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Obama criticizes virus response in online graduation speech

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by Jill Colvin —

WASHINGTON — Former President Barack Obama on Saturday criticized U.S. leaders overseeing the nation’s response to the coronavirus, telling college graduates in an online commencement address that the pandemic shows many officials “aren’t even pretending to be in charge.”

Obama spoke on “Show Me Your Walk, HBCU Edition,” a two-hour event for students graduating from historically black colleges and universities broadcast on YouTube, Facebook and Twitter. His remarks were unexpectedly political, given the venue, and touched on current events beyond the virus and its social and economic impacts.

“More than anything, this pandemic has fully, finally torn back the curtain on the idea that so many of the folks in charge know what they’re doing,” Obama said. “A lot them aren’t even pretending to be in charge.”

Later Saturday, during a second televised commencement address for high school seniors, Obama panned “so-called grown-ups, including some with fancy titles and important jobs” who do “what feels good, what’s convenient, what’s easy.”

“Which is why things are so screwed up,” he said.

Obama did not name President Donald Trump or any other federal or state officials in either of his appearances. But earlier this month, he harshly criticized Trump’s handling of the pandemic as an “absolute chaotic disaster” in a call with 3,000 members of his administrations obtained by Yahoo News.

The commencement remarks were the latest sign that Obama intends to play an increasingly active role in the coming election. He has generally kept a low profile in the years since he left office, even as Trump has disparaged him. Obama told supporters on the call that he would be “spending as much time as necessary and campaigning as hard as I can” for Joe Biden, who served as his vice president.

As he congratulated the college graduates Saturday and commiserated over the enormous challenges they face given the devastation and economic turmoil the virus has wrought, the former president noted the February shooting death of Ahmaud Arbery, 25, who was killed while jogging on a residential street in Georgia.

“Let’s be honest: A disease like this just spotlights the underlying inequalities and extra burdens that black communities have historically had to deal with in this country,” Obama said. “We see it in the disproportionate impact of COVID-19 on our communities, just as we see it when a black man goes for a jog and some folks feel like they can stop and question and shoot him if he doesn’t submit to their questioning.”

“Injustice like this isn’t new,” Obama went on to say. “What is new is that so much of your generation has woken up to the fact that the status quo needs fixing, that the old ways of doing things don’t work.” In the face of a void in leadership, he said, it would be up to the graduates to shape the future.

“If the world’s going to get better, it’s going to be up to you,” he said.

It is a perilous time for the nation’s historically black colleges and universities, which have long struggled with less funding and smaller endowments than their predominantly white peers and are now dealing with the financial challenges of the coronavirus. Even at the better-endowed HBCUs, officials are bracing for a tough few years.

Obama’s message to high school students came at the end of an hourlong television special featuring celebrities, including LeBron James, Yara Shahidi and Ben Platt, and was less sharp-edged than his speech to the college graduates. He urged the young graduates to be unafraid despite the current challenges facing the nation and to strive to be part of a diverse community.

“Leave behind all the old ways of thinking that divide us — sexism, racial prejudice, status, greed — and set the world on a different path,” Obama said.

Publicity 101: Pandemic and Beyond classes set for nonprofits

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Pandemic and Beyond– a free and upcoming one-hour webinar on nonprofit publicity strategies – is designed to acknowledge the global public health emergency and help nonprofits chart a course to an afterlife.

Marvin Stockwell

“We’re all trying to get the right messages to the right people, and nonprofits are facing pressures,” said Marvin Stockwell, director of media relations at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital and the class instructor for Pandemic and Beyond.

“I’ll cover evergreen publicity tactics people can use anytime, but I wanted to be responsive to what’s going on.”

What’s going on involves shutdown or severely-curtailed businesses and staggering out-of-work numbers. Many nonprofits find themselves in the same place as many businesses – sandwiched between concerns for their employees and customers and the very real threat of business collapse.

Momentum, a resource and professional development hub for nonprofits, typically provides in-person publicity classes that are fee-based. Due to the COVID-19 challenges non-profits face, the courses are now offered free of charge. This month, two will be offered: May 19 at 9 a.m. and at noon on May 26.

Stockwell said each session will focus on a different topic, with some issues likely discussed in both.

