Franklin County Farm Bureau News

 By J. Larry Miller

One of the benefits of being a Farm Bureau member is that we are working to provide protection for rural residents. The following is an example of how being alert can benefit you and others.

Larry MillerWhat started as a quick action by a concerned citizen in Gallatin County ended in a large reward! By reporting information about property theft to the Gallatin County Sheriff, followed by a felony conviction for the crime, this alert resident received $1,000 from Illinois Farm Bureau (IFB).  The crime involved theft of copper wire from a Gallatin County farmer’s irrigation system.

According to Peggy Romba, who heads up the safety program at IFB, this anti-crime program was launched in 2005. “Illinois Farm Bureau wanted to do its part to help reduce crime in rural areas, so they put the $1000 Reward Program into place, she said.

Forty-five county Farm Bureaus in Illinois are enrolled in the program, including the Gallatin County Farm Bureau.  The program also provides crime prevention tips to members with farmland and promotes good communication with the county sheriff and state’s attorney. A key component of the program is that anyone in the county, not just farmers, is encouraged to report any information or sighting of crime on area farms.

Illinois Farm Bureau offers the following tips to farmers to use in deterring theft, vandalism, and arson on their farm:

  • Install motion sensors and outside lights that automatically turn on at dusk.
  • Keep farm equipment, tools, and small recreational vehicles like ATVs locked up in sheds or garages.
  • Avoid leaving tractors, trucks, or combines in the field overnight (Disable machinery not in use by removing the rotor, distributor, or battery).
  • Keep fences and gates in good repair.
  • Prune back shrubbery that hides doors, windows, lights, and would-be burglars.
  • Warn thieves with “No Trespassing” signs or the $1000 Reward signs and stickers available at the county Farm Bureau office.

Franklin County is a participant in this program. If you’d like more information on this program, contact your county Farm Bureau. And remember to always be alert and report any suspicious activity to your local authorities.

Remember we are farmers working together. If we can help let us know.

 

Insanity? I think so!

Residents of Illinois have sadly become used to seeing their great state lampooned on late night comedy shows about the rampant corruption, abuse of power and total mismanagement of state funds.

muir mug ihsaIt goes without saying anymore that Illinois is the poster child across the nation for political corruption at the state level.  With the past two governors in prison and four of the last seven governors serving jail time and with three current members of the General Assembly under indictment I would dare anybody to argue with the previous sentence.

It would be very easy to say that what we see daily in Springfield is a ‘joke’ but a ‘joke’ is supposed to be funny, and clearly this is no laughing matter.

Illinois has the most underfunded pension system in the nation that now totals close to $100 billion and more than $6.5 billion in unpaid bills.  I find it mind-boggling that the state has more than 200,000 pay vounchers that go unpaid day after day.

With those numbers in mind and with countless people’s lives literally hanging in the balance, how totally incompetent is it that Gov. Pat Quinn and the General Assembly are fiddling over issues like driver’s licenses for illegal immigrants and gay marriage — while the state burns down around them.

But, Illinois voters must like what they are getting because they continue to send the same people back to Springfield, somehow believing that things will change.  As I have said often when referring to state government in Illinois, it fits the precise definition of the word ‘insanity’ — which of course is to keep doing the same thing over and over and over again while expecting a different result.

In short, we are sending the same people back to Springfield expecting them to fix the problems they created and the end result is that the situation gets worse every day.  Insanity?  I think so!

I saw a segment on the local news within the past 24 hours that I think shows that neither party really wants any substantial change in Springfield.  Oh, they give us lip service about change but really it’s a ‘Good Ol’ Boy’s Club’ and that’s how it’s designed to stay.

Let me explain.

The news segment I’m referring to was on WSIL and it was about legislation introduced by newly-elected state Rep. Charlie Meier (R-Okawville) that says (in a nutshell) that state office holders and members of the General Assembly won’t get paid until vendors, doctors, pharmacies, etc. that the state owes money does gets paid. Remember that $6.5 billion and those 200,000-plus unpaid vendors?  That’s what Rep. Meier is referring to.

