Travel Back in Time to Yesteryear Village

An obviously happy youngster, who couldn’t be more than 5 or 6 years old, beckoned her equally enthused friends into a building that you might not expect to pique the interest of small girls – a jail house. Nevertheless, the girl’s friends followed her to the old structure.

Inside, they found a statue of a prisoner in a striped uniform. Perhaps the girls’ experience unleashed their curiosity just a bit about their state’s past. The jail building stands amid other attractions at Palm Beach County’s Yesteryear Village. It is a living history park where the volunteers and staff’s aim is “opening people’s eyes to Florida’s history,” said Steve Barnard, a volunteer since 1998.

He is one of many volunteers who donate their time, among other things, portraying people from the state’s past. In Barnard’s case, he plays a fictional character, Lt. Ambrose Hall, a man inspired by Barnard’s family history. Ambrose was an “old family name,” he added. Barnard can speak with authority about one attraction in particular, a village fire department housing old-fashioned fire trucks. Barnard, a West Palm Beach resident, is a retired fireman who joined the city’s department when he was 40.  He recalled that when he joined the department, it was a time of horses and buggies.

Recently, he showed a visitor several fire trucks at Yesteryear dating back to the 1920s.  Up until then, the trucks were horse-drawn, he said.  Barnard, a man with grey hair and mustache, sporting work overalls on a recent day, speaks with a scratchy voice and states, “I love South Florida, it has some real cool history that most people don’t know about.”

The village comprises 9 acres on the South Florida Fairgrounds. ”If it wasn’t for the fairgrounds, the village wouldn’t be here,” said Paige Poole, Yesteryear’s Education and Community Relations Manager. The village displays buildings and artifacts from 1895 to 1945. Through audio on telephones, visitors can browse and learn about the original and replicated buildings including an old school, a farm, a blacksmith shop, a general store, a jailhouse and other places. In addition, Yesteryear features “the only big band museum in the United States, the Sally Bennett Big Band Hall of Fame Museum.”

Poole recommends that visitors allot at least two hours to tour the entire village. She says, “Past visitors love it, they absolutely love it, adding they’ve come from afar as Germany, Italy, Spain and Russia. There are a lot of unique exhibits here that people really enjoy.” For instance, if you wish to learn about a major crop in Palm Beach County, you can visit the sugar-processing exhibit.

Yesteryear Village also showcases a Southern Bell Telephone Exhibit dedicated to the history of the telephone. That term might sound like one from the past – especially in this day of cell phones and other technological advances.

“Speaking of technology, the village affords visitors and others a chance to unplug and go back in time,” said volunteer Marie St. John. On a recent day, St. John, in character, was showing youngsters how pioneers churned milk to make butter and make the liquid safe to drink. Back in her character’s day, everyone helped prepare a meal. “Everyone’s prepared some food for a feast,” she said.

 Visitors can learn about history at Yesteryear Village, one of Palm Beach County’s most unique cultural attractions. Yesteryear Village, located at 9067 Southern Blvd. in West Palm Beach.  Hours of operation are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday. https://www.southfloridafair.com/p/yesteryearvillage

Striving for Peace – One Step at a Time

For more than a decade, area residents have literally taken steps to bring about peace.

Each time Coral Springs’ Silent Peace Walk participants gather, once a month, early in the morning, to walk for peace, leader Audrey Ehlin reminds them how small steps can lead to a larger impact. Specifically, peace within their hearts can lead to peace within their families. Further, a peaceful community can spread to neighborhoods, the nation and the world.

Ehlin, of Coral Springs, as well as others gather at 7 a.m. on the first Saturday of every month at the International Peace Garden, located behind the Coral Springs Center for the Arts. Birds chirp and one can hear the soft sound of tree branches swaying in the breeze, but for the most part, quiet reigns. Folks move forward in a single-file line for about 20 minutes. Ehlin estimated the walks attracts anywhere from seven to 20 people.

“I believe one person at a time can make a difference,” she said.

Making a difference was on Coral Springs resident Piero Falci’s mind when one day, back in 2006 or so, he was watching the news. A horrific scene was unfolding in the Middle East, as a conflict between Israel and Lebanon raged.

“I saw images on TV of this man, about my age, in a residential area where bombs had fallen,” Falci said. “His house had been hit by a bomb and neighbors were removing the rubble to retrieve the bodies of his wife and two sons. I immediately thought about my family. I, too, have two sons.”

Falci heard an inner voice: What are you going to do?

What can I do? he wondered. After all, he was halfway around the globe. “But I was deeply touched, and the command to do something persisted,” he said.

At the time, Falci also was reading books about peace. An idea sprang to mind: He should start a peace walk. When Falci approached Coral Springs city officials with designs for a monthly event at the International Peace Garden, “the idea was received with enthusiasm,” he said.

