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REMEBERING Margaret Benham Radford

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Margaret Benham Radford January 1932 – December 2022

Margaret ‘Patsy’ Benham Radford made her transition to her heavenly home on Friday, December 9th.. at age 90.
Star Pupil – Basketball Player – Wife – Mother – Minister’s Wife – Surrogate Mother – Christian – Motivation Speaker – Loyal Friend
These are just a few words that describe the legacy of love and life lived by my Mama, who was as well a surrogate Mother to hundreds of other boys and girls. Born in Cartersville, GA on January 15, 1932, she was the fourth of ten children to Bradford and Flora Benham.
Before I share more about our Mother, these are the Arrangements: Mother Radford will lie in state at John P. Franklin Funeral Home on Wednesday, December 21 between 2 and 6 p.m. A Celebration of Life service will be held on Thursday, December 22, 2022 at Orchard Knob Baptist Church at 2:00pm. There will be a private burial service. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the Margaret B. Radford Educational Scholarship Fund to benefit underserved, orphaned, and in need boys and girls.

By Faith Radford Edwards
Mrs. Radford’s story: The Benham family were a close-knit family group and all of the children were raised to be studious and-God-fearing. “Patsy”, Margaret’s nickname, and sister Agnes, 18 months apart in birth, were always close, lovable to each other, and partners in childhood antics. Originally Patsy and Agnes were two years apart in school. That changed when around junior high, Patsy, who continued to excel in academics and sports, was ‘skipped’ a grade in school! Both girls were excellent basketball players and known throughout Bartow basketball county as those ‘dynamo Benham girls’.

Margaret graduated high school at age 15 as Class Valedictorian and received a scholarship to Payne College in Augusta Ga.

During one summer while at home and working, Patsy met and fell in love with a ‘bad boy’ whom had been introduced to her by Joe, Agnes’ fiancée. Agnes signed for Patsy to get married to John before Margaret left for her junior year at Payne College. (Of course, Margaret’s parents would not sign.) Margaret finished her junior year and gave birth to a baby girl, Faith in June 1950.

Margaret decided to put her education on ‘hold’ to be a dutiful wife and mother. Husband, John, the former ‘bad boy’ was called into the ministry. Six years later, Margaret and John moved to Atlanta to work and study: he in Seminary and she worked part-time as assistant principal at a private school while attending night classes. They were now parents to a daughter and son; the children stayed in Cartersville with family and visited on the weekends.

Margaret brought the children to Atlanta and they attended private school while parents worked and studied. John was called to pastor a church in Chattanooga; Margaret put the needs of the family before her dreams and the family moved to Chattanooga in the early 1960’s. It was also at this time that both Margaret and John went to work at the Bonny Oaks School as house parents. Bonny Oakes served as home for dependent and neglected children from 1895 to 1984.

Margaret was now the wife of a full-time minister; doting Mother to their 2 biological children, and surrogate Mother and role model to approximately 54 boys and girls who were housed on the ‘black side’ at Bonny Oaks School.

Margaret’s mission was to ensure these children got a chance for better opportunities. As was customary in that time, there were amenities available to the boys and girls on the ‘white side’ at Bonny Oaks that were not available to the boys and girls on the ‘black side’. Working with the school’s director/superintendent, Malcolm Adamson, and every other person in a leadership role at Bonny Oaks and in the Hamilton County system, Margaret fought for the place the children called home to be equal in amenities and to have better opportunities. She worked with both the elementary and high schools to ensure the children from Bonny Oaks were not placed in non-challenging classes and demanded the children not be ostracized because they lived at an orphanage.

As a minister’s wife, she taught Sunday School, started and directed Children’s Choirs; presented classes to both youth and adults on living life by Christian principles. She taught the girls and boys at Bonny Oaks how to cook, clean, balance a checkbook and accept responsibility! Times changed and Bonny Oaks was no longer segregated (Federal Law passed) and Mrs. Radford became Mother/House Parent to numerous black and white children. She never made a difference in children of various races, loved them all and encouraged them to become worthy and responsible citizens.