I talked about this last week on my Wednesday night radio show Sound Off (WQRL 106.3 or wqrlradio.com) and Rep. Meier will be my guest this week.
I love the idea and applaud the effort of a freshman state legislator who is not afraid to rock the political boat in Springfield.  At least Rep. Meier is attempting to do something to change the climate and to draw attention to the fact that the state is on a fiscal cliff and path that cannot be sustained.

As I watched the WSIL segment I found the comments of two longtime members of the General Assembly both interesting and disappointing.

State Rep. Mike Bost (R-Murphysboro) said the amount of money being paid to lawmakers and office holders is only a fraction of the amount owed so he didn’t support the legislation. It seems to me that Rep. Bost is missing the point.  In my conversation with Rep. Meier this week he is quite aware that the amount of money being paid to elected officials is a mere drop-in-the-bucket to the billions owed.  The point of Rep. Meier’s legislation is that it is not fair that a do-nothing General Assembly continues to draw a hefty paycheck every two weeks — for a part-time job — while businesses are going unpaid month after month after month.

I’m betting that state lawmakers missing a few paychecks would expedite the situation.

During the segment state Rep. Brandon Phelps said he didn’t think the legislation was constitutional because the Illinois Constitution sets the pay for state office holders and for elected officials.

I heard those comments and it immediately came to me that I believe the Constitution also requires that the state of Illinois will have a balanced budget each year … and when was the last time that happened in Illinois.

Rep. Meier is exactly what we need more of in Springfield – somebody who is not afraid to speak up and change the current badly broken system.  Somebody who is not afraid to say that the status quo is not working and things have to change, sooner rather than later.  Somebody who will call out every member of the General Assembly and say ‘you shouldn’t get a paycheck, you don’t deserve a paycheck until you do the job you were elected to do.’

Rep. Meier might be the new kid on the block in Springfield but I believe he ‘gets it.’  He understands that Illinois residents are worn out with politics as usual and the public be damned.  And before the partisan police start squawking … I’m referring to both Democrats and Republicans, period.

Every lawmaker in Springfield who is truly tired of the daily embarrassment that is called Illinois politics should embrace the efforts of Rep. Meier.

Tax Tips from H & R Block in Benton

In virtually every aspect of life experience is important.  But, when it comes to income tax preparation experience goes far beyond important – it’s imperative, a must.

PrintThat’s why choosing H & R Block in Benton is also a must, because the experience the entire staff brings could result in extra money in your pocket.  Norma Page, the original owner who is now retired, prepared tax returns for 45 years and now co-owners Terri Page (27 years as a tax preparer) and Pat Wilson (25 years as a office manager) have carried on the family business.

And with the experience of other staff personnel at the H & R Block in Benton that tallies up to more than a 100 years of tax preparation service for Franklin County and all of Southern Illinois.

H & R Block has been a fixture on West Main Street (just one half block west off the Benton Public Square) for more than 20 years and is ready to help you with your tax returns.  In 2010 Terri and Pat completely renovated the office through funding received by H & R Block corporate for excellence in tax preparations.  The office is bright and cheerful and sets a great mood for what can sometimes be a stressful appointment.

H & R Block in Benton wants you to know the following important changes and tips:

We received news from the IRS that for most taxpayers, 2012 e-file will open on January 30th. Further, people claiming residential energy credits, depreciation of property or general business credits will be able to file starting in late February or early March because of the need for more extensive form and processing systems changes.

Co-owners (left to right) Pat Wilson and Terri Page have more than 50 years combined experience to help you with your tax preparation needs.

Co-owners (left to right) Pat Wilson and Terri Page have more than 50 years combined experience to help you with your tax preparation needs.

The delays are due to the January tax law changes related to the ‘Fiscal Cliff’ deal; the IRS is hard at work updating forms and completing programming and testing of its systems.