“Many people ask why we do it,” added Falci, author of the book Silent Peace Walk: From Inner Peace to World Peace. “It is our belief that cultivating inner peace will help bring peace to the entire world.

“We think a lot about the survivors (of tragedies), and their pain, and our heart aches for them. In a way, in the middle of the beautiful International Peace Garden, we bring to our awareness how fortunate we are for living in a safe environment, and we compassionately connect with those who don’t have the same safety and comfort.”

Elizabeth Velez, of Tamarac, has participated in the peace walk since 2011. She said doing so not only brings her inner peace, but lets her meet like-minded people who enjoy connecting with nature.

For Coral Springs vice mayor Joy Carter, each time she makes the trek, she notices something different within the garden – different colors amid the foliage, for instance.

Among the garden’s permanent features is a peace pole bearing the words “May Peace Prevail on Earth” written in several languages. “I find it’s a really good way to start my day,” Carter said. “It just brings a balance to my persona, my soul. It keeps you centered.”

Parkland Hearts Project

In an effort to remember the victims of February’s massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, an area nonprofit organization has partnered with family and friends to organize service projects based on the victims’passions.

HandsOn Broward has worked with loved ones and friends tocreate 17 unique service projects, one for each victim. While details about the projects are mostly private to protect the privacy of family and friends, thecommunity can play its own role in remembering those who did not survive.Specifically, people can participate in the Parkland Hearts Art Project. Thosewishing to become involved can create paper heart cutouts with thoughts,feelings, hopes, and messages. Those close to the victims will be able to readthese messages. For more details, visit handsonbroward.org/ParklandHearts.

Kristina DaSilva, HandsOn Broward’s chief operating officer, said immediately following the February 14 tragedy at MSD, people called the organization looking for ways to help in whatever capacity they could. It wasn’t long after calls came pouring in that the Parkland Hearts Art Project was born. HandsOn Broward began receiving paper hearts with messages from all over the country.

In creating the project, HandsOn Broward followed a model from one of its affiliates, HandsOn Orlando. The latter helped organize “ThePulse Scrolls,” in the aftermath of the June, 2016 massacre inside Pulse Night Club in Orlando. A gunman killed 49 people and wounded 53 in whatauthorities described as, “The deadliest mass shooting by a single gunman inthe country at the time.” Also, the Pulse attack was the deadliest terroristattack in the U.S. since the September 11 attacks in 2001. Meanwhile, the MSD massacre was the deadliest shooting at a high school in U.S. history. Itsurpassed the  Columbine High School mass shooting in 1999.

The mass shooting spawned an outpouring of gun control activism from our community and around the country. The Parkland Arts Project and the planned community service projects are among the many efforts at healing following the February rampage. DaSilva said, “The projects present opportunities for healing through service.”

Keeley McBee, marketing and events manager of HandsOnBroward, said that volunteers, the majority of whom are Parkland residents, have “selflessly given of their time” to see the projects through. “They are amazing and awesome,” she continued. “We are reaching out to the community to gather supplies that will be donated directly to each project.” Visit www.parklandhearts.org/contributeto see how you can help. A wish list exists of specific needs. Click the link on the aforementionedwebsite to see the list and shop. Those wishing to bring items in person cancall Zakiya Becca at 954-233-1300 to set a drop off time.

Richard Walker, Candidate District 2 Commission Seat

In a nonpartisan race, Richard Walker faces Diego Pfeiffer for the Parkland District 2 commission seat. It will become vacant once commissioner Grace Solomon’s term expires in November. Election day falls on Nov. 6.

Each candidate was asked questions pertaining to issues facing Parkland, the candidate’s reasons for running, and how he would address top issues facing the city.

Walker said his experience as a family man and businessman qualifies him for the seat. He decided to run because he and his family are “fully invested in the city. I want to do my part to ensure the city that my wife and I chose for our children continues to be a special place.” He added: “I believe my experience and family make-up, having five children at each level of our school system and their various activities throughout the city give me a unique perspective on the commission.”

Walker added, “My extensive experience in the business world gives me a big picture understanding to ensure every decision is made in a fiscally responsible manner. Having been involved as a board member in soccer and Little League and as involved in the school system as we are, I believe I have a sound understanding of the needs and desires of residents.”

Walker hasn’t held a position in government. However, “I have been involved in many levels as a coach and recreational league board member.” As he sees them, the top issues are parks and recreation, growth and infrastructure, as well as safety and security.

“As our city grows, we need to ensure we can keep our city and all of our residents safe,” Parker said. “We need to improve communication with our Parks and Recreation department to ensure our Recreational programs and residents have the best access and as we grow all their needs are met to have successful program and events,” Walker said.

Regarding growth and infrastructure Walker said, “we need to ensure we have the plans in place to have the infrastructure to facilitate our incoming growth. We need to be mindful of the exceptional services our residents expect and that we can continue them at the highest levels.”

The candidate said he is looking forward to working with city officials to “ensure our residents have the best of everything.”