“I’ll keep the class lean on lecture so there’s plenty of time to answer questions and talk through current challenges people are facing,” Stockwell said. “In the week between our two sessions, the context of the pandemic will change, and being attuned to the current context is so important to communicating effectively.”

Civic groups, clubs and congregational groups can benefit from the sessions, Stockwell said.

Participants will learn to use the news media, social/digital media, grassroots marketing, effective branding and other resources. In addition to the class instruction, participants also will receive a starter media database of local journalists, as well as advice on how to approach reporters in top-tier trade media outlets.

(To sign up or for more information on these classes or other Momentum Nonprofit Partner offerings, visit momemtumnonprofitpartners.org.)

Privacy rights and protection/safety needs clash over COVID-19

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The privacy of individuals and the protection of first responders are two elements in a back-and-forth that raises the question of whether the two are mutually exclusive.

State. Rep. G.A. Hardaway

“Both privacy of individuals and protection of first responders are very important, but they are not mutually exclusive,” said State Rep. G.A. Hardaway (D-93), chairman of the Tennessee Black Caucus of State Legislators (TBCSL). “We can do both.”

Criticism on the firestorm level surfaced Monday with a COVID-19 Joint Task Force briefing during which when Memphis Police Department Director Mike Rallings acknowledged that first responders to emergency calls have had the addresses of COVID-19 patients for weeks.

On April 6, the Tennessee Department of Health gave – via a memoranda of understanding (MOU) – the OK to share such information with law enforcement. At Monday’s COVID-19 Task Force briefing Rallings said the information is necessary.

Memphis Police Director Michael Rallings

“If first responders become exposed, that could increase exposure to our community at large,” Rallings said, noting that 31 police employees have tested positive for the coronavirus and that 269 out on quarantine are now back at work.

Hardaway said state legislators learned on April 3 via a “somewhat cryptic” email from the state health department that data listing those who tested positive for the coronavirus would be made available to law enforcement.

“In a public health crisis, you don’t suspend the U.S. Constitution, you suspend laws and rules,” said Hardaway. “This is profiling, information released without the consent of the individuals involved.”

The “intrusion” was unwarranted and not the right solution for protecting first responders,” Hardaway said.

“Black legislators care about first responders. …Some of our folk are police and EMTs and firefighters. So don’t think we don’t want to keep them safe.”

Black Caucus members have presented three alterations to the COVID-19 disclosure format to Shelby County Health Department officials, the Tennessee Department of Minority Health and Disparity Elimination, the Tennessee Department of Health and the Tennessee Office of Minority Affairs:

  • On a need-to-know basis;
  • Have 9-1-1 operators ask if anyone in the household has COVID-19 at the time an emergency call is made;
  • Implement a rigorous testing regimen for first responders and purchase all of the personal protective equipment (PPE) to keep them safe.

“I am encouraged with our conversations,” Hardaway said.

At Monday’s COVID-19 Task Force briefing, Memphis Fire Department Director Gina Sweat called the COVID-19 information about those who have tested positive information “critical for protecting first responders working with a finite supply of personal protective equipment.”

Later during a telephone interview, Capt. Anthony Buckner of the Shelby County Sheriff’s Department said the only information given is the address of the COVID-19 case.

“…This provides our first responders with advance notice to use extra precautions should they have to interact with someone at that address.”

Dr. Mose Yvonne Hooks: Dynamic, engaged and supportive of students

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Dr. Mose Yvonne Hooks while attending the home-going services for Bishop E. Lynn Graves on Dec. 12, 2019. (Photo: Tyrone P. Easley)

The brother of Dr. Mose Yvonne Hooks knew his sister was not doing well during her brief stay at the hospital. He remembered her fondly after receiving news of her death Friday.

“She was a very dynamic lady,” said Phillip Brooks, who lives in California. “My sister was full of life, and she loved all of her family.”

Brooks and other loved ones are making a trek to Memphis to arrange final services. N.J. Ford and Sons has charge.

Teacher, professor, superintendent and educational advocate, Dr. Hooks had served as an administrator at Langston University in Oklahoma for several years. She died in Memphis at age 81.

Dr. Hooks had a long history of community-engagement service in Memphis and elsewhere.

“Dr. Hooks would always attend our sorority events and meetings. Everything we had, she was always there,” said Maya Lee, a Delta Sigma Theta member. “We awarded her a 50-year plaque at Founders Day last. Dr. Hooks just kept on going. So, it was hard to know that she was ill.”