Here’s what to know:

The IRS will begin processing individual income tax returns on Jan. 30 for the vast majority of taxpayers.
People claiming residential energy credits, depreciation of property or general business credits will not be able to file until late February or into March.
You can absolutely still complete your taxes in an H&R Block office or with H&R Block at Home, and we will hold them for you until they can be processed by the IRS starting Jan. 30th.

H & R Block in Benton is locally owned which means Terri and Pat serve customers and friends they know and see at church, ballgames and the grocery story.  Being a part of the community is important to Terri and Pat all the entire staff at H & R Block in Benton.  In all H & R Block in Benton has 11 full-time employees.

And to illustrate that the H & R Block in Benton will deduct $20 off your tax preparation if you bring a sack of groceries. The groceries must be brought at the time of your tax preparation, not at a later date. All food donations will go to the Benton Food Pantry.

For experience you can count on and service you can trust, stop by and visit H & R Block in Benton at 101 West Main Street in Benton or give them a call at 618-439-4641. They have many tax preparers available to assist in your tax preparation needs.

Not Your Parents’ 3 R’s Any More!

By Kelly Stewart

Have you noticed that what elementary students are learning these days is more advanced than what you and I may have studied in grade school, let alone high school?

Kelly Stewart While we focused on the 3 R’s (Reading, wRiting and aRithmetic), today students’ education must focus on the 4 C’s (critical thinking, creative thinking, collaboration, and communication) to meet the demand of 21st century learning.  Moreover, you may have heard how the Governors and State Superintendents of Education from across the U.S. have banned together to establish common standards.  Their intent was to ensure that all students are prepared with 21st century learning skills, thus keeping our country competitive in the global economy.  This effort resulted in the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) which have been adopted by forty-five states and the District of Columbia.

The Common Core State Standards or CCSS consist of high quality academic standards in English-language arts and mathematics for grades K-12. These standards were created in an effort to provide students with the skills necessary to succeed in college and work, which referred to as being “college and career ready.”

Historically individual states have set their own standards for learning leading to a disparity of learning standards across the states.  Expectations for student learning in the United States varied according to zip codes.  However, the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) ensure that consistent expectations for students from state to state exist, while providing clear guideposts for students, parents, and teachers.
In this article my brief overview describes how the English-language arts (reading, writing, grammar, listening, and speaking), or ELA standards, will be different from past standards.  Some of the changes in English-language arts include:

* A greater emphasis on non-fiction textReading and writing grounded in evidence from the text

* Greater text complexity

* Focus on Argumentative writing

* Shared responsibility for the teaching of reading and writing across the curriculum.

*According to David Coleman, one of the authors of the CCSS standards, “students should be able to read like a detective and write like an investigative reporter if they are proficient in Common Core standards.”   Thus, curriculum and teaching may look different in the coming years as teachers strive to assist their students in developing these skills.

* Moreover, parents will begin to see changes in their child’s education as a result of CCSS
implementation.  For example, in addition to teachers assigning fiction books written at a more challenging reading level, they will also expect students to practice their skills at home by reading an increased amount of non-fiction books.  Furthermore, students may be given writing assignments in subjects other than English such as social studies, science, or art.  Also, students will be asked to support their writing with evidence from the textbook.

For additional information, the National PTA has created The Parents’ Guide to Student Success, which is a grade level guide that serves as a resource for parents to increase their knowledge regarding the CCSS standards in English-language arts and mathematics.  To view these resources, visit http://www.pta.org/4446.htm.

I am very excited about the nationwide implementation of the Common Core State Standards.  For once, our nation is in agreement over what skills are needed for our students to be college and career ready.  More importantly, the standards focus on the development of skills that require our students to think, reflect, analyze, influence, evaluate, and communicate.  In other words, their education will strive to make them thinkers and problem solvers for life.  These skills will not only enable our children to be successful in the 21st century, but it will enable our great country to remain a leader in the global economy.

