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Special Needs Middle School Girl Leads Campaign to Help Police

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Born premature, Erin Baur (pictured, left) has learning, hearing and speech disabilities. She also has a passion for dogs.

The Ohio middle schooler learned that Chief Powalie of the Painesville Police Department would like a new K9 because his current dog, “Cash”, will be retiring soon. She thought it would be a good idea as a community service to raise funds for a new dog and started back in July by setting a goal of $11,000 — enough for the K-9, vet care, and a $1,000 bullet proof vest.

“I almost fell out of my chair when I found out,” Chief Powalie told the News-Herald in Willoughby. “One day I was talking to someone and the next I’m getting a phone call asking if they can put on a fundraiser — all unbeknownst to me.”

The 14-year-old has worked hard to set up a partnership with a tax deductible police fund and collecting donations at community events, like an upcoming dog walk festival on September 28th in Painesville’s Kiwanis Park.

In return for her community service, Erin will be allowed to name the new K-9 Officer. She has decided on the name “Gold.” Visit her “Go for the Gold” page here.

“She is a little one trying to make a difference and this is what we want from our next generation,” said the girl’s aunt, Marge Henning. “So let’s encourage her by donating to her campaign.”

(READ more from the News-Herald)

Elderly Couple Living in Car Get Surprise Help From Florida “Angels”

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A couple in their 70’s were living in their car with their three dogs after moving from Texas to Florida and finding the job he’d been promised had fallen through.

Gordon and Dee Head were spending their third week in a Walmart parking lot when Mr. Head prayed.

“I asked God to send us some angels… and they started showing up.”

Last Monday, Brandi Dussing, her sister and some friends were grocery shopping and noticed the couple sleeping in their car.

The young ladies insisted on buying food for the family and the dogs, but Brandi’s kindness didn’t stop there. She set up a YouCaring fundraising page to help them get back on their feet.

“The woman has such swollen feet from not being able to stretch out,” she explained in her appeal. “The man has had heart surgery in the past and shouldn’t be living in a car, especially at his age.”

After the campaign was shared on Facebook $14,500 was raised from 350 strangers.

WTVT-Tampa picked up the good news story and reports that the “angels” had been looking for temporary foster homes for the dogs until Gordon, a master plumber, can find employment.

(WATCH the video below or READ the story from Fox-Tampa Bay)

– Story tip from Judy Ritchie

Wedding Photo From 9/11 Rubble Now in Owner’s Hand 13 Years Later

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A woman who worked 13 years to return a wedding photo found in the rubble of the World Trade Center after the 9/11 attacks finally found the owner, thanks to 81,000 people who retweeting the image this year.

Fred Mahe thought he’d never again see the photograph he had tacked to his cubicle wall on the 77th floor.

But the photograph of him with his college friends at their wedding somehow survived the attacks and for the past 13 years a college professor named Elizabeth Stringer Keefe, who was given the photo by a friend who found it in the ash near Ground Zero, has tried to find its owners.

(READ the story from ABC News)

Buddha Statue Brings Tranquility to Oakland Neighborhood

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Crime has plummeted in a neighborhood in Oakland, California where Dan Stevenson decided to install a Buddha statue in 2009.

Dan is not at all religious but hoped that just maybe his small gesture would bring some tranquillity to a neighborhood marred by crime, graffiti, drug dealing and prostitution.

Soon, flowers and candles were left there as offerings and Vietnamese women began praying each morning on the sidewalk where the statue is bolted and glued down

What happened next was nothing short of stunning. The neighborhood changed. People stopped dumping garbage. They stopped vandalizing walls with graffiti. And the drug dealers stopped using that area to deal. The prostitutes went away.

The actual police statistics for that neighborhood block showed an 82 percent drop in crime since 2012 when the morning prayer sessions began.