Bonny Oaks School (home) closed and the children became wards under the direction of Family & Children Services. After over 20 years at Bonny Oaks, Mrs. Radford went to work for Family & Children Services which later became the organization Partnership and is now known as The Partnership for Families, Children and Adults. Later, she managed teen group homes established to provide assistance to troubled young men and women. She retired in 2005 after 45 years of service to children and community.

She enjoyed serving in various churches and was a spiritual and motivational speaker until she was unable to drive a car, and unable to walk. Sis. Radford wrote and delivered more than 100 bible-themed, Christ -centered messages to thousands who were in attendance at churches, conferences, and special gatherings. She was known for being a sharp dresser; admired for wearing big and beautiful hats; performing the ‘holy dance in pulpits when the spirit hit; and speaking the TRUTH… ..no padding, no chasers.

Margaret Radford has raised, nurtured, mothered, and guided generations of boys and girls as well as provided facts, information, and humor to countless men and women during her more than 60 years as Instructor, Caregiver, Mother, Role Model, and Confidant, while demonstrating Christian values and using God’s Words of the Bible as her guide.

She has received numerous awards and certificates, in both community and religious areas, including being honored as an Outstanding Baptist Minister’s Wife and named in 1998 as Black Pioneer Woman of Excellence by the National Coalition of 100 Black Women, Inc., Chattanooga Chapter.

At the time of her transition, her FAMILY remained one of her greatest joys. She was a very proud Mother, GrandMother, Great Grand Mother, and Great-Great Grand Mother, serving as matriarch over five generations. Her favorite color wass still Red, her favorite fabric was Mink and her favorite book, the Holy Bible! During activity time at Life Care of Hixson where she was a resident, she learned to play dominos in her late 80s and was a singing member of the Trembling Troubadors, a Parkinson’s support group!

Below are some excerpts taken from the Bonny Oaks website that was developed years ago for the former staff and residents to keep in touch.

Charles Calloway
Bonny Oaks – 1982 to 1989
Message: “I would like to say that Bonny Oaks School made a difference in my life and the people that gave their time to take care of me. I thank the Lord for what he has done to my life and how he brought me from a long way. The one person that I thank the most is Mrs. Radford. She was and still is my hero because of everything she taught me and the love she had for me. I am now a Deacon at Chandler Baptist Church, father of four kids, and I have a lovely wife, Kim Careathers, the Lord has blessed me with. I am an employee at Carta Bus Transportation. I just want to say Bonny Oaks made a difference in my life.”

Johnetta Fugh
Bonny Oaks – 1970 through 1976.
Message: “Looking back, Bonny Oaks was the best thing that ever happened to me. When I was there, it was a White and Black side but it changed, we learned to love each other. We learned to cook, to be responsible. Please, Oakknight, send a message!!!!!!”

Diane Stone
Bonny Oaks – 1962 through 1976
Message: “I would like to thank Mrs. Margaret Radford for all she did for me and my sister, Georgia Calloway, and my two brothers, Vernoral Stone (who has gone on to be with the Lord) and Charles L. Calloway. We all had some time at Bonny Oaks. The years I was there were good years and some were bad years, but most of all, we all came out alright! I am working at Memorial Hospital (18 years). Georgia is also working at Memorial Hospital. Charles is retired from Memorial Hospital and we are all doing just fine! I will never be able to thank Mrs. Radford for all she has done for us. She taught my sister and I how to be young ladies and how to treat our husband even before we were married. I just want to say “THANK YOU” from the bottom of my heart, Mrs. Radford. Diane Stone Hermon, Georgia Calloway and Charles Calloway”

