Wednesday, March 17, 2010

March Newsletter

President's Message

Winter Snows, Power Loss, Cancellation
Wasn’t February something else? It started with a record-breaking storm that smothered Lake of the Woods and our surrounding area under two feet of snow. Then 95% of LOW and many of the nearby residents lost power/heat/light for at least three days.
Then just as we were digging out, we were hit by another storm that dumped an additional foot of snow on us…and we were forced to cancel the AARP February 15 meeting.
And then the LOWA Board of Directors and General Manager suddenly instructed the meeting scheduling staff to start charging Chapter 5239 for its monthly meetings at the LOW Clubhouse. They said a $25. “room and audio set-up charge” was needed for our meetings, plus another $25. “room and audio take-down charge”—plus 5% tax!
Many of you emailed the Board and GM to protest these charges, and I made a similar statement at the February 17 Board meeting, but we received no positive response from our exalted leaders. In fact, one Board member chided AARP for expecting the thousands of non-AARP LOWA members “to pay for your monthly meeting room arrangements.”
This problem was scheduled to be Discussion Point Number One at the March 1 AARP Board meeting. We’ll report the discussion results in the Business portion of the March 15 meeting.
Meanwhile, let’s look forward to March and the coming warmer weather. Please consider volunteering your talents and abilities to a Chapter 5239 Committee or Service Group that interests you.
Bring food items and/or cash to the March 15 meeting to donate to the Wilderness Food Pantry, and Sheltering Arms. If you thought your February weather woes were unbearable, think of those individuals and families whose money-earners have been jobless for months. The food supplies we donate each month can be the difference between feeding their kids…or having “empty dinner plates”. Think about it.
One last word: An old man goes to a Wizard to ask him if he can remove a curse he has been living with for the past 40 years. The Wizard says, “Maybe, but you have to give me the exact words that were used to put the curse on you.”
The old man says, “I now pronounce you man and wife.”
Dick Martin, President

March Meeting to Focus on
Polio History and OC Relay for Life
by Carolyn Wray, Publicity, AARP Chapter 5239

The next meeting of AARP, Chapter 5239, will take place on Monday, March 15, at the LOW Clubhouse. Former resident, Jody Zogran will speak about her nursing experiences with polio victims at the Municipal Hospital in Pittsburgh taking care of polio patients. Dr. Jonas Salk and his research team were working in the basement of the same hospital striving to isolate the polio virus, which led to the development of the polio vaccine.
JoAnn Tolbert will speak about the establishment of the Orange County “Relay for Life.” After returning to Maryland for 11 years to participate JoAnn decided, in 2008 to get a team together at her church. When she called the Chamber of Commerce in Orange to see when they had their Relay for Life Walk, she was told they did not have one. JoAnn decided to start a walk at the Orange County High School. The first one occurred on June 13-14 2009, and raised $40,491 for the American Cancer Society Relay for Life, Orange County.
The older generation can remember when there were no polio shots and knew people who suffered from it. Also, most of us have friends and relatives who have suffered from cancer. We also know how far the cure for cancer has progressed.

MARCH BIRTHDAYS
(Pisces and Aries)
Joan Bealby, Francis Buttimer
Joann Buttimer, Diane Capps
Pete Cassese, Arlene DeSimone
Norma Ervin, Mar Fisher, Kathy
Thomas Hamilton, Joyce Haring
Anne Hartzel, Gale Henderson
Lee Huminik, Phyllis Jones
Robert Jones, John Lacey
Bill Lanier, Violet Liberti
Sally Lyddane, Philip McCann
Jean M. Molinari, Maurice Moody
Karen Mueller, Pam Nalls
Joe Nolan, Millie Nowers
Jim Ogletree, Doris Parmelee
Shirley Pfile, Phyllis Pulice
Barbara Ridge, Joseph Sandleitner
Elizabeth Scheuermann, Haag Scott
Robert Sherba, Sue Sillman
Sue Simmons, Stephanie Sloan
Elsie Smith, Janet Terry
Corky Thomas, Paul Tobin
Ralph Watterworth, Audrey Weeder

NEW MEMBERS
No new members due to the cancellation of the February meeting.

