Saturday, December 5, 2015

December 2015

    I have been trying to no avail to download some pictures that Deborah Thomas took of the MCREA Nov. meeting.  So, I am sorry folks, but I will be sure to have my camera on hand on Thursday, the 17th, to get enough to make up for this time.

   I understand that the Nov. meeting was well attended as usual and that the speaker, Melissa Porter of the Manatee County History Fair, was interesting.  Unfortunately, I could not attend since Chet, the dog, the three cats and I had all been put out of our house so that poisonous gas could be pumped in to kill the  termites.  What an ordeal that was. 

    Luckily, Chet's niece Karen in Cortez had an empty cottage that we were able to hide in until it was over. If you ever need to have your house done, enlist some aid.  It's amazing how much stuff you must either bag up in special doubled bags and seal with duct tape or carry off to another location.  Then there are all the medicines and other toiletries which also must be moved away from the danger area.  I made a resolution to go through cupboards and throw things away.  I am no longer going to buy all the bogo staff at the grocery store.  I seemed to have two boxes of everything.  And little bits of this and that will no longer be relegated to the freezer.  I'm just tossing them.  Never mind those starving children in China that my mother used to tell me about.  What they don't know won't hurt them.

    Thanks to your generosity, I have many books to grade and to take to FELT for the Christmas holiday distribution.  I think we do not have enough for every child on the list who receives a backpack of food, but there are so many needing help now.  We should be able to cover about half of them and then if you continue to bring books in, we can get the other half at the last distribution in June.  I pray that all those children will have their nutrition needs met during the break.  Hungry adults is bad, but hungry children is unbearable. 

    Please remember to donate to the MCREA Scholarship Fund.  We try to give at least two scholarships each year to high school seniors who are planning careers in education.  Unlike FREF Scholarships, we do not hold them to it, but often they do continue in education as they planned to in the beginning.  FREF, of course, gives a lot more and continues throughout the recipient's undergraduate years.  Remember, we decided a few years ago to ask for donations for MCREA Scholarship rather than try to sell each other things as we had been doing.  All those sweets weren't good for us anyway.  Diana Buell is our Scholarship Chair this year.  She will be happy to take your checks.

    We are still gathering items like small toiletries for nursing homes.  After our December meeting, Joan Sackett and Judi Ussery will collect them all and see that they are taken to the nursing homes.  Socks and cardigan sweaters are also much appreciated.  Food, medicines, perfumes, make-up, and large bulky items cannot be used.

    I just heard from Ron Schneider's wife that he is ill and in the hospital.  I know we will all be hoping for his quick recovery.

   I am looking forward to seeing you at Renaissance on 9th, 11:00 a.m., Thursday, Dec. 17.  If it's cool, we can don those holiday outfits that we used to wear for our kids -- ugly Christmas sweaters are encouraged.  I don't think they are ugly anyway.  But it is trendy to say that.
    If you haven't heard from your caller by the 13th, call Mary Ann Jensen at 756-7603 or Susan Roe, 792-4786.

     Ellen

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

November 3, 2015


Here is the large group that visited Port Manatee in October.  They found the tour, which Minnie Lee Jones booked for MCREA, to be informative and fun.  I know that many of us are planning to attend her next extravaganza at Selby Gardens.  If you haven't signed up yet, there were a few empty slots remaining -- not for long, I think.

    Here we are in November and there is no sign of fall yet.  Sweaty little children did their trick or treating in hot little costumes on Halloween night.  I planted my earth boxes while cussing at the mosquitoes and the sweat that ran down my nose as I worked.  The local weather predictors on t.v. are beside themselves with boredom.  Not only did we miss a hurricane this year, which although miserable for the rest of us, is their chance at center stage. Now we are not getting those cold fronts that they love to show marching through the South, into Florida, and often stopping at the Hillsborough County line. You can read the frustration on their sleek little faces as they launch into the "same ole, same ole". 

    Please remember the children's books which we are collecting for FELT.  In December, at the last distribution of food before the Christmas break, the volunteers like to include a book and extra food.  We are the only suppliers of books, so we need to come up with many of them.  Please search your boxes which you brought home from school when you couldn't bear to leave all of your great teaching stuff behind.  Also, the Central Library has books for sale very cheaply, and the best place of all,  the
Good Will Book Store at Tara is a treasure chest of books for kids and for you if you haven't check it out.  The books are in good shape, are cataloged, and are inexpensive.  I bought three at Publix the other day from a "3 for $10" bin.  This will be our last meeting before the break and I will have to get them all graded for distribution .  Make my work as difficult as you can by donating a lot of books.

