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Showing posts with label Letter to the Editor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Letter to the Editor. Show all posts

Monday, December 30, 2024

Letter to the Editor: Macon County Animal Service and Appalachian Animal Rescue Center are Separate Organizations



Dear Editor,

The Macon County Humane Society dba Appalachian Animal Rescue Center is a 501(c)3 no-kill animal shelter. Their mission is to maintain a shelter for stray and unwanted dogs and cats in Macon County, NC. Appalachian Animal Rescue Center, or AARC, is a closed intake facility with a maximum capacity of 50 dogs and 55 cats. AARC is not a county or state-owned facility; they are funded by donations, grants, and adoptions. Appalachian Animal Rescue Center cannot and will not trap, catch, or “pick up” animals; animals can only be surrendered at the shelter. AARC is there to help animals find their forever homes. AARC will not adopt any animals out unless they are spayed or neutered. Appalachian Animal Rescue Center is located at 851 Lake Emory Rd. Franklin, NC 28734; they can be reached at 828-524-4588 or by email at info@maconhumanesociety.org.

Macon County Animal Services is a county/state regulated, owned, and funded open intake facility. Macon County Animal Services, or MCAS, is there to protect the health and safety of all citizens, both humans and animals. MCAS handles cases of animal abuse, abandonment, trapping, and picking up animals; they also do accept owner surrenders. They try their best to find forever homes or reunite animals with their families. MCAS is a kill-shelter, but over the past few years, they have lowered their euthanasia to less than 10%. Macon County Animal Services is located at 1377 Lakeside Dr. Franklin, NC 28734; they can be reached at 828-349-2106 or by email at animalservics@maconnc.org.

Both facilities are there for the animals as an “in-between” home, however, they are separate. Appalachian Animal Rescue Center and Macon County Animal Services work together to find forever homes for animals, but they are separate.

If you have lost an animal, please contact both facilities. If you have found an animal, contact both facilities. If you need to surrender an animal, please contact both facilities. If you need to report an abandoned animal, please contact MCAS. If you need to report animal abuse, contact MCAS. If you need to trap an animal, please contact MCAS. If you need an animal “picked up,” contact MCAS.

Both places are working their hardest to find every animal in Macon County their forever home, but each facility has its own role to play. Please research all avenues of animal rescue and please spay/neuter your pets.

Friday, July 28, 2023

Letter to the Editor
Keeping the Library "Local"?

Photo taken by Bobby Coggins at the June 27, 2023 meeting of the Macon County Library Board.

Letter to the Editor (Received July 28, 2023)

At the June 27 Macon County Library Board Meeting, Chairman Bill Dyar was asked by Leah Gaston and the other two new board members for the opportunity to fully introduce themselves. Chairman Dyar agreed.

I have included all of new board member Mrs. Leah Gaston’s remarks below, but for purposes of this column, I want to focus on her following remark:

“…And I want to be involved with our library because my family loves and values this local library. It is important that we keep the local and our local library and our library free of distracting outside influences.”

The local/not-local trope has permeated discussions about the library and its content for close to two years now and perhaps this is the moment to unpack this overladen label.

What constitutes “local?” Is it an idea or thing that has its origins in Franklin, or Macon County, or the three-county region of Macon, Jackson, and Swain which the Fontana Regional Library system serves?

How long must the idea, thing, and/or person have existed within the subjective boundaries before it has become assimilated, no longer “outside”, and now worthy of being seen as “local?” Is it a year, the ten years such as Mrs. Gaston and her husband have been here for? Is it my almost 61 years as a Maconian, as I was born in Highlands in 1962, in a building that my sister later converted to a multi-organization nonprofit center, a place where she started the Highlands Literacy Council about 29 years ago. Or, must one have been here seven or eight generations as such families as the Silers, Corbins, Higdons, and others can attest? Or, must one be Cherokee and be able to trace back to a moment prior to the contact with English and Spanish speakers?

Or does the label “local” transcend geographic and chronological boundaries?

Mrs. Gaston implies that we should be vigilant, on guard against the intrusion of “distracting outside influences.”

So, now we’re additionally stuck with puzzling out what “outside influences” are. And we are tasked with deciding what is “distracting.” And, if we are “distracted” by these “outside influences”, what are they distracting us from? In other words, what exactly are we supposed to be focused on?

I am honestly baffled by the phrase “outside influences”, whether they be distracting or not, when the phrase is deployed as to best practices in library management.

It’s a library.

And if a library is to have any merit, any value, if it is to live up to its mission of being a collection of intellectual reflection, literary output, reference work, and as repository of art, isn’t the summative value of the institution, whether it's the Greenville County Library, the Macon County Library, the Vatican Library, and/or the Library of Congress, largely dependent on the scope and depth of “outside influences?” It would seem strange indeed to have a general public library which confined its stacks, its curations, to be highly provincial. Even stranger, would be the provincial confinement to only reflect the worldviews, the perspectives, of a select few, some sort of stunted ideological beachhead or province within a province so to speak.