What attracted Walker to Parkland was the small town feel. “I can go anywhere in the city and see people I know and when I meet someone new I am greeted with a warm reception.”

Walker has owned Bergen Sign Company for 22 years and is originally from New Jersey. After the company opened its second office in Pompano Beach, Walker commuted back and forth. That is, until he and his family moved to Parkland four years ago. “I could not think of a better place to raise our children,” he said.

Editor’s note: Despite repeated attempts to reach Diego Pfeiffer by phone and emails he did not respond. Pfeiffer, 18, is a recent graduate of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

Moving Ahead With School Safety

Parkland residents have offered suggestions on how to keep the city’s Broward County Public Schools students safe in the wake of last February’s shooting that killed 17 people. Municipal officials have been aiding the school district through a process that has involved a town hall meeting and focus groups. Parkland officials hired an independent company Ft. Lauderdale-based Conceptual Communications, to conduct the process.

“We don’t want to do anything that would alter the integrity of the data,” city spokesman Todd DeAngelis said, adding that is why the city hired an independent entity to run the process. A total of 78 people participated in six focus groups on May 29, 31, and June 2.

DeAngelis said Conceptual Communications employees were to synthesize comments, suggestions, etc. emerging from the focus groups. Then, Conceptual Communications planned to hand the information over to the city, which would, in turn, provide to the school district with the information. DeAngelis said the city could receive a report on the focus groups as early as June 16. After city officials hand over the report to the school district, “that’s the end of the process from our standpoint,” DeAngelis said.

In mid-May, the city initiated a two-step process to gain resident input on school safety. The first process was a town hall experience. Parkland officials invited residents to participate in one of several ways. They could show up in person at Pine Trails Park to record a video message up to three minutes. It would outline “their suggestions on the topic of school safety related to Broward County Public Schools located in the City of Parkland or complete a digital survey on the same topic,” according to information from the city.

Residents unable to attend the May 14 town hall experience had the chance to complete a digital survey online, from May 11 through 15. DeAngelis said residents who participated in the town hall were asked if they’d be willing to partake in one or more focus groups through a randomly selected process. Information from the town hall would “serve to direct the focus group discussions,” the city spokesman said.

Nearly 80 people participated in the aforementioned six focus groups held at the end of May and in early June. Neither the town hall experience nor the focus groups were open to the media. DeAngelis said city officials decided that offering residents the chance to voice their opinions was the right thing to do.

“We just wanted to facilitate a process to ensure their voices are heard,” he said. The spokesman noted that school-age residents who live in Parkland attend Broward County Public Schools. Furthermore, their parents are “heavily invested in the schools,” he added. “If the voices of the residents of Parkland were absent, it would seem conspicuously so,” DeAngelis said. “The superintendent has indicated that he is looking forward to receiving the information,” he said, referring to Broward County Schools Superintendent Robert Runcie.

“Our community must find a way to learn and move forward from the tragedy that occurred at Marjory Stoneman Douglas,” Runcie said in a prepared statement through a district spokesperson. “The town hall meeting and the focus groups offer a way for the Parkland community to come together, work together and hopefully, stay together to find answers and make change. We welcome this process and its potential for healing.”

The shooting at Stoneman Douglas spawned an impassioned response from not just local youth, but students nationwide. Local students marched in the area and in Washington D.C. advocated for stricter gun laws and restrictions, encouraged people to vote, spoke out on national television, met with President Trump and other high-ranking government officials and conducted protests.

March for Our Lives was a student-led demonstration in support of tighter gun control. The event took place on March 24 in Washington D.C. with more than 800 similar events throughout the U.S. and around the world.

Although several school shootings have taken place following the Feb. 14 massacre at Stoneman Douglas, youth are keeping up the fight. March for Our Lives is now a website with resources. (https://marchforourlives.com).

Its mission statement reads: “Not one more. We cannot allow one more child to be shot at school. We cannot allow one more teacher to make a choice to jump in front of an assault rifle to save the lives of students. We cannot allow one more family to wait for a call or text that never comes. Our children and teachers are dying. We must make it our top priority to save these lives.”

The Unexpected: Children Can Have Strokes

Edgire Joseph credits Dr. Celso Agner with saving her 11-year-old daughter’s life from a condition many may not associate with children. Stroke.

Strokes are a lot more common – and potentially deadly – in children than people might realize. “It’s the 10th leading cause of mortality in children,” said Agner, who treated Joseph’s daughter, Coral Springs pre-teen Lynn-sah Joseph.

Lynn-say’s symptoms, on the day she suffered a stroke last November, suggested something wasn’t right. At school, she complained about feeling dizzy and had a headache. When Lynn-sah came home her symptoms worsened. EMS personnel rushed her to Broward Health Medical Center. The girl’s condition deteriorated – until she became paralyzed on her left side.

