Deployments Suck!
by Jami_Van_Brocklin
 The Munford Mixer
Apr 23, 2012 | 2659 views |  0 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
Sorry it's been a while since I've written anything. As my husband prepares for deployment to Afghanistan, you can imagine that life is becoming hectic. For any of you who have been through a deployment, you know what I mean. He already served in Iraq, so I already have been there, done that; however, this time around, we have 2 kids instead of 1, and we aren't living on a base with a community of people going through the same thing. It's a lot more stressful this time around.

On top of the deployment stuff, I am preparing to finish out the spring semester. I'll be taking the summer semester off, but I'll be starting back to school in the fall. Along with my starting back to school in the fall, our daughter will be enjoying her last year of elementary school and our son will be starting preschool, and unfortunately, their daddy will miss it all! :(

I will be updating this blog from time to time as my life permits. I do have quite a bit of things that will be coming up soon that I will be sharing, such as GS events and activities, along with community events that I am going to be helping to coordinate. So, please don't give up on me! LOL
Get Your Girl Scout Cookies! Last Week! Cookie Booths!
by Jami_Van_Brocklin
 The Munford Mixer
Mar 03, 2012 | 2776 views |  0 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
Our Troop had a cookie booth planned for the Piggly Wiggly in Talladega for this morning from 11 a.m.-2 p.m, but with the bad weather last night, I've been told that the EMA in Talladega County said that there was flooding, so that one has been cancelled.

However, we will be at Precious Prints Pottery and Paint Bar in Oxford, today, from 4 p.m.-7 p.m. Please come out and support our Girl Scout Troop. We are also collecting donated cookies for local National Guard soldiers who are preparing for deployment to Afghanistan this summer. If you don't want or can't eat the cookies, please think of our HEROES!
GIRL SCOUT COOKIE BOOTH!!! Come get your cookies!
by Jami_Van_Brocklin
 The Munford Mixer
Feb 09, 2012 | 2355 views |  0 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
Girl Scout Troop #20074

First Cookie Booth of the Season! Come support our troop! Help send our troop to Summer Camp this summer.

All cookies $3.50 per box.

Samoas, Thin Mints, Tagalongs, Do-si-dos, Thank U Berry Munch, Dulce de Leche, Trefoils, and introducing...in honor of the Girl Scout's 100th Year Anniversary....Savannah Smiles

All donated cookies will go to local Alabama military troops!


Date: Saturday, Feb. 18, 2012
Time: 12 p.m.-3 p.m.
Location: Winn-Dixie in Coldwater on Hwy 78
4920 Hwy 78 West

Cash only, PLEASE! NO BILLS OVER $20.
PTSD Research Study for Iraq/Afghanistan War Vets
by Jami_Van_Brocklin
 The Munford Mixer
Jan 17, 2012 | 2412 views |  0 comments | 12 12 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
Emory University, located in Atlanta, Georgia, recently accepted someone I know into their PTSD Research Study program. In this program, this person will receive free treatment as part of the study, and this person will use new therapies that are not available to society yet. These studies have been going on since 2006, and many have been found to be effective for the majority of the Vets who have gone through the program already.
If you know someone who is an Iraq or Afghanistan War Vet, or if YOU are that Vet, and have a diagnosis of PTSD and do not feel that current treatments are working, contact Emory Univ. PTSD Research Program.

http://www.psychiatry.emory.edu/PROGRAMS/Trauma/

Go to this link for more information!
Operation Cards for Soldiers - a Crafty Cause!
by Jami_Van_Brocklin
 The Munford Mixer
Jan 11, 2012 | 1586 views |  0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink
Crafting for a Cause   While looking up a blog on homemade crafts, I found a link to another blog about crafting, and I found this! Operation Cards for Soldiers! This is the information that the blog Ladybird Ln had on this project:

"
I am so excited for October-Novembers Crafting for a Cause project! It is very near and dear to my heart. So many soldiers around the country, leave the comfort of home, friends, and family, to serve in the military. This month I am spotlighting a wonderful organization Operation Christmas Cards. The mission of Operation Christmas Card is to “love our troops one card at a time” to ensure that each of our service members know they are appreciated, supported and loved by the very people they are sacrificing their lives to fight for.