Study shows women superior, men are genetically flawed

It was announced last week that U.S. Military leaders formally lifted the ban on women serving in combat positions.

In making the announcement Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta noted that women have become an “integral part” of the military and have already demonstrated their willingness to fight during the wars of the last decade.

muir mug ihsa

Of course, that decision opened the floodgates about the role of women in the military and even about a woman’s physical ability to serve in combat. And of course, all that debate started me thinking because one of my favorite topics to muse about in the past has been the differences, as I see them, between the sexes.

In past ramblings I’ve discussed the usual list that includes toilet lids, remote controls, power tools, and men’s refusal to ask directions when they’re hopelessly lost. I’ve also mentioned how women have the ability and technology to spend 20 minutes in front of a mirror and make themselves look 20 years younger while men stumble around looking every year of their age – or perhaps a little older.

And of course I’ve also written about the fact that women, even though most men won’t admit it, are a little smarter than we are.

After reading and listening to the arguments about women’s qualifications for combat duty I recalled a story I read recently that was entitled: “X Chromosome Shows Why Women Differ from Men.”

Certainly, my track record with the opposite sex played into my fascination with this story.

The article stated that a team of scientists has “cracked” the genetic code of the female X chromosome which is linked to more than 300 human diseases and, according to the study, it also explains why women are so different than men. The article went on to say that chromosomes are found in the nucleus of every cell and contain genes that determine the characteristics of an individual. Women have two X chromosomes while men have an X and a Y chromosome, which gives men their male features.

One brief paragraph in the story provided one of those ‘light bulb moments’ for me. It read:

“The research also showed that men’s Y chromosome is an ‘eroded’ version of the X chromosome and contains only a few genes. The X chromosome is also bigger than the Y chromosome and because females have two X chromosomes, one of their X chromosomes is largely switched off or inactivated.”

Wow! Those two sentences provided me with information that I’ve been searching for years to find.

Admittedly, I’m not a person that excelled in science, but it seems to me that those two sentences prove that men are working at a disadvantage when trying to deal with women. Let me try and cut through the scientific mumbo-jumbo and explain it in layman’s terms.

What I gather from that paragraph is that women have two, big strong X chromosomes, while men have one X chromosome and a Y chromosome that is referred to as an “eroded” version of the X chromosome. I hate to be the bearer of bad news but it seems that this scientific study shows that men are trying to play the game against a superior opponent and with cheap, faulty, generic equipment, to boot.

And on top of that, one of women’s big, strong X chromosomes is switched off or inactivated. When I read that my first thought was of the playground bully taunting you by saying that he could “whip you with one hand tied behind his back.”

In short, this study tells me that it takes all the X chromosome and the generic Y chromosomes that I have to stumble through the day while women cruise through the day on one X chromosome – that is unless they wants to kick in the other big, strong X chromosome that’s inactive and resting. Men should understand now why they simply say, ‘yes dear’ regardless of what she says. Apparently, we’re not genetically equipped to answer any other way.

But, as I use my one X chromosomes and my cheap-version Y chromosomes to write this column, I think I see a silver lining in this scientific study that could be useful to all men.

Let me explain.

You see, this study provides men with the ultimate excuse we’ve always wanted. The next time your wife, asks why you act the way you do, simply blame it on the Y chromosome.

Men should start to think in these terms: the next time you forget to put the toilet lid down (and you will) – and you’re awakened by the splash of water and a scream in the middle of the night – or the next time you forget to take the trash out (it will happen) … simply blame it on that darned, eroded Y chromosome.

Or, the next time you go to the grocery store and bring home the wrong brand (and again, you will), or drive around for an hour looking for a particular street while refusing to ask directions (it’s a certainty) simply explain that you’re genetically flawed. Speaking solely to the men in the audience, don’t you believe now that women know they’re dealing with an inferior product, they’ll back off a little and not be so demanding?