(READ the story, with photos, in the SF Chronicle)

– Story tip from Dusky Pierce

The Myths and Realities of Being Too Busy

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If you listen closely almost everyone talks about being too busy. Being busy is a great way to stunt your leadership growth. After all, if you are busy, you have an excuse that covers many mistakes including dropping the ball, losing opportunities, or being sidetracked by overwhelm.

We keep trying to solve the “too busy” problem with time-management courses, or new technology but the problem of being too busy still exists and results in loose ends, lowered performance, and increased stress and anxiety.

What I’ve discovered by mistake is that besides the inability to see the choices, or the unwillingness to do so, being too busy is usually a result of the failure to delegate. So if delegation is the answer, why don’t we do it more often? We fail to delegate because of these three reasons:

  1. Process
  2. Trust
  3. Vacuum

 Process

When you are good at something, or you have done something yourself for years, you become unconsciously competent. In other words, you can do the job without thinking. The drawback is that you do not understand the step by step process needed to break the job down into “modules” so to speak, so that you can effectively train someone else to do it for you. For years I handled all of my own posting on social media, and blogging, booked my own travel, and formatted my own contracts. When I hired an executive assistant to do those things for me, it was difficult to know where to start and difficult to believe someone could do what I’d been doing for years any better than I could. Boy was I wrong. I now realize that a lot of the problem was really about trust.

Trust

trust puzzleIf you have uncovered the process of how to train someone to do what you do, the next step is to actually allow someone else to take charge. This requires that you trust. You must trust the other person to deliver. You must trust yourself to mentor, or to initiate difficult conversations around performance. You must learn to trust yourself to handle disappointment. You must trust yourself to stay out of the way while the other person learns.

Before I started trusting, I would make an assignment and then do it myself. I know it sounds crazy but if you ask employees, this is not uncommon.

The inability to trust someone else to do something as efficiently or eloquently as you is often a disguise for a deeper need: the need to be important. If you listen closely to a leader, owner or entrepreneur, you will hear a variation of, “No one can do this as well as I can…” which may be about trust, or it may be a hidden agenda to prove your superiority. In order to fully trust, you have to get rid of some beliefs about yourself and others that may be holding you back. Once you handle the trust issue, the vacuum awaits.

Vacuum

Absorbed pensive mature businessmanWhen you eliminate anything from your life, you create a vacuum. It doesn’t matter if you empty your office of the furniture, or you eliminate a dreaded job from your workday, elimination creates a vacuum. Nature abhors a vacuum.

When you hand over some of your work to someone else, you immediately have extra time. Even if the extra time is a few hours or a few days, your mind is not preoccupied, there is time to think. The thoughts that come to you may not be pleasant. You may wonder what to do next. This can create worry and anxiety. In addition, there’s no excuse to drop balls. You have time to make that return call or answer the email. If you start a new project make sure you have enough time to finish.

Who are you without your deadlines, overwhelm and attachment to being too busy? It can feel a little strange. In order to fill the vacuum, you can think about things you never thought about. Being busy kept you from the awareness of these thoughts and feelings. It’s easy to be too busy. It takes leadership and personal growth to delegate.

Points to Ponder
1. How many times a day do you talk about being too busy?
2. What tasks could you cross train someone to do?
3. What are the reasons you do not delegate some of your tasks?

marlene-chism-thumbnail-portrait


Marlene Chism
is a consultant, international speaker and author of Stop Workplace Drama (Wiley 2011). Marlene’s passion is developing wise leaders and helping people to discover, develop and deliver their gifts to the world. Marlene’s message is spreading across the country at association meetings, corporate retreats, universities and other venues. If interested in exploring speaking or training opportunities please call 1.888.434.9085

Photo credits: (top) Kevin Dooley (middle and bottom) Sal Falko, via CC licenses 

Battlefields to Farm Fields: Veterans Heal Themselves and Feed a Nation

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Because the vast majority of America’s farmers are aging fast, the country needs one million new farmers over the next 10 years to continue feeding itself.

Fortunately, the Cavalry is coming to the rescue — literally, from the Marines, Army, Air Force and National Guard.