Following her diagnosis, Lynn-sah underwent emergency surgery to remove a blood clot in the middle of her brain. Six days after the operation, Lynn-sah’s neurological test returned normal. She did, however, suffer some residual weakness in her left arm. Lynn-sah returned to school six weeks later.

Her mother recalled feeling “scared” and “shocked” on that November day, when her daughter couldn’t feel her left side. “The second shock that day was when I found out they didn’t have any stroke treatments for children,” Edgire said. “Dr. Agner is the best and he saved my daughter’s life.” The physician is an interventional neurologist at Broward Health Medical Center.

“I didn’t want to believe that I had a stroke,” Lynn-sah said. “Not at my age. I thought it happened to people who are older.”

Agner said strokes are “not very common” in children and teenagers. “Most childhood strokes occur either because the youth has Sickle Cell Disease, or because the youngster had suffered a form of trauma. “Non-traumatic stroke is even more rare, because they are not recognized easily,” Agner said.

In Lynn-sah’s case, “the cause of stroke has not been identified yet,” he added. “We are working on it. The patient has been consulted by specialists in cardiology and hematology.”

Stroke is more likely in the teen years than in earlier childhood. Agner said it’s “hard to talk about numbers because strokes are often missed. It is getting more frequently diagnosed because the awareness on the condition is increasing, so we start seeing more cases.”

Agner said children and their caregivers should be on the lookout for the following symptoms: Difficulty moving limbs on one side, problems with vision, trouble speaking, unresponsiveness, or not being alert. “If any of these things occur without a prior history of occurring, there should be a concern for stroke,” he said. “Children should be taken to the ER immediately. Do not delay or wait. The main problem with pediatric stroke is early recognition.”

According to Broward Health officials, Lynn-sah’s early diagnosis “led to a positive outcome that highlights the importance of timely stroke intervention.”

While better technology exists to treat childhood stroke patients, “approved protocols are currently not approved for children, so it is treated on a case-by-case basis,” Agner said. In Lynn-sah’s case, treatment has resulted in a positive outcome.

“She started off with a complete left-side paralysis,” Agner said. “Now she has a slight left arm weakness but it is almost imperceptible now.”

According to a Broward Health press release, Lynn-sah is back to being a fun-loving, happy pre-teen. “I feel back the way I used to be – active, jumpy, I feel great,” Lynn-sah said.

Lynn-sah is looking toward her future. “When I grow up, I want to be a neurologist like Dr. Agner,” she said.

Giving Brings Thanks

When you sit at your Thanksgiving tables later this month to celebrate, you’ll likely give thanks for your blessings. But before the holiday arrives, or even on the day, you can participate in one or more giving efforts for those in need. The communities of Parkland, Coral Springs, and the surrounding area offer multiple chances to do a good deed before you enjoy your own Thanksgiving meal.

The City of Coral Springs is holding its 29th annual THANKSforGIVING event, which “relies on community help to donate items for Thanksgiving baskets given to families in need,” according to the city’s website. “Residents and business owners are asked to give to this worthy cause as the Thanksgiving holiday approaches.”

The deadline for dropping off non-perishable items is November 3. Food items needed include canned yams, mashed or flaked potatoes, stuffing, gravy, cranberry sauce, cookies, canned corn, green beans, canned fruit, cookies, rice, soup/ramen noodles as well as macaroni and cheese. You can drop off donations at the Aquatics Complex – 12441 Royal Palm Blvd.; City Hall – 9551 W. Sample Road; City Hall in the Mall – 9239 W. Atlantic Blvd.; and, the Coral Springs Gymnasium – 2501 Coral Springs Drive.
City staff will place all donated items in baskets, together with a gift certificate for a turkey, ham or main dish. Volunteers at religious institutions will distribute the items to preselected families. For more information, call Mary-Lin at 954-346-1356 or MaRhea at 954-346-1355. The city will also accept monetary donations toward the cause.

Kim Sanecki, volunteer services coordinator for the city, said it “never ceases to amaze me” how generous and involved the community is. “I think it says that we’re so lucky to live and work here, where people want to give back to the community,” she said. “Coral Springs is a great place to live and people want to get involved and give back because of that. Last year, thanks to donations, the city was able to provide 400 food baskets for Coral Springs residents in need,” Sanecki said. She also commended city employees for their willingness to donate. “Our employees are so charitable,” Sanecki said.

Another opportunity to help is through Broward County-based Harvest Drive, Inc. It distributes food items at more than 15 Broward County middle and high schools. While the Harvest Drive takes place year-round, the largest project occurs in November. That is when more than 2,300 families receive a week’s worth of groceries, household items, and other things for an entire Thanksgiving meal and beyond.

Jodi Samson, the Harvest Drive district coordinator and a Broward County School social worker, said each family receives 8 to 10 bags of groceries. Students from more than 180 schools, collect, sort, and pack food items under adult supervision. When families arrive to pick up the groceries, adults volunteer to distribute them.