The Macon County Library, indeed all of the Fontana Regional Library member libraries, have works of history, literature, science, and art from every place on the globe. Are we to take these works within the current stacks as “outside influences” to be shunned?

Since the denunciation of the Macon County Library’s and FRL holdings and/or their categorization or shelving started approximately 18 months ago, we have heard “outside”, “outsider”, and “outside influences” as epithets sneered in public fora. And within the same accusatory breath, the term “local” has been proffered as some sort of badge of legitimacy, a member of an elite or chosen.

Libraries historically are all about inclusivity. Not exclusivity. The Macon County Library and the Fontana Regional Library have made tremendous strides in the direction of inclusivity. And this expansion of the circle of who counts and what sort of media should be offered by these institutions isn’t “promotion”, rather it is indeed an update to reflect what are the various interests and outlooks of people who live in Macon County and/or the three-county area. Indeed, that has always been the mission of public libraries.

We could argue that our libraries in Macon, Jackson, and Swain are now more local than ever and I hope the respective boards will continue to serve the broadest community possible, our community of law-abiding, peaceful citizens, of diverse interests, backgrounds, perspectives, and dreams.

John deVille Maconian since 1962.

Checked out my first book at the Hudson Library in 1967.





Published at 2.18pm on Friday, July 28, 2023

If you wisdh to send a Letter to the Editor, address it to editor@MaconMedia.com, keep it under 5,000 words. No vulgarity or profanity or calling names.

Saturday, February 11, 2023

Letter to the Editor: Did you purchase an Aetna CVS Health plan for 2023?

**February 16th, 2023 Update** 

Karen Williams reports the NC Dept of Insurance has sent her a copy of a letter from Aetna asking for more time to do an internal investigation. Also, the Franklin Press wants to interview her for a story about these HMO policies next Thursday.



Letter to the Editor: Did you purchase an Aetna CVS Health plan for 2023?

I would like to warn citizens in Western NC about a new insurance sold for 2023 on healthcare.gov through Aetna CVS Health!

Aetna has been good insurance in this area for a long time. I know since I've done medical billing and management around here for over twenty years. This year, they are accepting Premuium Tax Credits from our Government and premiums from policy holders and have few to NO providers in the western counties of NC. Angel Medical Center has ONE provider in the entire hospital that is considered in network. They show Harris Regional completely out of network along with most medical providers.

When an insurance company is accepting tax credits and premiums for HMO policies with NO out of network benefits and NO network to support those policies sold, that my friends is INSURNANCE FRAUD!

If you purchased an Aetna CVS Plan from the Marketplace and you live in Western North Carolina, you need to pick up the phone or get on their website and see if your providers are in network with this insurance company! It could save you hundreds to thousands of dollars in denied medical claims, not to menition the stress and frustration! Aetna providers in our area are not considered in network with the new Aetna CVS plans. Protect yourself and file complaints if necessary with the NC Dept of Insurance.

Karen Williams of Franklin, NC

Photo provided by author.

Editor's Note: Today (ending at midnight), February 11, 2023, is the last day that someone can change policies on the marketplace. Open Enrollment begins in November and will be the next opportunity to change policies.



Sunday, October 9, 2022

Letter to the Editor
Keely Metcalf, of Franklin NC, is aiming to raise awareness of Developmental Language Disorder (DLD) for international #DLDday on Friday 14 October 2022



 Sophia, my daughter, was diagnosed with DLD at the age of 18 months, a hidden but common disability that affects 1 in 14 people. DLD causes difficulties in understanding and using language for no known reason.

Sophia wants everyone in the community to learn about DLD so they can help the 2 students in every class of 30 who have DLD, a neurodevelopmental condition.

DLD is a brain difference that makes talking & listening difficult. It is 50 times more prevalent than hearing impairment and 5 times more prevalent than autism. 

The 2022 DLDday theme is Growing with DLD, highlighting that DLD is a lifelong, permanent disability. People do not grow out of DLD but with individual support that can include regular speech-language therapy and educational adjustments they can thrive. It’s about growing with DLD.

Raising Awareness of Developmental Language Disorder (RADLD), is the lead organization that coordinates international DLDDAY advocating for increased recognition and support for people with DLD across their lifespan. 

“People with DLD are 6 times more likely to suffer from anxiety and 3 times more likely to have clinical depression. They are also at significant risk of struggling with reading, spelling and mathematics. Although DLD is a common condition affecting many areas of life, people with DLD are unlikely to receive access to services,” said Stephen Parsons, Chairperson of RADLD.

