Tag: United States

  • Fact Check: Former President Donald Trump isn’t the commander in chief

    “Big news!” a recent Instagram post said. “Trump is commander & chief.” 

    The supposed evidence that former President Donald Trump is still running the nation is offered in a video in the Oct. 3 post. 

    “This was Dan Scavino posting a clip of President Trump departing Costa Mesa,” a narrator in the video said. “You can see President Trump posing there with the police … he’s got those guards all around him and he’s got the Secret Service all around him. Guys, we’ve seen the vehicles all around him. Many people are posting, look, there’s no way that he’s got all those vehicles, medical, comms, truck, unless he’s running the nation, unless he’s the commander in chief.” 

    This post was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)

    The post refers to a video shared Sept. 30 on Instagram by Dan Scavino Jr., a Trump adviser. 

    “45 department beautiful Costa Mesa, California!” Scavino wrote. “#TRUMP2024 #MAGA #USA.”

    Scavino was in Costa Mesa for a ticketed “special evening event” with the former president. 

    Scavino’s video shows Trump posing for a photo with several armed police officers, leaving a building and waving at supporters. Flashing lights are visible from emergency service vehicles. 

    The video then cuts to what appears to be a recording shot from inside Scavino’s moving car. It shows more supporters bearing flags and waving, while some police and medical vehicles line the road. 

    Trump is not the commander in chief. President Joe Biden now holds that role. 

    It’s not unusual for a former president to come under protection after leaving office, or for local agencies to help. In June, for example, the Columbus Police Department in Georgia provided a motorcade for Trump.

    In 1965, Congress authorized the Secret Service to protect former presidents and their spouses during their lifetime. Major presidential and vice presidential candidates can also receive Secret Service protection. 

    “In order to maintain a safe environment for the president and other protectees, the Secret Service calls upon other federal, state and local agencies to assist on a daily basis,” the Secret Service says. 

    We rate claims Trump is commander in chief Pants on Fire!



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  • Benjamin L. Reynolds, Command Sergeant Major, U.S. Army, Vietnam Two Silver Stars – Conclusion

    Benjamin L. Reynolds, Command Sergeant Major, U.S. Army, Vietnam Two Silver Stars – Conclusion

    Published 1:00 pm Friday, October 6, 2023

    Continued from Part 1 [action that took place on Feb. 26, 1968, resulting in Reynolds being awarded the Bronze Star for Valor].

    Sergeant First Class Benjamin L. Reynolds, wearing the campaign hat of a Drill Sergeant, inspects the rifle of a trainee at Fort Rucker Army Base, Alabama, in April 1964. At that time, SFC Reynolds was the only Drill Sergeant at Fort Rucker. The Drill Sergeant insignia on his right breast states, “This we’ll defend.” [Photo: Steve Reynolds courtesy of The Army Flier, April 22, 1964].

    After the harrowing escape from the damaged helicopter, First Sergeant Ben Reynolds approached the special forces commander at the base and asked to “borrow” a helicopter. He was determined to rescue his company still trapped by the NVA. 

    Once airborne, they headed back to the hill where the NVA still held the high ground above his company. After he was on the ground, First Sgt. Reynolds joined first platoon in the assault upon the hill that was still being held by a vastly superior NVA force. Reynolds, who was called “Top” by the men in the company [a term given to their First Sergeant], was quick to realize that part of his company had been cut off from the rest. 

    Quoting from the Army report that up-graded Reynolds’s Bronze Star to a Silver Star: “During the initial assault, the First Platoon leader was wounded, and without hesitating, First Sgt. Reynolds assumed command… Placing himself in constant danger by moving and communicating under fire, he effectively employed the platoon and placed effective fire on the enemy and once the company was up and moving, took the objective. Once on the objective, he continued to expose himself while organizing, directing care and evacuation of the wounded …First Sgt. Reynolds provided inspirational leadership and extraordinary courage in heavy combat. This was critical for the 1st Platoon and B Company’s successful mission accomplishment…This resulted in the capture of the Headquarters and Command Post of the 7th Battalion, 66th Regiment of the North Vietnamese Army, and the concomitant mauling of that enemy battalion.” 

