Dear Editor:
Regretfully, after seven-plus years of restoring, managing and promoting the Old Pisgah Schoolhouse I am retiring as Pisgah Schoolhouse Manager.
I want to thank every person who has come through the doors of the Schoolhouse and helped make it such a success. I will still be working with the Schoolhouse Jammers and looking for new opportunities to promote their music. However, I’m not getting any younger and there are places I want to go and things I want to do so I will be less involved.
The Schoolhouse will be left in good hands as Monica Flynn and Judy Kizer will be the new schoolhouse contacts. Monica is married to Charles Flynn who has returned to Somerset after living near Washington, D.C. for many years. Charlie actually went to Pisgah Schoolhouse as a child. Judy Hughes Kizer was raised in Somerset and her brother attended Pisgah School. Please welcome Monica and Judy as you have welcomed me.
For those not aware of the Schoolhouse story:
Aound 1964 the Pulaski County Board of Education closed a number of rural schoolhouses and offered them for sale. Ralph and Beulah Stigall purchased the Old Pisgah Schoolhouse located between the Church and their home. When Beulah was getting their affairs in order, around 2000, she offered the Schoolhouse to Pisgah Presbyterian Church and the Church purchased the property. The decision at that time was “Do we tear down the building or try to restore it?" That began the schoolhouse restoration.
The Church gave the Schoolhouse Committee $10,000 to get started. Holland Hall, a member of the church, worked five or six days a week for nearly a year as restoration chairman. Other church members made generous contributions and our wonderful Somerset community jumped on the bandwagon and helped make the Schoolhouse what it is today.
From very large contributions by Ward Correll of more than $10,000, to a donation from a small boy of 5 cents, every penny was important to the restoration.
Obstacles, i.e., old lead paint, were overcome by Simpson Paint who called on one of their suppliers in Somerset, N.J., to come in and resolve the problem.
Carol and I even had personal friends in Chicago sending money. There isn’t enough room to include recognition for every person participating in the reclaiming of Pisgah’s Past. Efforts by Rena Buchanan gathering class lists and teacher names, the young men who volunteered to paint the outside of the schoolhouse, the Garden Club planting beautiful landscaping around the Bandstand, the support of the Pulaski County Newcomers who have supported the schoolhouse and all our fundraisers from the very beginning are just a few of hundreds who supported the schoolhouse.
The generosity of this Community is not new. In putting together the history of Pisgah we came across information saying that when a tornado destroyed Pisgah Church the community joined hands and helped rebuild the Church. In the late 1930’s and then later after WWII the community helped build the Pisgah Community Building which was the center of the Pisgah Community.
I am so proud to have been a part of this gift back to our Community by helping with the restoration and preservation of the Schoolhouse. Thousands of you have been to fundraisers, school reunions, family reunions, baby showers, wedding showers, weddings and concerts, etc. at the Schoolhouse and I have gotten to know and have become friends with you. I am thankful for my involvement with the schoolhouse as it has afforded me the opportunity to get to know the people in this community. Each and every one of you is important to us and we will look forward to seeing you at the Schoolhouse Jammers performances and seeing you around town.
It has been totally fulfilling and rewarding to have been a part of this historical restoration. And in saying goodbye to the Pisgah Schoolhouse I just learned there is a schoolhouse restoration project going on to save the one room school in the Reno Community.
Thanks again to the generosity of the Somerset Community.
Carl & Carol Skaggs
Somerset, KY 42503
Letters
Pisgah School Manager Retires
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The Perils of Alcohol
Dear Editor:
The Feb. 1, 2012, front page news of the Commonwealth Journal, read in big, bold letters, ALCOHOL at Eagle’s Nest. -
Reenactment Poorly Planned
Dear Editor:
In response to the article by staff writer Chris Harris concerning the Battle of Mill Springs recently held in your county. I have concerns over the objectivity of the content, particularly with Bill Neikirk’s comments.
I am a living historian and travel from Florida to Virginia taking part in approximately 30 events per year; thus, I do know something of which I speak. -
Rockcastle Hospital responds to article
Dear Editor:
This letter is in response to the article printed January 31, 2012, in the Commonwealth Journal titled “Local Nursing Homes on par with rest of nation.” The article incorrectly noted that the only Kentucky nursing home with zero deficiencies was the Nursing Facility of Hardin Memorial Hospital in Elizabethtown. I would kindly ask you to correct the information to include our facility. -
Western Pulaski Water could communicate better
Dear Editor:
Last weekend, residents of Pulaski County who have “city water” were affected by the countywide boil water advisory. This was the first time I can remember the entire county being under such an advisory. When the accident occurred at the City Water plant last Thursday afternoon, print and broadcast media serving Pulaski County were advised. -
Reader not so happy ban
Dear Editor:
I am writing this letter in response to the recent Somerset city limits Smoking Ban.