    Other on-going collections are empty shoe boxes for Meals of Wheels.  Each Christmas, the volunteer drivers take a shoebox filled with goodies to each of the people on their routes.  Meals of Wheels is collecting the boxes which they will wrap, or you may wrap if you like, cover separate, combs, razors, toiletries, socks, and other small things that would cheer a shut-in.  Christmas wrapping paper would also be appreciated.

    Also, there is the Manatee County Food Bank which is especially active during the holidays.  Canned and dried food are needed.

     Of course, not everyone can do all of these.  Just do what you can (of peas, of corn, of beans?)

    Retired Educators Day has been proclaimed by Governor Rick Scott to be celebrated on Sunday, Nov. 15.  If you would like to inform your clergy person of the date and have it announced in church or temple that day, it would be a good thing for our image as a productive body.  I have sent the proclamation to the newspapers.

    Remember that the November meeting will be on Wednesday, Nov. 18.  Renaissance on 9th has another large event on Thursday.  Melissa Porter, the Education and Volunteer Coordinator of the Manatee County History Fair, will be our speaker.  We have donated to this group for many years.  It gives the students incentives to learn about the history of the county, state, and nation.  With so much emphasis on testing of the basics, the fair presents an opportunity for some creative learning.

    Our annual Halloween party was a blast as usual.  Thank you, extroverted ones, for dressing up and adding your creativity










 to the celebration, especially the big Richard Chicken who inspired the chef and staff so much that they prepared him a special dinner of corn which was served with a flourish by the chef himself.  Bingo by Sandy Stephenson was a hit as usual, and the prizes were great. 

  If you do not hear from your caller in the week before the meeting, please call Sue Roe, 792-4786 to make a reservation.

  See you soon,
  Ellen



Monday, October 5, 2015

10/05/2015

    I think the unreasonable and dictatorial behavior of the SCF Board of Trustees in doing away with faculty's continuing contracts and cutting the pay and adding hours to the staff's contracts is an object lesson for us all.  Most of us are retired from the Manatee County Schools, but I had experience in both MCC ( as it was then known) and the Manatee School System.  When I was hired at the college, I was surprised to discover that faculty and staff relied on the administration to set wages and benefits.  The only representation they had was an elected faculty senate who would troop over to the president's office in the springtime and listen while he told them what he would do for them the next year.  I think the staff did not even have that.  Hiring was individual in that the applicant was offered a salary which could be discussed, but most did not know that, so they accepted what they were offered.  Often, in the same department, teaching the same load, with the same credentials, salaries were all over the map.  Now faculty and staff is being told that they no longer will have the protections of continuing contracts, that salaries will be decided by the ability of the instructor, that applicants must name the salary which they will take, and staff will lose pay and work more hours.  And there is nothing they can do about it.  This is called "running the schools like a business". 

    I think the situation at SCF should give us impetus to support FREA, the organization which protects our retirement and our benefits.  It should also give us a deeper respect for MEA and the FEA which protected us when we were still working.  We must be mindful of those who are entering the profession and help them realize the same benefits we did.  Writing letters, emailing, and calling our legislators can help, not just us, but them as well.

    Okay, end of harangue and on to more pleasant things in MCREA.

     We had a wonderful turn-out for our first meeting.  Elaine Graham spoke about Take Stock in Children and told us about her experiences mentoring students at Southeast High School.  She has seen some from 9th grade through college.  She urged us to join her in mentoring a student one day a week. Call her if you are interested.  756-1470

    Diana Buell, Chair of the Volunteer Services Committee, visited the Salvation Army Men's Homeless Shelter and found a great need for our help.  The men come there to sleep, eat, and shower.  They need small individual sizes of shampoo, bar soap, razors, toothbrushes, shaving cream, deodorant.  Clean, used towels and washcloths are also needed.  The family homeless shelter there needs the same things in addition to diapers, baby wipes, kids and women's socks, pillow cases, and twin size sheets.  Please bring these items to the meeting and Diana will see that they get to the Army.