    One of the soldiers in B Company concluded, “Because of Top’s leadership, devotion to duty and to his men, we [B Company, 3/12 4th Infantry Division] defeated a numerically superior enemy force. Top did this without concern for his own personal safety and well-being. His actions were in keeping with the highest traditions of the 4th Infantry Division, and reflect great credit upon himself and his men.” 

    Reynolds participated in more than 50 air assaults to earn an Air Medal with one Oak Leaf Cluster [signifying at least 50 combat air assaults]. First Sergeant Reynolds’s Bronze Star was up-graded to Silver Star in 2008 because of the testimony of his men. As proud as he was of the two Silver Stars, Ben Reynolds was quick to deflect credit to others. He was most proud of the number of young men he had helped train.

    Reynolds described his philosophy as a drill sergeant, “When I was promoted to First Sergeant, I was still working with trainees. I had been working with trainees for 26 cycles as a drill sergeant. I had families from all over the U.S. coming to visit their sons or husbands when the trainee had free time on weekends. I had families say to me, ‘So you’re the sergeant that doesn’t cuss or get drunk and yell and scream at the recruits…Just let me shake your hand…My son tells me you’re the best.’”

    CSM Ben Reynolds beside the statue dedicated to the first class of Drill Sergeants to graduate from the Drill Sergeant School in 1964. Thje statue stands at the Drill Sergeant School at Fort Jackson, S.C. [Photo: Steve Reynolds]

    At the end of his career, Command Sergeant Major Reynolds shared with pride, the number of young men he had helped train, “I was a drill sergeant for 26 cycles and a cycle is eight weeks…Then I was First Sergeant or Sergeant Major for another 10 cycles, a total of 36 cycles. 

    “A platoon consists of 55 men, a company was about 190 – 220 men, five companies per battalion for approximately 1,100 men…So let’s say that I was drill sergeant for 275 men for 26 cycles, which is about 7,150 men that I was den mother/father, finance officer, house cleaner, chaplain, training doctor and most of all, a shoulder to cry on.

    “As a First Sergeant, 220 men for five cycles is 1,100 men, times five is 5,500 men. As Sergeant Major, another 27,500, or a total of 40,000 men that I trained.”

    Plaque dedicated to the Army’s first class of Drill Sergeants on July 1994. The class of 39 students graduated in 1964 and included SFC Ben Reynolds. He became the first graduate to become an instructor at the school. The plaque is located at the Drill Sergeant School, Fort Jackson, S.C. [Photo: Steve Reynolds]

    After returning stateside from his first tour in Vietnam [1967-68], Master Sergeant Ben Reynolds was assigned as an advisor to the South Carolina National Guard in Union, S.C. He was there for about a year before being ordered back to Vietnam.

    Reynolds arrived for his second tour in August 1970 and became First Sergeant for Company B, 5th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Battalion, 1st Air Cavalry Division. Their unit was called The Black Knights and they operated in the III Corps area, north and south of Saigon to the Cambodian border. Their mission was search and destroy. B company was commanded by Captain Hugh F. Foster III [who later retired as a Lt. Colonel].

    Describing their mission, Foster recalled, “We trekked through the jungle and the mountains in search of an elusive enemy who did not want to be found. Each step you took could be your last on earth, since we were always at risk of mine, booby-traps and ambush. When we did find him [or he found us], the result was always violent deadly and terrifying. 

    “On one field excursion, Top [Reynolds] brought an entire smoked ham on top of his rucksack. Every night he would grab the ham and a butcher knife and wander off to talk to some of the troops. I chanced to hear his conversation one night. It went like this, ‘Hey, how about a big ol’ slice of smoked ham? Pretty good, Huh? This is about the best stuff in the world. Have you given any thought about reenlisting?’” 

    “DFTR stands for Don’t Forget to Reenlist! …That expression came to my mind in memory of First Sgt. Benjamin L. Reynolds, in his somewhat twisted but penetrating sense of humor, which had a very positive impact on morale.” 