No, I don’t think so either, in fact now that women know they are dealing with a flawed product I expect the demands to ratchet up. And sadly, with our weak, eroded Y chromosome there’s nothing we can do about it except utter our standard pathetic answer: ‘yes, dear.’

I had to chuckle when I read the final paragraph of the article. It reads: “These discoveries, made by an international consortium of scientists, shows that females are far more changeable than previously thought and, when it comes to genes, far more complex than men.”

Far more changeable? Far more complex? No kidding?

It didn’t take an international team of scientists to explain that to me. I had that figured out the first week of kindergarten.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Franklin County Farm Bureau News

By J. Larry Miller

Heavy rains across southern Illinois this weekend may have resolved the low water levels on the Mississippi River. The National Weather Service said that by Thursday the water level of the Mississippi River at St Louis will be up nearly 2 feet from last Wednesday, bringing it to the highest level in almost a month. At Thebes, the water level has jumped almost 9 feet since last week. This does not mean that the long affects of the drought are over but I have noticed that Rend Lake water level is up and there is a lot of mud around my cattle feeding bunks.

Larry Miller

USDA’s Farm Service Agency (FSA) reminds producers that the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 extended the authorization of the Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008 (the 2008 Farm Bill) for many Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) commodity, disaster, and conservation programs through 2013. FSA administers these programs. This affects every farmer in Franklin County so use these cold days to get your farms enrolled.

The effects of this summers’ drought continues to cause problems for farmers. Several farmers are waiting to receive their crop insurance checks after going through audits because claims were so high. These audits require a review of the past 3 years’ production records to confirm actual production history. As they wait, cash flow can be a problem as the large number of claims makes a heavy load for crop claims adjusters. Kansas State University crop insurance expert Art Barnaby says 2012 drought claims aren’t breaking the bank. Looking at loss ratios, and with IL and IN claims still being filed, Barnaby says, “What is also clear is the 2012 crop insurance losses are going to much lower than the original estimates. The (USDA) underwriting loss may even be less than $3 billion.” Total claims (from USDA and company funds) paid as of January 14 were $11.581 billion.

Dale Durcholz will be making a market update presentation here at Farm Bureau on Tuesday January 29th. Please call for reservations for breakfast at 435-3616.

House Republicans appear confident they have the votes to pass a short-term debt ceiling increase as they attempt to dispatch with this fiscal battle to focus on bigger ones ahead. The legislation would suspend the $16.4 trillion debt limit to allow the nation to continue to borrow money to pay its bills for another three months and then increase the legal limit to that new debt level. I thought they saved us from the financial cliff but it looks as if were are in a free fall!

Remember we are farmers working together. If we can help let us know.

Our Universities: Demographic Shift

The changing nature of students, their interests and abilities, requires that our universities change too.  While they do, we must remember the attributes of learning and insight, and the abilities and skills that make the university valuable to all change little, it all. Universities help create cause in students, not effect.
An explanation of cause is not a justification by reason.
C. S. Lewis
______________________________________________________________
The January 2013 report from the Western Interstate Commission on Higher Education, “Knocking At the Door: A Projection of High School Graduates,” contains clarifying revelations. The number of blacks and whites finishing high school will decrease in the near future as the number of Asian Americans/Pacific Islander and Latino graduates will increase. Like a tsunami.

