Cooperative Extension with Paul McKenzie: What Works in the Garden
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The H-V Chamber of Commerce and WIZS, Your Community Voice, present Jobs in Vance for November 9th, 2021. The Chamber compiles the information, and it is presented here and on the radio. Contact the Henderson-Vance Chamber of Commerce at 438-8414 or email christa@hendersonvance.org to be included.
JOB OPENINGS IN VANCE COUNTY – Week of November 9, 2021
Name of the Company: Vulcan Materials
Jobs Available: Heavy Equipment Operator
Method of Contact: Contact area NC Works Career Centers for more information
Name of the Company: Vance County Social Services
Jobs Available: Multiple positions open
Method of Contact: Please go to county website at www.vancecounty.org for more information
Name of the Company: Servpro of Franklin Vance and Granville Counties
Jobs Available: Staff to clean up and restore homes and businesses related to water damage, fires and mold. On- the- job training is provided
Method of Contact: Stop by the office at 260 Industry Drive off Ross Mill Rd. near Lowe’s or call 252-433-005
Name of the Company: Ahner Security, Inc.
Jobs Available: Alarm Technicians Needed. MUST be able to pass a drug test and background check. Experience preferred but not required
Method of Contact: If interested contact office at 438-7181 or go by 5799 US-1 Bypass in Henderson
Name of the Company: Vance County Sheriff’s Department is urgently hiring
Jobs Available: Deputies, Investigator, School Resource Officers, Office Administrative Assistant and Detention Officers
Method of Contact: For more information please contact the Sheriff’s office at 252-738-2200 or go by the office in person at 156 Church Street Suite 004, Henderson
Name of the Company: Ameristaff, Inc.
Jobs Available: Custodian
Method of Contact: Contact area NC Works Career Centers for more information
Name of the Company: Penn Pallet Inc.
Jobs Available: Laborer
Method of Contact: Contact local area NC Works Career Centers for more information
Some of these businesses are present or past advertisers of WIZS. Being an ad client is not a condition of being listed or broadcast. This is not a paid ad.
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In just a few days, communities all over the country will officially observe Veterans Day – American flags will flutter in the breeze along main streets, schools and federal institutions will be closed and, at least locally, military veterans will be treated to free meals as a way to thank them for their service.
Tributes and other forms of appreciation, however, aren’t all that veterans need when they return home from deployments or transition back into a civilian society. The VA can help with medical needs, but the Red Cross also plays a role in helping veterans.
Yes, THAT Red Cross. The same organization that sponsors blood drives and CPR classes, lends disaster relief and assists victims of fires, the same organization that helps servicemen and women get home to attend to a birth or a death of a family member. The Red Cross partners with veteran centers to provide workshops – virtual and in-person – to ease transitions from soldier to civilian.
Air Force Retired Lt. Col. Charlie Brown has worked with the Red Cross to provide this service to veterans. She spoke with John C. Rose and guest host Phyllis Maynard on Monday’s Town Talk about how her participation with the program came about.
Brown spoke by phone from northern Virginia and said she turned her sights to school counseling when she left the military. She had been a commander for the Air Force’s recruiting arm, and she said two of her troops told her they were suicidal.
“We intervened,” Brown said, but she added that she realized there were not many resources available at that time.
It was her work in school counseling that steered her in the direction of similar services for veterans. She completed the certification process to do clinical counseling and that’s when the Red Cross came calling. They were working on a program about resiliency, she said, “and they said ‘We’d like for you to join our team. It looked like the perfect fit,” Brown recalled.
With her experience both in the military and in counseling, she set about doing the work before her. She said she works with veterans, their caregivers and their children to build resiliency – “how to withstand the stresses that life brings.”
With in-person workshops suspended because of COVID-19, the team pivoted to offer virtual workshops. Titles like “Stress Solutions,” “Creative Calmness” and “Effective Communication” are a few offerings available at the veterans centers.
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Veterans who served in Afghanistan are getting help from older veterans as they make their way to the centers to access services. “They are qualitatively different,” Brown said. “They’re a different generation.” But they are dealing with anger and frustration early, she said, “before they build up that scar tissue that’s so hard to break through.”
Vet centers are community-based counseling centers that provide a wide range of social and psychological services, including professional readjustment counseling to eligible veterans, active-duty service members, including National Guard and Reserve components, and their families.