    We are also still collecting books for Feeding Empty Little Tummies.  This is the program which fills backpacks on Fridays with food for needy kids to take home for the weekends.  The books which we donate are distributed at Christmas and in June as an addition to the backpacks.  Books should be new or clean used ones for grades K-6.

    Another of our outreach projects is collecting food for the Manatee County Food Bank.  You can bring a can or two and deposit it with us.  Renaissance on 9th is a depository for that food. 

    Dr. Moira Hendricks, Director of YMCA Reads is asking for our help with tutoring.  Please call her at 941-798-9622, ext. 408, if you would like to find out more about volunteering there.

    Our meeting on October 15 should be an interesting one.  The speaker will be Rick Bowes, FREA State Field Director, who will speak about FREA Health and Retirement Benefits.  And then the event we all love, Sandra Stephenson will run her Halloween Bingo game.  Please bring 20 quarters to play with.  They will be a donation from you to the MCREA Scholarship Fund.  Then there is the costume parade and prizes for the best, the most beautiful, the scariest, the....  Please come in costume and get into the holiday.

    As always, if you do not hear from your caller by Friday, Oct. 9, please call Mary Ann Jensen to make a reservation,  756-7603.   

    See you soon,
    Ellen






Tuesday, September 8, 2015

September 8, 2015



    Like a bear in the springtime, or a cat in the fall, it is time to shake off the long sleep of summer and get back into action.  Hobo is not anxious return to the merry go round of meetings, luncheons, money raising, and volunteering.  Are you? Emerging from our summer dens to test the temperature, most of us are not excited about staying out there. It would be nice if September really was the month of cooler days which many of us enjoyed as children. 


   My daughter used to tell me that she could detect fall in the air this month.  She was a native who was more sensitive to slight changes in the atmosphere.  I heard a weather man on television say that September 12 is the statistically correct point in time when the temperature and the humidity begin their slow fall, day by day, sometimes warming a little and then cooling a little, as the month progresses into October.  So I am waiting for the 12th and looking forward to those days that follow.

    Polly Bostick and Tommy Thompson both left us this summer.  We will miss them at meetings.  Tommy was always there helping Ron Schneider at the check-in table.  Before Polly got sick she ran around selling 50-50 tickets during the meetings.  Both of them were excellent teachers at Sugg Middle School for many years.  Polly taught math and Tommy taught social studies.  We have sent checks in their memories to the FREA foundation which supports state scholarships for teachers.

    Our annual reception for newly retired educators garnered some members at the event and more have promised to attend the September meeting and join then.  Here are some pictures from the Meet and Greet. Many members showed up to help welcome the newcomers and to prepare the snacks and drinks.  Thank you all.



    Membership checks must be in by the end of September to assure your name is included in the MCREA Handbook.  You can bring your check for $55, which covers your MCREA membership and your FREA membership, to our September 17 meeting, or you can mail it to Ron Schneider, Treasurer, 3802 Chinaberry Rd., Bradenton, FL 34208. 

    Minnie Lee Jones has produced a great schedule of events for us this year.  She will have information for you at the first meeting.  The first event is a trip to Port Manatee.

    The annual District 7 FREA Workshop will be held on Oct. 6, at Der Dutchman Restaurant in Sarasota.  All members are welcome to attend and learn more about the work of FREA as well as meet other members of District 7.  For more information, come to the September 17 meeting or contact President Sue Roe at 792-4786.

  Deborah Thomas is once again chairing the FREA 5th Grade Writing Contest.  She will be sending information about the contest to elementary school principals and teachers soon.  If you would like to help her with the project, please call her at 752-6895.

    The FREA Convention this year will be held aboard a Royal Caribbean cruise ship.  For more information and to make a reservation, go to the FREA website.  www.frea.org.  If you haven't been looking at the website regularly, you will find it very informative and fun to read.

    Mary Ann Jensen and her calling committee will be getting in touch with you soon to make reservations for lunch ($15) at Renaissance on 9th, on Sept. 17.  If there is a slip-up and you are not called, please call Mary Ann before Monday, Sept.14.  Our first speaker is Elaine Graham, a member of MCREA, who will talk about Take Stock in Children, "The Power of Mentoring". 

