Dawson County news. (Dawsonville, Georgia) 2015-current, May 25, 2022, Image 9
PAGE 9A Send a letter to the editor to P.O. Box 1600, Dawsonville, GA 30534; fax (706) 265-3276; or email to editor@dawsonnews.com. DawsonOpinion WEDNESDAY, MAY 25, 2022 This is a page of opinion — ours, yours and others. Signed columns and cartoons are the opinions of the writers and artists, and they may not reflect our views. Honoring beloved wife with gift that will keep giving It is the gift that will keep on giving. And it could not be more rewarding. This past month, my family and I estab lished the Jane J. Yarbrough Endowed Nursing Scholarship in theWellStar School of Nursing at Kennesaw State University. The scholarship will be awarded to nontra- ditional students who have already earned a bachelor’s degree but are interested in pursuing nursing at Kennesaw State. It is no secret that there is a severe short age of nurses these days. According to sta tistics, Georgia currently has fewer than 100,000 nurses in a population of more than 10.5 million people. Simply put, there are not enough new nurses graduating from nursing school to deal with the number of people needing medical attention. The American Association of Colleges of Nursing attri butes the shortage of nurses to several fac tors, including the fact that the rate of retirement for nurses is growing. Over half of the registered nurse workforce is cur rently over 50 years old. Even though nursing school enrollment is up, it is not keeping pace with projected demand and the need for nursing services. My family and I saw a critical need that we could address as well as an opportunity to honor a beloved wife and mother who epitomizes what the scholarship represents — a chance to begin a rewarding career at a time when others are in the process of winding theirs down. Here is the story of how that came to be. When I returned from a tour of duty in Washington, courtesy of the Bell System, we were empty nesters with two children in college. That left Momma as the only one without a degree. She had grown up in the dark ages when young women were encouraged to become secretaries, get married, have babies and leave the busi ness world to the guys. This in spite of having been a straight-A student in high school, a member of the National Honor Society and possessed with a great love for medicine. So, the family decided it was the perfect time for Momma to head off to college and scratch her medical itch. That meant Kennesaw State University and the pursuit of nursing. It wasn’t easy. It was hard. Very hard. She had been out of school for a long time. But she prevailed thanks to her intel ligence and tenacity and a lot of family support, and her dream came true. The former stay-at-home mom was now a reg istered nurse. Not long after graduation, she was hired into Delta Air Lines’ occupational nursing department, where she stayed until I retired from BellSouth and joined the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games, which required a lot of travel and involvement on both our parts. But that is not the end of the story. It was during her time at KSU that our son had broken up with a longtime girl friend. Trying to be helpful, Momma men tioned that her lab partner had just broken up with her boyfriend. The two had become good friends while working together in lab class. It seems you get to know people pretty well when you are dis secting dead critters. Only out of a profound sense of loyalty to her would our son even consider going out with someone his mother had recom mended, let alone one who cut up dead stuff with her. But he agreed. But only for one date. And just as a favor to his mother. That was 37 years ago, and that young lab partner today is his wife, Jackie, the mother and grandmother of a great and loving brood of Yarbrough offspring as well as a hospice nurse. As for me, I got a wife with a hard-earned nursing degree and a wonderful daughter-in-law as a bonus. Life has not gone as I had expected. I had assumed, given my pedal-to-the-metal lifestyle, I would be the first to go. I assumed wrong. Almost imperceptibly, my beloved partner began to decline both physically and mentally. After two long and agonizing years and in the midst of COVID-19, we lost her on a cold December day in 2020. God had other plans for her. She made this a better world while here, and now her good works will live on. The Jane J. Yarbrough Endowed Nursing Scholarship at Kennesaw State University’s School of Nursing will bene fit those aspiring to change careers and become part of a profession that she loved passionately. She is truly the gift that will keep on giving. Rest in peace, Jane Yarbrough, RN. You can reach Dick Yarbrough atdick@dick- yarbrough.com; at P.O. Box 725373, Atlanta, GA 31139; online atdickyarbrough.com or on Facebook at www.facebook.com/dickyarb. We are seeing long haul COVID symptoms now By Dr. Larry Anderson Anderson Family Medicine We always have to import the viruses that have the potential to cause us harm. We do not seem to grow any of them at home ourselves. The latest has come to us, not in Dawson County, via Canada. No, Canada is not a hot bed for this vims. It wasn’t until about 1979 the first known human was infected. Previously it was only in animals. The CDC, the folks who brought us masks and stay home, does have a vaccine but it is not readily available to all of us. Some of our anti-virals seem to be effective in treating it. Of course, we are talking about the Monkeypox. This is not what Shakespeare meant when he wrote “a pox on both your houses”. Although there have been small outbreaks in the world, it does not seem to be taking hold anywhere. I would recommend just following it in the news. Yes, it is safe to go to the zoo. No problems with the monkeys. Influenza cases seem to be continuing on a slow, steady course. On a scale of 1-13 we stay