I can't think of anything better then sending a card to a soldier expressing thanks for our freedom during the Holiday season. Who is with me?
Participation is very easy and we encourage everyone to help. This
would be a great project to do as a family, church group, work group, etc. Operation Christmas Cards welcomes cards of ALL faiths from anywhere around the world! The cards can be store bought or home made, but we ask that they are no bigger than 9x9 to fit into shipping boxes.
Doesn't this sound like fun! Here are some guidelines from the Operation Christmas Card:
Do's and Dont's :

-do NOT seal the envelopes
-only write supportive and encouraging notes
-you may include email or mailing address
-stickers and glitter are OK
-envelopes may be decorated
-if mailing large quantities please ship in bulk. Its cheaper for you and easier for us.
-Please include the total amount of cards you send if mailing multiples. It helps us greatly!
You do not need to include money for postage. Operation Christmas Cards sends the cards in bulk. Shipping is expensive and you can donate money for shipping if you would like on their site.
Operation Christmas Cards Needs the Cards by November 28th! Cards and donations can be mailed to:
Operation Christmas Cards
PO Box 102
Shrewsbury MA 01545
or if using UPS/FedEx/DHL etc.:
Liberty Churches
ATTN:Operation Christmas Cards
495 Hartford Turnpike
Shrewsbury MA 01545"

It states that it's for Christmas, but I'm sure you could do any holiday! 