Mrs. Radford has been at Bonny Oaks since the 1960’s and still works today for the Family & Children Services at the boys cottage, Keese Hall. Over the years she has assumed many titles during her decades of dedication to the children, including Houseparent, Assistant to the Director and Director of Campus Life. She is proud to tell you that she is 80 years old; that her son, Henry, received a scholarship and graduated from the University of Miami in the state of Florida; that her daughter, Faith, lives in Chattanooga, runs a successful business and has two sons; and that she is extremely proud of her grandson, Ben and two great-granddaughters, Kaylx and Shelby! When asked if many of the children from the Black side of Bonny Oaks ever returns to see her, she said “They come back and find you! I receive many Mother’s Day cards from them, and I still know them all by name”. Mrs. Radford writes the following message to her “Men and Women”:

Dear Men and Women

I want you to know how thankful I am that God saw fit to put me in your lives. There were so many days of hardship, mental anguish but there were more days of joy, anticipation and happiness through the many challenges that we had. I look back on all those days and, as I close my eyes, I can remember each of you. Remember the birthday parties, the barbeques, the days you received your report cards – how proud we were of so many good report cards. And, I also think about all the report cards that were hid, that were changed and some just got lost in the shuffle – as well as all the A’s and B’s that were hung and framed and things taken home with you.

I know as you read this, you will chuckle but I hope and pray that all of you are good Mommas and Daddys. I know some of you are taking care of your own parents and I think that is wonderful. I look back on those days as our accomplishments, for, in this group there are lawyers, anesthesiologists, nursers, teachers, preachers, funeral directors, those who are aspiring artists, and those who are entertainers, cooks, chefs, beauticians, barbers. There are a lot of single parents I am proud of and some good Mommas and Daddys who are bringing their children up in the fear of God. Remember to always reach for your dreams. Never stop dreaming, never stop living, loving, believing. For there is a higher Power than all of us.

Mayor Wamp continues with efforts to fire longtime County Attorney Rheubin Taylor

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A native of Chattanooga, 73-year-old attorney and pastor Rheubin Taylor has a long record of service to the community.

Despite County Commission efforts to end the Weston Wamp/Rheubin Taylor feud, the county mayor last week filed papers vigorously pressing on with efforts to fire the longtime county attorney. 

Hamilton County Mayor Wamp is asking the court to declare that attorney Taylor’s contract is unenforceable and that the mayor has the authority to terminate Taylor. 

The Mayor’s office alleges Wamp worked for weeks in an attempt to find a resolution with both the commission and attorney Taylor that would have prevented further legal action. But attorney Taylor was uninterested in finding such a solution and was only willing to consider a resolution through the courts, Wamp said.  

On Oct. 31, attorney Taylor filed a lawsuit against Wamp asking the court to determine that the mayor lacks the unilateral authority to fire the county attorney and that Taylor’s four-year contract, which went into effect in 2021 and extends through June 2025, is valid.

Last week, Mayor Wamp filed a 29-page answer and counterclaim to Taylor’s lawsuit. In the Chancery Court documents, Wamp’s filings ask for a declaratory judgement, breach of fiduciary duty of loyalty, an injunction, and a breach of contract.

The injunction would halt Taylor from acting as county attorney. At press time, Taylor retains the position of county attorney and the privileges connected with the position.

In his court documents, Mayor Wamp contends that the county attorney is an at-will employee and “Taylor can be terminated for good cause, bad cause, or no cause or all,” and that “the County Commission lacks the authority to hire or fire anyone, including Taylor.”

A statement from the Mayor’s office said, “The County Mayor’s office had a November 30th deadline to respond to Rheubin Taylor’s ongoing legal action against Hamilton County Mayor, Weston Wamp. The Mayor’s response to Mr. Taylor’s suit asserts Mayor Wamp’s clear authority and obligation under state law to appoint all department heads, which, in this case, would include Mr. Taylor who is, unquestionably, the head of Hamilton County’s legal department. The response also substantiates the Mayor’s position that incident to the right and obligation to appoint, is the authority to terminate. It is not the Mayor’s intention to seek to remove Mr. Taylor from the office by way of an injunction prior to the conclusion of this lawsuit.