With their physical conditioning and discipline, returning U.S. veterans are the ideal candidates to become the next generation of farmers to provide the nation with food security. Recognizing the connection between local food security and national security, these young men and women are forging a network in sustainable agriculture to benefit us all.

Veterans with PTSD and Traumatic Brain Injuries, as well as other physical and emotional wounds of war, often find it difficult to reintegrate back into a traditional job and daily routine. Through sustainable farming, veterans are able to heal from these wounds through working on the land, creating a nurturing life, and finding a support system of other veteran farmers.

“As a combat veteran, I was involved in a lot of destruction. “ says Mike, a former Marine. “Shifting from that to growing something, seeing something thrive, does something on a very deep spiritual level.”

young-farmer-former-soldier-with-tractor-GroundOperationsThrough a compelling award-winning 40-minute film, along with a social action campaign, an organization called Ground Operations is on a mission to reach returning war veterans to plant the seed about a sustainable farming career, and then to connect them with the training, resources, and programs they need to be successful.

At least eleven states have veteran run farms and programs, like Sgt. Adam Burke’s organic blueberry farm in Florida.

Bleeding out from a mortar hit in Iraq, Adam promised God that if he could live to see his family again, he would do something to make his life worth saving. Two years later he started the Veterans Farm in Jacksonville, a place of emotional solace and job training for disabled vets like himself.

black-veteran-farming-lettuce-GroundOperations“Teach these guys how to farm, they can have sustainable lives with sustainable agriculture,” he says in the film, Battlefields to Farmfields.

You can support the Ground Operation mission right now by either widely sharing the two-minute video or buying the full 40-minute film on DVD for $20. You can also make a donation or  host a screening at your church or community center and the website offers a guide for event planning.

WATCH the video below from www.groundoperations.net

SHARE to Support the Veterans!

Pit Bull Hailed a Hero After Saving Boy From Bees

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An Oregon City family is calling their pit bull a hero after it saved an 8-year-old boy from a swarm of bees.

A group of children were playing near a creek and one of them unleashed a swarm of bees by stepping on a rotten log. Most of the kids got away but Jesse Shaver was being repeatedly stung and had trouble making it up the hill.

Fortunately, his dog Hades dragged the boy up the slope to the grass and, once there, let him mount her.

“She let me crawl on her back and took me to my mom,” Jesse told Fox 12.

“I’m so glad we adopted her,” said Jesse’s mom, who was “astonished to see the dog dragging her son to safety.”

(WATCH the video below or READ the story from KPTV)

Not a Single Elephant Poached in 3 Years for Revamped Chad Park

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Zakouma National Park in Chad is especially renowned for its free roaming herds of African elephants. The population was greatly reduced by a frenzy of poaching between 2000-2010, but their numbers are now on the rise again. Thanks to an overhaul of anti-poaching strategy, there has not been a single elephant killed inside the 19,000-square-mile park for nearly three years.

In December 2013, 21 new elephant calves were sighted in the park, marking a turning point for Zakouma’s besieged elephants.UNEP-image-ozone-layer-Earth

POPULAR: Scientists Confirm Victory in Ozone Layer Recovery

 

The remaining key species in the park are stable or on the increase and in general the ecosystem is healthy with the water buffalo population in particular showing a huge recovery from an estimated 220 in 1986 to just over 10,000 in 2014.

The relationship between the park and local communities is better than it has ever been as local people are reaping the benefits from extensive law enforcement patrols in their areas, according to AfricanParks.org.

In 2013 a toll-free cell phone number was set up to provide a means by which people can easily and anonymously transmit information regarding potential poaching threats to Chad’s elephant populations. Additionally village radios were installed in 16 villages in Zakouma’s periphery, providing a reliable means of reporting suspicious activity concerning the security of both the local population and the elephants. These radios enable the villages to be in 24-hour radio communication with our control room in Zakouma.