    At this stage in the war, senior NCOs like Reynolds, did not often lead air assaults. According to Lt. Col. Foster, “Top Reynolds would come out every few days whenever he thought he could get away with it.” Reynolds would receive two Bronze Stars during this time. In April 1971, Reynolds was transferred to the 1st Signal Brigade as First Sergeant of the HQ Company.

    In August 1971, Reynolds returned to the States and was assigned to HQ Company, 17th Battalion, 4th Infantry Brigade at Fort Jackson, S.C. After a year, he was promoted to Battalion Sergeant Major and assigned to the HQ Detachment, 1st Infantry Battalion, Basic Combat Training Brigade at Fort Jackson.

    Command Sergeant Major Ben Reynolds retired from the Army in May 1974. He had been awarded the Combat Infantryman Badge, the Silver Star, the Bronze Star for Valor [later upgraded to the Silver Star], the Bronze Star with three Oak Leaf Clusters, the Meritorious Service Medal, the Air Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster [signifying at least 50 combat air assaults], the Army Commendation Medal, the Army Good Conduct Medal [with four knots for a total of five awards], the Army of Occupation Service Medal with Germany Clasp, the National Defense Service Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster, the Vietnam Service Medal with Campaign Stars, the Vietnam Cross of Gallantry with Palm and Gold Star and the Vietnam campaign Medal with 1960-device [awarded to U.S. service members who served anytime from 1960 till the end of the war].

    Reynolds began a job as Assistant Director of Transportation for the Richland County South Carolina School District # 2. At that time, the district was the largest school district in South Carolina. Ben and Helen’s son, Steve, graduated from high school in May 1975, and they and their daughter, Gail, moved to Opp, Alabama.

    In July 1994, the Army dedicated a plaque at the Fort Jackson Museum, commemorating the first class of soldiers to graduate from the Drill Sergeant School that had been established there in 1964. Ben Reynolds’s name is among the 39 names listed. He was also the first member of that class to teach at the school.

    A bronze statue of a Drill Sergeant was dedicated in front of the Drill Sergeant School in October 2001. The statue commemorates the first class of Drill Sergeants to graduate in 1964.

    After moving to Opp, Alabama, he continued to maintain contact with the men of Company B, 3rd Battalion, 12th Infantry Regiment. With encouragement from the men he had led in Vietnam, Ben Reynolds decided to have a reunion at his home on July 4, 1997. With Helen’s help, they hosted close to 20 men. Helen spoke about the reunion, “I feel that it was a healing experience for them. My husband was career military but most of the others were drafted and they did what our country asked them to do.” They continued to make it an annual affair in Opp until they decided to move it to St. Louis, Missouri, in 2000.

    Ben missed one of the reunions because of bad health, so the men decided to bring it back to Opp in 2008. About 30 men who had served with Reynolds in Vietnam attended the reunion. During this reunion, Ben’s fellow soldiers decided that the Bronze Star he had received during the February 1968 battle, warranted an upgrade to the Silver Star. Their letters to the Army brought about a review, and Ben received his second Silver Star. The medal was pinned on Reynolds by his U.S. Congressman, Bobby Bright.

    Reminiscing at the reunion, Reynolds said, “They called me Top because that is what soldiers call their First Sergeant., but from a distance, it sounded to me like ‘Pop.’…They made me feel like a father. You sleep together, fight together and work together, You’re together for a year and got a feeling of closeness.” Another soldier at the reunion said, “He walked every step with us in the Central Highlands of Vietnam and he fought every fight with us.” 

    From Drill Sergeant at boot camp to the battle fields in Vietnam, Command Sergeant Major Benjamin L. Reynolds was the very personification of a soldier’s soldier. The recognition of his legacy as a Drill Sergeant can be seen today at The Fort Jackson Museum.

    He also left a legacy of service in Opp, Alabama, after his retirement. For more than nine years, Ben Reynolds played guitar and sang bluegrass music at the Opp Nursing Home on Sundays. He was also a member of The Dulcimer Band that played in nursing homes in Opp, Andalusia and Florala. He taught Sunday School at the Opp Nursing Home as a substitute.