“Separately, our response and our counterclaims also summarize the extensive evidence the County Mayor’s office has identified as justification to terminate Mr. Taylor for cause. Mayor Wamp worked tirelessly for weeks to find a resolution with the commission and Mr. Taylor that would have avoided protracted litigation.  Mr. Taylor, however, was uninterested and unwilling to consider a resolution outside of court. Our primary objective is to seek an expeditious court ruling on the County Mayor’s authority before a judge outside of Hamilton County.”

Mayor Wamp alleges that attorney Taylor has been “utilizing county resources for his own private practice of law through a shadow law firm he operates out of the county attorney’s office, with the county paying the operating costs of that office, and with Taylor retaining the fees generated from this private work rather than remitting them to the county.”

Taylor’s contract states that he may “engage in any other non-conflicting activity on a professional basis.”

Mayor Wamp’s filing also says attorney Taylor “lobbied members of the County Commission to help him keep his job,” prompting the County Commission to intervene on behalf of attorney Taylor by passing a series of resolutions.

The resolutions called for Hamilton County to provide attorney Taylor with back pay on his annual salary of around $180,000–funds that he was owed since the attempted termination by Mayor Wamp on Oct. 14–as well as Taylor’s regained access to his county-issued computer and cellphone.

In June 2021, commissioners and then-Mayor Jim Coppinger approved a four-year contract with attorney Taylor lasting through June 30, 2025.

Termination, the contract states, requires “a majority of the County Commission, with concurrence from the county mayor or a two-thirds majority without concurrence from the county mayor.”

County Mayor Wamp, the 35-year-old son of former U.S. Rep. Zach Wamp, was elected to his first political office on Aug. 4. Before taking office, he earned a living as a venture capitalist and entrepreneur.

Taylor, 73, is a native of Chattanooga and has a long record of service to the community. When he returned to Chattanooga in 1973, he was the first African American licensed attorney in the city. In 1978, he and the Rev. Paul McDaniel became the first Black Hamilton County commissioners. Taylor also became the first Black Hamilton County attorney in July 1993.

Taylor has spent 29 years as county attorney and 15 years before that as a county commissioner. He has served as the senior pastor at Mt. Zion Baptist Church in Lafayette, Georgia for more than 20 years.

Alton Park Development Corporation’s 2022 Chattanooga Humanitarian Award Gala set for Dec. 17

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The Alton Park Development Corporation will hold its Annual Chattanooga Humanitarian Award Gala on Dec. 17. The event will be held from 6-10 p.m. at the Chattanooga Civic Center at Mountainside (Alton Park), 701 Hooker Rd.

WPTP 100.1 FM show host and “Celebrity Hypeman” Tony Boston will serve as host. Entertainment will be provided by international recording artist Jimmy Allgood. 

2022 Chattanooga honorees:

Bishop Kevin Adams – Civic Leader, Pastor of Olivet Baptist Church and Chairman of the Community Safety Coalition. Called upon as a trusted ally in the community to convene, examine and strategize ways in which to resolve differences, bring an end to gang violence, and restore hope and peace to all people. His ministry extends beyond the church wall to include feeding the homeless, and providing education to children to help eliminate the “School to Prison Pipeline.”

The Rev. Alfred Johnson – Civic Leader, Pastor of the Church of the Newborn and House of Refuge. For decades, he has been a pillar in the community–providing resources financially, mentally and spiritually for individuals returning home from prison and needing a new beginning and a second chance

The Honorable Robert Philyaw – Juvenile Court Justice Judge and Advocate for Children. Serves as chair of the Tennessee Commission on Children and Youth (TCCY). Dedicated to advocate and improve the quality of life for children and families, and provide support for other child and family advocates. 