about a 3. Not sure what will hap pen with these numbers since very few are wearing masks anymore. Be sure to get vaccinated. Always your best chance of protecting yourself from this vims. Ukraine is still at war. Refugees bring a different set of health problems. Supplies are getting scarce. Facilities are over whelmed. Civilians, women and children are still being targeted. Say your prayers, call your Senators. COVID continues to hover at the bottom of the charts but just does not seem to want to go away. Still having pockets of out breaks in different parts of the country. Best advice is to stay away from those areas. Wear a mask when your safety is in doubt. Still not seeing a big demand for boosters but it is better to be on the safe side and get the booster. We are seeing long haul COVID symptoms now. Some have a prolonged cough, some have elevated blood pressure. The clue is when you have symptoms that do not respond to standard therapy. Be safe. Wear your sun screen and DEET. Thanks for reading. LETTERTOTHE EDITOR Baby food, killer drugs It is a terrible thing to have a baby die because of contaminated food. No sane person would argue that we do not need to have food standards that are rigorous. I am not. But it is interest-ing to think about what we focus on with the power of the Federal Government. Last year we had about 100,000 people die from drug overdose. We have an open southern border and illegal drugs are com ing over by the ton everyday and we will do nothing to stop it. None of those drugs come from inspected manufacturing plants. We will not complete the wall. We will not guard our border. We will not repel those in the act of breaching it. Our feder al agencies, under the direction of the president, are prevented from protecting the public. Meanwhile up in Michigan it seems that some sort of disgruntled worker wrote a detailed com-plaint that said the baby formula plant was in violation of sanitary rules . The months long inves tigation has not found one contaminated package in their hunt for evidence. The Federal Drug Administration has prevented the plant from starting back up. My guess is that there is some long detailed list of requirements that must be met. My guess is that the company will have to agree to pay fines for violations noted. If the Feds found things that needed to be changed why has it taken so long? I have no idea but you can bet it is not because the company wants to drag out the down time. It probably has to do with a stupid arrogant bureaucracy that is out of control. They are puffed up with their own sense of power. The consequences to hungrey babies be damned. Just think about the priorities of the Federal Government. They will let babies go hungry to claim that they have saved a few by their inspections but will let thou sands of people die from illegal drags which have no inspections of any kind because they want an open border. Are we not led by crazy people? Gary Pichon Marble Hill Rocky road ahead but someone cares Last week I talked about the economy and tried to calm some of the fears that people have based on the fear mongering of some of the political leaders and pun dits who so many people hear from. Unfortunately, these lies and fear monger ing adversely affect the well-being both mentally and physically of all Americans. The current administration, led by President Joe Biden is concerned about our economy, especially how it affects our low- and middle- income Americans. Wealthy Americans may lose some money during this period of high inflation and the rocky stock market, but because of their wealth, they will still be okay and will recover more quickly than low to middle income Americans. Republican Sen. Rick Scott’s “11-Point Plan to Rescue America,” plan means to protect the family, by not only ending abortion rights, but also requiring all Americans, no matter how little money they make, to pay more income taxes. The GOP is proposing to raise taxes on 75 million American families, more than 95% of whom make less than $100,000 a year. “Their plan would also raise taxes on 82% of small-business owners making less than $50,000 a year,” but would do nothing to hold corporations accountable, even as they are recording record profits. Next, they want to make all laws that expire every five years — including Social Security, the Affordable Care Act, Medicare, and Medicaid. Congress can then just repass the ones it likes, he says. It is obvious in this plan who will suffer, and it is not wealthy America. President Biden has laid out the difference between his economic plan and Scott’s. He pointed out that his policies of using the govern ment to support ordinary Americans have produced 8.3 million jobs in 15 months, the strongest job creation in modem histo ry. Unemployment is at 3.6%, and 5.4 million small businesses have applied to start up this year — 20% more than in any other year recorded. And the deficit has gone down because more people working mean more taxes paid. Note, this is NOT A RAISE IN THE TAX RATE, but more money because of more people working! Kemp released his 2022-23 budget last week. We will see an increase in spending in Georgia of over $3 Billion. This will add funds to public education, infrastruc ture, and health care. But it is important to note, that because of the American Rescue plan passed by Democrats in the US House and Senate, Georgia received $8.4 Billion this year and will receive a total of $17.5 by 2024 from Democrats. We can afford this increase budget, including the tax cut Kemp has pushed, because Democrats passed the American Rescue Plan and the Infrastructure bill. So yes, the economy is rocky, but it important to point out who cares about that and who is doing what needs to be done to help low- and middle -income Americans. Make sure you vote for you family and their well-being. Vote for Democrats! Bette Holland Dawsonville