If any organization wishes to donate food, they should bring it to their nearest distribution site. In the Parkland/Coral Springs, area, the nearest sites are Westglades Middle School, 11000 Holmberg Road in Parkland, JP Taravella High School, 10600 Riverside Drive, and Coconut Creek High School, 1400 NW 44th Ave., Coconut Creek. For information as to when you should donate food items and/or money, contact the schools. The phone number for Westglades Middle School is 754-322-4800, while you can reach JP Taravella High at 754-322-2300 and Coconut Creek High School at 754-322-0350.

“We love our volunteers,” Samson said, adding that part of Harvest Drive’s mission is to teach youngsters to give back to their communities.

“In addition to the business and community donations, children are at the helm of all collections,” according to a Harvest program description. “In addition to helping others, the purpose of the Harvest Drive is to teach children at an early age that their contributions can make a difference in the lives of others.” For more information, visit harvestdriveflorida.com.

Farther north, the 2017 Thanksgiving Box Brigade can use your help. The program is part of Boca Helping Hands, a nonprofit organization with a mission to provide food, medical and financial assistance to meet basic human needs. It works like this: People pick up a box from the organization and fill it with the following: (1) 6 oz. Stove Top stuffing mix, (1) 10.5 oz. canned gravy (no glass jars), (1) 1.56 oz. powdered drink mix, (4) 15 oz. canned vegetables, (2) 15 oz. canned fruit or fruit cocktail, (2) 4 oz. instant mashed potatoes mix, (1) 29 oz. canned yams, (1) 14 oz. cranberry sauce, (1) 15 oz. canned pie filling and (1) 9-inch Ready Made Pie Graham Cracker Pie Crust (not refrigerated). Families, who registered in October for a Thanksgiving dinner, will receive a turkey and one of the boxes. Each box will feed a family of four.

If you’re interested in filling boxes, call Suzan Javizian at 561-417-0913 ext. 204 or e-mail her at suzan@bocahelpinghands.org. You must return all boxes by Wednesday, November 1. “We’re very grateful for (volunteers) support, we’re very appreciative,” said Javizian. Those who would rather host a Fall food drive should email her. Javizian said Boca Helping Hands is low on food, largely due to Hurricane Irma. Holding a food drive would “be totally, totally helping us,” she said.

St. Andrew Parish also has volunteer opportunities for its Thanksgiving Day luncheon. The parish serves about 1,800 meals to community residents. “It has become a labor of love for the parish,” said parishioner Alan Nichols, who is president of the Men’s Club. Dinner will be served from 8am to 3pm. For more information about volunteering, send an email to samc@bellsouth.net.

Harvest Drive, Inc. drop off sites

WESTGLADES MIDDLE SCHOOL
754-322-4800
11000 Holmberg Rd., Parkland 33076

COCONUT CREEK HIGH SCHOOL
754-322-0350
1400 NW 44th Ave., Coconut Creek FL 33066

JP TARAVELLA HIGH SCHOOL
754-322-2300
10600 Riverside Dr., Coral Springs 33071

MILLENNIUM 6-12 COLLEGIATE ACADEMY
Main Office: 754-322-3900
5803 NW 94th Ave., Tamarac, FL 33321

POMPANO BEACH HIGH SCHOOL
754-322-2000
600 NE 13th Ave., Pompano Beach

PLANTATION HIGH SCHOOL
754-322-1850
6901 NW 16th St., Plantation 33313

CYPRESS BAY HIGH SCHOOL
754-323-0350
18600 Vista Park Blvd., Weston 33332

STRANAHAN HIGH SCHOOL
754-323-2102
1800 SW 5th Pl., Ft. Lauderdale 33312

WESTERN HIGH SCHOOL
754-323-2400
1200 SW 136th Ave., Davie 33325

 

 

Park Trails Elementary gets a new principal

 

If Park Trails Elementary School students are ready to help change the world through kindness, they share a goal with the Parkland school’s new principal.

Charles McCanna, who has worked for Broward County Schools for all 32 years of his educational career, plans to implement a spreading kindness theme for the upcoming school year. Kindness is what endeared McCanna to a fifth-grade boy at another school. He recalled the youngsters were walking to class when the boy stared at McCanna. He wasn’t annoyed, but wondered what the boy was thinking.

“Mr. McCanna, why are you so nice?” he recalled the student asking him. “I never expected that answer and it was really great to hear,” McCanna said. “It made me feel like I was doing something right. I really try to lead by example.”

McCanna said he explains to children that being kind to people all the time is hard. “It’s easy to lash back at somebody if he or she was mean to you. But in the end, being nice pays off,” the administrator said. “Being kind to people is really the way to go. It can change the world, actually.”

Since December 2002, McCanna served as principal of Nova Blanche Forman Elementary in Ft. Lauderdale. He said an atmosphere of peacefulness pervades the halls and classrooms. McCanna added he can only recall three or four fights in 15 years.