SUNSHINE REPORT
A sympathy card was sent to Paula Hornady on the death of her husband Richard.
If you know of a member who needs cheering up, contact Carolyn Durphy at 972-3306.
NOTES, BITS AND PIECES
Membership Renewal Now Due Please note that if you joined for the first time from September to December of 2009, your 2010 dues are paid. Also, several people paid twice last year, so they do not owe 2010 dues. Check with Linda Wight/Dick Durphy. You may pay your $7 dues at the March meeting or mail a check made payable to “AARP Chapter 5239” to AARP 5239, P.O. Box 945, Locust Grove, VA 22508

Monthly Silent Auction
The Storehouse Is Nearly Empty! We had a good sale at the January meeting, but now we need new items to replace the old for the silent auction on March 21. Raid your closets and cabinets—even those of your friends and neighbors. Now is the time to clear out the nice things you no longer need and your children don't want. You know the money we take in from the auctions goes to good causes, so you can feel good about helping. Please let us have your donations by March 9 as preparation for the auction will take place on March 10. PLEASE give them to us clean and in good shape—new or gently used. Contact Patti at 972-1370, Carla at 972-3436, or Roxanne at 972-836 for pickup. Many, many thanks.

Meeting “Sweets” Needed
Donations of pastries and other “sweet-tooth” items are needed for the Coffee and Sweets social hour before each AARP monthly meeting. If you can provide something for this member fellowship time, please let our Food Refreshments Chairman Alice Grgas know what you’ll be bringing, and for which month. Contact Alice at Algrg517@AOL.com or 972-6199.

Pictures Needed

by Nola Davidson, Scrapbook Editor
To keep the Chapter Scrapbook up-to-date, pictures taken on the various AARP trips are needed. If you don't want to share, I will make copies. Just identify the event and the people featured. See me at the meeting, call 972-8403 or email ndavid51691@verizon.net

Free Income Tax Filing Assistance
Free Tax Preparation and E-filing through the AARP Tax-Aide Program will be available February through April 15, 2010.
· Lake of the Woods Holcomb Building through April 10. Appointments may be made by calling 972-0350 for Fridays, 10 AM to 2 PM, or Saturdays, 9 AM to 2 PM..
· Orange Extension Office, 146 Madison Road, Suite 102, Orange (Across from McDonald's), through April 15. Appointments may be made by calling 540-672-1361 for Wednesdays, 10 AM to 2 PM, or Thursdays, 1 to 5 PM.
Requirements include: Social Security card(s) or appropriate alternative(s), an official ID with picture, ALL W-2s and 1099 Forms, any other 2009 tax-related material and a copy of your 2009 tax return.