    Suzanne Willever has volunteered to greet members and lead devotions this year.  If you would like to serve on her committee, please call her at 750-8783.  Deena Thomas will chair the Information/Protective Services Committee.  Please call her at 371-3404 to help.

    Our long serving Treasurer, Ron Schneider, is looking forward to his retirement from the MCREA Board.  If you are interested in giving Ron a reprieve from his duties, please call him or Susan Roe.  This is a position which can be eased into as an assistant treasurer in order to learn the job from Ron.  Actually, we are not dealing with vast sums of money here and anyone who handles a household budget is well prepared to take over. 

    I am looking forward to seeing you soon,
    Ellen



Monday, May 25, 2015

May 25, 20015 Wrapup for the year


     We had ninety members present for our May luncheon and meeting, a good number considering that many of us have left for cooler climes.  Our speaker was Christine
Nelson who gave us information on identity theft and ways to combat it.  If you would like more information on how to protect yourself you may call her at 941-376-0615 or email her at chris.protectid@yahoo.com .  She was accompanied by Detective Adrian Meridan of the Bradenton Police Department who is a fraud and identity theft investigator.  Both stressed the need for everyone to be aware of the huge growth in fraud and identity theft along with the growth of the public's use of technology like the internet and cell phones.

   









 The tables were beautifully decorated for our "picnic" with beach toys and florals.  The fried chicken, baked beans, potato salad, and cookies were perfect for the theme and they tasted good too.

  
   Our MCREA Scholarship winners attended.  Here are Danielle Duida and her mother and Nola Berish with Scholarship Chair, Pat Griffin.

Danielle also won an FREA Scholarship, a really big deal, since the grant gets larger each year that she is in college and is still in education, keeping good grades.

 
 
 
 
 






 Danielle, Pat, and Nola

A highlight of the meeting was the installation of new officers for 2015-17.
Deborah Thomas performed the installation ceremony.  Patricia Edwards stood in for Nancy Erwin, Secretary, who could not attend.




 
Our New MCREA Officers
Ron Schneider, Acting Treasurer
Elaine Waldron, Membership Chair
Phyllis Omilak, First Vice President
Susan Roe, President
Judy Shostrom, Past President
Parliamentarian, Fay Murphy (not pictured)
 
 
    The Board selected September 3 for our new retiree reception which we are now naming " The New Retiree Meet and Greet".  It will be held at the Central Library at 10:30 and you are invited to attend with someone interested in joining MCREA. (All retirees do not join the first year of their freedom.)  Our first general meeting will be on September 13.  If there should be a change in meeting place, you will be informed.
 
    Ron Schneider is listed as "acting treasurer" because his term in office has finished, but he has agreed to carry on until a new treasurer is found.  Please consider taking over for Ron if you would like to do more for MCREA. 
 
    Have a great summer,
    Ellen

 

Wednesday, May 6, 2015

May, 2015

    May already?  Does it seem to you that time is going by faster and faster with each day we get older?  Remember when we couldn't wait to be through high school, then to graduate from college, and at last get on with our lives away from parental control?  It seemed to take forever to grow up.

    If you are like me the next phase was a bit quicker paced, a blur of work, raising children, keeping a home going, and paying bills.  There was some fun and some satisfaction in there too, of course.  But there were days when the school day seemed to drag, especially before a holiday.

    Then finally, the big day which we had dreamed about arrived-- retirement.  We collected our stuff and our last paycheck and went home to a quiet house with days of leisure stretching out before us.  That didn't last long.  Soon the responsibilities grew as we took on new tasks and tried to keep in shape with visits to the gym, traveled, or visited the multitude of special doctors that come along with the aging process.

    And time went nuts!  It flies along at break neck speed while we try to keep up the pace.  Is it a new dimension we have entered?  A kind of string theory jump into another space?  Or is it just that it takes longer to get things done when we have to think more than we used to about our next move.  I do that.  I don't just leap into action anymore. I consider the pros and cons of an action.  Sometimes a new situation occurs before I have dealt with the one I am still considering.  What's the hurry, I say as I trundle along trying to keep up. 

    But here we are in May already and I wasn't ready for the hot summer.  I haven't planned anything at all except to read all the new books that I have downloaded onto my Kindle.  Maybe that is enough for now.  I'll think about it later.