--Keely Shay, Franklin, NC

Editor's Note: Learn more about DLD at [DLD Project]

Sunny: Growing with DLD




Monday, August 2, 2021

Letter to the Editor: Lasgna Love and Food Insecurity



Dear Editor,

Last month I saw an article in the August 2021 Taste of Home Magazine titled “Kindness and Compassion in a Pan”. The article was about a nonprofit organization called Lasagna Love and is all about helping folks dealing with food insecurity. The concept is simple: if you need help putting food on the table, login to the Lasagna Love website (www.lasagnalove.org) and request a home-cooked lasagna. You will be matched to a local Lasagna Love volunteer chef, and s/he will contact you to coordinate a delivery date and time and arrange a safe, contactless delivery.

Lasagna Love is a nationwide grassroots movement that aims to positively impact communities by connecting neighbors with neighbors through homemade meal delivery. Lasagna Love seeks to eliminate stigmas associated with asking for help when it is needed most. It is about making and delivering meals to families in the neighborhood who are struggling, whether that struggle is financial, emotional, or simply a feeling of being overwhelmed.

I volunteered to be a “lasagna Chef” and waited to be matched to a family. My closest matches are in Swain County. According to the Feeding America website, 15.7% of families living in Macon County were food insecure in 2019. Let’s help support our local families and friends by providing a simple act of love and kindness during a time of uncertainty and stress. If you have a neighbor, friend, or colleague who could use help putting food on the table, please let them know about the www.lasagnalove.org website. If the family does not have internet access, you can log in and nominate the family.

If you love to cook and want to support families in the community, consider becoming a volunteer lasagna chef. You can get your whole family involved and join the kindness project. Together we can work to reduce hunger in our community.

Thank you for taking the time to read this.

Teresa Falzone
Franklin
August 1, 2021




Letters to the Editor may be submitted at editor@MaconMedia.com You may include hyperlinks and embedded video and up to two photos per letter. If you wish to embed a slideshow, please use a service such as Flickr, Photobucket, or other hosting platforms that support embedding.



Published at 9:15am on Monday, August 2, 2021

Wednesday, May 5, 2021

Letter to the Editor:
Taste of Scotland Society, Inc.



Taste of Scotland Society, Inc.

The Taste of Scotland Society, Inc. is a group of people who love our Scottish heritage, and we endeavor to promote events that enlighten townspeople and visitors alike with the many facets of our Scottish heritage. Our two annual events are the Robert Burns Dinner and the Taste of Scotland and Celtic Festival.

The dinner is held on or near the 25 th of January, the anniversary of Robert Burn’s birth. This event is held in Tartan Hall. The Calling of the Clans along with the color Guard add to the flair of the festivities. The clans march in with their tartan banners waving following our piper.

The clan roll call rolls off the Gaelic tongue. A traditional Scottish sinner is celebrated with the “Toast to the Haggis” and Celtic music fills the air and adds to our festive salute to Robert Burns. We have many toasts, including the Toast to the Lads and Lassies. This often humorous one is usually done by a married couple, and is an annual highlight of the evening. We give homage to the Bard by celebrating one of his poems during the evening. The close of the evening is special with all singing “Auld Lang Syne” in a Celtic circle.

The second annual event is the Taste of Scotland and Celtic Festival which is traditionally on Father’s Day weekend. This year we will celebrate with a Ceilidh at the Rathskeller on June 19 from 5 until ?

A Ceilidh is a social gathering which will feature Scottish and Irish music and singing. Street fare will be provided by Rockin Rollie Pollie and Scottish beverages will be available from the Rathskeller. Our Ceilidh this year will have added attraction. Clan Crawford, our clan of the year, will parade in to the piper. Daisy Haley, our new Little Miss Tartan, will be crowned by Kendall Holland, our retiring Little Miss Tartan.

Celtic music styling of “Norma Jean & I ” who will sing the beautiful ballad, “Caledonia” will bring a tear to your eye. This husband-wife duo is a true musical treat. “The Jacobites By Name”, one of our favorites groups, will entertain us with a medley of Scottish songs from pub tunes to traditional ballads.

Our special guest for the evening is George McClellan, a member of FSA, member and director of the Burns Club of Atlanta since 1987, as well as a member and director of the Robert Burns Association of North America. George McClellan has led an interesting life. He acquired an associate college degree in geology, was in the army for three years wuth TS clearance, a California Highway Patrolmen for five years, and also a retired Special Agents of the Naval Investigative Services, now the NCIS. He has also been a bagpiper since 1975 and a world traveler.

We have two meeting each month: one is a business meeting; one is a Gathering at Frog Quarters. The Gathering is an open meet and greet for all people who would like to join. The entertainment will vary from Celtic music to tartan search which enables you to trace your Scottish roots by name and clan.

Upcoming events are the following: Frog Fair is Saturday, May 8 outside Frog Quarters from 9 am to 3 pm. TOSS will sell special etched bottles with or without fairy lights. This is a craft fair to benefit the Greenway.

The regular meetings are on the first Wednesdays of each month at Frog Quarters at 4:30 p.m. We will have another Meet and Greet, but the date is uncertain as of this time. New people who would like to join are welcome.