    Sadly, Ben Reynolds life was cut short when he was killed in an automobile accident on February 9, 2010, near Opp. His funeral was held at the First Baptist Church of Opp on February 12. Burial with full military honors followed at Peaceful Acres Cemetery. Reynolds was survived by his wife, Helen; a son Steve [Karen] Reynolds; a daughter Gail Reynolds [Kenneth] Hall; and five grandchildren.

    John Vick

    The author would like to thank Command Sergeant Major Reynolds’s son, Steve, for his help in telling his father’s story. He would also like to thank CSM Reynolds’s wife, Helen, for her help.

    [Sources: letter from U.S. Army Lt. Col. [Ret], Hugh L. Foster III; The Dothan Eagle article, March 14, 2008; The Opp News articles, February 11, 2010 and July 16, 1997; The Army Flier, April 22, 1964]

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  • Okla. woman pleads guilty to fatally shooting daughter while trying to kill stray dog

    TULSA, Okla. (TCD) — A 43-year-old mother faces a maximum sentence of eight years in federal prison for accidentally killing her 16-year-old daughter in Indian Country in 2018.

    According to an Oct. 2 news release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Oklahoma, Amanda Moffett pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter in connection with her daughter’s death.

    On the evening of Oct. 5, 2018, Moffett’s daughter, identified by KSNF-TV as Laramie Moffett, alerted her mother about a stray dog attacking kittens outside their home. Moffett reportedly went onto the porch and discharged a firearm at what she thought was the stray dog but fatally shot her daughter instead.

    Moffett admitted in federal court that she did not “confirm that her daughter was out of her line of fire.”

    According to court documents obtained by KSNF, Moffett, a Cherokee Nation resident, was originally charged with first-degree murder in Nowata County District Court, but the case was dismissed after Moffett’s attorney claimed she was wrongfully charged.

    The victim and her mother had allegedly been arguing before the shooting, and officials were initially unsure how many times Laramie Moffett had been shot.

    Amanda Moffett reportedly said she fired at the dog, causing it to run away. She also claimed the gun fired by itself after she dropped it on the ground.

    In a statement, U.S. Attorney Clinton Johnson said, “Every gun owner has the legal responsibility to use extreme caution when discharging a firearm. This case unfortunately highlights the potential tragic results absent that caution.”

    Moffett remains on supervised release until her sentencing, which has not yet been set.

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  • Fact Check: You can pass the salt: Bill Gates and the FDA aren’t coming for it

    A headline being shared on social media reads like a misinformation Mad Lib: “FDA wants to replace salt with Bill Gates’ new mRNA fake salt.” 

    An Instagram post sharing it was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)

    A statement from the Food and Drug Administration said the claim is “fake.”

    In April 2023, the FDA issued a proposed rule to amend its “standards of identity” to allow the use of salt substitutes in foods that use salt.

    The FDA’s standards of identity were first established in 1939 to “ensure that the characteristics, ingredients and production processes of specific foods are consistent with what consumers expect,” according to the agency’s website. 

    Consider jams that contain fruits. Because some such products once contained “little fruit,” according to the FDA, the standards of identity for fruit preserves and jams require that products represented as jam contain a minimum amount of fruit.

    But back to salt.

    “The proposed rule would provide manufacturers with flexibility and facilitate industry innovation to reduce sodium in standardized foods,” said the statement the FDA sent to PolitiFact. “The proposed rule does not list permitted salt substitutes; however, it makes clear that safe and suitable ingredients should be used to replace some or all of the added sodium chloride and that serve the functions of salt in food.”

    Information about the proposed rule on the FDA’s website says, “The proposal would not require manufacturers to replace salt with salt substitutes.” 

    It mentions neither mRNA nor Microsoft Corp. co-founder Bill Gates.

    We rate this post False.



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  • ReAct sets auditions for ‘Willie Wonka’

    ReAct sets auditions for ‘Willie Wonka’

    Published 2:30 pm Friday, October 6, 2023

    ReAct Theatre and Arts has set auditions for its March production of “Willie Wonka the Musical” for Oct. 15th, 16th and 17th.

    The musical, which is set for March 15-17 in the Dixon Center for the Performing Arts on the campus of LBW, has 14 speaking parts, and is expected to feature at least 40 children in the chorus, director Cathy Powell said.

