Local Girl Scout Earns Gold Award

Girl Scouts of Middle Tennessee congratulates Chelsea Simpson for earning the Girl Scout Gold Award – the highest achievement in Girl Scouting.

Chelsea educated community members on domestic violence and suicide by providing presentations on self-defense and by distributing resources on who to call and what to do in situations of abuse. She also made blankets and bibs for the S.A.V.E. Shelter Program of Cannon County.

By earning the Girl Scout Gold Award, Chelsea has become a community leader. Her accomplishments reflect leadership and citizenship skills that set her apart.

“Earning the Girl Scout Gold Award is truly a remarkable achievement, and these young women exemplify leadership in all its forms,” said Shelia Majors, director of training, volunteer relations and outreach at Girl Scouts of Middle Tennessee. “They saw a need in their communities and around the world and took action. Their extraordinary dedication, perseverance and leadership is making the world a better place.”

Cannon County Special Olympics Team Brings Home The Ribbons

Cannon County Athletes participated in the Area 9 Special Olympics Track and Field Competitions on April 15th at Tennessee Tech University. Overall, 14 counties from the Upper Cumberland Region were represented. Cannon County’s participants were Wesley Anderson, Chris Blount, Jacob Campbell, Victor Cook, Dalton Coppinger, Michelle Farrar, Vincent Lao-Ang, Matthew Martin, Nate McKee, Rainey Myers, Chris Overstreet, Landon Robinson, Chris Smitty, Tyler Spurlock, Zach Spurlock, and James Wheeler. Congratulations to these participants for bringing home 18 1st place ribbons, 7 2nd place ribbons, 4 3rd place ribbons, and 2 4th place ribbons. Also, sixteen Cannon County High School Family, Career, and Community Leaders of America (FCCLA) members attended this event with the participants as peer buddies and volunteers.

Board Of Education Holds Student Recognition Awards

The Cannon County Board Of Education held Student Recognition Awards at their recent Board of Education meeting.  The following list of students were recognized for various achievements in the Cannon County School System
Student Recognitions April 14, 2016
 
ACADEMIC
 
CCHS—Carpentry Award—Zack Lopez
 
              Robotics Team—Blood, Sweat and Duct Tape Award
Austin Moore
Seth Combs
Erin Scott
LeeAnn Scott
Seana Patino
Kirsten Garrison
Jake Walkup
Josh Walkup
Tyler Callahan
Matthew Van Winkle
Catherine Shaw
Tommy Davis
Jaydon Coon
Chloe Dill
Maika Fonoti
Willie Green
Joram Hardin
Michael Higdon
Justin Hill
Evan Kellerman
Travis Marlow
Quentin McMackins
Alehandro Segaviano-Carillo
Sam Shaw, Club President
Chris Smith
 
Short Mtn. Science Fair
1st grade—1st Jaxon Smith
                     2nd Carla Ferrell
                     3rd Mackayla Parker
 
2nd grade—1st Serenity Fields
                     2nd Amelia Gay and Kennedi Clark
                     3rd Mason Riddle
 
3rd grade—1st Ada Curtis
                    2nd Alissa Smotherman, Brinley Simmons and Rosa Vanloo
                    3rd Lily Nichols
 
 
4th grade—1st Larena Youngblood
                    2nd T. Wayne Williams and Will Gunter
                    3rd Eli Nokes and Madison Johnson
 
5th grade—1st Katie Blackman and Bella Pelham
                    2nd Kelsey Underhill
                    3rd Chloe Robinson
 
6th grade—1st Lilly Ellis
                    2nd Lucas Estes
                    3rd Makayla Roller and Colby Ashford
           
 
CLUBS
 
Beta Club—Hannah Jo Naylor (ES)—5th place Language Arts Competition
                     Brent Scott (ES)—3rd place Cross Stitch Craft Competition
                     Sadie Jones (WD)—1st place State Photography
 
 
FCCLA—Taylor Dearmond and Hannah Haley—1st place District Service Project Portfolio
                                                                                     1st place State Service Project Portfolio
 