Walter Wendler mug 2
Additionally, over the next few years there will be a reduction in the total number of high school graduates produced until the numbers stabilize at around 3.3 million nationally according to Ronald Roche of Diverse Issues in Higher Education in the January 17, 2013 edition.
Some states are particularly challenged.  In Wisconsin two-year enrollments are down. University leaders and state policymakers suggest these realities are due to a 6.3% decline in Wisconsin high school graduates projected from the year 2010 to 2015, according to a story in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel last October.
The diminishing number of students available to attend universities and the nature of their backgrounds, expectations, and aspirations exacerbate a continuing decrease in university budgets through lower tuition revenue. Cost increases for everything from faculty to football push the prospects of college out of the reach for new and different cadres of students.
Universities have two options.  Bend or break.
Bob Lay, Dean for Enrollment Management at Boston College, suggested that with this shift in demographics produces a larger number of students from less affluent families where college study has not been the norm.  These recent high school graduates participate with less family experience, understanding and support.  Yet, increasing expectations and believed benefits of the university experience abound creating unrealistic expectations for student and institution alike.
Universities will stand and deliver; or lie down and die.
Dean Lay also suggested that “The notion that we are merely gatekeepers for our institutions has thankfully faded in the minds of current leaders in higher education.” His optimism is admirable, but many institutions continue to move too slowly towards a revitalized approach to university life in response to a markedly different group of students.
False hope in the power of distance learning and online instruction to provide a high-quality university experience shifting from classroom to digital experience will fall short. It is effect not cause. The new demographic, like the old demographic, wants contact with interested professionals who take tutelage seriously.
Most freshman classes at state universities are now more representative of the population they serve than at any time in history. This is great news. However the graduating classes revert back to the same old look, with the shifted demographic holding the bag, but not graduating. Hopes die: debt thrives.  Access is encouraged and rewarded with cheap loans, but success is locked up in after-school detention.
It is better not to accept a student unprepared and live in the deceit that they will complete a worthwhile program than to take in a person with the lowest likelihood of graduation.  William Powers, president at the University of Texas suggested many of the students are fully capable, but have not been challenged, nurtured, or tutored in a way that allows them to be successful.  He packages the problem crisply, “Often, they may have gone to a high school where they didn’t have a calculus class or advanced placement classes. The challenges are also financial and what I call cultural. They might be away from home, and they don’t have parents and aunts and uncles who have already been here.”
The times are tough for many universities…but will get tougher yet. Little relief is in sight for universities unwilling to simultaneously hold onto the traditional values of the university experience, enlightened teaching and engaged faculty and staff, while also looking at alternative methods to reduce the total costs and increase the effectiveness of the university experience.
Requiring all students to participate in some form of either low- or no-cost distance education, encouraging students to begin at a community college and reducing costs and scouring out ineffectiveness are all valuable considerations, but none a panacea in isolation.
These actions and others help to address the dramatic demographic shift and the escalation of the expectations that comes with it. At our universities academic leadership that understands cause is required.

Much more than music …

(Editor’s Note:  I have seen many posts on Facebook in the past couple days recognizing the birth date of the late J.B. Kearney.  Rightly so, nearly all those posts talked about his music, his work as a talented painter, his six pretty daughters and his service to his country.  After Kearney died in September 2010 I did what I often do when I have something I have to get off my mind – I grabbed my keyboard and recalled my first meeting with Kearney nearly 40 years prior and the indelible impression he left on me.  Below is that offering … I hope you enjoy.  JM)

———————————————————————————————————————————————————————-

I read the obituary and then I read it a second time more slowly. The name of the deceased was J.B. Kearney and as is always the case the obit told a brief chronological story about his life.

muir mug ihsa

The obituary painted a picture of a good life, a talented man who was an outstanding musician, a gifted painter, a man that served his country in the military and worked hard as a public servant. The obit also clearly indicated that Kearney’s legacy will live on through his children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren. We should all be so lucky, I thought, to live a long life that full and rewarding.

While I read the entire obit with interest I was particularly drawn to two sentences that read:

During his life, he (Kearney) was involved in local politics and served as mayor of West City in the 1970s. He was instrumental in bringing business to West City and helping to form the municipality it is today.’

While those two sentences are concise and accurate they stop far short of telling the entire story of what J.B. Kearney accomplished as mayor of West City.

Let me explain.

Only a few days after my 18th birthday I went to work at Old Ben Mine 21 near Sesser and shortly after that I bought a house in West City. The house, located on Blakely Street, was an old ‘fixer-upper’ and I tackled the renovation a little at a time with absolutely no experience as a homeowner but with a lot of enthusiasm.