    “It might seem early to audition for a March performance,” Powell said. “But the children cast as Oompahs will be featured in the Andalusia Christmas parade and on stage at Christmas in Candyland.”

    Willie Wonka is the story of a world-famous candy man and his quest to find an heir. The musical features familiar tunes like, “The Candy Man.”

    Auditions have been set as follows:

    • For students in 3rd through 5th grades, auditions are Sunday, Oct. 15, at 2 p.m. at Andalusia Elementary gym
    • For 6th through 12th grades, auditions are Monday, Oct. 16, at 6 p.m. at Church Street Cultural Arts Center
    • For adults, auditions will be Tuesday, Oct. 17 at 6 p.m. at Church Street Cultural Arts Center

    ReAct was organized in 2022 to produce the original local history play, “Women of the Jury,” written by Andalusia native Marianne Merrill Weber. The group also produced a mural walk in the fall of 2022, hosted an art show and lecture series featuring the work of Shiney Moon, and staged “Charlotte’s Web.” Since that time, a board has been formed and is in the process of pursuing 501(c)3 status for ReAct.

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  • Woman arrested at Miss. wedding for allegedly stealing gifts meant for newlyweds

    PONTOTOC COUNTY, Miss. (TCD) — A serial wedding crasher was arrested at a ceremony last week for allegedly stealing money and gifts meant for the bride and groom.

    The Pontotoc County Sheriff’s Department released a statement announcing Sandra Lynn Henson was taken into custody at a wedding Sept. 30 on charges of petit larceny, trespassing, and disturbing the peace. She had previously been arrested in Alabama, Tennessee, and other counties in Mississippi for “crashing weddings and stealing money and cards from purses.”

    The Sheriff’s Office said she was wanted in Alabama.

    Henson has been charged with similar crimes in the past. She was arrested Aug. 1, 2019, in Florence, Alabama, for third-degree theft of property and fourth-degree theft of property. She allegedly stole gifts from two different weddings.

    According to WATN-TV, Henson is dubbed the “Mid-South Wedding Crasher” after she made her way through about a dozen weddings. She was sentenced in 2021 to five years in prison, but Mississippi Department of Corrections records show she was let out on parole.

    Her husband spoke at her 2021 sentencing hearing and reportedly said, “All I can say to the families is from our family, we are very sorry for any pain you’ve experienced and I’m very deeply sorry.”

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  • Fact Check: Biden said Obama spent hundreds of millions to bury Florida power lines. That lacks evidence

    Frozen bottles of water, slushy popsicles and melting ice cream get you only so far when the power goes out in a hurricane. 

    After Hurricane Idalia knocked out power to about a half million northern Florida homes and businesses in late August, President Joe Biden said it would have been worse if the federal government hadn’t improved the state’s electrical grid.

    “Under the Obama-Biden administration, we invested hundreds of millions of dollars in the state of Florida replacing wooden power poles with steel poles, and we buried these electric lines,” Biden said at the White House Aug. 31.

    Days later, Biden surveyed damage in Live Oak, Florida, where broken and downed power lines signaled widespread power outages that commonly follow hurricanes and tropical storms.  Biden said that FEMA could in the future replace the wooden poles with steel poles.

    We wondered if Biden was right about the earlier work: Did the Obama administration spend hundreds of millions to keep the lights on (and, most importantly, air conditioning running!) in Florida? 

    We contacted multiple federal, state and local government agencies in Florida. We did not find the figure Biden cited. 

    FEMA provides grants to bury power lines

    Hurricanes cause multiple threats to electricity systems, including flooding and high winds. The U.S. Energy Department in 2020 found that weather-related outages cost from $25 billion to $70 billion a year. 

    Nationwide, most lines are above ground. States and utilities have sought ways to pay for bringing poles underground. Florida has hardened its electricity distribution system with stronger steel poles for the larger, high-voltage transmission lines, said Ed Hirs, who teaches energy economics at the University of Houston. Much of that work came after Hurricane Andrew hit in 1992.