We are already planning the Taste of Scotland and Celtic Festival for 2022. It will be held on Father’s Day in June. The first day will be a lively downtown parade filled with the unique sounds of bagpipes, people in their colorful clan kilts, Little Miss Tartan, and much more. Either a Ceilidh or a Clan dinner Friday night will be offered that night. The venue for Saturday had to be changed because of the anticipated increase in vendors, pipe bands, clans, and children’s activities, and the space requirements for all Registered Heavy Athletics.

Registered Heavy Athletic Games will be under the direction of Scott Medlin. One group of women and two groups of men will be competing in these exciting contests: the caber toss, stone put, weight throw for distance, weight throw for height, Scottish hammer throw, and sheaf toss. We are also in negotiations with some interesting thrilling additions to the festival. As more information becomes available, the group will announce the new additions to the weekend. We have three or four pipe bands interested in the Saturday event. Sunday we hope to have a “Kirkin’ of the Tartans and a Sunday afternoon concert.

Sometimes people are confused by the Scottish tartans Museum and the Taste of Scotland society. It is true that our group once was the support for the Scottish Tartans Museum, the only one of its kind in the United States. But when the museum changed its name to the Scottish Tartans Museum, Inc., our group could not use any part of the name.

Therefore, the members decided to keep the aim of sponsoring Scottish heritage and chose the “Taste of Scotland Society, Inc”. We are now both incorporated, separate groups that both try to share Scottish heritage in unique ways.

Submitted by Merrilee Bordeaux for Taste of Scotland Society, Inc.



Short Biography of George G.McClellan (FSA Scot), 

 Californian by Birth, a Georgian by choice, since 1987. 

 Associate College Degree in Geology Three Years US Regular Army w/TS Clearance Five years as a California Highway Patrolman A Retired Special Agent, of the Naval Investigative Service now, NCIS! 

 Member and director of the Burns Club of Atlanta since 1997; Member and Director of the Robert Burns Association of North America (RBANA), bagpiper since 1975, world traveller, author, and resident of Ellijay, Ga since 1998.



Published at 12:08pm on Wednesday, May 5, 2021
Edited at 12:36pm to add photo and bio of George G.McClellan


Thursday, June 18, 2020

New Angel Medical Center Design Nearly Complete, Groundbreaking to Happen Before End of Year



As Angel Medical Center (AMC) has navigated, along with all of you, a new way of life and care provision in the wake of COVID-19, life is still not “back to normal.” Ultimately, our “normal” may be different from what came before it.

There’s no question that it has been a challenging time for our community, and the world. This month, however, I’m pleased to update you on the progress of the new Angel Medical Center (AMC) because the strategic planning, facility design, and logistical preparation necessary to bring this project to life have continued on, despite the recent upheaval.

I’ve had the pleasure of working with a talented team of designers from HCA Healthcare whose specific expertise in healthcare facility design. They’ve worked to bring our vision for the new facility to reality. The first step was assessing the patient and community needs in our new hospital. Once the space plan and services were established, the national architectural standards were analyzed and incorporated into the plan. Other details considered in the plan are functional layouts, furniture that is easy to clean, the proximity of services, and incorporating features that create a comfortable, healing environment.
It’s also helpful to think of the fact that our hospital must meet many different needs — those of staff, caregivers, and patients. We needed space for the storage of supplies and equipment close to where our staff cares for our patients. We wanted to encourage patient caregivers to stay with our patients, so we need a family space that is comfortable and promotes family-centered care. We also want to incorporate unique elements from Franklin and our county in the design of the new hospital.

The new AMC will be easy to access, so patients can quickly find the department where they are seeking care. Signage will also be clear, providing wayfinding for our patients and families. Once a patient enters the hospital’s main entrance and is registered, they will be within steps of any outpatient services they need. The Emergency Department will also be on the hospital’s first level and clearly marked, and the location of our helicopter pad will be close to the Emergency Department to make patient transport efficient. The second floor will be totally focused on the care of our inpatients, and will provide a quiet, healing environment for them and their families. The interior of the new AMC started to evolve when I spent two days with our design team from HCA Healthcare in early March. We worked with an interior design inspiration board, reviewed renderings, and made decisions about materials and finishes, with the goal of making our new space convey warmth and comfort. Glass elements will allow abundant natural light into the hospital, and inviting furniture will be situated so as to make guests feel comfortable, but not crowded.

This goal will also be realized by using a warm and inviting color palette grounded in soft grays, blues, and greens – the colors of nature. A nature-based feeling will also be incorporated into our main lobby, which will feature a dramatic natural stone wall, and our cafeteria, whose glass wall and doors will be accented with an etched tree motif.

Another appealing aspect of the design is the use of local landmarks. Examples include the use of the Smoky Mountains and Wayah Bald fire tower in our design. You will also recognize the influence of our region’s Scottish heritage on the facility’s furnishings.

