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Respecting the road in front of him
Faith, persistence, safety keys to Barboza’s career
On a stretch of icy road in 2000, Nick Barboza learned a lesson that would impact the rest of his life behind the wheel. The trailer began to slide first, then the tractor followed. In an instant, the truck jackknifed – steel folding against itself, momentum overtaking control. Ice, Barboza would come to understand, demands respect.
Patience, practice paid off during job search
Before Nick Barboza ever trained another driver, he had to learn how to speak for himself – in a language that wasn’t his own. When Barboza arrived in the United States from Mexico, he spoke little English. That made his path to becoming a commercial truck driver more complicated, but not impossible.
Couple takes action for homeless population
For years, the homeless people standing along Chattanooga’s roadsides barely registered in Wyndi White’s mind. She says she noticed them briefly, peripherally, as part of the landscape around traffic lights and intersections – a man holding cardboard near Brainerd Road, someone pushing a shopping cart along South Terrace Avenue, figures gathered near interstate ramps.
News briefs: State seeks poll workers for upcoming elections
Tennessee Secretary of State Tre Hargett is encouraging eligible residents to serve as poll workers ahead of the Aug. 6 State and Federal Primary and County General Elections and the Nov. 3 State and Federal General Election. Poll workers assist with a range of duties during early voting and on Election Day, including greeting voters, checking voter registration information, answering questions, explaining voting procedures, assisting voters when needed and helping process ballots after polls close. Workers are compensated and receive training before Election Day.
UTC Beat: Johnson named assistant women's hoops coach
The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga women’s basketball program has promoted Sydney Johnson from graduate assistant to full-time assistant coach. Johnson joined the staff last summer and helped the Mocs post a 20-11 record and capture the Southern Conference regular-season championship during the 2025-26 season.
Newsmakers: Norton receives CBA’s Liberty Bell Award
The Chattanooga Bar Association recognized community leader Bill Norton with its 2026 Liberty Bell Award during the organization’s annual Law Day Celebration on Wednesday at St. John’s Restaurant. This year’s Law Day theme was “The Rule of Law and the American Dream.”
CPD points to partnerships, tech as crime numbers fall
The Chattanooga Police Department reported sharp declines in violent crime, property crime and overdoses in 2025, while department leaders credited a combination of proactive policing, technology investments and community partnerships for the improvements.
Financial Focus: Saving for Retirement: Are You Guessing or Planning?
Let’s say you dream of spending your retirement mornings on a warm beach, coffee in hand, waves rolling in. To get there, you had a simple plan: save $1 million and buy the beach house you always wanted. But when retirement arrives, reality hits. After accounting for keeping your current home, everyday expenses and health care, $1 million doesn’t stretch as far as you thought, and the beach house remains a dream. The problem wasn’t your discipline – it was that your number was never really your number. It was arbitrary, not anchored to what your ideal retirement would actually cost.
GCR President: Affordability, supply remain challenges
Markets can feel confusing when national headlines point one way and your local experience feels another. That is why this monthly snapshot matters. It highlights what’s changing in the Chattanooga region, including how much is coming to market, how quickly buyers are moving and how pricing is holding up.
Rogers Column Archives: Hats off to the national anthem, but that’s all
I don’t think of myself as a rebel, college alma mater (Hotty toddy!) notwithstanding. But I staged a mini-protest the other night at a Sounds game, by refusing to stand and take off my hat as requested. No, not for the national anthem. I always rise and de-hat for that at games, sometimes even singing along and hitting the occasional right note. But I remained defiantly seated and head-covered for “God Bless America.” I’ll tell you why in a bit.
SEC champ Lady Vols rowers now seek NCAA crown
It’s common to see the University of Tennessee rowing team conducting early-morning workouts on the Tennessee River. The Lady Vols have built their confidence through every stroke and they are reaping the rewards. After capturing their first SEC championship, the Lady Vols are ranked No. 1 in the Collegiate Rowing Coaches Association rankings for the first time in program history. Rowing is the 14th program at UT to hold a No. 1 ranking, and the fourth in the 2025-26 athletic year, joining softball, soccer, and men’s indoor track and field.
‘Dollar’ discussion eventually worth the investment
On what would you spend your last dollar? That may be a trick question; you can’t get much with a dollar anymore. Half a candy bar? A sniff of gasoline? Even a box of tenpenny nails will set you back more than ten pennies. So what will you do with your last dollar? Because, as you’ll see in “The Almighty Dollar” by Brendan Greeley, there’s more where that single buck came from.
Some parents pushing back on classroom tech
ARDMORE, Pa. (AP) – For high school senior Aliyah Pack, getting distracted during school is the norm. Kids in her Pennsylvania school district use iPads starting in kindergarten, switch to Chromebooks in second grade and get their own MacBooks in eighth grade.
Test score declines reveal a ‘reading recession’
MODESTO, Calif. (AP) – Before every important test, teacher Nancy Barajas dims the lights, turns on a disco ball and blasts music from her playlist. Her sixth graders dance together as a “pre-celebration” to boost their confidence before taking their exam.
Senators from both parties push Hegseth for action on Ukraine aid
WASHINGTON (AP) — A bipartisan group of senators is pushing back on delays by the Department of Defense in sending $600 million in security aid to Ukraine and other allies in eastern Europe, dispatching a letter to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Friday that calls for the funding to be disbursed.
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