Thursday, August 21, 2014

FIVE COUNCIL CANDIDATES ATTEND CASPER SENIOR CENTER MEET AND GREET



Five city council candidates attended "Meet and Greet" at the Casper Senior Center (Central Wyoming Senior Services). That's according to Wayne Clements, Executive Director, who said the event, held each day during lunch the week of August 4-8, gave local seniors the chance to meet the candidates individually. "All eleven Casper City Council candidates were invited," he noted, "and five attended. This was a very important event for local seniors; we are an active group socially and politically and we pay attention to those candidates who support issues important to seniors." According to the 2010 Census, almost 40% of Casper's population is age 45 and older; 13% is age 65 and older.

Those who attended last week's Meet and Greet included Ward One candidate Robin Mundell,  Ward Two candidates Shawn Johnson and Paul Meyer, and Ward Three candidates Kenyne Schlager and William Street. "We want to thank those five candidates who joined us," remarked Clements, "and demonstrated their interest in learning more about the Senior Center and senior issues." The city council primary election will be held Tuesday, August 19. The general election will be held in November.

The Casper Senior Center, located at 1831 East 4th Street in Casper, and organized in 1976, serves approximately 1,000 meals each week.

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

GRANDPARENTS RAISING GRANDCHILDREN



Bill Cosby is a very talented entertainer; few of us would take issue with that. Several years ago, during  one of his television appearances, the topic of conversation moved to grandchildren. Mr. Cosby stated how much he enjoyed being around his own grandchildren. In fact, he added, the reason grandparents and grandchildren get along so well is because they share a common enemy.

While that's a funny comment, there's no question a special relationship does exist between grandparents and grandchildren. For some grandparents the relationship runs even deeper. About one in 14 children in this country lives in a household headed by their grandparents, more than double the number from 1970.

These statistics are mirrored by some clients at the Senior Center and Parenting the Second Time Around, a support group which meets there. It is not unusual to see grandparents raising grandchildren when parents are unable to do so due to substance abuse, incarceration, death, mental illness, or child neglect. Often a grandparent will take in a grandchild to prevent the child from being placed in foster care, and state welfare agencies are more frequently seeking out grandparents to raise children whose parents could no longer do so.

There are a number of resources available for grandparents who are raising grandchildren. The Parent Education Network has an excellent 30-page publication, Grandparents Raising Grandchildren, designed for Wyoming residents and available at the Senior Center. The web site raisingyourgrandchildren.com provides information on legal and financial issues and where to find help at the local and state levels. And the web site aarp.org has a "Home and Family" section that includes a special Grand Facts sheet full of help for grandparents raising children. In Casper you can contact Parenting the Second Time Around by calling the Senior Center at 265-4678.

Grandparents Day is celebrated every year on the first Sunday after Labor Day. This year Grandparents Day is Sunday, September 7 and it's a particularly good time to recognize and appreciate those grandparents who are raising children for the second time. With apologies to Mr. Cosby, grandparents and grandchildren may share a common enemy, but they also share a special bond of love. Grandparents who raise grandchildren are among the unsung heroes of our communities.