    Burying power lines can cost up to $1 million per mile — an expense that local and state governments have not wanted to cover. And underground lines can flood, said Joshua D. Rhodes, research scientist at University of Texas at Austin. However,an underground system results in “fewer points of failure than having 100s of miles of lines way up,” Rhodes said.

    A White House spokesperson referred us to the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which sent us a spreadsheet of grants given to states over decades for electrical lines or poles mitigation. 

    None of the Florida grants were approved during the Obama-Biden administration. Most of the grants were obligated — federal jargon for approved — during Donald Trump’s administration. The Florida grants added up to about $38 million. For example, FEMA awarded the town of Palm Beach nearly $8.5 million to bury power lines, and the village of Golf was awarded nearly $1.7 million to remove utility poles and bury overhead electrical lines.

    But other agencies spend on hurricane proofing, too. So, we kept looking.

    HUD provided hazard mitigation grants to Florida following 2016 hurricanes

    In this Oct. 18, 2018 photo, utility crews set up new poles and utility wires in the aftermath of Hurricane Michael in Panama City, Fla. It’s the greatest need after a hurricane and sometimes the hardest one to fulfill: Electricity. (AP)

    The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development also gives hazard mitigation grants. A HUD spokesperson told us that the agency gave about $118 million for Florida after the 2016 hurricanes Hermine and Matthew. 

    The initial award, about $47 million for St. Johns County, was listed in a Federal Register notice during the last days of the Obama administration. 

    But the information we received from HUD did not specify how much money, if any, was spent on burying electrical lines or replacing wooden poles. 

    Florida, through subrecipients, used the money to repair storm-damaged infrastructure, build  affordable housing and rehab homes, according to a statement HUD sent us. Burying electrical lines and replacing poles would qualify as eligible activities, although when the money was allocated, HUD prohibited using it to assist private utilities. That block is no longer in place.

    The Florida Division of Emergency Management found one electrical project that received $500,000 during the Obama administration: an underground utility lines project in Coconut Creek, a city in Broward County. A city spokesperson confirmed the project.

    We sent a summary of our findings about FEMA and HUD grants back to the White House for comment. 

    In response, the White House pointed to Obama’s 2009 announcement about $3.4 billion in grants being awarded nationwide through the 2009 stimulus act for smart electrical grid projects. Obama’s goal was updating the parts of the grid that handle transmission and distribution, which helps the systems respond to power outages. The second part was modernizing electricity on the customer’s end, ideally so people could decide to use energy at off-peak times, when it’s less expensive.

    Florida Power & Light Co., the state’s largest utility,  received $200 million to install smart meters, devices that show hour-by-hour energy pricing, in customers’ homes. But nothing in the articles that the White House sent said that the money was for burying electrical lines or replacing wooden poles. 

    Florida has pursued some of this work on its own. In 2019, Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis signed into law S.B. 796, which created a new process for utilities to pass along costs of burying lines, and other grid-strengthening projects, to consumers. Florida Power & Light has been burying power lines in various communities. 

    Florida Power & Light told the Sun Sentinel newspaper’s editorial board that the cost of burying the lines would be up to $35 billion. Florida Power & Light said online that about 45% of its distribution system is underground. That’s the same proportion for Duke Energy Corp., which has about 1.9 million accounts in Florida, a spokesperson told PolitiFact. 

    Our ruling 

    Biden said, “Under the Obama-Biden administration, we invested hundreds of millions of dollars in the state of Florida replacing wooden power poles with steel poles and we buried these electric lines.” 

    The White House pointed to FEMA grants, which added up to far less than the amount Biden cited, and to smart electrical grid projects, which are not the same as burying power lines.

    If Biden had said that during the Obama administration, the federal government invested hundreds of millions of dollars in electrical-related projects, he would have been on firmer ground. But that’s not what he said. 

    We rate this statement False. 

    RELATED: All of our fact-checks of President Joe Biden

    RELATED: Fact-checking 2024 presidential candidates, who’s running



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  • Fact Check: Social media post misleads about flu vaccine ingredients. Here’s what’s in them.

