Category Archives: Opinions
Anxiety about the holidays
Bonnie: Mom used to be the hub for our holiday dinners. She loved visiting with all her relatives, and we, too, enjoyed the experience.
There were never too many guests for her, even as the family grew. Now, with Alzheimer’s disease, she is no longer capable of entertaining. In fact, she feels overwhelmed when too many people are present. I want our family to come, but I don’t want family get-togethers to be a source of anxiety for either
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Senior discounts: You’ve earned them
If you’ve always prided yourself on being completely independent and have delayed being categorized as a senior, this might be the time to
reconsider that. Here are some thoughts:
• Are you getting the correct property-tax relief? While your area might specify that you get a certain percent off your taxes because you’re a senior, it’s always possible that a clerk didn’t enter your information
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Veterans get more free legal help
The Department of Veterans Affairs is hooking up with other groups to
provide pro bono (free) legal services to veterans. The VA, the American Bar Association and The Veterans Consortium and National Law School Veterans Clinic Consortium have signed an agreement to improve access to free help.
Whether it’s about foreclosure, eviction or any other legal snarls that
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It takes a village to cook a dinner
Grandmama believed that Thanksgiving dinner called for many hands.
As she always said, “Idle hands are the devil’s workshop,” and truer words were never spoken.
Uncle Walter lived by these words, “If they can walk, they can work.” And that is pretty much the truth, unless the task involves using a very sharp knife.
Children can scoop out oranges, slice
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Open enrollment scams
Medicare open enrollment brings the scammers out in full force. This
is the time of year (until Dec. 7) to decide whether to keep your current Medicare plan or make changes to it. Even though the deadline for making changes might have ended by the time you read this, scammers have all kinds of tricks up their sleeves:
• They might try to tell you that open enrollment runs through the end
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Courier Letters to the Editor
A marvelous exhibit at museum
Dear Editor,
On Nov. 9, we had the great pleasure of attending the opening of the J. Michael Johnson photo exhibit, “The Nam Era: Never Forgotten,” at the Pickens County Museum of Art and History.
We have, in our lifetimes, been privileged to visit the great Art
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Courier Letters to the Editor 11-15-17
Expect more tax increases
Dear Editor,
I examined the five-year capital budget recently passed by the Pickens County School Board in a 6-0 vote. The school district uses the capital budget to replace things like roofs, HVAC systems, renovate buildings and pay for repaving and repainting schedules.
In early 2016, the district administration and school board majority
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Trial run: Living on Social Security
If you’ve reached the age where you can collect Social Security and keep working without any reduction in your benefits, at some point you’re going to wonder: When is it safe to retire? Before you let go of
that paycheck, do a trial run.
Try to live for a period of time (at least six months) on just an amount that would equal your Social Security income should you retire. Use the rest of your work income to pay off all your bills and put some money aside.
To determine if Social Security will be enough, save every receipt and
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Making the country a better place
The old man walked into the museum. He was tall and stood erect,
wore glasses and had lively eyes. He carried a cardboard Prince Albert cigar box with him and set it down on top of the copying machine.
He took off his cap and said he’d seen the notice in the paper asking all World War II veterans to come by and tell their stories for the upcoming war exhibit.
And opening the cigar box, he began. He told us he’d never talked to anyone about his war experiences. I think he was like so many other World War II veterans who’d endured four years of battle, testing the limits of human endurance, and sometimes passing those limits. These men left home and were gone for years. Those who came home had spent their years in other countries. Countries that, in some cases, had been almost leveled by battle after battle. They’d seen death in every form. Sometimes they slept with their heads on the frozen bodies of dead enemies. They were seldom, if ever, comfortable, often wet, nearly frozen, often
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The new CARE Act
The Department of Veterans Affairs is proposing the new Veterans Coordinated Access and Rewarding Experiences (CARE) Act and
has sent those ideas to the House and Senate Veterans Affairs committee.
The original CHOICE Act gave veterans the option of getting medical care closer to home, outside of a VA facility, if they lived more than 40 miles from one or couldn’t get an appointment for 30 days. That was a good step, except when it came
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