Blogs
post a blog entry
Please note that The Anniston Star reserves the right to delete blog entries for any reason without prior notice.
Blogs are for personal use only. Any posts used for commercial purposes (i.e., selling products or services) will be deleted.
Blog posts containing racial or sexual remarks or other offensive content will be removed immediately.
Please do not use your blog post to copy content from other Web sites. Instead, we encourage you to provide a link to that content.
Repeated violations of these rules may result in the termination of your AnnistonStar.com account.
Recent Blog Posts
by GaryInnes
Jun 18, 2013 |  0 comments | 13 13 recommendations | email to a friend
Resume strategies are necessary to know before writing a resume. Mostly, people are unaware of such strategies. Resume strategies are the task of strategist. It is surprising that resume writer is different to strategist. Resume services flourish, and range from an overvalued typing service up ...
8JV2_Photo_Jun_05__8_47_39_AM.jpg Resurrection by JanCase
Jun 13, 2013 |  0 comments | 127 127 recommendations | email to a friend
My grandparents always planted their garden on Good Friday. I never asked why. It was just one of those things like the Frigidaire or the chester drawers. I was grown before I realized that it was pronounced “frigid air” and was a brand name, not a synonym for refrigerator. I’ll blame the preval...
L57X_snorkeling_pulau_tidung.jpg by opiektidungcom
Jun 04, 2013 |  0 comments | 39 39 recommendations | email to a friend
Pulau Tidung is a new paradise in North of jakarta. With exotics beach panoramic, and also beatiful floral reef. We can also take snorkeling activity there. For more details: New Paradise Pulau Tidung
LUNCH AND LEARN, JUNE 26, 2013 by SherryBlanton
Jun 03, 2013 |  0 comments | 134 134 recommendations | email to a friend
Please join the Calhoun County Master Gardeners for Lunch and Learn on Wednesday, June 26th at noon at Cane Creek Community Gardens at McClellan. Our speaker will be Hayes Jackson and his topic will be "A Simple Water Feature for the Garden." The program is free. Bring your lunch and come! 
HYDRANGEAS ARE FINALLY IN BLOOM! Spring by SherryBlanton
Jun 03, 2013 |  0 comments | 84 84 recommendations | email to a friend
This has been the strangest spring (and it is not officially over for three weeks). I might call it the spring that almost did not happen. It was chilly one day; then the monsoons struck, and now the heat and humidity have set in. Farmers shook their heads as they worked to get gardens plowed an...
The Great Pretenders by JohnBagwell
May 26, 2013 |  0 comments | 47 47 recommendations | email to a friend
I was walking through my living room when I noticed an upside-down cardboard box moving kind of awkward-like down the hall.  Two pairs of legs from the calf down were visible.  The box bumped and bungled its way around as the two occupants inside giggled and talked.  Watching my daughter's play...
TIME by JohnBagwell
May 20, 2013 |  0 comments | 47 47 recommendations | email to a friend
One word. A tremendous amount of power and significance behind it. The last few weeks I've not had much TIME to do anything more than work, study, work some more, and try to find TIME for family in there somewhere.  As the weeks of my studies drew to a close, TIME became more and more...
8TLB_IMG_4916.JPG Lunch and Learn, May 22, 2013 by SherryBlanton
May 18, 2013 |  0 comments | 44 44 recommendations | email to a friend
Please join the Master Gardeners for our May Lunch and Learn program, May 22, 2013 from noon until 1 PM. The program is held the fourth Wednesday of the month at Cane Creek Community Gardens at McClellan from April through September. Our May speaker is Lisa Harris of Scenic Alabama and her progra...
Golf - The Other Four-Letter Word by CalicoHawk
May 05, 2013 |  0 comments | 42 42 recommendations | email to a friend
Have you played Golf?  It’s a lot of fun, and quite stressful all at the same time.  Unless your name is posted on one of the leader boards at major golf tournaments, that is.  It’s called “golf” because all of the other four-letter words were taken.  I started playing the game when Tiger Woods ...
by MsSnooty2Shus
May 05, 2013 |  0 comments | 41 41 recommendations | email to a friend
It does not matter how many woman laid with my Husband.  He was mine  and still is>>>> I pray for the bastard children! Mitch and I were  MARRIED in a religious ceremony on April 6, 1980. We met at Fort Belvoir Virginia and fell in love with a passion that has never been met by any other. So ...

Today's Events
event calendar Icon_info

Thursday, 20, 2013
post a new event Icon_info

Pond Spring- The Gener... 3:50 PM
Oxford Farmers market 12:00 AM to 11:59 PM
Join us for the kick-off of Oxford's first...