 
FFA—Hannah Nave (CCHS)—2015-16 Middle TN Regional Winner in Sheep Production Proficiency
                                                    2016-17 State Secretary
           Emily Nave (CCHS)—2015-16 Middle TN Star Greenhand Award
           Zac Melton (CCHS)—2015-16 Middle TN Regional Winner in Beef Production Proficiency
 
LEGO LEAGUE–3rd place in Core Values at state convention—Jackson Simmons, Austin Powell, Brody      Morris, Ella Simmons, Ethan Powell, George Seybold, Austin Bush, Toby Tucker (WD)
                         
 
SPORTS
 
CCHS—Austin Martin—3rd team All District
                                          All Defensive Team
             Briar Jakes—All District Honorable Mention
             Charlie Parrish—All Freshmen District Team
             Brandon Miles—All Freshmen District Team
             Kelli Davis—3rd team All District
             Autumn King—2nd team All District
                                        All Defensive Team
             Maleah Scott—3rd team All District
             Tori Knox—All Freshmen District Team
             Olivia Walkup—All Freshmen District Team
 
 
Woodland—Girls’ basketball team—1st place in county tournament
                       Boys’ basketball team—2nd place in county tournament
 
 
Woodland All-tournament team members
Caroline Blanton
Jessie Kauffman
Abbie Judkins
Anna Grace Sissom
Kristin Fann, MVP
Blake Bush
Austin Powell
Brady Bryson
 
  
 
 
COMMUNITY
SMS 4-H SCHOOL WINNERS
 
4TH Grade—DEMONSTRATIONS
Eli Nokes
Jack Byford
Alli Lawson
T. Wayne Williams
4th Grade—COOKIE BAKING
1st Traven Lawson
2nd Jack Byford and Eli Nokes
3rd Abigail Carrier
 
4th Grade—Public Speaking
1st–Jack Byford
       Alli Lawson
      T. Wayne Williams
      Will Gunter
      Eli Nokes
2nd—Madison Johnson
          Abigail Carrier
3rd—Traven Lawson
 
4th Grade—Chick Chain
Alli Lawson
T. Wayne Williams
Shanyn Hill
 
 
6th Grade—Public Speaking
1st Kyler Bryson
     Jordan Timmons
 
6th Grade—Baking Contest
1st Colby Ashford
     Zach Martin
 
6th Grade—Poster Contest
1st Hunter Underwood
 
6th Grade—Clover Bowl School Winners
Zach Martin
Alexis Johnson
Hunter Underwood
Dalton Green
 
 
COUNTY 4-H WINNERS
 
4th Grade SMS Clover Bowl Winners
David George
Traven Lawson
T. Wayne Williams
Mackenzie Parker
 
Other 4th Grade SMS County Winners
1st place 4-H Poster Contest—Eli Nokes
3rd place Baking Contest—Jack Byford
4th place Public Speaking—Jack Byford
1st place Photography Contest—Nature Category—Jack Byford
 
 
5th Grade SMS Clover Bowl 3rd Place
Katie Blackman
Hailee Gunter
Whitny Johnson
Kelsey Underhill
 
 
Other 5th Grade SMS County Winners
1st place baking contest—Hailee Gunter
1st place photography contest—Flower Category—Alexis Rigsby
2nd place photography contest—Nature Category—Hailee Gunter
 
 
 
West Side County 4-H Winners
1st place 4th grade County Public Speaking—Katie Hare
3rd place Regional Public Speaking contest—Katie Hare
2nd place County 5th grade 4-H Baking Contest—Ethan Simon
3rd place County 4-H photography Contest 6th grade—Emily McCullough
3rd place County 4-H photography contest 7th grade—Ivy Travis
 
4-H Clubs of the Year
Short Mountain 5th grade
Short Mountain 7th grade
 
West Side 4th Grade Clover Bowl County Contest– 3rd place
Dylan Gunter
Ivan Segaviano
Katie Hare
Madalyn Phillips
 