Dr. Edna Varner – Civic Leader, Educator and Advocate for Education. Dr. Varner has served on more than 12 nonprofit boards that focus on lifting the human spirit. She is a past board chair of The Aim Center, Siskin Children’s Institute, the Community Foundation and 2017 Annual Campaign Chair for United Way. As a teacher, she made sure her students had necessities. In her work at the Public Education Foundation, she established an emergency fund in memory of her sister–who was a teacher. The fund pays for the licensure tests and personal needs that teachers, especially teachers of color, cannot afford during their training year.

Attorney Rheubin Taylor – Pastor, Civic Leader, Hamilton County Attorney. Responsible for coordinating all legal matters (including litigation) involving Hamilton County Government and its various elected and appointed officials and their employees. 

Attorney Robin Flores – Civil Rights Leader and Attorney. Advocate for Chattanooga citizens that have been wrongfully treated and/or arrested in Chattanooga. 

LaTrice Currie-Leslie – Channel 3 News Anchor, Civic Leader, Philanthropist. Serves as ambassador for Go Red For Women and has served on various boards. Some of her many awards include Chattanooga Woman of Distinction, Chattanooga Times Free Press Best of the Best Local Newscast and Hamilton County Outstanding Citizen.

The only Black-owned community development organization in Chattanooga, Alton Park Development Corporation is a non-profit 501(c)(3) entity.

The proceeds from this event will benefit charity projects that promote equality and justice in education of the Alton Park Development Corporation and those of the honorees. Proceeds will also help to improve the lives of families and strengthen and build community ties, said Alton Park Development Corporation President Dr. Elenora Woods. Further information about the Alton Park Development Corporation and the 2022 Chattanooga Humanitarian Award Gala is available online at info@apdc98.org.

Remembering “Lu ‘The REAL DEAL’ Peterson” In Our Hearts & Memories

By Ron Griffin

MEMORIAL TRIBUTE – Luther Spooky Peterson was a well-known local musician and entertainer. He retired as a driver from Alexian Brothers. He was a member of The Masonic Order. He performed with local music groups such as Peterson, Harden & Mack, Broad St. Exit, Love, Peace & Happiness, Strictly Rhythm, The Sensations, and many others. He was a 1968 graduate of Riverside High School and was also known for his delicious BBQ.

It was on the Chicago music scene where Spooky focused on the Congo Drums, the flute and also mastered the Kalimba (African thumb piano made famous by Maurice White of Earth, Wind and Fire).

In 1983, Spooky was hired as the percussionist/ background vocalist for the late great Curtis Mayfield. Spooky toured extensively with Curtis until Mayfield had to suspend for health reasons.

Mr. Peterson garnered the Johari Lounge “Entertainer of the Year” in 1988 and in 2016 Luther Peterson was awarded The Lifetime Achievement Award by the Mary Walker Foundation. This award was given to Luther Peterson in appreciation for his talented and unselfish contribution to Chattanooga music.

Contributed Photo: The Fatalians: L-R: Joseph “Lucky” Scott, Spooky Peterson, Paul McKibbins, and Thomas “Dopey” Griffith.
Contributed Photo: Broad Street Exit Band: L-R John Cady, Luther Spooky Peterson, Cheryl Porter, Bill Hackler, Howard Brown, Gail Lattimore and Vinson Canion

After touring with Curtis Mayfield, Luther Peterson chose marriage, kids and Chattanooga over the rigors of touring.

He was preceded in death by his father, Luther Peterson, Sr., aunt, Bobbie Jo Mack, and sister, Lucellan Peterson. He is survived by his wife, Mary Smith –Peterson, Daughters, Tiffani (Phil) Barfield and Keila Peterson, Sons, Keith and Kaylon Peterson, Mother Sarah Harden, Siblings, Jackie (Gil) Aikens, Barbara Pratt, Elizabeth (Major) Matthews, Susan Stoxsell, Pamela Peterson, Kenneth Harden, Anthony (Earnese) Peterson, Alvin Harden, nine Grandchildren and many cousins, nieces, and nephews.