Oxford Farmers market 12:00 AM to 11:59 PM
Join us for the kick-off of Oxford's first...
Hip Hop Hope Vacation ... 12:00 AM to 11:59 PM
$0 The Living by Faith Ministry will host Vac...
Second Cleburne commissioner probed in use of inmate labor
by Laura Camper
lcamper@annistonstar.com
Jun 20, 2013 | 0 views |  0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Two Cleburne County commissioners’ use of inmate labor is being scrutinized by the Alabama Ethics Commission. The state body requested records connected to Commissioner Laura Cobb’s employment of a county inmate at a gas station she manages, according to documents provided by Cleburne County Probate Judge Ryan Robertson this week in response to a request from The Star. The Ethics Commission also has requested records of Commissioner Emmett Owen’s use of inmate labor. Cobb, who took office in January, interviewed the inmate, who was later hired to work full-time in the gas station on Alabama 46, she said. The inmate is paid $7.25 per hour, the federal minimum wage. Cobb said that inmate, Kevin Walker, was released from jail about two weeks ago and still works for the station doing cleaning and yard work. According to the records provided by Robertson, the Ethics Commission requested the records of the gas station’s payments to Walker as well as the records of Owen's payments to inmates at his place of business in Georgia. Cobb told a reporter she has not spoken to an investigator. The Ethics Commission does not discuss its investigations, a legal research assistant said last week. Owen has spoken to an investigator and last week he acknowledged taking prisoners to work with him at the Candler Building in Atlanta. Taking the inmates out of state is an infraction of the rules of the program, but according to John Hamm, director of member services for the Association of County Commissions of Alabama, it’s not against state law. Owen last week declined to talk with The Star about whether he had broken any other rules of the program. Cobb was "confused" as to why her employer’s use of inmate labor is being questioned now, she told The Star. “He (Walker) would not have been able to get out if he had not had a full-time job,” Cobb said. Walker told The Star Wednesday that he was grateful to be a part of the program. He said he started out doing community service through the program and later got the paying job at the station. It gave him a chance to pay his fines and support his two children while he was in jail, Walker said. It also gave him a chance to meet people in the community, said Walker, who is from Georgia. “I have community support to where I didn’t have any,” Walker said. The gas station, owned by Won G. Cho, has been using inmates through the program for two or three years, Cobb said. The station was having a difficult time finding reliable employees and the coordinator of the work release program suggested using inmates, she said. It’s worked out very well for the station, and it gives the inmates the opportunity to pay their fines, Cobb said. Cho’s daughter, Maria, confirmed Cobb's comments. She said the inmates have been hard workers and that they have helped her father, who is getting older, she said. “They’re really generous to my daddy,” Cho said. “They help him.” Lane Kilgore, jail administrator, said he could not find an employer contract for the gas station in part because he doesn’t know whose name to look under. The corrections officer who manages the program has been out sick and was unable to help search. But, Kilgore said, Walker is the second inmate who has worked at the station. Staff writer Laura Camper: 256-235-3545. On Twitter @LCamper_Star.
 Leonard “Mac” McQuown (Photo for The Anniston Star by Misty Pointer)
Leonard “Mac” McQuown (Photo for The Anniston Star by Misty Pointer)
slideshow
Heflin PD applies for free stuff
by Laura Camper
lcamper@annistonstar.com
Jun 19, 2013 | 127 views |  0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
The city of Heflin Police Department has applied to receive tens of thousands of dollars of free equipment through a military surplus program. Captain AJ Benefield, interim police chief in Heflin, said the department is trying for a boat, two golf carts, three all-terrain vehicles and a 36-passenger bus through the 1033 Military Surplus program. It has been approved at the state level but is waiting for final approval, Benefield said. If the department gets all the requested items, it could total about $150,000 worth of equipment, he said. “And all of this is no cost,” Benefield said. The department does have to pick up the equipment and pay any fees or permits to transport it back to the community, he said. The department has gotten other equipment through the program including M16 guns and a bulldozer, Benefield said. “You have to do justification for your department to use these items,” Benefield said. The city could use the golf carts and ATVs to help patrol special events like the concert a few weeks ago or the upcoming Fourth of July parade, Benefield said. The boat could be used for a water rescue on Lake Heflin or at the watershed, he said. And if the city finds that it doesn’t use the equipment, with the exception of demilitarized weapons and such, after a year the department can auction it off to recoup their investment, Benefield said. Sgt. Kenneth Perryman, program coordinator for the state of Alabama, said by 2012, Alabama law enforcement agencies had received more than $16 million worth of equipment through the program. The program is open to all federal and state law enforcement agencies with arrest authority, Perryman said. The program was created by federal act in 1995 with a focus on counter-drug and terrorism efforts. Not all police departments have to deal with terrorism, but they do deal with drug arrests, he said. The program gives them access to high end equipment that they may not otherwise be able to afford, he added. “Whenever (the military) turns things back in, it’s available for law enforcement agencies,” Perryman said. The equipment can run the gamut from buildings, to aircraft, to weapons, to night vision goggles to protective clothing, he said. It’s all given away on a first-come, first-served basis, Benefield said. He gets emails when new equipment becomes available and lets the state know when he is interested in an item. It can take anywhere from two hours to two days to hear back from the state if the department’s request is approved, but it takes longer to go through the rest of the process, Benefield said. Approval for the equipment has to go through three departments, the state, the Department of Defense and the Defense Logistics Agency, which oversees the program, Perryman said. It can take a few weeks before the department will know for sure that it got the equipment, Benefield said. But it’s worth the wait. It’s equipment the department doesn’t have the money to go out and purchase otherwise, he added. “It’s a very beneficial program if used right,” Benefield said.