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Tuesday, 18, 2013
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Pond Spring- The Gener... 3:50 PM
Oxford Farmers market 12:00 AM to 11:59 PM
Join us for the kick-off of Oxford's first...
Oxford Farmers market 12:00 AM to 11:59 PM
Join us for the kick-off of Oxford's first...
Anniston Middle's "failing" grade may not lead to tax credits after all
by Tim Lockette
tlockette@annistonstar.com
Jun 18, 2013 | 2554 views |  0 comments | 42 42 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Anniston Middle School (Staff file photo)
Anniston Middle School (Staff file photo)
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Anniston Middle School is among 78 "failing" schools where students' families will qualify for a state tax credit under the Alabama Accountability Act, state school officials announced Tuesday. But whether any of those families will be able to collect the tax credits remains very much in doubt. Anniston's school board has already voted to close the middle school. Local private schools have said they won't accept a set of scholarships that are linked to the tax credits. Local public schools say court orders in the state's decades-old desegregation case may prohibit Anniston students from transferring. “I will approve no transfers until we’ve cleared this with our attorneys in Lee v. Macon or the Justice Department,” said Joan Frazier, superintendent of Anniston City Schools. Frazier and school leaders across the state had long awaited the release of a list of schools determined to be "failing" by state school officials. Under the Alabama Accountability Act, passed by the Legislature in February, the state will give tax credits of about $3,500 to families with students in "failing" schools -- if they transfer their children to non-failing public schools or enroll them in private schools. List long awaited Just which schools were "failing" remained a matter of debate for months, as lawmakers debated the criteria and ultimately passed a new definition of failing schools in May and granted the Alabama Department of Education the power to interpret those rules. The final list, released Tuesday morning, contained 78 schools, most of them middle or junior high schools, and nearly all of them in high-poverty areas. Anniston Middle was the only school in Calhoun County that made the list. In a webcast press conference, state schools Superintendent Tommy Bice said middle schools may have figured so heavily in the list because they're the only grade span in which all students are tested under the state accountability system. Anniston Middle School Principal Lynwood Hawkins declined comment on the "failing" rating Tuesday, referring all questions to Frazier. Frazier defended the middle school, pointing to state figures that show improvement in test scores over the past six years. In 2007, 46 percent of the school’s students met or exceeded state standards on the Alabama Reading and Math Test. In 2012, 60 percent of students hit that mark. “We fit the same pattern as other schools on the list,” she said, noting that other “failing” schools had shown improvement in students’ scores on the test. A pathway out? Sen. Del Marsh, R-Anniston, the Accountability Act's primary author, said the designation will give Anniston's families a choice. "Many of them will simply choose to remain," he said. "But those who want to move to another school can do that now." Marsh has long promoted the Accountability Act as a pathway out of failing schools for students who are stuck in them. Transferring out of Anniston Middle may not be so easy, though. The school is the city's only middle-grades institution, which means that students hoping to transfer to another school would have to attend a school outside their district. Even if Anniston's desegregation order allows students to transfer out, nearby school systems are bound by orders that keep them from allowing students in, school officials say. “Due to our desegregation order, we will not be accepting transfer students under the Accountability Act at this time,” Calhoun County Superintendent Joe Dyar said. Oxford City Schools is under a similar order, director of student services Roy Bennett said. Jacksonville City Schools Superintendent Jon Campbell didn't cite a court order, but said the city's school board has already agreed not to alter its admissions policy, which limits admission to Jacksonville residents and children of full-time Jacksonville State University employees. He said board members wanted to keep the city's resources focused on its residents. Scholarship dilemma Desegregation orders don't prevent students from leaving for private schools, but it's still not clear the tax credits will be available for those students either. The state Department of Revenue announced Tuesday that the tax credits won't be available to families zoned for failing schools who are already in private schools. The department also announced that the tax credits won't be available if students transfer to private schools that don't accept scholarships created available a separate program set up under Section 9 of the Accountability Act. Section 9 offers tax credits to businesses if they donate to scholarships programs for low-income children. Leaders of three Anniston private schools -- the Donoho School, Faith Christian School and Sacred Heart of Jesus Catholic School -- told The Star earlier this year that they had no plan to accept the Section 9 scholarships. "It takes away our independence when we have to report information to the state like a public school," Jan Hurd, head of the Donoho School, told The Star on Tuesday. Hurd said Section 9 scholarships would require schools to report test grades and other information to the school system. Hurd said she did not know until Tuesday about the ban on tax credits for schools refusing Section 9. She said the school's board of directors had already decided to decline the scholarships, though the issue would be brought up again at a coming board meeting. Attempts to reach the directors of Faith Christian and Sacred Heart were unsuccessful Tuesday. State revenue director Julie Magee said the decision to link the tax credits to Section 9 was simple. The Accountability Act, she said, defines a private school as one that accepts the Section 9 scholarships. "We're just doing what the law says," she said. School to close Anniston Middle School's place on the failing schools list may be short-lived. The city's school board voted earlier this year to close the school, part of a citywide reorganization being done in response to the city's declining enrollment. City officials have also expressed interest in using the middle school site, across from Lowe's onMcClellan Boulevard, for commercial development. School officials have not set a date for the closure, but Frazier said it will likely happen in two or three years. Marsh said that even with the closure, parents of middle-grades kids in Anniston should continue to qualify for the tax credit. He said the change wasn't a true school closure, but just the closure of a building. "If it was failing in one spot, it's failing in the next," he said. Frazier said the change was indeed a school closure, with Cobb Elementary slated for conversion to a junior high for grades 7-9 and the system's sixth-graders expected to be distributed among the city's elementary schools. If Anniston Middle's families do get the tax credit, that credit would expire once they age out of the middle school -- thus becoming zoned for Anniston High School. Anniston High hasn't met state goals on standardized tests for years, but it wasn't on the failing schools list. Marsh said students using the tax credits who aged out of Anniston Middle wouldn't have to go to Anniston High. "They could continue to go, they'd just have to pay the tuition to go to a private school," he said. Marsh has long maintained that the Accountability Act isn’t perfect, but is the start of a system of school choice for the state’s students. “There’s a bridge there, so that if they don’t want to be in the middle school, they can leave,” he said. Capitol & statewide reporter Tim Lockette: 256-294-4193. On Twitter @TLockette_Star.
A partially completed house in Eva's Corner subdivision in Oxford. (Photo by Stephen Gross/The Anniston Star)
A partially completed house in Eva's Corner subdivision in Oxford. (Photo by Stephen Gross/The Anniston Star)
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HOT BLAST: 'We must move beyond guns themselves'
Jun 18, 2013 | 34 views |  0 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend | print
A teddy bear, flowers and a candle are the only items left at the entrance to Sandy Hook Elementary School on the six-month anniversary of the Dec. 14 shooting in Newtown, Conn., on June 14. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)
A teddy bear, flowers and a candle are the only items left at the entrance to Sandy Hook Elementary School on the six-month anniversary of the Dec. 14 shooting in Newtown, Conn., on June 14. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)
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Writing in The New York Review of Books, Georgetown Law professor David Cole examines the failures to pass gun-control measures over the six months since the Sandy Hook massacre.

In Facing the Real Gun Problem, Cole claims gun-control supporters have a fundamental misunderstanding of gun owners and their advocacy groups.

He writes, "[A]ny effort to address gun violence must also look beyond gun regulation, to the root causes of the violence. As noted above, the vast majority of gun deaths are caused by handguns. The Constitution forbids banning ordinary guns, and Americans do not support such bans anyway. And with 270 million guns already in private hands, it is too late for a meaningful ban in any event. Accordingly, if we want to do something about gun violence, we must move beyond guns themselves, to address the problem at its roots." 