Photo of African elephant herd by Vaughan Leiberum (CC license)

Maine Rescuers Free Whale That was Completely Entangled

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Off the coast of Bar Harbor, a humpback whale is finally free after rescuers took hours to disentangled the fishing gear so it could swim away.

The Department of Marine Resources arrived Saturday afternoon with the proper tools after a whale watching boat spotted the disabled whale. After daylight faded they returned on Sunday morning to finish the tail. The mammal swam away without injury.

(WATCH the video or READ the story from WFMY News) – Story tip from Joel Arellano

Photo courtesy of whale-watcher Walter Churchill via Facebook

Vermont City Reaches Milestone in Energy, 100 Percent Green

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Vermont’s largest city has a new success to add to its list of socially conscious achievements. 100 percent of Burlington electricity now comes from renewable sources such as wind, water and biomass.

Across the state, Vermonters are urging their electric utilities to provide them with renewable sources of power, and utilities like Burlington Electric are listening.

(READ the full story from the Associated Press)

Photo credit: Mike Dunn (CC via Flickr)

 

 

How Hummingbirds Evolved With Odd Taste for Sugar

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Hummingbirds are the only birds that feed on sweet nectar, but like all other birds, they lack sweet-taste receptors on their palates and long tongues. So how did they evolve a taste for sugary food?

Now scientists have shed light on the evolutionary mystery of how the birds taste that sweetness. They developed their own kind of taste receptor, unlike any other birds.

(READ the story from the CS Monitor)

Photo: Leucistic Hummingbird at Inniswood Metro Gardens, by Lori Taggert

 

India People Power! 50 Strangers Lift Bus to Free Trapped Youth

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In the Indian city of Pune, a group of about 50 bystanders worked as one to lift a bus that had trapped two students on a motorcycle.

NDTV reports the pair were pulled to safety and went to the hospital on September 1, and said the group’s quick action likely saved the boys’ lives.

This is “people power in action,” the news outlet said, as they Tweeted this video below.

(READ the story from the Pune Mirror)

Photo from Twitter, Hindustan Times

Mystery Donor Gives Money To Vandalized Stores In Ferguson, Keeps Town ‘Hopeful’

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Neighbors are helping neighbors in the riot-weary town of Ferguson.

An unidentified man delivered encouraging words last week along with envelopes of cash to businesses cleaning up after the Missouri neighborhood protests left shops vandalized.

“He reached out and he gave me an envelope, and in the envelope, it was two $50 bills,” said one shop owner whose windows were broken. “He said I’m sorry for your losses, and he turned around and he walked out the door.”

Residents have seen other displays of community spirit, like the day dozens of teachers and students cleaned up litter following the demonstrations.

(WATCH the inspiring video or read the story at Huffpost (NOTE: the video starts playing when you land on the webpage)

Elderly Americans Fall in Love With Brazilian Youth Who Practice English Using Retirement Homes

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The CNA language school network launched the heartwarming Speaking Exchange project, which connects young people in Brazil learning English with Americans living in retirement homes who are very happy to have someone new to talk with.

They talk face-to-face using a private digital tool that connects them via video chat.

The seniors in America are thrilled to talk with young people in this win-win project launched in May, 2012, which helps the Brazilian youth improve their English speaking skills.

(WATCH this MUST-SEE video below)

 

12-Year-Old CEO Has Already Made $150,000 With Stylish Bow Tie Company

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Moziah Bridges loved dressing with style, but he couldn’t find bow ties that were cool and fit his 9-year-old fancy. So he asked his grandmother to teach him to sew.

Mo’s Bows” was born and he used Granny’s whimsical scrap fabric to make and sell bow ties and pocket squares.

”I like to wear bow ties because they make me look good and feel good.”

Today he employs five seamstresses from his home in Memphis, Tenn., and has topped $165,000 in revenue.

Moziah appeared on CNBC recently to talk about how business is going.