I would like to know WHY the city council can stop smoking in nursing homes. The nursing homes are OUR HOME! This is the only home that many nursing home residents have had for many, many years. -
Thank you, city council
Dear Editor:
To say that I had come to believe that I would never see happen in Somerset what came to pass at the most recent Somerset City Council meeting would be an understatement. -
Kentucky children need expanded preschool
To understand why my proposed budget expands access to preschool to 4,000 more Kentucky 4 year olds, it helps to imagine two kindergarten classes arriving for the first day of school.
In one class, the kids are bright-eyed and healthy. They know the alphabet, their numbers, and a little rudimentary math (think basic addition and subtraction). They can even read a little bit, and are able hold a conversation with adults. In short, they’re confident, curious, creative and energetic. They want to learn.
In the other class, the kids are just the opposite. Several have health problems, like tooth aches, asthma and lingering sickness caused by poor nutrition. They’ve never been read to, don’t know either their letters or numbers and can’t spell their names. They’re too timid to interact with their teachers and classmates, show little interest in anything around them and—to summarize—are completely unengaged.
You don’t have to be a kindergarten teacher to predict the outcome of the year: One class will learn, the other will struggle.
When the students enter first grade the following year, the same gap will exist, only it’ll be larger. In later grades, the gap will be larger still.
Barring aggressive intervention, the kids who began their school careers behind are likely to remain behind the rest of their lives.
That’s why getting our youngest children off to a good start—by laying a foundation of good health and cognitive development that enables them to hit the ground running in kindergarten—has been one of my top priorities as governor.
The seeds of learning are planted early in life. Earlier, even, than kindergarten. Scientists say that some 90 percent of physical brain development occurs from birth to age 3.
That’s why we’ve brought health care coverage to nearly 60,000 children whose families didn’t have any.
We’ve improved dental care for tens of thousands of children by increasing the number of dentists who treat children and bringing treatment straight to our classrooms.
We’re aligning our preschool and early care programs around a common definition of kindergarten readiness, one that guides our care workers in preparing our children mentally, physically, emotionally and socially to do the work involved in kindergarten.
And we’re seeking to expand access to preschool to 4,430 of our at-risk 4-year-olds.
My proposed budget for the 2013-2014 biennium—which I presented to the General Assembly on Jan. 17—includes $15 million to expand eligibility to families whose incomes are 160 percent or less of the federal poverty level, up from the current cut-off of 150 percent.
Bu the end of my term, I intend to set eligibility levels at 200 percent or below, which would help us add 3,920 additional children on top of this year’s gain.
Anecdotally, this makes sense.
Statistically, it’s a wise investment.
The Committee for Economic Development -- a national nonprofit, nonpartisan business-led public policy organization -- produced a report funded by the Pew Charitable Trust that studied the benefits of early childhood education. The report found that kids who had access to high-quality preschool were less likely to drop out of school, less likely to commit crimes, earned higher incomes and were healthier.
Consequently, experts say that every dollar spent on preschool programs carries a return on investment that ranges from $2 to $17.
The formula is simple—we can invest in our children early, or we can pay substantially higher costs later for things like remedial school work, basic job training, expanded welfare and prison costs.
If we don’t give kids the best possible start to their education, the bill comes due again, again and again.
Our people—especially our children—are Kentucky’s greatest resource.
To bring transformational change to our state, we must cultivate that resource by making substantial investments in our intellectual infrastructure.
Even in the most wretched financial times, there are certain investments that we cannot ignore.
But this is more than a financial argument. It’s also a moral one.
We owe all of our children—whether they live in our inner cities or our mountain hollows, our suburbs or our farms -- a chance at a promising and productive life.
And that process starts early. -
Act of Kindness Appreciated
Dear Editor:
Santa Claus does not always wear a red suit and a red hat with white fur, neither does he have soot on his clothes from the chimney. -
Subsidies and Socialism
Dear Editor:
Robert Moore is totally wrong about the Black Lung Program. I worked as a disability examiner when Black Lung was enacted. Black Lung was a political boondoggle for buying votes. -
‘What’s a body to do?’
Dear Editor:
My wife and I drive about 60,000 miles a year and we are naturally concernend about gasoline prices.
Retailers say the prices are regulated by the distributors. Distributors say the prices are regulated by the market. - More Letters Headlines
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The Perils of Alcohol