    You did it!  I sorted 209 lovely children's books by grade level and delivered them to FELT last week.  Now when those children receive their last back packs of the school year, 209 of them will also have a nice book to read as well.  It makes me sad to think that some of them who really depend on that food in those back packs will not be getting it all summer, but there are other programs which will be available that perhaps will fill in the gaps.  Please start gathering books for next year's distributions. 

    Have you seen the MCREA logo items?  Trophy and Sports World will put our logo on mugs and tee shirts when we drop in and order one.  You can even bring your own tee shirt if you have style you like.  We also have some car decals available which you can purchase at the May meeting. 

    David Brown is collecting items to sell at the FREA Conference.  He needs things worth $25 or more for the Dollars for Scholars store at the conference.  Other sales of smaller items are needed for the Country Store.  Home made goods like jams and jellies go well, also, gently used items like purses, music boxes, and other things which may be cluttering up your spaces.  All profits go the FREA Scholarship Fund.

    We will be installing our new officers at the May meeting.  The position of Treasurer is still open.  If you would like to support MCREA by taking on this position, please let Deborah Thomas know.  I think you would enjoy being a member of the Board of MCREA.  We do have fun and the work is divided up among us.  Ron Schneider has graciously volunteered to continue his duties until a new person is found.  It is important to know that this job does not require a lot of expertise in finance, since we do not have a lot of money to manage.  Alas!

    I hope to see you on Thursday, May 21, at Renaissance on 9th.  Remember to arrive around 11 for a quick check in and an opportunity to visit with your friends.  The theme of this meeting is "Summer".  We will be served picnic fare.  I will vouch for the picnic food at Renaissance.  The potato salad is outstanding.  Our program will be on Identity Theft presented by Christine Nelson.

As usual, call me or Judy Shostrom if you do not hear from your caller by the 16th.
Ellen






Thursday, April 2, 2015

APRIL 2015

    I missed the last meeting because I accompanied my husband to the Sarasota County Courthouse.  No, he isn't a felon, and after his time before the judge, he isn't a traffic violator either.  It seems there were no witnesses in the courtroom to testify that he caused a wreck on U.S. 41, so the judge dismissed the case.  What a relief.  After the wreck, he was carried off to the Blake Trauma Center while the guy in front of him at the accident site gave his version of the accident.  Chester says the guy changed lanes and clipped him.  Anyway, no fine, no points, and no traffic school. 

  
     On March 17, Judy Shostrom, Deborah Thomas, and I went to Kinnan Elementary School to award the MCREA Fifth Grade Essay Contest winner, Victoria Rodriquez, with a $25 gift certificate.  Her teacher, Joy McArthur, also received a $25 gift certificate to use as she wishes in her classroom.
 
    Judy and Deborah were very composed and professional as they spoke on the televised morning announcements about the contest and about MCREA.  I was very impressed with their ease in front of the camera.  Victoria's parents showed up and were very pleased with Victoria's honor. Her essay has been forwarded to FREA to compete with other essays from winners around the state.  Deborah is already planning next year's contest.  This year was a complicated one for teachers who had a hard time, she thinks, carving out any time for doing the essays.  Four schools did participate with 22 essays turned in.  We think interest will grow.
  
    Victoria's mother said that Victoria is a voracious reader, a clue to her ability to write well.  The topic that was chosen by FREA was to describe an experience that the writer had with an older person -- grandparent or friend.  Victoria chose to write about a trip her family made to visit her grandparents in New York State and their trip to see Niagara Falls.  She made the reader feel as if he or she were there too.

 
 
 
    Our April meeting gives everyone an opportunity to reminisce about a favorite trip or to discuss an exciting one you are planning.  We call this our Show and Tell program and it is always lots of fun.  Please bring in any interesting object which you picked up on your travels and share it with us.  We will meet at Renaissance on 9th, at 11 a.m., on Thursday, April 16.  As usual, if you do not hear from your caller in the week preceding, please call Mary Ann Jensen at 756-7603 to make a reservation.
 
    At our March Board Meeting, we had amassed 11,077 hours of volunteer work.  Each year, we nominate one of our members who has volunteered many hours as our Volunteer of the Year.  This year's nominee is Sandra Stephenson who creates those brain teasers for our enjoyment at lunch and the Bingo cards for the Scholarship Fund. Among hundreds of hours she spends on other volunteer projects, she also knits and crochets those hats for newborns. 
 