McCanna has won several accolades during his time at Nova Blanche. He was voted by his peers to represent 139 elementary schools as chairperson of The Elementary Principals’ Organization. Apple Computers honored McCanna with a Distinguished Program Award in 2012 and 2013 for serving on a discussion panel regarding Strategies for iPod Use in Schools.

As principal of that school, he “led one of the most diverse elementary schools in Broward County,” according to his résumé. The ethnic breakdown of the school’s 756 K-5 students is as follows: 23 percent White, 43 percent Black, 24 percent Hispanic, 7 percent Asian and 3 percent Multi-Racial. Among the student body, 7 percent are English language learners, 55 percent are on Free or Reduced Lunch and 10 percent are in an Exceptional Student Education program.

McCanna said having a diverse student body benefits them. “They have the chance to learn about other cultures, and while they may be different from one another, they can not only get along but become friends. A diverse environment offers many opportunities to practice acts of kindness,” he said.

McCanna said he accepted the opening at Park Trails Elementary because he was ready for a new challenge. He will be in a less-diverse, larger environment; Park Trails has 1,300 students. But the soft and pleasant-spoken McCanna didn’t sound fazed during a phone interview. “It’s going to be fine,” he said.

Throughout his career, McCanna has taught for about four years, served as mathematics supervisor for three years, assistant principal for 10 years, and principal for 15 years. He said he has no desire to become a district superintendent.

His decision to enter the education field was cemented in high school in his home state. The teacher handed out dittos and gave the class “busy work.” McCanna thought he could do better as a teacher. He received an elementary education degree for his bachelors and a graduate degree in science education. McCanna said he soon felt his heart belonged in elementary school.

“They’re very honest, usually,” he said, referring to students that age. “Some of them have very few filters. They’ll tell you exactly what they think about things, especially (the) youngest ones. It’s just hilarious. And they just want to make the teacher happy at that age.”

 

DUAL ENROLLMENT

If you’re a high school student and itching to attend college, you may not have to wait.

Dual enrollment is an option that allows students to earn high school and college credits at the same time, possibly save money on college tuition, and perhaps finish college early. But just because you want to be a dual enrolled student doesn’t mean you can be. You must meet requirements.

Eric Belliard, guidance director at Coral Springs High School, said dual enrollment is open to juniors and seniors at CSHS. In addition to being a junior or senior, you must possess at least an unweighted 3.0 grade point average. A student must also earn qualifying PERT college readiness test scores, or qualifying scores on the SAT or the ACT in English, reading, and math. You must maintain at least a 3.0 GPA to continue in the program. If you fail a class, you’re out.

“There’s a big demand for it,” Belliard said, referring to students hoping to be dual enrolled. NBCMiami.com reported, and Belliard confirmed, that CSHS offers more dual enrollment classes on its campus than any other Broward County school. CSHS offers nine such classes through an arrangement with Broward College and two through Florida International University. Belliard estimated about 13 percent of the school’s student body is dual enrolled.

According to the school’s website, “CSHS Dual Enrollment Academy provides a venue for our students to take advantage of an accelerated curriculum. There are no costs associated with tuition, fees, or books. Smaller classes provide a more comprehensive classroom experience. In addition to providing a smooth transition from high school to the post-secondary education, dual enrollment reduces the time necessary to complete requirements for a college degree and can save parents money on college tuition.”

“You’re saving tons of money,” Belliard said. Terrence Sullivan, guidance director at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, said students also benefit because, “it’s giving them college credit and at the same time it’s satisfying high school graduation requirement(s).” “It accelerates their college program,” Sullivan said. Sullivan added it’s not unusual for a dual enrolled student to graduate high school having earned a full-year’s worth of college credits. Sullivan and Belliard said they don’t encourage or discourage students from dual enrolling. They provide students and parents with information and let them make an informed choice.

“We don’t discourage it (but neither do we) actively recruit kids into dual enrollment classes,” Sullivan said. Sullivan said even some middle school students are dual enrolled. However, he suggests students don’t begin a dual-enrollment program until they are juniors. “Students who aren’t ready for dual enrollment run the risk of having their college GPA negatively impacted,” he said. Belliard said he tries to make sure students don’t overload themselves with courses. He said per Broward College policy, students can take up to 11 credits per semester as a dual enrolled student.

“Most Florida public universities within the state university system will accept dual enrollment credits,” Belliard said.

 

Storytellers: The American Cuban Diaspora

Over a 58-year period, they left their homes, probably for good, with their clothes on their backs. Some brought their families as they fled their oppressive homeland, while some might not have had any choice but to leave their family members behind – perhaps never to see them again. They could no longer stand the oppressive regime that tormented them and even killed their loved ones.