(WATCH the videos from TODAY and CNBC)

 

 

 

Australia Scientists Print Cheap Solar Panels Onto Flexible Plastic

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Australian solar power scientists have developed a cheap and fast way to print solar cells onto plastic — plastic that can be used to cover an iPad or tint the windows covering a skyscraper.

Using organic solar ink and a new printer, a consortium of scientists from Australian universities can now print solar collectors onto flexible pages of PET plastic 16 inches long by 12 inches wide.

“It’s very cheap. The way in which it looks and works is quite different to conventional silicon rooftop solar,” said senior research scientist Dr Fiona Scholes. “Connecting our solar panels is as simple as connecting a battery.”

(READ the story and watch video at ABC.net or WATCH the Consortium’s video below)

Photo courtesy of CSIRO 

Humorous Ugly Fruit Campaign Reduces Food Waste in France

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A French grocer has increased its customer base by 24 percent since launching its Inglorious Fruits & Vegetables campaign this summer.

Railing against the food industry for discarding millions of tons of produce every year, Intermarché used humor in its ad campaign to bring in customers to buy the ‘ugly’ produce, which is priced at a 30% discount.

The television, radio, print and poster campaign celebrated the odd shapes of the Grotesque Apple, the Ridiculous Potato, the Hideous Orange, the Failed Lemon, the Disfigured Eggplant, the Ugly Carrot, and the Unfortunate Clementine.

“Now you can eat five a day inglorious fruits and vegetables,” they proclaimed, “in the glorious fight against food waste.”

– WATCH the video below from Intermarché

– READ the story from CTV

– Story tip from B.S.

Photo of the Day – Bridge of Dreams

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For nine years, a dedicated group of Amish neighbors, horsemen, businesses and Ohio politicians raised money and worked to convert a vacated railroad line into a multi-use trail for cyclists, equestrians, hikers and horse-drawn vehicles.

Since 1999, the Bridge of Dreams and the 4.5 mile Mohican Valley Trail have become a tourist destination for visitors through Knox County’s spectacular Mohican River valley.

Photo submitted by Lori Taggart

 

Gates Foundation Pledges Ebola Cash

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The Gates Foundation is committing $50 million to help step up efforts to tackle the deadly virus in the affected countries.

This comes on top of other funds announced by the UK and US governments, as well as the European Union.

(READ more from the BBC)

Photo from Gates Foundation Facebook Page – Story tip from xklm

Manchester Dogs’ Home Raises £1 Million in 24hrs After Arson Attack

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“To the people of Manchester – thank you is not enough. We cannot find the words,” said Lisa Graham, manager for 10 years at the Manchester & Cheshire Dogs’ Home.

Since 1893, the English charity has provided shelter and veterinary care,and found adoptive homes for more than one million dogs. Now it’s people who are stepping up to rescue the animal shelter, after their kennels in Manchester burned to the ground last evening, as a result of arson, killing 53 dogs.

Almost immediately, the staff at Manchester Evening News set up a fundraising page on JustGiving.com to collect donations. In just 24 hours the page has raised more than 1.1 million pounds for the animal sanctuary, with donations pouring in from around the world.

“Thanks to the help of the fire service and police,” approximately 150 dogs were saved, according to the group’s Facebook Page.

Also, Jason Dyer, 41, and his nephew Dean Rostock, 25, ran into the burning building after they heard the animals yelping around seven o’clock, according to the Manchester Evening News. The pair are believed to have saved 20 dogs from the flames.

Numerous local organizations assisted in transporting the surviving dogs to other kennels, and the community has been delivering blankets and food at a central drop-off point (Christchurch on Water st. harpurhey).Manchester-Dogs-Home-logo

Businesses are stepping up too. Green Frame, a business that specializes in refurbishing reclaimed UPVC windows & doors, heard the tragic news and volunteered to donate as many windows as needed.

“We would like to help as much as we can… for the rebuild of Manchester and Cheshire dogs home.”

(READ the full story from The Independent)

Photo credits: Manchester & Cheshire Dogs’ Home on Facebook – Story tip from Amy