Malvin R. Goode: First African American News Correspondent

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Malvin R. Goode was a pioneer in broadcast journalism, becoming the first African American news correspondent for a major television network in 1962.

Goode arrived at the pinnacle of his career later in life, but his accomplishment serves as a testament to the work ethic he developed in the steel mills of Pittsburgh.

Malvin Russell Goode was born February 13, 1908 in White Plains, Virginia. He was raised primarily in Homestead, Pennsylvania, just outside of Pittsburgh. As a high school and college student at the University of Pittsburgh, Goode worked in the steel mills in the larger city to the north.  He was later employed by the YMCA in Pittsburgh as its boys work director. Goode was instrumental in working to end racial discrimination at the Pittsburgh locations of the YMCA. After his time there, he moved to the city’s housing authority. In 1948, Goode started his journalism career at the Pittsburgh Courier newspaper remaining there for the next 14 years.

During his journalism career, Malvin R. Goode began working in broadcast radio with KQV and worked his way up to hosting a daily five-minute news program on WHOD. He was named WHOD’s news director in 1952. Ten years later, Goode’s big break came when he became ABC’s first Black network news correspondent. Goode was reportedly hired after baseball icon Jackie Robinson complained to the network executives that there weren’t enough Black reporters on air. At the time, Goode was 54 years old.

Goode reported on the Cuban Missile Crisis and the debates happening within the halls of the United Nations. Despite his late entry to journalism, Goode gained the respect of his peers and was even cited as a mentor to celebrated news anchor Peter Jennings. In 1963, Goode and others taught journalism to African students via a seminar series in Nigeria, Ethiopia and Tanzania. In 1968, he also covered the assassination of Reverend Martin Luther King Jr.

Among Malvin R. Goode’s awards and acknowledgments, he became the first Black member of the Radio and Television News Director Association. In 1972, he became president of the United Nations Correspondents Association. He was also a member of 100 Black Men in New York and worked with the National Black Network. Goode is the recipient of the Mary McLeod Bethune Award from Bethune-Cookman College and the Michelle Clark Award from the Columbia University School of Journalism.

Goode was married to Mary Lavelle and the couple had six children together. Goode died of a stroke at the age of 87 in Pittsburgh. His funeral at Lincoln Avenue Church of God in Pittsburgh was attended by the aforementioned Jennings and many of Goode’s journalism peers.

UTC Library Special Collections receives grant to document Chattanooga’s labor history

The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Library’s Special Collections department has secured a grant to digitize documents and photographs detailing the history of labor and industry in Chattanooga.

The $3,630 grant awarded by the Tennessee Historic Records Advisory Board with funds provided by the National Historic Publications and Records Commission provides for Special Collections to hire a student assistant during the spring 2023 semester to scan and write metadata for materials in the library’s possession.

Director of Special Collections Carolyn Runyon and Manuscripts Archivist Erin Ryan wrote the grant application.

“There is a widespread interest in labor history today among researchers,” said Ryan, the grant’s principal investigator. “In line with that trend, we receive inquiries in Special Collections for help with projects related to labor in Chattanooga. Right now, the bulk of our holdings in that area have not been digitized, which limits the reach of how many people can find and use them.

“The funding we have received for this project will allow us to create dedicated digital collections related to labor and industry in our area and to make these collections freely available on our website where global audiences can discover them.”

During the grant-funded project, Special Collections will digitize more than 200 photographs and approximately 134 pages of materials, booklets and correspondence documenting early Chattanooga manufacturing companies.

Ryan noted that Chattanooga became an industrial center in the South after the Civil War and was known as the “Dynamo of Dixie.” The city attracted industries that included iron fabricators and textile mills like Wheland Foundry, which began operating in Chattanooga around 1874;

U.S. Pipe and Foundry, founded in 1887; and Dixie Mercerizing Company, organized in 1919.