 
   The roster of new MCREA officers for 2015-2017 was announced at the March meeting.  The election will be held at the May meeting.  The following have graciously accepted their nominations:  President, Susan Roe; First Vice President, Phyllis Omilak; Second Vice President, Elaine Waldron; Secretary, Nancy Erwin; Treasurer, Pat Griffin; Past President, Judy Shostrom.
 
    Now is not the time to heave a big sigh of relief that those people have agreed to take over the helm and your job is done.  There are many committee assignments which must be made, and when you are called to serve, please say yes.  If you would like to serve on a committee, check your Directory, choose one, and let one of the new officers know.  No task is too hard because we all share the load.
 
    I will be emailing you an MCREA Renewal of Membership form.  Please take care of this as soon as possible which will save us having to place phone calls to procrastinators.
 
 
    Please remember to bring in some children's books this month for the FELT project.  I will be grading them and boxing them up early in May in order to get them to FELT for the last day of school distribution.  We need lots more.  I intend to visit the Goodwill Book Store at Tara soon to pick up some.  Big Lots and grocery stores often have books on sale which would be great to add to our stock.
 
 
 
 
See you on April 16.
 
Ellen
 

 
 



Sunday, March 8, 2015

March 2015

    Perhaps this is a dangerous day to write a blog.  I seem to be able to make a good many errors on an ordinary day, like misspelling "Witt" in my last one.  If I can do that on a good day when I have had enough sleep and my inner clock is functional, I dread to think what I might do today, the first day of daylight saving time.  I read somewhere that there are more heart attacks in the first few days after the time changes than at other times.  I will not be having one of those, but a brain freeze is always possible.
 
    So now I have covered myself for whatever happens, and I hope that you will forgive me ahead of time.  Maybe you won't even notice my errors since you are also a bit befuddled today. 

    Our meeting this month is on Thursday, March 19.  As usual, although we start our meeting at 11:30, it is wise to get there as near 11 as possible if you want to avoid the line and have some time to visit with everyone.  Actually, we are now such a convivial group that it seems an imposition to ask everyone to quiet down for the exceedingly short business meeting.  Our April meeting, which has been switched with the program in May, will be much more informal.  It is titled "Show and Tell" and everyone gets to share -- no formal speaker.  I know you will enjoy it.

    This month's program sounds interesting.  "Musical Entertainment and Comic Relief for the Chronologically Gifted" is how it is described.  Okay, I understand the first part, but who are the C.G.'s.  Does that mean us?  Perhaps it is referring to our great wisdom?  If that is the case, it is good to have that positive spin.  I say hooray for us!

    Last month's speaker filled us in on some of the machinations of politics, Tallahassee style.  Linda Edson is our FREA Representative there, a 2010 retired teacher.  She made several points which I think are very important.

    "Logic, common sense, and facts don't count," she said, when dealing with the
legislators.  The House, she said, always votes along party lines, so there is not much chance of changing anyone's mind there.  The Senate sometimes listens.  Letter writing, emailing and phoning all work.  The messages may not be read or heard, but they are tallied by office staffs. 

    Regarding FRS:  Our present pension plan allows the FRS to make long-term investments.  Changing to individual retirement accounts would negate those.  The reason the retirement funds were unfunded during the recession was not so much because the investments lost money as it was that the funds paid in by the members of FRS were not put into FRS, but into the general fund.  Even so, our pensions are rated well nationally and have the fund has grown a great deal now that the stock market has recovered.

    Florida Education's future:  When the Drop program was eliminated in 2011, many educators signed up in its last year who might have gone on teaching longer.  In 2016 there will be a teacher shortage as those people retire.  Numbers of students majoring in education are dropping which will contribute to the shortage.

    Priorities for FREA:  Edson said keeping FRS money from being put into the general fund, and letting new hires have a choice of Pension or "Defined Investment"   
(their term for an IRA investment rather than the FRS) is another item.  At present, the default program for new hires is FRS.  If that is changed, some who really aren't paying too much attention might find themselves in the IRA program.  Keeping the health insurance subsidy and the COLA which FREA fought for and won many years ago is another goal.  Yes, even those last small items are in danger.