News of Dr. Hooks’ death brought online condolences, reflections and memories of interaction with her.

Pam Walker Williams posted, “Dr. Hooks was my neighbor. She lived two doors down from my mother. A good neighbor. RIP”

Elaine Thompson shared this recollection: “I worked with her at Shelby State back in the day. Very warm and intelligent lady. Always encouraging to young people.”

Going professionally at times by the name Dr. Mose Yvonne Brooks-Hooks, she was born in Jackson, TN, on July 1, 1939, the third of seven children. Her parents and grandparents, both maternal and paternal, graduated from Lane College. Teaching was a kind of family profession.

Her mother, Lottie Thompson Brooks, was a teacher and former Miss Lane College. Her father, Elder Phillip E. Brooks, was a presiding elder of the CME Church and teacher. Elder Brooks served congregations in both Jackson and Memphis.

The family moved to Memphis when Dr. Hooks was four years old. As education and culture were highly valued, the Brooks children took lessons in piano, violin and other instruments. She and her siblings served as musicians in their father’s church as well as other affiliate churches.

“Crossroads to Freedom” — Rhodes College’s digital archive of materials recounting stories of  the civil rights era in Memphis — includes a segment in which Dr. Hooks details her experiences.

Dr. Hooks graduated from Booker T. Washington High School, where her principal, Blair T. Hunt, had a profound effect on her thinking about the importance of education for African-American students.

During the “Crossroads to Freedom” segment, Dr. Hooks recalls how her parents were diligent in shielding their children from the effects  of a segregated Jim Crow South. The Rev. Brooks would drive his children everywhere so they would not be subjected to riding the back of the bus. When the family would go shopping, the children would use the restroom at home before leaving. Their parents didn’t want them to see the “white” and “colored” signs on the restrooms and water fountains.

“I remember our principal, Blair T. Hunt, drawing attention to the fact that our books were used and outdated,” Dr. Hooks said during the interview at Rhodes College. “They came from some of the white schools from East Memphis. Even with second-hand material, black students could still aspire to great things.”

Dr. Hooks’ extensive higher education began at Fisk University in Nashville, where she studied Spanish. She earned a master’s degree in French at Columbia University in New York. Her post-master’s work was completed at Colorado State University and later at Kent State University, where Dr. Hooks was awarded a fellowship to study in Russia.

Her long and distinguished career as a teacher and advocate for education began immediately out of college. Dr. Hooks taught public school on the elementary, junior high and high school levels. She was one of 13 teachers chosen to integrate schools. Hooks was sent to Central High School, the oldest high school in the city. She taught French.

Later, Dr. Hooks joined the faculty at Shelby State Community College (now Southwest Tennessee Community College) before accepting a position with Langston University in Langston, OK., where she filled both administrative posts as well as faculty assignments.

She maintained her home in South Memphis, commuting some weekends back to the city until her retirement in 2015. After 18 years away, she returned to Memphis to enjoy retirement, continuing her active role in social and civic affairs with her sorority and with the River City (TN) Chapter of The Links, Inc.


 

https://tri-statedefender.com/legacy-dr-mose-yvonne-hooks-july-1-1939-may-15-2020/05/15/

The virus did not stop this birthday!

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Talia Bliss was the birthday girl and the recipient of a drive-by surprise. (Photo: Gary S. Whitlow/GSW Enterprises)

by Tabitha McGuire — 

My daughter, Talia Bliss, was born May 4, 2005. We have celebrated her birthday every year in some kind of way, whether it be a party, dinner with the family or just cake and ice cream. This year was to be no different.

The pandemic and the shelter-at-home order threw a monkey wrench in our traditional plans. But a 15-year-old girl watching the world around her open up, while her county decides to shelter at home, still feels some type of way about her birthday.

I’m not a social-media maven. But I had seen the birthday parades and I thought maybe she’d like that. It would give her a chance to see her family while maintaining a safe distance.

Pictured (l-r): Ashley Nicole, Chloe Janelle, Talia Bliss and her mother, Tabitha McGuire. (Photo: Gary S. Whitlow/GSW Enterprises)

I texted my friends that have watched her grow over the years. I put a message in the cousins’ groupme and I got in touch with her granddad.  Everyone was game.

The best part was it was all a surprise.