Patient rooms will be significantly larger and able to accommodate visitors and staff more comfortably. “Smart Room” technology will also improve the coordination of care for our patients and allow the patient to manage their communication with the nurses and their own comfort.

When the design is finalized, we will submit a detailed set of construction drawings to the state for approval. Once we have the state of North Carolina’s approval, we anticipate breaking ground on the new hospital. Exciting things are happening at the hospital as we envision offering you care in a state-of-the-art, efficient, and beautiful facility. There’s still a great deal of work to be done before we host a ribbon-cutting, but we are well on our way. We appreciate the support and patience of our community as we move forward toward the reality of our new hospital.

Karen S. Gorby, RN, MSN, MBA, CENP, FACHE, is Chief Executive Officer and Chief Nursing Officer of Angel Medical Center. Gorby is a Fellow of the American College of Healthcare Executives (ACHE). For nearly three decades, she has served hospitals and health systems in Ohio before assuming her role at Angel Medical Center. Gorby received her MSN from Saint Joseph’s College in Standish, Maine, and her MBA from Wright State University in Fairborn, Ohio.

ABOUT ANGEL MEDICAL CENTER

Angel Medical Center, a member of Mission Health, an operating division of HCA Healthcare, is a full-service community hospital serving Macon and the surrounding counties. Located in Franklin, North Carolina, Angel Medical Center is a Top 100 Critical Access Hospital offering inpatient services that include an intensive care unit, and a medical and surgical unit. Angel Medical Center has also been named an Acute Stroke Ready hospital by The Joint Commission and the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association. Outpatient services include a wound clinic, chemotherapy services, a full laboratory, digital mammography, CT, MRI, nuclear medicine, rehab therapy, as well as surgical and endoscopy services. The hospital also operates Mission My Care Now Franklin and CarePartners Hospice & Home Health. For more information, please visit missionhealth.org/angel.

ABOUT MISSION HEALTH

Mission Health, an operating division of HCA Healthcare, is based in Asheville, North Carolina, and is the
state’s sixth-largest health system. Mission Health operates six hospitals, numerous outpatient and surgery centers, post-acute care provider CarePartners, long-term acute care provider Asheville Specialty Hospital and the region’s only dedicated Level II trauma center. With approximately 12,000 colleagues and 2,000 volunteers, Mission Health is dedicated to improving the health and wellness of the people of western North Carolina. For more information, please visit missionhealth.org or @MissionHealthNC.

###



DAY SPONSOR

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To see updates related to COVID-19, please click: franklinhealthandfitness.com

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Wednesday, September 12, 2018

Letter to the Editor Acknowledging Quick Response by Cullasaja Fire Department and Macon County EMS

I want to thank and acknowledge the Cullasaja Fire Department's prompt and professional assistance when I was bitten by a copperhead Thursday morning. I've always been concerned about a response in the event of an emergency, as we are somewhat remote. First responders were on site in five minutes; EMS a few minutes later. Everyone was amazing. Thank you for everything.

So people are asking for "the story." If you're interested, here goes:

Bill and I had been gone from home almost two weeks and had returned in time to do laundry, pay bills, and get ready for company to arrive on Friday. We had already canceled on these friends—twice!—and I was bound and determined not to let anything interfere with our plans this time.

My to-do list Thursday was a mile long. I was home alone and had almost completed item #1: watering my dying outdoor plants; it obviously had not rained the entire time we were in Alaska. I was barefoot (I know, I’m an idiot), and as I walked down my mulched path to water the last ten feet of my garden, I noted a weed in front of a small hosta. Watering with my right hand, I reached down with my left to pull the weed.

As I did, an adult copperhead (2-3’ long—I couldn’t tell because he was coiled under the plant) struck my left middle finger. Obviously threatened, he struck from a foot or so away.

Having a history of anaphylaxis from simple insect bites, I knew that response time was of the essence. Within 60 seconds, I was in the house and calling 911. We live at the top of a mountain in a very small town, and I’ve always been concerned about response times in case of emergency. I’m thankful that within five minutes, first responders had arrived, and the 911 operator stayed on the phone with me until they did.

Five minutes later, there were I-don’t-know-how-many ambulances/fire trucks/emergency vehicles in our driveway. I want to encourage my Franklin neighbors to have confidence in our local emergency services! I was rushed to Angel Hospital in Franklin, where I received outstanding care for a few hours. As my finger, my hand, and my arm began to swell, ED nurses began marking my hand and arm, noting increasing circumferences at different points every half-hour or so.

It was interesting: I could feel the venom travel from my fingertip (fortunately, only one fang had hit me, about 1/4 inch below my first joint), down my finger to my hand, then my wrist, and then up my arm. The sense of the moving venom was followed by intense nerve pain that manifested even before each area swelled. Slowly but surely, my hand swelled until it looked like a surgical glove that had been blown up like a balloon. My hand began to discolor, as did my arm, as the swelling increased and worked its way up to my shoulder, chest, and back. They warned me that the entire appendage would probably turn black and that I should be prepared for the worst.