    On the bright side, she thinks that maybe the new presidents of the Senate and the House will be more willing to listen to us.  She reminded us that our FRS fund has more money than half of the world's countries and it is invested well and wisely.

    Our neighbors, the  Sarasota County Retired Educators, visited us at the meeting.  They seemed to be interesting and interested.  I had a surprising reunion with one of my students from Southeast H.S., Kathy Dring, who has retired from the Sarasota Schools. 






    We are still collecting food for the Manatee County Food Bank, children's books for FELT (Feeding Empty Little Tummies), and small items like soaps and shampoos etc. for gifts for shut-in seniors at Christmas.  The MCREA Scholarships forms have been sent to the high schools and we eagerly await their return.  The FREF Scholarship winner's application has been submitted to FREF and now we have our fingers crossed for her.
FREF door prize tickets are still available at meetings.

   If you do not hear from your caller by Sunday of the week prior to our meeting, please call Mary Ann Jensen at 756-7603 at the latest to make a reservation.  We had 112 reservations for the February meeting.

    I will leave you with some pictures from Minnie Lee Jones,Social Affairs Chair.

St. Paul Missionary Baptist Church.
Martin Luther King Jr. Day of Service
Dr. Phyllis Omilak helps Clydie Mae Collins on the computer.
Members and guests visit SMART
Ron Schneider, Eileen Schneider, Sue Roe (holding the horse), Eugene Jones, Minnie Lee Jones, B.J. Jones, Ezra Mason, Mildred Owens, Deborah Thomas
Strawberry picking at O'Brien Family Farms
Mildred Owens and Minnie Lee Jones

Minnie Lee Jones helps women use the new computers.



See you soon,
Ellen 



Monday, February 9, 2015

February 9, 2015

    I know everyone was saddened by the deaths of our members, Everlina Carter and Sharon Ethridge.  Then we also lost two well-loved, former Superintendents, Dan Nolan and Gene Whitt.

    Several years ago, David Brooks, N.Y. Times editorial writer and commentator on PBS News, wrote a column about loss which resonated with me.  He said that we never really lose our loved ones because they are part of us.  As we go on living, the experiences, thoughts, and dreams we shared with them remain alive.  Yes, we miss them terribly, but they still live on in us. 

  When I first started teaching at Southeast High School, Dan Nolan was already there teaching English and Speech.  He was in his early 20's and looked every bit of 16.  It was his second year there and he said that finally other teachers had stopped sending him back to his classroom because he didn't have a hall pass.  His wife Marilyn also was there teaching Biology.  Love bloomed.

    Gene Whitt was a force of nature.  When he appeared at Southeast as principal, the school changed completely.  He swept us all up, students and faculty, with the strength of his personality, sending us out to teach and learn as we had never done before.  School spirit bloomed and grade averages rose in spite of our lack of textbooks, desks, and a living wage.  When we, in desperation, walked out, Gene came with us.  He stayed for a few days until he was ordered back into the school by the superintendent.  But we knew where his heart was.  It was always with the students and their teachers.

    Our meeting attendance has been great.  We had 92 signed up to come to our last session.  We hope that you will join us on Feb. 19th.  We are hosting the Sarasota Retired Educators Association.  Linda Edson, FREA Legislative Committee Chair, will be our speaker.  You will hear about the latest legislative activity which may prompt us into some activity of our own if they are still attempting to weaken the Florida Retirement System. Just for fun, we are suggesting that you show some patriotism for this month of Presidents' Day by wearing red, white, and blue. 

    When you are chatting and doing Sandy's latest puzzle, do not forget to jot down your volunteer hours and put them in the basket your table.  The numbers are amazing when everyone shares.  In May, all the hours of all the units across the state are amassed and then presented in the form of a check to the Governor for the amount those hours would be worth.  Good karma and good publicity in one shot.

    MCREA Scholarship forms are in the high schools and we hope for some great applicants.  The Scholarship Committee is still accepting donations.  Just give your check made out to MCREA Scholarships to Ron Schneider when you sign in, or mail it to him at 3802 Chinaberry Road, Bradenton, FL 34208.
  
    FREF is asking for donations to the FREA Scholarships also.  Tickets for door prizes will be available at our meetings until May.  We have two Manatee County Students who are currently receiving the scholarships.  These are particularly good awards because they continue throughout the winners' college career.  We had an excellent student apply this year, and we have sent her application with our recommendations along to FREF.  Competition is keen since each FREA Unit in the state may send in one student application.