Readjustment counseling is offered to make a successful transition from military to civilian life or after a traumatic event experienced in the military. Individual, group, marriage and family counseling is offered in addition to referral and connection to other VA or community benefits and services. Vet center counselors and outreach staff, many of whom are veterans themselves, are experienced and prepared to discuss the tragedies of war, loss, grief and transition after trauma.
Originally funded by the Elizabeth Dole Foundation back in 2010, Brown and others on the Red Cross curriculum teams sat down with workshop facilitators to learn which topics would be most useful. They arrived at a few – the concept of identity, feelings of isolation and self-care. With those concepts in mind, the team got to work.
As Brown explained, oftentimes, family members leave careers to care for veterans who require additional assistance. “They had to step away when they became caregivers,” the result of which could bring on challenges for the caregiver. And when the person being cared for has mobility issues and can’t get out of the house easily, feelings of isolation can build within a caregiver.
These both lead to challenges of self-care, which Brown said is a vital component of caregiver well-being. Although there may be services in the community, if there’s nobody who can provide respite to a caregiver to run errands, make a phone call or get a relaxing massage, the caregiver has very limited options for self-care.
Caregivers can be incredibly reluctant to seek help, but as Brown said, caregivers “have got to refill their own tank.” She and the curriculum team created a variety of activities that caregivers can indulge in while still providing care to their loved one.
“We’re trying to pivot now and come up with a way to make the module richer, to give more options,” Brown said, “to help people deal better with all of the challenges that come up.”
There is help out there, she said. The key is knowing how and where to reach out for that support.
Visit https://www.vetcenter.va.gov/ to learn more.
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A 15-year-old turned himself in Wednesday to the Vance Sheriff’s Office following the fatal shooting of a teenager last month.
Sheriff Curtis Brame told WIZS News via email today (Friday) that the juvenile who surrendered himself to authorities has been charged with first-degree murder. The shooting happened on Oct. 19 on Foxfire Drive.
The victim, 14-year-old Rosendo Montiel, died at Duke University Hospital from a gunshot wound on Oct. 21.
The suspect surrendered shortly before 10 p.m. on Nov. 3, Brame said.
An earlier press release from the sheriff indicated that the shooting had occurred on Tuesday, Oct. 19 shortly before 12:30 p.m. The Vance County Sheriff’s Office responded to 318 Foxfire Drive in reference to a gunshot victim, the press release stated.
At the scene, it was discovered that a 14-year-old had suffered a gunshot wound “causing life threatening injuries and was transported to Duke University Hospital.”
Sheriff’s Office Criminal Investigators were able to identify a suspect and obtain a secure custody order for the 15-year-old suspect. The original charge of attempted first-degree murder was changed to first-degree murder on Oct. 21.
Brame said the investigation is ongoing.
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The Boys & Girls Club of North Central North Carolina has its main club site for Vance County at 212 N. Clark St. in Henderson, but with some financial support from a 21st Century Grant, two satellite clubs are up and running at two elementary schools in the county.
Ronald Bennett serves on the group’s corporate board. He said Wednesday’s Be Great Breakfast fundraiser was a big success, thanks to caring people in the community. “It was a good turnout for a great cause,” he said.
The new program sites are at Carver Elementary and New Hope Elementary. “We are excited that we were able to open the two rural sites,” Bennett told Trey Snide on Thursday’s The Local Skinny! segment. He said folks in the communities around the schools are happy that there is club programming available to students who live out in the county.
The breakfast netted about $15,000.
“It just shows that there are committed people right here in the community that pitch in and make a difference,” Bennett said. Donors got to show their support via their pocketbook and they got a good breakfast, to boot. The breakfast was held at Henderson Country Club.
CEO Donyell “DJ” Jones was the keynote speaker for the morning’s event. Jones came on board about a week before the pandemic shut everything down, and although things had to look a little different, the clubs across the five counties served by BGCNCNC found ways to provide services.
Vance’s Youth of the Year Keyon Tunstall also shared his story at the breakfast. He started coming to the club at age 5, Bennett said, and now has a leadership role there. As Youth of the Year, he received a $1,000 scholarship that he can use at the school of his choosing.
Bennett said he got to know Tunstall last year when they were both working at the club to distribute hot meals. “He is a great young man with a very bright future,” Bennett said.