The Cleburne News - 06/20/13
Jun 19, 2013 | 17 views |  0 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Heflin Highlights
by Suzanne Payne
Jun 19, 2013 | 26 views |  0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Lovely Lady Even though this is way after the fact, I want to recognize a dear lady and good friend of mine who celebrated a birthday milestone last month. Sarah Johnson turned 75 on May 25th. Sarah is special to many of her friends and family and I count myself among them. Speaking of special…here are some people who fit that category! Happy Birthday to them all! June 19-Mattie Norman. June 20-Kadie Benefield, Mark Bell, Blake Bowman, Chasity Davis and Troy Brandenstien. June 21-Linda Charles, Stephen Chupp, Audrey Vise, Ronnie Mayfield, Stacy Hartley and Ethan Summerille. June 22-Ann Howle, Taylor Draper, Kim McMichael, Jane Sanders and Sam Parker. June 23-David Johnson, Chris Davis, Charlotte White and Betty Jo Rich. June 24-Beverly Johnson, Mark Truett and Brittany Turner. June 25-Malene Bowen, Chris Turner, Scott Dennis, Serena Owen, Kaley Oliver, Nicole Estes and Ty McLean. June 26-Ashley Wilkerson, Kim Williamson, Rachel Perry, Clay Owens, Ashley Robinson, Mary Merrill and April Benefield. Still Sweethearts A very happy anniversary to these couples. Being in love makes you complete. June 20-Shawn and Ellie Hudgins…Ronnie and Laura Mayfield. June 21-Billy Wayne and Dana Morgan. June 22-Tim and Delores Allen. June 24-Robert and Carolyn Jarrell…Tony and Shelia Waddell…Mr. and Mrs. Benny Brown. June 25-Jeromy and Misty Owen…Keith and Kay Yancy. June 26-Jackie and Jane McDaniel…Gearld and Barbara Perkins. Sunshine List Jimmie Nell Vise, Sherry Riddle Brown, Glenn Shortt, Mildred Hollis, Kerry Smith, Malene Bowen, Doug Taylor, Charles Laminack, Terry Benefield, Kathy Jacks, Glenn Berry, Sara Noland, Ken Sanders, Martha Holley, Rider Bearden, Gearld Brown, Jackie Stovall and Merrill Hayes. Just a Reminder 1. Big plans are going on with the Cleburne County High School class of 1998…reunion type plans! If you are interested in finding out more, send your contact information to cleburnecountyclassof1998@gmail.com 2. The Ranburne First Baptist Church is doing what churches do best. They are helping out a fellow human being. On June 22, this caring group of people are having a fundraising event for Kerry Smith. Kerry and his family have been members of this church for a very long time. At the present time, he is in Northside hospital awaiting a bone marrow transplant and receiving chemo treatments for leukemia. For $8.00, you can enjoy a scrumptious barbeque meal, participate in a silent auction and enjoy a Christian concert featuring Christy Sutherland (Barbara Mandrell’s daughter-in-law), Kelli Dodd, Phillip Frost and Tonya Parrish. See church members for tickets or call Jackie Howle at 256-453-2823. Bye! Until next week…remember…If winning isn’t everything, why keep score?
-->
Marketplace