 
Woodland 4-H Winners
County Baking Contest—1st place Austin Powell
                                             3rd place Toby Tucker
Regional Livestock Judging—4th place—Hunter Owen, Abigail Buchanan, Kaitlyn Trail
Regional Public Speaking—3rd place—Ethan Powell
County Photography Contest—1st place Abigail Buchanan
                                                        2nd place Austin Powell
 
 
Woodland County Clover Bowl Winners
5th grade County 1st place Ethan Powell, Gunter Pitts, Jon Fann, Shelby Duggin
6th grade County 1st place Nolan Bell, Parker Cawthorn, Walker Cawthorn, Emma Grace Hughes
8th grade county 1st place Austin Powell, Rachel Laxton, Abigail Buchanan, Silas Choate, Mckenna Powell
 
 
 
 
4-H Congress
CCHS Delegates—Bryson Bell
                                Ashlynn Nokes
                                Zach McCullough
                                Elizabeth House
County Reporter at 4-H Congress—Elizabeth House
 
 
TAR WARS
 
West Side—5th Grade School Winner—Gaige Turner
Woodland—School Winner—Reese Vance
State Contest—Sawyer Parton (ES)—4th place
                             Eli Nokes (SMS)—Honorable Mention
 
 
 
 
LIONS CLUB
 
Lions Club Essay Contest
1st Caitlin Miller (CCHS)—district contest
2nd Stella Brown (ES)—district contest
3rd Destinee Byrd (WS) — district contest
 
 
Lions Club Peace Poster Contest
School Winner—1st Hunter Davis (ES)
                              2nd Michael Barrett (ES)
 
 
County Winner— 1st place district– Briley Cunningham (WS)
                                2nd place district– Destiny Leath (WD)
                                3rd place district– Baleigh Fulkerson (Aub)
Congratulations to all these students for their accomplishments
 

Inside Cannon Schools

 
April 24-30—Senior Trip
April 25—Progress Reports
April 26—CCHS Softball game at Dekalb Co., 4:30 p.m.
April 26—CCHS Baseball game at Dekalb Co., 5:30 p.m.
April 26—CCHS Soccer match at Central Magnet, 5:00 p.m.
April 27—WBRY Spotlight—Title I, Pre-K, and summer reading programs will be featured.
April 28—Middle Grades Sports Committee meeting, 5:00 p.m., WGS
April 28—Recessed School Board meeting, 6:30 p.m., WGS cafeteria
May 2-6—TN Ready testing (TCAP Achievement testing)
May 2-6—Teacher/ Staff Appreciation Week
May 2—CCHS Baseball game with York at home, 4:30 p.m.
May 2—CCHS Softball game with Franklin Co. at home, 7:00 p.m.
May 2-3—Tennis District Tournament (TEAM)
May 3—CCHS Baseball game at York
May 3—CCHS Soccer match with Dekalb Co. at home, 6:30 p.m.
May 5—CCHS Soccer match with Community H. S. at home (SENIOR NIGHT), 6:00 p.m.
May 6— CCHS Prom at Stones River Country Club
May 5, 6 &9—Tennis District Tournament (INDIVIDUAL)
May 6-11—Softball District Tournament at Upperman
May 10—Senior Awards night, 7:00 p.m., CCHS gymnasium
NOTE—May 6, 2016 will be a regular instructional day. 

Congressman Diane Black: Political Correctness At Its Worse

Washington bureaucracies don’t use the same words as the rest of us. 

The U.S. Customs and Immigration Enforcement calls the President’s 2014 executive amnesty “deferred action for parents of Americans and lawful permanent residents.”

Government agencies referred to Senate Democrats’ 2013 government shutdown as “a temporary lapse in appropriations.”

And the 2015 Boehner-Obama budget deal that busted previously enacted spending caps and suspended the debt ceiling until 2017 was given the nonthreatening title of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015. Because who could vote against that? (I did)

It’s as though Washington-types think that, by softening their description of the challenges we face, we can make the challenges themselves go away, or at least conceal them from the American public. Such appears to be the motivation behind the latest policy change from the Library of Congress.