The medical folks were concerned about a lot of things, primarily

my heart
my kidneys
tissue necrosis
blood clots
liver failure

Debating whether or not to begin antivenin, they were receiving step-by-step direction from National Poison Control. Because of the tremendous cost of CroFab, the antivenin used for snakebites (each vial costs about $2,500, each infusion requires 4–6 vials, and the treatment is usually 4 infusions), they do not immediately administer the drug unless they know the snake was a baby; babies evidently hang on to the skin longer and release more venom than adults unless the adult is close to death. But when my swelling started progressing far quicker than anticipated and the situation became life-threatening, they began CroFab here at Angel Hospital.

At that point, they informed me they needed to transfer me to the trauma center at Mission Hospital in Asheville. I continued receiving CroFab in the ambulance and then was treated in the ED there for two or three hours.

It was a riot: at both hospitals, there was a steady stream of employees, interns, PAs, nurses, and even physicians coming to my room to ask me if they could look at my hand and arm. They kept saying, “We’ve trained for this, but we’ve never actually seen a snakebite victim before! What did it feel like? How did you know it was a copperhead? How does it feel now?” Some of the younger ones actually said, “Oh, that is SO COOL!” I felt like part of a freak show at the circus or, as my daughter-in-law, Estel said, a member of the ensemble of The Greatest Showman. :-)

They administered round #2 of CroFab and moved me to the Trauma Unit. The swelling continued to increase, but—I’m convinced, because of the prayers of all of you—my vital signs and blood work, monitored every 15 minutes or so, stayed positively perfect. By midnight, however, I could not move my hand at all. They gave me round #3 of CroFab at 3:00 am, and round #4 at 9:00.

At that point, I began moving my fingers a bit. I sensed the swelling was beginning to diminish. The medical staff had prepared me for a long stay, possibly a week or two. But within hours, they decided to release me. Poison Control ended up being a bit unhappy about that decision, but I promise you, all I wanted to do was get home to my own bed.

Over the past two days, the swelling and pain has continued traveling across my chest, but Poison Control assures me this is no big deal. Lymph node involvement is completely normal, and the symptoms should dissipate in the next two weeks or so.

My arm is NOT black. My hand is NOT necrotic. The swelling has tremendously decreased. I am typing now without much discomfort. I am believing my hand and arm will be completely healed and restored, to the glory of God.

So thank you! Thanks for all the love. Thanks for the prayers and encouragement and support. It is nothing short of miraculous that everything the medical professionals anticipated and warned against has not come to pass. I must tell you that I have never once been anxious or fearful. If anything, I was massively annoyed that this incident was cramping my style and interfering with my plans. I had the peace of God that surpasses all understanding. Through the entire ordeal, the verse that kept flowing through my mind was from Luke 10:19:

"I have given you authority to trample on snakes and scorpions and to overcome all the power of the enemy; nothing will harm you."

Now, I don’t recommend trampling on the nasty creatures. But it was enough of a correlation to give me complete confidence in the power of Christ in me. A snake ain’t no thang to Him.

However, I’d like to recommend rubber boots and leather gloves whenever you work in the garden.

Thanks again for prayerfully carrying my family and me through this experience.

Love,
Lindsay


Tuesday, January 2, 2018

Letter to the Editor:
Another Christmas made brighter for those in need




Again this year, Macon County Department of Social Services would like to extend our most sincere appreciation to the following sponsors in helping us make Christmas brighter for the children, the families, and the individuals we serve. Thank you for partnering with us to make Macon County a stronger community. We look forward to continuing to make a difference with you in 2018.


• Julie Adams and Rachel Marshall - Discover Church
• Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory LTER Employees
• The Filling Station Thrift Store
• Franklin High School French Club – Lisa Welch
• Franklin High School Student Athletes – Taylor Rogers
• Rita and Mike Foskey
• Sheryl and Geoff Gerard of Madison, MS
• Evan Harrell Real Estate
• Junaluskee Lodge #145 A.F. & A.M.
• Macon County Register of Deeds Employees
• Shawn and D’Anne Maddox
• Amy and Scott Manshack – State Farm Insurance
• Susan M. and Dana McQuitty
• Ty and Elizabeth Payseur
• Snow Hill United Methodist Church
• Watauga Baptist Church
• Mike Wood

If you are interested in supporting a foster child at any time of the year, please contact Stacey Messer at 828-349-2546. Thank you.

R. Patrick Betancourt, Director

Macon County Department of Social Services

Lakeside Government Complex
1832 Lakeside Drive
Franklin, North Carolina ∙ 28734-6778
Tel: 828-349-2124 ∙ Fax: 828-349-2401
www.maconnc.org/dss.html



Saturday, June 10, 2017

RE: Lee Buchanan’s Opinion piece in the 24th May 2017 Franklin Press
Letter to the Editor by George Crockett


File Photo of Memorial in Rankin Square



“The South went to war to preserve slavery,” Buchanan says. The South did not go to war. War was brought to the South.