    The MCREA Board elected to donate $50 to the Manatee County History Fair as we have done for several years.  If you are interested in volunteering as a judge or in some other way at the fair, please see Phyllis Omilak for information.

    The Board also decided to charge $5 for a handbook replacement.  If you would like to purchase another, see Elaine Waldron.








    As always, if your caller misses you, call Mary Ann Jensen by Sunday, Feb. 15, to make a reservation.

See you soon,
Ellen

Friday, January 9, 2015

January 9, 2015

I made a huge error on the last blog.  Forgive me Minnie Lee Jones for incorrectly calling you Minnie Lee Rogers.  Of course, I know her well and I can't imagine where my brain was when I made her a Rogers.  I do know that at one time I knew a Minnie Rogers so I guess the synapses snapped on that and the fingers followed.
    A few months ago a college classmate who writes class notes for our alumni magazine asked for anecdotes about our college experiences.  I sent one to her which she has sent on to the editors who are gathering the stories for an article.  When she thanked me in the latest alumni class notes, she called me Helen Bell.  Yeah, I was a little bit miffed thinking she would remember me as I remember her.
   So, Minnie, I can understand if you are upset with me.  Someone once said that he or she didn't care what the media wrote as long as they got his or her name right. 

Regretfully,
Ellen

Thursday, January 8, 2015

January, 2015

    Time does go much faster for me now that I have definitely hit the downhill side of the mountain.  Climbing up through all those years of raising children, keeping a home running, and educating adolescents was a long slog.  It took years and years and it felt like eons.  Then came retirement, an expectation of a slow glide through the "golden years" of travel, reconnection with my family, and lots of great books.

   Little did I know that as the work slowed down, everything else would speed up.  For example, I spent at least two hours yesterday discovering how to use the U Go device that my granddaughter gave me for Christmas.  Coordinating it all required the little gizmo with its impossible-to-insert battery, the cell phone with an Apple store app, and my computer.  Finally, I attached the little tracker to my body ( you don't need to know how), and now I can track all my footsteps and my sleep hours.  It occurred to me that now I can watch myself fail in real time.  Do I really want to take 2000 steps each day and sleep 7 hours?  And if I do, do I need a record of it? 

    With January comes FREA's drive to raise money for the state education scholarships.  Since we have two local recipients right now, I think we should be very interested in helping them out.  Also, the door prizes that they offer are usually terrific.
I am sure they will be announced at our meeting this month.  We should not forget our local scholarships in the meantime.  Although we will be concentrating now on the state promotion, MCREA Scholarships are still receiving funds if you haven't donated yet.

    FELT book contributions were great in December.  Unfortunately, they came in the day before school ended for winter break and that was too late to send them home with the kids.  However, the books are residing under my desk waiting for the last day of school in June to be distributed.  Please keep them coming in.  I have about 100 books now, and there are about 400 kids in the FELT program.  Remember, the students are from K to 5th grade, so there is quite a range of reading skills to serve.  I grade them all quickly (no formulas or counting words, just eyeballing) and give them to Bill Evers who takes them to the backpack assembly point. 

    Joan Sackett, Judi Ussery, and their crew packed up the gifts you brought for the elders and took them to the retirement homes.  I am sure they were much appreciated there.  You brought a little cheer to some shut-in souls. 

   Our Christmas program was very enjoyable with Sam Lane's piano rendition of favorite seasonal music.  I was lucky to sit at his table and hear about his extraordinary life.  He was accompanied by his wife Anita who helps him navigate in his world without sight.  Perhaps because of his disability, which he has had since birth, he is very sensitive to everyone around him and is a great conversationalist.  I loved hearing his conversation with Minnie Lee Rogers about church matters.  He called her "Sister Rogers" which was very sweet and respectful.

    Here are some shots of the festive December group.










    Our next meeting is on January 15, at 11:30 a.m., at Renaissance on 9th.  If you want to avoid a line, come early.  Apropos of our presenter Sam Lane in December, our speaker will be Debbie Grubb from the Florida Council of the Blind.  We are still collecting for the Food Bank, so bring a can or a box or two. 

    See you soon,
    Ellen