The purchase of the house also provided me with my first-ever experience with septic tanks. And nearly 40 years later my reaction when even thinking about septic tanks is – ughhh! There is nothing quite as frustrating as paying $150 to have a septic tank pumped out and then three days later see raw sewage bubbling up in the yard in that spot where the grass is always greener.

You see, I grew up in Sesser, which had a sanitary sewage system, so making the move to West City in the early 1970s provided me with somewhat of an education. Words like ‘sewer-ditch,’ ‘honey-dipper,’ and ‘out-house’ were soon added to my vocabulary. And let me tell you there is nothing quite like the smell of an outdoor ‘john’ on a hot July night.

It was during this time that I met J.B. Kearney. He stopped by that old Blakely Street house one day and introduced himself as a candidate for mayor. He got my attention quickly when he said that if he was elected he would fight for a sanitary sewer system for the village. Well, needless to say he got my attention, along with my vote and support, in a hurry.

Kearney won that election, unseating a mayor who had held the position for three decades and unlike many candidates these days who provide lip service during a campaign and then run and hide once they’re elected he immediately began the arduous task of keeping his promise about a new sewage system.

Looking back, I can’t imagine, particularly in that era before all-things-electronic, what went in to getting a mammoth project like that off the ground. Think about it, state and federal permits, government bureaucracy and red tape, snail mail and then dealing with every single residence and business in West City that would be affected. It still seems somewhat mind-boggling to me.

But perhaps the biggest obstacle that Kearney faced was a small faction of naysayers within the community who fought him every step of the way. To this day I still don’t understand the logic of those that battled against Kearney’s effort to move the village to a modern era and at the same time change the aroma of the air.

And it was that side of Kearney – the dogged determination, quiet leadership and unwavering perseverance – that prompts me to string some words together today to honor a man that I believe was a visionary and far ahead of his time. To say that Kearney left an impression on a then-20-year-old the way he forged ahead with the project would be an understatement.

Certainly, West City has been blessed with several progressive and forward-thinking public officials since Kearney ended his time as mayor in 1984 but when I look at West City today, the paved streets, outstanding emergency services and the tremendous economic growth (not to mention a sanitary sewage system) I always think of J. B. Kearney. I was there nearly 40 years ago and I know what he went through, saw how hard he worked and I’m still inspired by what he accomplished.

Obituaries are adequate and purposeful when describing the highlights of an individual’s life but they fail to reveal the real fabric of that person.

Today I would like to add a footnote to J.B. Kearney’s obituary.

Along with the relevant facts that were listed Kearney should also be remembered as a man of integrity, a man who was quiet, dignified and reserved but certainly not afraid of a fight and a man that stood up against loud and sometimes ignorant voices to do the right thing. Perhaps the greatest compliment I can pay to him today is to simply say he was a good man that kept his word.

As I stated earlier Kearney’s legacy is intact through his children, grand-children and great-grandchildren but another part of his legacy will also live on forever in a small and now-thriving village that he fought like a champion to guide into a new and modern era.

Rest in peace Mayor Kearney … you fought a good fight.

 

 

 

Northern Unit News

By Kristi Brose
Seven members met on Monday,January 14, 2013 answering to the roll call of “what is your favorite healthy snack?”  Six of the members were on Team A, who were responsible for the meal and we told the one who was on Team B to decide what she wanted everyone on her team to bring next month.
The members who remembered that the meeting was changed to Mondays were: Kristi Brose, Mary Bauer, Linda Duncan, Earlene Galloway, Sue Browning, Darla Forsythe and Carolyn Odom. Team B, check with Carolyn Odom for what she decided on the meal.  No reports were given, no business was conducted.
However, there were in depth discussions about taxes, insurance costs, doctors and bug bites(there is a story that goes with this one, but it couldn’t be put in print). The next meeting will be MONDAY, February 11, 2013 at 11:30 a.m. Our sympathy goes to Judy Webb in the passing of her mother-in-law, Mickey Webb. Also, get well wishes go out to member, Janice Richardson . Hope everyone is avoiding this flu that is going around!

