purchase property, and they have told me they will employ 22 folks from this county, including a manager,” he said. “I think that will be a perfect fit for Eton and the surrounding communities.”

Cantrell said he is also trying to get a steakhouse in town.

“Fatz (Cafe) has not said no,” he reported of the chain of eateries in several Southern states. “The bad thing is the economy we’re in — it makes them hesitant to make a move right now.”

Local News
  • Pinewood  derby  3 mlh.jpg Derby time

    Owen Halman, 8, of Dalton, lines up his car “Fire Bullet” before a race during the Boy and Cub Scouts grand championship Pinewood Derby Saturday at First Presbyterian Church.

    March 20, 2010 1 Photo

  • Home painting 3 mlh.jpg Helpin’ and paintin’

    With his bracket busted and interest in the men’s college basketball tournament waning, Pierce Montgomery spent Saturday re-painting the Dalton home of a Vietnam veteran who couldn’t do the work himself.

    March 20, 2010 2 Photos

  • DSC officials explain possible cuts

    Dalton State College officials know the state budget cuts they planned for almost a month ago won’t be as deep as expected. What they don’t know is exactly which of the proposed cuts they’ll have to implement.

    March 20, 2010

  • Education funding 037-color-SUNDAY.jpg Higher education funding is at center of debate

    More than 4,000 students, including several at Dalton State College, have banded together to push back against proposed state cuts to higher education funding.

    March 20, 2010 1 Photo

  • Local officials view possible cuts at college with concern

    Dalton State College plays a big part in plans by local leaders to grow and diversify the area’s economy, so they are viewing proposed cuts to the college with some concern.

    March 20, 2010

  • Habitat groundbreaking 4 mlh.jpg Young couple awaits Habitat for Humanity home

    Luis Sanchez knows how the Gutierrez family feels as they watch their house being built by the Dalton-Whitfield Habitat For Humanity.

    March 20, 2010 1 Photo

  • Superintendent decision coming Monday night

    The Richland 2 school board in Columbia, S.C., has chosen a superintendent — Whitfield County Schools superintendent Katie Brochu was one of three finalists — but won’t publicly say who it is until Monday, according to The State newspaper.

    March 20, 2010

  • Area arrests for March 21

    Recent arrests from the Whitfield and Murray County jail reports.
     

    March 20, 2010

  • Marilyn Helms: Companies vary on correcting products, services

    In the first half of my column on my Dalton State College quality management systems class quality “problems” project, I discussed the situations that companies did not resolve.

    March 20, 2010

  • “Do You Remember?” cast announced

    Members of Dalton Dance Company will perform in Dalton Arts Project’s “Do You Remember?” spring concert — a look back at the music they grew up with as well as the music enjoyed by previous generations of teenagers (now parents and grandparents). 

    March 20, 2010

Community Calendar

Loading…
Events by eviesays.com

AP Video