    Instagram post, Oct. 2, 2023 (archived)

    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, What’s in Vaccines?, accessed Oct. 4, 2023

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    U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Thimerosal and Vaccines, accessed Oct. 4, 2023

    Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Vaccine Ingredients – Fetal Cells, accessed Oct. 4, 2023, 

    Institute for Vaccine Safety, Excipients in vaccines per 0.5 ml dose, accessed Oct. 4, 2023

    NBC News, Caterpillar-Grown Flu Vaccine Protects Better Than Egg-Incubated Vaccine, June 21, 2017

    University of Minnesota, CIDRAP News, FDA approves first flu vaccine grown in insect cells, Jan. 17, 2013

    U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Fluad Quadrivalent, package insert, accessed Oct. 4, 2023

    U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Flucelvax Quadrivalent, package insert, accessed Oct. 4, 2023 

    U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Afluria Quadrivalent, package insert, accessed Oct. 4, 2023 

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    Email exchange with spokesperson for GSK, Oct. 5, 2023



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  • Taylor named new director of FBC’s Mother’s Morning Out program

    Taylor named new director of FBC’s Mother’s Morning Out program

    Published 11:00 am Saturday, October 7, 2023

    Patty Taylor is serving local families in her new role as the director of the Mother’s Morning Out program at the First Baptist Church of Andalusia.

    An open house was held on Thursday, August 10 prior to the first day of school on Tuesday, August 15. The school calendar will coincide with Andalusia City Schools.

    “When it first started in our city, it was at the local Methodist church and moved to First Baptist many years ago. We will be operating twice a week from 8 a.m. until noon on Tuesdays and Thursdays,” Taylor said.

    Beverly Farrington was the previous director of the program for 17 years.

    “Beverly put a lot of the procedures and policies in place. I can’t say enough wonderful things about her, but she decided to spend more time with her grandchildren. I had retired, so in a way, we swapped places. We have rooms for babies who are crawling in our 1-year-old room, a 2-year-old room, and a combination 3 and 4-year-old room.”

    The program is open to anyone in the community or throughout Covington County and not limited to FBC families.

    “It’s not like a school where you have to be zoned to come. Anybody can come bring their child around 7:50 before we start at 8 a.m. Children are picked up at 12. Parents send a snack with their child, so we make sure they have something to eat and drink. It’s a time for the kids to socialize with each other. We do academics with our 3 and 4-year-olds to prepare them for school such as writing their names, learning their letters, colors, basic shapes, and other developmentally-appropriate things. There is a lot of playing going on in the 1-year-old room,” she said.

    Taylor feels it is important for children to get that foundation of learning early. There are currently six teachers with two per classroom.

    “We have Margaret Bennett who is a retired teacher and Helen Johnson, a retired preschool teacher, in our 3 and 4-year-old room. Both have many years in education and do an outstanding job running that classroom. They do painting activities and work on their fine motor skills. They recently took a walking field trip and saw the construction going on here at the church. They are working on procedures they would do at the elementary school such as walking in line and communicating with the teacher. It is almost like a segue into a real school setting.”

    She hopes the children realize they are loved during their time in the program.

    “We love them, God loves them, and we want to love on our parents. We would like to have some opportunities for parents to come together, socialize, and let us help meet some of their needs. There are several things in the works because we feel like this is a ministry. It’s hard being a parent no matter what season they are in, but we hope this gives them reassurance for leaving their child with us. You want your child to be independent and grow into that separation aspect. This is really that first step.”

    Parents who are interested in enrolling their children may fill out a form at the church.

    “My contact number is on the flyer, and parents can reach out by calling or texting me. We can get them on a waiting list if we don’t have room, but we do have room with the 3 and 4-year-olds. If any parent wants to put his/her child in a great environment, we have redone this area. It is brand new and clean with toys, plus we have great teachers. Mindy Beasley and Beth Maddox run our 2-year-old room and do a great job. They learn about Jesus during story time and do coloring activities. Eleanor Coleman and Brenda Syler do a great job of loving on our babies in the 1-year-old room,” Taylor said.

    With over 31 years in education, Taylor retired and began working for an educational software company.