- Bob Davis 
Area home builders seeing improvement in the market
by Patrick McCreless
pmccreless@annistonstar.com
Jun 18, 2013 | 91 views |  0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
A partially completed house in Eva's Corner subdivision in Oxford. (Photo by Stephen Gross/The Anniston Star)
A partially completed house in Eva's Corner subdivision in Oxford. (Photo by Stephen Gross/The Anniston Star)
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Tony Waddell has plenty of work to do these days. He couldn't be more thrilled. Owner of Waddell Construction Company in Heflin, Waddell has seen business for his home-building company increase in Calhoun County in recent months. "Yes, it's improved with us tremendously," Waddell said. "We've got a lot more work, a lot more building." Waddell is not the only home builder seeing improvement this year. U.S. Census Bureau figures released Tuesday show all U.S. new-home construction starts, which include single-family homes and condos, increased 6.8 percent in May compared to April figures and 28.6 percent compared to home starts in May last year. Meanwhile, a National Association of Home Builders report released Monday states builder confidence in the market for newly built single-family homes is at its highest level since 2006. The reports indicate the home-building market is recovering from the Great Recession — an important component of the overall U.S. economic recovery efforts, economists say. The census data show single-family home construction, almost two-thirds of the home-builders market, increased 0.3 percent in May compared to April. Also, single-family housing completions increased 4.2 percent in May compared to April. The National Association of Home Builders report indicates the confidence rating was 52 in June, an increase of eight points from the previous month. Any reading over 50 indicates that more builders view sales conditions as good than poor. The report, calculated every six months, has not had a rating over 50 since 2006, according to a Monday press release from the association. “Today’s report is consistent with our forecast for a 29 percent increase in total housing starts this year, which would mark the first time since 2007 that starts have topped the 1 million mark," said David Crowe, chief economist for the National Association of Home Builders, in the press release. Home builders across the country have struggled in recent years since the Great Recession hit in 2008, which caused massive layoffs and discouraged many people from buying new homes. "We've struggled ... I've been in this business for 36 years and I never thought I'd see it like we have had the last four years," said Sam Almaroad, president of Sam Almaroad Construction in Jacksonville. However, in the last few months, Almaroad has seen business improve. "I think the market is turning as far as my company," Almaroad said. Almaroad said he is building custom homes in Jacksonville, Oxford and Piedmont. Almaroad noted, however, that his company is still mainly remodeling homes or building additions to get by in the still recovering economy. "As things progress though, I think there's going to be a demand for lots," he said. Waddell said most of his new home construction is in the Oxford area. He said low interest rates and cheaper building materials are helping stimulate more interest in home building. "The cost of building materials are the lowest they have been in several years," Waddell said. Shad Williams, president and CEO of Cheaha Bank in Oxford, said his bank has had more loan requests for new home construction this year. He said he is optimistic the housing market will continue to improve. "Our bank has been contacting builders to let them know we have money for new homes," Williams said. "I believe there is a demand for new homes in Calhoun County." Robert Robicheaux, chairman of the department of marketing, industrial distribution and economics at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, said the home construction market is a vital part of the economy. "The home building industry is huge in that whenever a person builds a new home, construction crews benefit, but so do retailers ... you have to buy new appliances, new carpet, new drapery," Robicheaux said. Keivan Deravi, economist at Auburn University Montgomery, agreed. "The economy is basically a three-legged stool — one leg is having factories to produce, the second is creating jobs and the third really is the housing market," Deravi said. "It's such a huge sector of the economy." Deravi said improvements in employment have helped stimulate the housing market. A drop in unsold homes has also stimulated the market. The recession led to an influx in cheaper foreclosed homes, which lowered demand for new home construction. Robicheaux said the housing market is far from recovered, but there are changes in the economy that should help the market improve further. "The rise in the consumer market, unemployment is being lowered ... all these things are falling in line to show we are having recovery," he said. Staff writer Patrick McCreless: 256-235-3561. On Twitter @PMcCreless_Star.
A teddy bear, flowers and a candle are the only items left at the entrance to Sandy Hook Elementary School on the six-month anniversary of the Dec. 14 shooting in Newtown, Conn., on June 14. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)
A teddy bear, flowers and a candle are the only items left at the entrance to Sandy Hook Elementary School on the six-month anniversary of the Dec. 14 shooting in Newtown, Conn., on June 14. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)
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