They sought freedom; freedom from the totalitarian state in which they lived, and the freedom that comes with living in a democracy, one in which they could pursue the American Dream. it’s a true story, one likely familiar to almost everyone living in south Florida. And it’s a story that a miami museum with one of the city’s newest buildings, the American museum of the Cuban Diaspora, seeks to relate to visitors in detail. Founding director Ileana Fuentes wants to be clear: Miami’s “new kid on the block,” as she calls it, is more than an art museum. She won’t refer to it merely as a “cultural institution” either. “it’s a much larger historical storytelling type of institution,” said Fuentes, who left her home country of Cuba at age 4 as part of Operation Peter Pan – a “mass exodus of more than 14,000 unaccompanied Cuban minors to the United states between 1960 and 1962,” according to Wikipedia. A Catholic priest created the program to fly Cuban children to the United states. Fuentes, 68, left her home country without her family at age 13 and spent her first year in the United states in an orphanage in Denver, Colo. Within a year, Fuentes’ parents arrived in the U.s. “Other people weren’t so lucky,” the author and historian said. A mix of trustees of the museum, sponsors, and supporters of the museum, along with members and staff of the Greater Miami Convention and Visitors Bureau attended the May 4 event.

Fuentes and her family settled in New York, where relatives lived. She grew up in New York, attended school there, taught there, and worked as an administrator at Rutgers University. She’s lived in Miami for the past 21 years. After the museum was founded in 1996 as a “museum without walls” to spread awareness about Cuban Culture, Fuentes joined the organization as a cultural consultant in 2009. The museum seeks to enlighten people about the Cuban Diaspora. Its mission is to “tell the story of the Cuban Diaspora through the eyes of its greatest artists, thinkers, and creators,” according to the museum’s website. Culture, history, and gender are Fuentes’ main areas of expertise. “It’s been my career for 40 years,” she said. Fuentes said the museum has expanded its mission to not just promote Cuban culture, but to tell the story of the Cuban Diaspora in a way that incorporates humanities, sociology, and history, among other disciplines.

The building may look small from the outside, but when people enter the facility, they’ll notice white marble floors, white walls, the “huge” lobby and the “gorgeous” roof and terrace, Fuentes said. The exterior includes a garden featuring a fountain and foliage. The building encompasses a total of 15,000-squarefeet, 7,000 of which is devoted to gallery space. There are four galleries and three floors (two plus the roof). The museum is in Miami at 1200 Coral Way, where that road turns into Third Avenue. It’s near the Vizcaya Metrorail station. The Miami Trolley includes a Coral Way route, so people can take advantage of that free mode of transportation to and from the museum. Miami Museum Month falls each May, allowing visitors and local residents to take advantage of offers such as “Buy One, Get One Free admission” and “Join One Museum, See Them All.”

The city chose The American Museum of the Cuban Diaspora to launch this year’s event as the featured museum. In early May, the public was invited to tour the museum, which included an exhibition titled “Orlando 2016,” in memory of the victims of the multiple murders inside Pulse, a gay Orlando nightclub where 49 people were killed and 53 wounded in a terrorist attack/hate crime on June 12. According to www.cnn.com, the shooter, Omar Mateen, a 29-year-old security guard, pledged allegiance to the terrorist group ISIS. He was killed in a shootout with Orlando police. The exhibit is the work of Luis Cruz Azaceta, who “fled Cuba from the threat of compulsory military conscription under Fidel Castro’s newly formed regime,” according to the museum’s website at thecuban.org. “He moved to the U.S. and used his previous experience with the dictatorial regime to create his work.” Azaceta “explores the themes of terrorism, war, and exiles in his 29-piece exhibition that spans from 1980 to the present. Oppression and the human spirit weave together to bring this affecting exhibition to life.” Fuentes estimated about 300 people attended the event in early May.

The museum also offered a preview to the public last November. “Everybody was flabbergasted,” Fuentes said, adding anticipation was riding high among people who’d been following the new building’s development. Money for the museum came from Miami-Dade County under a bond issued in 2004. The county’s voters approved the raising of funds to build and improve recreation facilities, cultural facilities, and parks, Fuentes said. She said she and museum board members are “very excited. “It’s not just a museum for Cubans or Cuban-Americans,” she said. “It’s a museum for everybody.” The grand opening is scheduled for November 16. The museum is currently open from 10am to 4pm on Saturdays and Sundays. That will change after the grand opening; hours will remain the same, but the museum will be open every day except Wednesday. Museum officials plan on hosting school groups, starting with middle school. Staff also plan on taking programs into schools. “It will be a two-way street,” Fuentes said. Luis Cruz Azaceta, ORLANDO, 2016. Acrylic on canvas.

When seniors need a lawyer

An 86-year-old who broke her hip recently was released from rehabilitation. While she was well enough to leave a medical facility, she faced other issues: She could no longer live alone and she’d accumulated expenses that far exceeded her ability to pay them. The senior citizen’s daughter looked for help and found it through Feldman & Feldman, a law firm specializing in, among other areas, elderly law. The firm is working with the woman, the surviving spouse of a wartime veteran, to help her qualify for VA Aid and Attendance benefits. Feldman & Feldman is also providing the area resident with options to qualify her for Florida Medicaid benefits to assist with her care expenses.