On March 22nd, the world’s largest library announced that it would cancel the use of “illegal alien” and the broader term “alien” as bibliographical terms, writing in a three-page memo that the phrases are “pejorative” and “often misunderstood.”  The Library of Congress explained that the terms will be swapped out for broader phrases such as “noncitizens.” 

The decision was reportedly made in response to a student petition from Dartmouth College’s “Coalition for Immigration Reform, Equality and DREAMers.”  Setting aside the fact that liberal student groups probably shouldn’t be able to bully a Congressional research arm into unprecedented policy changes, it begs the question – misunderstood by whom?

Since the Naturalization Act of 1790, our government has recognized “alien” as an appropriate description for noncitizens. The term is still found in U.S. code and, just this week, was uttered by Justices Ginsburg, Sotomayor, and Kagan – not exactly immigration hardliners – during oral arguments in United States vs. Texas, the court case challenging President Obama’s executive action on immigration.  

If the phrase is suitable for our law books and even our most progressive Supreme Court justices, than it ought to work just fine for the Library of Congress.

That is why I introduced the Stopping Partisan Policy at the Library of Congress Actlegislation preventing the Library of Congress from capitulating to hyper-political correctness and instead directing the library to continue using “alien” and “illegal alien” as reference terms, just as they were before.

In this situation, our words matter. I’m not an immigration lawyer, but I am a nurse and I learned a long time ago that you won’t have much success curing a condition you refuse to first properly diagnose.

Similarly, when our bureaucracies trade common-sense language for sanitized political speak that ignore reality and downplay the toll of illegal immigration, it results in barriers making it that much more difficult to ultimately solve the problem.

Coming up with a new, politically correct term for those who defy our laws to cross our borders doesn’t diminish the threat of illegal immigration on our economy, our national security, or our sovereignty.  My constituents know that, I know that, and its time the Library of Congress recognized this truth as well. 

Congress must act to pass the Stopping Partisan Policy at the Library of Congress Act without delay and send a message to D.C. bureaucracies: stop thinking about the most PC way to describe illegal immigration, and start working with us on solutions to address it.

Be Aware About Student Loan Forgiveness Scams

The Tennessee Department of Commerce & Insurance’s (TDCI) Division of Consumer Affairs wants to alert consumers about student loan forgiveness scams recently reported by the Better Business Bureau (BBB) of Middle Tennessee.

“Student loan debt forgiveness offers can leave you owing more,” said TDCI Deputy Commissioner Bill Giannini. “It’s important for Tennesseans to stay informed and do their research to avoid potential scams. The Division of Consumers Affairs works closely with the BBB to identify and alert consumers to these deceptive business practices.”

According to BBB’s announcement, predatory companies are targeting consumers who are seeking federal loan forgiveness. Consumers, typically college students and/or graduates, who respond to the company’s online advertisements are immediately contacted by the company and offered fake debt relief services in exchange for an advance fee.

Tips to Avoid Student Loan Scams

    Never pay upfront. Legitimate lenders typically charge for service once the service is complete. You should not be required to pay an upfront fee beforehand.
    Know your options.  If you are having trouble paying your student loans, contact your lender directly. The federal government offers payment assistance programs.
    Never give a third party power of attorney. Do not sign anything giving a company the power to negotiate on your behalf. A scam company can use this to take control over your loans.
    If it seems too good to be true… it probably is. Any company guaranteeing services that quickly “erase” student loan debt is not being truthful. This is a red flag.

Protect Yourself
According to the U.S. Department of Education:

    Enrollment in alternative repayment programs, like Income-Based Repayment (IBR), is available at no cost to federal student loan borrowers.
    Debt relief companies do not have the ability to negotiate with your creditors in order to obtain a “special deal” under these federal student loan programs. Payment levels under IBR and other federal income-driven repayment plans are set by federal law.
    Any claims by debt relief companies to the contrary may be misleading and potentially a violation of law.

Experiencing Repayment Problems?