Our Universities: Human Touch

Opportunities to increase the potency of a university are numerous. No single effort is more valuable than a concerned teacher working directly with a motivated student.   Human touch is required to respond to the distinctive needs of each student.
There is nothing more unequal than the equal treatment of unequal people.
— Thomas Jefferson
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In the exercise of an annual habit, the American Association of State Colleges and Universities produced the top 10 higher education issues for 2013, under the banner of Policy Matters last week.  And while the report did not say it, the relationship between teacher and student is the cure for most ills.
Boosting institutional performance to support performance-based funding is first on the list. Some measures floated to the top of the tally: student retention, degree completion, and enrollment – the last especially noteworthy as demographic forecasts predict a decreasing number of potential college students over the next two decades.  Increasing retention, completion, and enrollees requires good teachers and advisors exercising caring concern for individual students.

Increased state operating support for higher education is the second most pressing issue.  In spite of the wailing and gnashing of teeth, university presidents have little real impact on public funding beyond representing institutional need, which always exceeds available public resources. But, they can have tremendous impact on the quality of teaching, and that truly matters. When professors teach with passion and institutions are intolerant of incompetent teaching, good things happen.  Leadership must recognize teaching excellence, and then legislators respond: They too were the victims of incompetence and the beneficiaries of enlightened instruction.   At the Statehouse, lawmakers might be more responsive to the cries for help if good teaching seemed more important to institutional leadership.  Without confidence from the Statehouse towards the schoolhouse, we are all in the outhouse.  Excellence in both teaching and high human contact engagement is the elementary contribution to university effectiveness.  And it is easily recognized and appreciated by those inside and outside of the academy.

Tuition prices and tuition policies shows up the third spot. Educational leadership must be concerned with cost efficiencies.  The utilization of electronically supported learning opportunities, from i-Pads to i-clickers and i-wired courses, if correctly implemented, increases the impact and value of face-to-face human contact and leads to the highest value of human learning experience.
Student aid programs cashes in at number four.  Through impassioned human contact, the probability of effective outcomes from student loans and grants are increased. Care needs to be exercised from both the lenders and borrowers perspectives.  Good teachers can exercise care and thoughtful analysis of need, want, ability and outcome.   An educator must eventually say, “This individual is a good bet.”  An algorithm or a clerk can’t do that, valuable as both may be.

Online education places seventh on the list. It would be a good idea if every student was required to complete at least 10% of the required courses for a degree through free online educational opportunities. This would simultaneously reduce the cost of college by 10%. Combined online and onsite instruction provides the best of both worlds: high human contact and high efficiency — each when needed — support, not substitution.
College readiness (5), immigration (6) and guns on campus (8), made the list but are issues not particular to universities.  Some educational leaders crave these conversations…they deflect attention from the difficult and challenging human contact issues that make education work, simultaneously providing the appearance of social concern.  Appropriate focus on pedagogy is work of enlightened leadership.
Economic and workforce development is number nine. Human interactions between faculty members and students help people make vocational decisions, enabling graduates to be simultaneously productive citizens and breadwinners. These are personal matters that must be queried and addressed one at a time.  Policies, while valuable, are not the key issue.

Number Ten is consumer protection involving for-profit colleges. It’s about time. State boards, and those who appoint them, have peddled degrees regardless of quality, content, effectiveness, or faculty assessment of student fitness and probable contribution to the economy as an elixir for all that ails contemporary society.  A growing tragedy marked by cheap degrees and the idea that everybody must have one, no matter the quality. Education turned into consumerism.

The human touch evident in good teaching in our universities is the key to effective performance.  We all know invigorated teaching when we see it. Every student needs to be treated differently, read “unequally,” so each may be treated fairly.

Human touch is the only way to accomplish such fair and potent treatment.

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