    “I really loved helping teachers who in turn helped students, but there was a lot of traveling involved. This was a great opportunity after Beverly retired, and I saw it as a sign from God. Beverly and I work really well together. She loves this program and the kids and is always asking me how things are going. It is nice to take the background I have and give all the opportunities we can to the kids,” she said.

    In addition to the program’s curriculum, love for children remains a key focal point.

    “We want to keep the focus on love of each other, love from your teachers and parents, and God’s love. It’s a ministry, and you don’t get rich but get paid in lots of other ways. None of us were prepared when we had our own kids, and you’re able to share and encourage with other parents.”

    The staff works with students on future skills they will need in kindergarten.

    “We want to make sure we are instructing our students in developmentally correct concepts. We also focus on teaching students about God’s love.”

    As the program director, Taylor is tasked with finding new teachers or substitutes as needed.

    “All of our teachers have been background checked. Anytime you are working with children, safety is of the utmost importance. All of that is done through our church. We really take safety important and make sure our kids are safe and taken care of while their parents are out,” she said.

    Taylor turns attention to God for the future of the program.

    “We want to serve our community and continue to talk with parents and pray about the next steps for Mother’s Morning Out. Right now, I am not even sure what those next steps are. When I come into something new, I feel like taking a deep breath and getting into it to see what is going on. I have only been doing this since August and want to go into it slowly without making radical changes. Things have been working really well. We are excited to have new playgrounds for our children as well as the Sunday school and preschool programs.”

    There is a monthly cost for attendance, and price breaks are given to multiple children of the same family.

    “Trent and I have always felt what we do is a ministry. We love kids and take care of kids. I switched to being a principal many years ago because I felt like I could take care of more kids and support teachers. Teaching is a tough job because kids are a bundle of energy, and as adults, it’s your responsibility to love on them and take care of them. I feel it’s a great way to give back to our community and love on kids and their parents. We want to make sure we are staying aware of what preschoolers need and how we can best support parents. We are all in this together. All of this is possible because of our church and wanting to provide this ministry to our community. I am the lucky one that gets to be a part of it,” Taylor said.

    Trent and Patty Taylor are the parents of three grown children: Ryne (McKenzie) Taylor, Tiffany (Austin) Armstrong, and Paige Taylor, and two grandchildren: Perry and Ruben.

    For more information email ptaylor@fbcandy.org or call the church at 334-222-5151.

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  • Man accused of kidnapping 9-year-old at N.Y. campsite allegedly left ransom note in her family’s mailbox

    SARATOGA COUNTY, N.Y. (TCD) — Law enforcement officials identified the man accused of kidnapping 9-year-old Charlotte Sena from a campsite over the weekend and revealed he was caught after leaving a fingerprint on a ransom note.

    Charlotte went missing Saturday, Sept. 30, while riding her bike at Moreau Lake State Park. New York State Police and several other agencies descended on the park and searched for her, which ultimately led to State Police issuing an Amber Alert. The AWARE Foundation tweeted Charlotte was “taken under circumstances that lead police to believe that they are in imminent danger of serious harm and/or death.”

    She was found “safe and in good health” on the evening of Oct. 2.

    Now, new information is coming out about the girl’s suspected abductor and how investigators located him.

    According to Gov. Kathy Hochul, on Monday, Oct. 2, at 4:20 a.m., a car pulled up to Charlotte’s family’s home, which was being guarded by New York State Police. Her parents were already at the campsite searching for their daughter. The car drove up to the mailbox, a man dropped something off, then left. State Police went to the mailbox and reportedly found a ransom note.

    Investigators began searching for a match on the fingerprint left on the note but came up empty. They input the print in a database for the entire state of New York, which yielded a positive match for 46-year-old Craig Ross because he had a DWI in Saratoga in 1999.

    Officials located his residence and found his mother inside. Hochul said Ross lived in a camper behind the home, so officials went into the mobile home using a tactical maneuver called a dynamic entry. Police took Ross into custody and discovered Charlotte in a cabinet.

    According to New York State Police, Ross was arraigned at Milton Town Court and was booked in the Saratoga County Correctional Facility, where he is being held without bail. He is charged with first-degree kidnapping, but State Police said he will likely face additional charges.

    Hochul called Charlotte’s rescue “a very good day.”



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