    As soon as you realize you are having trouble making timely loan payments, contact your loan servicer.  Do not ignore payment notices. Never ignore legal notices about past due loans.
    Lenders typically offer to help you plan repayment in a feasible way.  Don’t be afraid to contact your lender. Options may include making lower payments or suspending loan repayments under “deferment” or “forbearance” plans.  
    The type of lender (government or private) and the type of student loan will impact your available options.
    Be aware that loan delays or other changes to loan terms may result in paying a higher total loan cost over a longer period of time.
    For additional information about student loan repayment, visit www.studentloanborrowerassistance.org, provided by the National Consumer Law Center.

Public Safety On Display Saturday At Fairgrounds

In what hopes to be an annual event the first Cannon County Public Safety Day will take place Saturday at the Justin M Pemberton Memorial Arena.  This event is one of the ways that the Cannon County Emergency Responders will bring public awareness and offer education to their services to the County.    The first 200 children will receive a special fire prevention and safety kit.  The event will feature fire trucks, ambulances, rescue vehicles, Life Flight helicopter, law enforcement vehicles, health and wellness awareness, public safety and preparedness booths, home electrical and gas safety awareness.  Bounce houses and refreshments are planned.  Register to win free fire extinguishers and smoke detectors.  Cannon County Public Safety Day takes place at the Fairgrounds Saturday from 10-3P.

Cruise-In Season Starts Saturday Afternoon

The Cruise in season starts Saturday with the first  Cruise-In On The Square In Woodbury from 4-7:30P.  All makes, models and motorcycles welcome.  No entry fee, enjoy DJ music, door prizes and register for the Grand Prize donated by DTC communications to be awarded at the October Cruise.  For more information, call Carolyn Motley at 615-563-2222 or John Barker at 615-542-4065.

Saturday’s Forever Abbey Road Is Sold Out

Forever Abbey Road is bringing their fun and exciting Beatles revue back to the Arts Center on April 23! The band last performed to a sold out crowd of over 260 at the Arts Center in July, 2016 and is back by popular demand.   From the Beatles’ early years of “She Loves You” and “I Want to Hold Your Hand” to the psychedelic period of “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” to their later years of “Hey Jude” and “Let It Be”- Forever Abbey Road performs it all with exciting energy, heart and accuracy. The band has been invited to perform at the biggest Beatles festival in the world and and is quickly becoming known as one of the most entertaining Beatles revues around!  Arts Center of Cannon County officials have noted that this concert set for Saturday night has been sold out.

Cannon County Rescue Squad Joins Thumbs Down Campaign

The Cannon County Rescue Squad, Inc, will be partnering with the Tennessee Highway Safety Office to promote the second annual Thumbs Down to Texting and Driving campaign during the month of April. April is nationally recognized as Distracted Driving Awareness Month. Agencies participate in the campaign by providing information and increasing awareness in their communities about the dangers of distracted driving.
“Texting and driving requires motorists to take their eyes off the road, hands off the wheel, and mind off the task of driving. This is a recipe for a crash, and that’s a scary thought. It’s arrogant and selfish to think that your dangerous and illegal behavior is acceptable. No one has the right to put another person’s life at risk like that,” said Tim Bell, Chief Operating Officer.

Texting and driving in Tennessee can result in a $50 fine for a driver of any age. For young drivers who have Learner’s Permits or Intermediate Restricted licenses, cell phone use of any kind while driving is illegal.
Preliminary data reveals that in 2015, Tennessee experienced its highest number of known distracted driving crashes at 22,964. These crashes resulted in the death of 51 people. Each day, twenty-five individuals on average are injured in a crash caused by a distracted driver. Nearly twelve percent of all crashes in Tennessee last year were caused by someone who was driving distracted.

 “Crashes caused by distracted drivers have more than doubled in the last decade,” said Tennessee Highway Safety Office Public Information Officer Amanda Brown. “Each day, nearly sixty-three people in Tennessee are distracted by something in their vehicle, whether it is a phone, food, the radio, or something else, and they hit someone. We all have to start taking responsibility for our actions and make the choice to focus on one thing – the road.”

For more information about the Thumbs Down campaign or to learn more about texting and driving, visit www.thumbsdowntn.com.