“The collections are meant to contribute to primary source material about industrialization, including the roles of Black people and women in foundries and mills,” Ryan said, “as well as to inform research about the environmental impact of industrialization.”

Wheland Foundry closed in 2002, followed four years later by U.S. Pipe and Foundry’s Chattanooga property. Dixie Mercerizing Company has had numerous name changes and is now known as The Dixie Group.

Some of the images in the digital collections will include: photographs of Black and white laborers working together in the foundry during the Jim Crow era; aerial photographs of the foundry complex, as well as photos of equipment; images of women working in different departments of the textile factory; and a booklet showcasing the Dixie Mercerizing Company’s operations and their mill village, Lupton City.

“Special Collections hopes that these materials will be able to augment and inform our existing holdings about urban planning and environmental issues,” Ryan said, “and that these materials will be of use not only to scholars but to journalists, students, artists, city planners and many others who may gain from exploring the labor history of Chattanooga.”

Commissioner Clarence Carter announces $500 Christmas bonus for Tennessee’s Families First participants

By Camm Ashford

Tennessee Department of Human Services (TDHS) Commissioner Clarence H. Carter on Monday announced a $500 Christmas bonus for families who receive monthly cash assistance through the state’s Families First Program.

Households with a case in the program as of Dec. 1, 2022, will receive the one-time additional payment on their existing Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT) cards. This one-time payment will be available beginning Dec. 1.

The $500 bonus will provide extra support for nearly 24,000 children in participating Families First households ahead of the holiday season.

“We serve some of the most economically vulnerable families and children through the Families First program and recognize the challenges they’re facing,” Commissioner Carter said. “Keeping up with the demands of the holiday season can introduce additional hurdles in caring for children, such as accommodating school breaks, providing extra meals, and so much more. This one-time boost in financial assistance is intended to help Families First participants overcome these temporary hurdles, positioning them to start the year off strong.”

Carter was appointed to serve as a member of Gov. Bill Lee’s Cabinet as the commissioner of TDHS in January 2021. He leads the state’s second-largest agency with an operating budget of more than $3 billion and nearly 4,000 employees working in offices in all 95 counties.

Through more than 17 programs and services, the department partners with Tennesseans to facilitate nutrition programs, employment assistance, vocational training and protective services to enhance their well-being.

In 2015, Commissioner Carter founded the Institute for the Improvement of the Human Condition. At that organization, he worked with state and local safety net agencies to meet the emergency needs of socially and economically vulnerable citizens.

Prior to serving as TDHS commissioner, Carter served on the federal level as director of the Office of Family Assistance and acting director of the Office of Community Services within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. While there, Commissioner Carter led the administration of seven federal programs including the $16.5 billion Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program.

Families First is Tennessee’s TANF program. TANF is a federally funded program that emphasizes “work, family strengthening and personal responsibility to empower families for long-term success.” The program helps participants reach this goal by providing temporary cash assistance, transportation, child care assistance, educational support, job training and other support services.

For further information, call the Tennessee Department of Human Services Family Assistance Service Center at 866-311-4287

The incredible idiom and the mighty metaphor!

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Okay class (eh, electorate), whip out your pen, paper (and blood pressure monitor). Today we’re going to talk about the medicinal benefits of an idiom and a metaphor, both in the context of nerve-wracking reactions to recent mid- term elections.

Here, allow me to set the stage.

You see, my patience had worn thin. I had a hard time waiting for the elections to end. If I could offer a one-word description of the deluge of negative ads, partisan finger pointing, outright lies, cowardice, election denials, etc., “disgust” would be that word.

But interestingly, where once my reaction was more likely than not to be one of disgust, these days it’s actually one of uncontrollable laughter. I guess you can say that I’ve evolved.  

Stay with me, please.