The South fought for slavery, he says. Who was fighting against slavery that the South had to fight for it? Lincoln told them they could keep their slaves if they did not secede. They seceded anyway, so they must have had other reasons. The Republicans did not adopt abolition of slavery as a war goal until late 1862, but there had been fighting since early 1861, so there must have been other goals for which the North went to war.


Washington and Jefferson were “flawed men of their time” because they owned slaves, says Buchanan. Then every last one of us alive today is a flawed person of our time because we buy goods made in factories that emit carbon dioxide and drive cars that produce carbon dioxide.


Buchanan says the men who led Confederate armies in the war, were flawed men of their time. Until 1789, our constitution of government was the Articles of Confederation. It provided each member state of the union with a veto over legislation proposed in Congress so that laws had to be agreeable to every state. The constitution that replaced the Articles, provided no veto to any minority. The majority was always to rule, regardless of the needs of any minority. In the 1840s, John C. Calhoun suggested that the Constitution be amended so that a majority of each major party would have to agree in order for laws to be passed. He predicted that without such an amendment, separation of the Union would result. The Northern states had a majority in the House of Representatives almost from the start, but the South held a majority of the Senate until 1850. Northern businessmen and politicians wanted the government to support industry. With the help of some Southern senators, they got a protective tariff after the War of 1812. From then, Northern industry existed on government subsidy. Most of that subsidy resulted from the tariff which prevented Americans from buying foreign goods except at very high prices, so that Northern businessmen could charge very high prices for their goods. Also, the majority of the tariffs collected were spent in the North. In the 1830s, South Carolina risked war with its Nullification Act to escape the oppression of the protective tariff. (In March 1862, after the Southern Congressmen had gone home, the Republican Congress would pass a protective tariff that was higher than any the North had yet obtained.) The Southern Representatives and Senators usually voted against government support for industry. Northern businessmen and politicians began to scheme to reduce the political power of the agricultural South. In the 1820s, they got slavery barred from certain territories. In the 1840s, they tried unsuccessfully to bar it from more territories. Also in the 1840s, they tried unsuccessfully to limit the size of farm that could be purchased in the territories. (In 1862, after Southern states had withdrawn from the federal government, the Republican Congress would pass the Homestead Act which limited the size of farms carved out of federal territory.) In 1850, California was required, for admission to the Union, to allow the federal government to retain all government lands in the state, so that the business interests with their new majority in both chambers of Congress, could control the size of farms carved out of government lands. In 1860, the industrial interests, which already controlled both chambers of Congress, obtained control of the Presidency also. Now their long campaign to make the agricultural interests in the U.S. subservient to the industrial interests, would be certain of success. Now a majority of Southerners joined those fire-eaters who had long believed secession was the only way for survival. Such men are not flawed. Such men are patriots. That most of rural America, north and south, agreed with them is suggested by examining a county by county map of the Presidential election of 1860–rural counties voted Democratic or Constitutional Unionist, urban counties elected Lincoln.


“Clinging to the evil economic engine of slavery was the shameful motivation behind Southern aristocracy going to war,” Buchanan believes. In every Southern convention to consider secession that I know anything about (and I don’t know everything), the majority of the aristocratic delegates present, voted against secession. However, the Southern states were democracies, not aristocracies, so the aristocrats were out-voted by the delegates from the middle class and commonality. When war came, the aristocrats supported the Confederacy. By then it was their country, like it or not, and their country was being invaded. The Southern aristocracy did not go to war. War was brought to them. Clinging to the evil economic engine of government subsidies was the shameful motivation behind Northern bourgeois going to war. If the South seceded, the North would no longer have its captive market for its goods or other peoples’ money for improvements to its transportation systems, thus would occur the Mother of all Great Depressions.


“The South’s cause was grotesquely wrong.” There is never one cause for warfare and never is one side all right or all wrong, and I maintain that the South was more right than wrong and more right than the North. That is my opinion, which at least is an educated opinion.



--George Crockett


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Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Letter to the Editor
Our Appreciation to the Generous People of Macon County

Thank You Card from Samaritans Purse

February 27, 2017



I am writing to thank and celebrate the residents of Franklin/Highlands and Macon County for spreading joy to children around the world this Christmas season. The generosity of Macon County volunteers, families and groups contributed a total of 4,766 shoebox gifts, paved the way for us to collect a total 18,719 shoebox gifts from all of our Western North Carolina Area (which includes Cherokee, Clay, Graham, Haywood, Jackson, Macon and Swain Counties) for the Samaritan’s Purse project Operation Christmas Child—the world’s largest Christmas project of its kind. Our International Total for 2016 is 11,485,662 Shoeboxes!