Legislative Report
by Pat Berry
The Virginia General Assembly is confronting a major budget shortfall for the coming year and finds itself between the proverbial rock and a hard place: either increase taxes or cut services—education, transportation, public safety, health care, and more.
In the effort to keep police on the street, teachers in the schools, and roads cleared of snow some local leaders find hiking real estate taxes a possible alternative to cutting the budget for schools or safety.
There are hundreds of bills being discussed, but two issues are of special interest to homeowners: 1) tax assessments and 2) property rights. Assessments determine your taxes; and the less restrictive Virginia's property laws are, the more attractive Virginia's real estate markets become.
Here are five of the strongest bills currently being considered and a brief explanation of their content:
· House Bill 570: Putting the burden of proof on assessors, not homeowners. Today, if an assessor overvalues your home (and raises your taxes), you have to prove he made a mistake. This bill will shift the burden of proof from the homeowner to the assessor;
· House Bill 552: Preventing local governments from changing their minds about zoning. Imagine having your local government approve a zoning change so you can improve your property. But after you begin work, the locality reverses its decision, and you're forced to tear down what you've done.
· House Bill 191: Making sure HOA complaints are handled fairly. Today, if you have a complaint about your homeowners association, an ombudsman at a Virginia government agency called the Common Interest Community Board can help resolve it. But different HOAs have different complaint procedures. This bill allows the ombudsman to set a single procedure for all home- and property-owners associations.
· House Bill 205: Requiring insurers to pay for the complete repair. If your home is damaged, your property insurance will pay to fix that damage, but the repair could look very different than what's already there. This bill will require insurers to make the repaired area blend in better with the existing structure, so your property is not only fixed, but looks like it should.;
· House Bill 430: Increasing fairness in the real estate assessment process. Some more education for the people in charge of real estate appraisals can only make our system better. If this bill passes, it will require additional education for real estate assessors, and ensure that members of the board that hears your appeal have expertise in appraisal and home valuation. It will also make the appeals process friendlier for homeowners: Upon request, the assessor must disclose information about your assessment, and the homeowner's standard of proof will be lowered.
The General Assembly meets for two months, unless a special session in called, and legislators have their plates full trying to shrink government services in the face of a $4 billion shortfall. The five bills listed above will warrant the attention of homeowners throughout the state as the budget debate continues.
President's Message
Every Member, A Volunteer
That’s one of the main mottoes of AARP, asking that every member of a chapter donate some part of their time to community service and to helping those in need.
Chapter 5239 has dozens of active Committees and working groups that are always open for new members. All these groups are in a constant state of change—people move, people get sick or can’t handle the work any longer, people “burn out” after doing a given job for some years and need some one else to step forward to take over.
That’s why we ask every member to pick out an area or two of specific interest to them and volunteer to help. After some weeks or months of exper-ience on the Committee or working group, the member is familiar with the routine involved and comfortable with actions needed. And then can step up when “new blood” is needed to carry the work forward into the future.
Chapter 5239 offers you a wide variety of volunteer opportunities—each calling for different talents and abilities—or essentially none, just asking you to give a little of your time and energy to a goal of helping others who can’t help themselves.
For example, we’re coming into the dreaded “INCOME TAX TIME!” If you have had accounting experience or simply enjoy the process of doing annual income tax forms (!?), AARP’s Tax-Aide Program is for you. Program volunteers meet with tax payers who are swamped by form legalese and tax changes and use computer programs to help them solve their form-filling problems. Interested? Call Donna Jackson at 972-1977 to volunteer to help.
An example of “no talent needed” is on AARP’s monthly “Eyeglass Processing Committee”. This group meets the fourth Wednesday of each month from 9 AM to Noon to help in the Lion’s Eyeglass Reclamation Project. Volunteers wash, dry and inspect donated eyeglasses, and then trained teams read and record the eyeglass specifications. The eyeglasses are then sent overseas by the Lions for free distribution to the poor and needy. If you like local gossip—and how the LOWA Board of Directors has screwed up again—this is the group for you. Call Betty Hughes at 972-3820 to join this fascinating and informative group.
Please consider volunteering your services to one of the many, many AARP Chapter 5239 Committees and working groups. We need you.
One last word: A young grandson asked Grampa how old he was. Grampa diplomatically answered,, “Well, I’m not sure.” Said the little boy: “Just look in your underwear, Grampa. Mine says I’m four to six.”
Dick Martin, President

DAR Genealogist to Speak at February AARP Program
by Carolyn Wray, Publicity, AARP, Chapter 5239

The next meeting of AARP, Chapter 5239, featuring speaker Debbie Sue DeHart, will take place on Monday, February 15, at the LOW Clubhouse. Ms. DeHart has been a genealogist for 21 years. As a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR), she has served as Chairman of Volunteer Information Specialist, Lineage Research and Membership, State Vice Chairman of Membership, and Organizing Regent for a new chapter of DAR, which received 24 state awards the first year. Lineage papers for 123 new members have been completed since 2004. Ms DeHart continues to be very active in the DAR and recently completed a Computer Project for the State Regent creating a web site for use of the State Officers for Membership and Reporting.
This program should be most interesting, especially for DAR members and for people who are interested in researching their own family backgrounds. The meeting will begin at 9:30 AM with sweets and coffee followed by the program at 10AM. Come and enjoy this very friendly and active group of AARP senior citizens on Monday, February 15, at 9:30 AM. delete