Which takes us first the word “idiom,” a particular idiom here – “to cut off your nose to spite your face” – meaning not do something out of spite that could end up causing more harm to oneself than to the person with whom he/she is angry.

Now that takes us next to the word “metaphor,” a figure of speech in which a word or phrase is applied to an object or action to which it is not applicable. For the purpose of this narrative here’s a metaphor… “Laughter is the best medicine!”

You see, in response to all the vitriol and shenanigans leading up to the recent elections, setting aside my disgust, my ability to roll over in side-splitting laughter – as in, “Oh my, can you believe what that clown just said?” was my saving grace.

Okay, I confess to having been entertained by much of the hilarity, the buffoonery, the stunts, and the clown shows. But inarguably, there are frequent faces in the news – no need to cite them here – that evoke laughter even before they open their mouths and let loose the bull. Where once these clowns made me cuss, nowadays they make me cackle. They’re the ones who provide fodder for late night TV hosts, cartoonists, and satirists. They’re ready-made for side-splitting caricature.

Look, like everyone I longed for preferred outcomes in both local and national elections but decided to prepare myself mentally for whatever the outcome. So as what’s been my usual response to eminent uncertainty and probable disappointment, I retreated to history – for me, literary history – for solace and prophetic insights that could soften the impact of my anticipated “post-election blues.”

So I turned off the news, ignored the polls and spent an afternoon retrieving words of wisdom from James Baldwin, William Shakespeare, William Faulkner, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and others for words of wisdom. But somehow I landed on quotes by Irish poet and playwright Oscar Wilde. Others aside, I needed comedic relief and insights and Oscar Wilde was the right person at the right time.

Now as you scroll down this list of his quotes, associate the names of politicians (or someone else you know) with the quote. Feel free to nod and chuckle, guffaw if you need to, or let loose a litany of “amens” as you go down the list. Here goes:

“The public is wonderfully tolerant. It will forgive everything except genius.”

“Some people cause happiness wherever they go, others whenever they go!”

“It’s not whether you win or lose, it’s how you place the blame.”

“There is only one thing in the world worse than being talked about and that is not being talked about.”

“The truth is rarely pure and never simple.”

“There are only two kinds of people who are really fascinating: people who know absolutely everything and people who know absolutely nothing.”
 

“Most people are other people. Their thoughts are someone else’s opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation.”

“Every saint has a past, and every sinner has a future.”

“Experience is merely the name men gave to their mistakes.”
 

“Man is least himself when he talks in his own person. Give him a mask, and he will tell you the truth.”

“True friends will stab you in the front.”

“I think God, in creating man, somewhat overestimated his ability.”

Okay now class (or electorate), let’s do a quick health check after you have laughed at a few of these quotes.

Can you honestly say that you experienced a good laugh? If no, I extend my thoughts and prayers. If yes, guess what? Your overall heath may have improved. Here’s why:

Laughter enhances your intake of oxygen-rich air, stimulates your heart, lungs, and muscles, and increases the endorphins that are released by your brain. A rollicking laugh fires up and then cools down your stress response and can increase and then decrease your heart rate and blood pressure. The result? A good feeling.

Laughter can stimulate circulation and aid muscle relaxation, both of which can help reduce some of the physical symptoms of stress. Over the long term, laughter can improve your immune system, ease pain, increase personal satisfaction and sharply improve your mood.

Now here’s the kicker – A hearty laugh can help you gain new friends and ward off the malcontents, the purveyors of negativism, the gloom and doom crowd, the people who, wrote Oscar Wilde, “cause happiness whenever they go!” © Terry Howard is an award-winning writer and storyteller. He is also a contributing writer with the Chattanooga News Chronicle, The American Diversity Report, The Douglas County Sentinel, Blackmarket.com, co-founder of the “26 Tiny Paint Brushes” writers’ guild, recipient of the 2019 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Leadership Award and 3rd place winner of the 2022 Georgia Press Award