In October, we had the privilege of hearing the personal story of shoebox recipient Dania Yadago, who received a shoebox when she was 5 years old. She now lives and attends college in North Carolina, serving Operation Christmas Child as much as her busy schedule allows. In November, the Western North Carolina Collection Center at Holly Springs Baptist Church celebrated the Grand Opening of the 2016 Collection Week with a special ‘ribbon cutting’ and time of prayer! It was attended by County Commissioners Ronnie Beale, and Gary Shields, School Board Member, Fred Goldsmith, and Pastor Donnie Seagle, volunteers and guests! Area Coordinator June Trull shared some of the history of Holly Springs Baptist Church’s journey from becoming a Relay Center in 2008, to a Relay-Relay Center, to a Collection Center for Western North Carolina and 11-year-old Callie Barnett, from Windy Gap Baptist Church, cut the ribbon to open the WNC Collection Center. Macon County’s other drop-off location First Baptist Church of Highlands, celebrated it’s first year as a drop-off location. Long time volunteers Sergio Barranco and Angelica Garcia did a great job as coordinators.

The gift-filled shoeboxes are tangible expressions of God’s love for children around the world suffering from poverty, natural disaster, war, disease and famine. These children, many of whom have never received a gift before, learn they are loved and not forgotten. Since 1993, Operation Christmas Child has collected and delivered more than 135 million gift-filled shoeboxes to children in more than 150 countries and territories.

It’s not too late for people to make a difference. Though the Macon County drop-off locations are closed until November 2017, filled shoeboxes are collected year-round at the Samaritan’s Purse headquarters in Boone, North Carolina. Additionally, anyone can conveniently pack a personalized Operation Christmas Child shoebox gift at samaritanspurse.org/occ. Information about year-round volunteer opportunities can also be found on the website or e-mail us at wncocc@yahoo.com.

Thank you again to everyone who participated in this project and for those who do so year after year. These simple gifts, packed with love, send a message of hope and continue to transform the lives of children worldwide.


Sincerely,

June Trull, Area Coordinator
Western North Carolina Area Team
Operation Christmas Child
828-347-5230
**Any time is a good time to pack a shoe box!!**


Friday, December 30, 2016

Letter to the Editor
Christmas made brighter for those in need




The Macon County Department of Social Services would like to extend our most sincere appreciation to the following sponsors in helping us make Christmas brighter for the children, the families, and the individuals we serve. Thank you for helping us to fulfill our mission of partnering to promote, protect, and strengthen our community.


Matt Bateman, Franklin Fitness Center
Jeff Cloer
Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory Employees
Discover Church
Chris and Amanda Duke
Franklin High School French Club and Lisa Welch
Franklin High School Student Athletes and Taylor Rogers
Michelle Graham of Raleigh, NC
Sheriff Robert L. Holland and the Macon County Sheriff’s Office
Terell and Linda Johnson
Junaluskee Lodge #145 AF&AM Members
Jonathan and Megan Keener
Jane Long
Amy Manshack, State Farm Insurance
Lee and Teri Marshall of Orange City, FL
Rachel Marshall
Cheryl McCune of Portage, IN
Alan and Alpha Shoffeitt
Snow Hill United Methodist Church
Watauga Baptist Church and Dr. Wesley Price


If you are interested in supporting a foster child at any time of the year, please contact Stacey Messer at 828-349-2546.

R. Patrick Betancourt, Director – Franklin, N.C.

Our Mission: Partnering to promote, protect, and strengthen our community.

Monday, April 25, 2016

Letter to the Editor
No Negative Connotation in Resignation of Mayor from Board

Letter to the Editor



Letter to the editor in response to the Macon County News & Shopping Guide article Thursday, April 21, 2016 “Mayor resigns from ATCC board”:

No negative connotation in Resignation.

As a founding member of the Franklin Appalachian Trail Community Council I offer for readers the following information: Facts:

1. Franklin Mayor Bob Scott was one of four people that promoted Franklin to seek designation as an Appalachian Trail Community.
2. The Franklin Appalachian Trail Community Council (by its by-laws) has two representatives from the Town of Franklin an alderman and a town employee.
3. Since the Council’s formation in 2009, until elected mayor, Bob Scott served as the town alderman representative.
4. When elected mayor Pattie Able replaced Bob Scott as the alderman representative.
5. Mayor Scott remained on the Council until his recent resignation (by its by-laws the council has a flexible membership from 11-15).

In my opinion: 


1. Mayor Scott left the Council in strong hands.
2. His love of Macon County’s surrounding natural beauty and his support to Franklin as a mecca for outdoor enthusiasts is unquestionable.
3. At this time, his leadership, managerial ability and political capital need to focus on other issues facing Franklin.
4. Franklin’s position as an A.T. Community is secure in no small part to his early vision and eight years on the Council.

Bill Van Horn




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