Channel 18 Presentation
AARP’s speaker presentation from this month’s meeting will be telecast on Comcast Channel 18 for one week, starting the Friday after the meeting. The program will be telecast four times a day for the week. Check exact broadcast times in Lake Currents, or on Channel 18’s “Calendar of Events.”

FEBRUARY BIRTHDAYS
(Aquarius and Pisces)
Helen Berra, Kathleen Bradford,
Kathleen Bradie, Jack Doherty,
Irving Grimes, Benjamine Jason,
Ed Kessler, Lincoln Klabo,
Norma Lanier, Jeanne Larsen,
Frank Liberti, Patricia Lieb,
Joan Litschert, Sylvia Lyngle,
Laurie Paonessa, Barbara Rakes,
Nancy Sandleitner, Bob Schafer,
Barbara Scott, Peggy Simpson,
Alton Smith, Joann Strawhun,
Micky Talbott, Clair Wescott,
Russell Williams, Patricia Witmer,
Jody Zogran, and Ray Zogran

SUNSHINE REPORT
A get well card was sent to Corky Thomas.
If you know of a member who needs cheering up, contact Carolyn Durphy at 972-3306.

Chapter Members Volunteer to Help
In response to Chapter openings and to help with new needs in serving our community and local area, the following members have stepped forward to volunteer their time and efforts:
· Meeting Coffee Committee: George and Ruth Lenwell, plus Bill Walker; Al and Rani Manhard; Alan and Pat Berry.
· Medical Information Chairman: Frank Jacobeen.
· Child Mentoring Service Coordinator: Dick Berra. This is a new Chapter position, to promote member volunteering to mentor students in Kindergarten-through-8th Grade. Two locations are available: In the “After School Program” at LOW Church; and in the “EXCEL Program” at Locust Grove Elementary and Middle schools.
· Wilderness Food Pantry Liaison: Kathi Martin. Another new Chapter position, it involves providing(I would change to delivering) the monthly meeting food donations to the Food Pantry, as well as handling other specialty food donations as they arise.
Our hearty “Thank You!” to these volunteers…

What is Woods Cares?
by Janet Terry, Co-Chair of AARP’s Woods Cares
Woods Cares is a group of AARP volunteers helping individuals within the Lake of the Woods who are shut-ins, caregivers of shut-ins, or those in need for some other reason. We have been serving our community members for the past 10 years. There are approximately 45 AARP members who have volunteered their time and/or talents. These individuals are all over the age of 50. Most of them are 60-, 70-, and 80-year-olds, who continue to be of service to their neighbors.
Services provided in the past have consisted of transporting people to doctor’s appointments, grocery shopping, taking people to beauty appointments, picking up prescriptions, or running other errands. Other helpful tasks have included simple plumbing repairs, small appliance repairs, raking leaves, and transporting trash to the compactor. We have also visited with shut-ins to give their caregivers a break. This list represents a sample of what you may need us to do for you. Remember, this is a free service.
If you would like to be a volunteer or know of someone has need of our services, please contact one of our committee chairpersons, and they will endeavor to find a person to help. For information call: Marion at 972-4085, Janet at 972-1957, or Jeanette at 972-0726.
Our AARP motto is, “The Power to Make it Better”

AARP Virginia’s “Create The Good” Program
AARP Virginia is developing a new program to connect local chapter members throughout the state with volunteer needs of organizations in their community.
The program’s motto—“Whether you have 5 minutes, 5 days, or 5 years…it’s all good”—means that everyone can do something when it comes to making a difference in the lives of others. The goal is to link individuals who want to help with local organizations in a way that meets the needs of both.
You can find full information on this program at CreateTheGood.org AARP’s dynamic website. Current CTG Organizers are needed to increase the reach of AARP’s annual Food Drive throughout Virginia, and to also expand the Operation Energy Save Project.
Please email Brian Jacks at bjacks@AARP.org to apply for this opportunity.