“We are also assisting the senior with ensuring her advance directives are up-to-date, so that her daughter may step in and act for her, if necessary,” said Michael Feldman, a partner with the Coral Springs firm.

Feldman is an elder law attorney, a lawyer who specializes in legal problems faced by the elderly andtheir families. Elder law attorneys deal with the “practical and special needs of vulnerable elders and their families, when facing health-related and financial problems,” Feldman said.

He said senior citizens should retain an elder law attorney whenever they face problems related directly to legal problems often faced by the elderly. Elder law’s areas of practice include Medicaid or VA benefits, advance directives, such as durable powers of attorney, healthcare designations and living wills. Elder law also encompasses estate planning and estate administration.

Before hiring an elder law attorney, a person should conduct research by finding out the answers to he following questions:

  • Is the lawyer a member of specialized organizations such as NAELA, AFELA, the Elder Law section of the Florida Bar?
  • How many years has the attorney worked in Elder Law?
  • What specialization and/or board certifications do they have?

Sometimes a person requiring the services of an elder law attorney might contact an ombudsman. Such an individual is “a government employee charged with protecting citizen rights in particular areas of concern,” Feldman said. “Most are attorneys themselves but will refer you to an appropriate private attorney when and if they believe your needs will be best served by engaging private legal counsel.”

According to the web site elderlawanswers.com, under the federal Older Americans Act each state must have an ombudsman program that addresses the complaints of residents who live in nursing homes, board and care homes, and assisted living facilities.

Each statewide program usually comprises several regional or local ombudsman programs which operate within an Area Agency on Aging or other community organization.

 

For help

Celebration Clouded in Mystery

Valentine’s Day is usually associated with roses, the color red, chocolate, cards, heart shapes, and their associated symbol – love.

 

But little verifiable facts are known about the history behind Valentine’s Day and its namesake. “Somewhere along the way, Valentine’s Day came to represent romance,” according to americaslibrary.gov.

 

“Saint Valentine” started the celebration of love that falls every February. Valentine, however, might refer to more than one person. According to history.com, the Catholic Church recognizes no less than three saints named Valentine. Church officials martyred each of them.

 

 

One legend suggests Valentine was a priest who served during the third century in Rome. At that time, Emperor Claudius II decided that single men were better soldiers than those married and with families.  Therefore, Claudius forbade marriage for young men. Valentine refused to obey Claudius’ decree; he continued performing marriages in secret, but was caught. Claudius sentenced Valentine to death.

 

Others suggest that Valentine was killed for trying to help Christians escape harsh Roman prisons, where authorities beat and tortured them. “According to history.com an imprisoned Valentine actually sent the first ‘valentine’ greeting himself after he fell in love with a young girl – possibly his jailor’s daughter – who visited him during his confinement. Before his death, it is alleged that he wrote her a letter signed “From your Valentine.”

 

Legends may differ, but the stories share at least one commonality: they stress Valentine’s appeal as a sympathetic, heroic and most importantly romantic figure. According to history.com “By the Middle Ages, Valentine would become one of the most popular saints in England and France.”

 

Why is love in the air in February, as opposed to the other 11 months? It depends who you ask. Some maintain Valentine’s Day falls in mid-February to commemorate the anniversary of Valentine’s death or burial, which likely took place about the year 270 A.D. Others believe the celebration falls in the middle of February to “Christianize” the pagan celebration of Lupercalia. This was a fertility festival to honor Faunus, the Roman god of agriculture. The festival was also dedicated to the Roman founders Romulus and Remus.

 

During the beginning of Christianity’s rise, Lupercalia continued, but was deemed “un-Christian” by the end of the fifth century. That is when Pope Gelasius declared February 14 Valentine’s Day. But the celebration wouldn’t become synonymous with love until the Middle Ages. During that time period, the French and English generally believed February 14 was the start of birds’ mating season. This reinforced the idea that the day should be set aside for romance.

It wasn’t until after 1400 that written Valentines began to appear. The oldest known valentine still exists in the form of a poem penned in 1415 by Charles, Duke of Orléans. The letter was intended for his wife while he was imprisoned in the Tower of London after his capture at a battle. Americans likely started exchanging hand-made valentines during the early 1700s.

 

During the 1840s, Esther A. Howland began selling the first mass-produced valentines in America. She became known as the “Mother of the Valentine” and made “elaborate creations with real lace, ribbons and colorful pictures known as ‘scrap.”

 

According to the Greeting Card Association, Americans send roughly one billion Valentine’s Day cards each year. That makes the celebration the second largest card-sending holiday of the year behind only Christmas, when about 2.6 billion cards are sent.