NOTES, BITS AND PIECES
Membership Renewal Now Due Please note that if you joined for the first time from September to December of 2009, your 2010 dues are paid. Also, several people paid twice last year, so they do not owe 2010 dues. Check with Linda Wight/Dick Durphy. You may pay your $7 dues at the February meeting or mail a check made payable to “AARP Chapter 5239” to AARP 5239, P.O. Box 945, Locust Grove, VA 22508

Monthly Silent Auction
The Storehouse Is Nearly Empty! We had a good sale at the January meeting, but now we need new items to replace the old for the silent auction on February 15. Raid your closets and cabinets—even those of your friends and neighbors. Now is the time to clear out the nice things you no longer need and your children don't want. You know the money we take in from the auctions goes to good causes, so you can feel good about helping. Please turn in donations by February 11 so our auction committee can sort, price, and prepare them. PLEASE give them to us clean and in good shape—new or gently used. Contact Patti at 972-1370, Carla at 972-3436, or Roxanne at 972-836 for pickup. Many, many thanks.

Pictures Needed
by Nola Davidson, Scrapbook Editor
To keep the Chapter Scrapbook up-to-date, pictures taken on the various AARP trips are needed. If you don't want to share, I will make copies. Just identify the event and the people featured. See me at the meeting, call 972-8403 or email ndavid51691@verizon.net

Free Income Tax Filing Assistance
Free Tax Preparation and E-filing through the AARP Tax-Aide Program will be available February through April 15, 2010.
· Lake of the Woods Holcomb Building through April 10. Appointments may be made by calling 972-0350 for Fridays, 10 AM to 2 PM, or Saturdays, 9 AM to 2 PM..
· Orange Extension Office, 146 Madison Road, Suite 102, Orange (Across from McDonald's), through April 15. Appointments may be made by calling 540-672-1361 for Wednesdays, 10 AM to 2 PM, or Thursdays, 1 to 5 PM.
Requirements include: Social Security card(s) or appropriate alternative(s), an official ID with picture, ALL W-2s and 1099 Forms, any other 2009 tax-related material and a copy of your 2009 tax return.

Legislative Report
by Pat Berry
If you are thinking of ways to increase your energy-saving efforts, another new initiative may be coming your way in the form of something called a “smart meter.” Dominion Virginia Power is conducting a pilot project involving 46,000 customers in the Charlottesville area that promises a further reduction in both home and business energy usage. Dominion, which provides energy to two-thirds of the state, will spend $600 million to swap its 2.4 million residential meters in Virginia with smart meters by 2013.
Funds from the national stimulus package have been invested in planning for 40 million smart meters to be installed nationwide over the next few years. Rappahannock Electric Cooperative in Fredericksburg received $15.6 million to upgrade to smart grid technology. Smart meters can read how much energy is used, and when, so the utility can charge variable rates—more for power used in peak periods, less in off-peak times. Customers can lower their bills by running dishwashers or clothes dryers in off-peak hours.
Since there are always questions about how a new program will impact the citizens of the state, AARP Virginia and the Virginia Citizens Consumer Council are working to ensure that consumers are protected as the new technology is phased in.
AARP will ask the General Assembly to ensure that smart meters and variable rates are voluntary. AARP is concerned that older people may not be able to cut their usage because of medical needs and that some low-income or sick people could be hurt if power is shut off without a home visit. Lastly, AARP is opposed to pricing tied to the time of day that energy is used.
As always, all of the possible ramifications of such a change have to be discussed before it becomes a “done deal.” If you are interested on finding out more about smart meters and their future in Virginia, try the following website for Dominion Power: http://dom.mediaroom.com and type “smart meters” into the search block.