The parade is on. {Photo: Gary S. Whitlow/GSW Enterprises}

My best friend lined the cars up on the street behind our house and at the prearranged time we brought Bliss out. We handed out cookies as party favors. The cars stopped and everyone sang both versions of happy birthday to her.

She loved absolutely every minute it. Her birthday was a success.

The virus did not stop this birthday!

Graduation uncertainty prompts a mother’s drive-by inspiration

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Leah Seals was the person of interest for those who took part in her drive-by graduation. (Photo: Gary S. Whitlow/GSW/Enterprises)

by Iesha Wood —

I’m introducing my daughter, Leah Seals, a graduating senior representing Ridgeway High School’s class of 2020. Leah is the oldest of her siblings. She participated in FLBA, is a member of the National Honor Society, Choir and is also a proud member of GROW, which is an organization committed to helping girls become outstanding women.

Leah has maintained a 3.7 GPA while working two part-time jobs. She has been accepted into several colleges, choosing to attend Tennessee State University (TSU,) where she will study to become a Registered Nurse.

Leah Seals, with graduation flowers in hand, with her mother, Iesha Wood, and James Wood.
(Photos: Gary S. Whitlow/ GSW Enterprises)

I always told my children that high school should be one of the most memorable periods of your life. Senior year is usually the peak of a student’s high school career. Due to COVID-19, students now are faced with missing out on milestone experiences, including senior prom and other senior activities.

I wish that I could say for sure right now that the seniors will have the opportunity to walk across the stage at commencement ceremonies, but those dates are tentative as well. This really makes me sad as a parent. I want to “fix” any situation that may come about in her life. Unfortunately, this is one situation that I have absolutely no control over.

So, I tried to make light of the situation at hand and still provide my child with some sort of normalcy. That is how I came up with a small solution of inviting family and friends to participate in a drive-by graduation parade. This was done in an attempt to follow social-distancing guidelines provided by the CDC and still congratulate my daughter.

I planned a surprise drive-by parade with all of our family and friends there to celebrate with her. I also surprised her with a car as a graduation present from us. It was a small gesture to show her all of the love, support and pride that we as a family have for her.

Leah Seals’ graduation presents included a surprise parade and a car.(Photo: Gary S. Whitlow/GSW Enterprises)

And, I must say that she was very surprised, excited and encouraged to keep going! It was a grand occasion for a grand accomplishment.

LOC’d in with LOC: A graduate’s perspective

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James Yates is a 2020 graduate of LeMoyne-Owen College. (Courtesy photo)

by James Yates —

Last weekend my Bachelor of Science degree in biology would have been conferred during LeMoyne-Owen College’s commencement ceremony. Although the Magician Class of Spring 2020 did not walk across a stage to receive our degrees, we can still reflect on our time at our beloved institution. Everyone has a story of their journey to complete their degree, and mine came with many challenges and re-routes.

I initially entered LeMoyne-Owen College as a freshman in Fall 2003 on both an academic and athletic scholarship. My mother, an LOC alumnae, wanted one of her children to attend the college she loved so dearly. I attended, but I was not ready for the responsibility of higher education.

Unable to find the balance between academics and my social life, my grades suffered, and I eventually lost my scholarships. In an effort to mature, I enrolled in the Navy. The military provided me with the structure and discipline I needed to move forward. There, I became a diver and joined the Diver Institute of Technology, becoming the first African American diver with the company.

I left the Navy in 2013 ready to pursue my degree again. I attended community college to take courses and boost my GPA. I also tapped into my spiritual side, and grew a deeper relationship with God. Those experiences, paired with the loss of my mother, prepared me to get even more serious about my goal to graduate from college.

In Fall 2018, I returned to LOC as a junior to major in biology and minor in chemistry at 32 years old.

This time around, I truly experienced the magic of LeMoyne-Owen College. It’s a big place in a small space that has produced alumni who impact the world. Professors care about students and work to provide an intimate, family atmosphere for us.

I also applaud our interim president, Dr. Carol Johnson Dean, who has changed the culture of the College. She allows students to advocate for ourselves and also supports us through leadership presence. She and other administrators are at games and student organization events, always cheering us on.

Everything I wanted to do my first time in college, I’ve done. I prioritized the things most important to me: my future, family and faith. I excelled academically and was even voted as Mr. Senior among my class.

This semester, my father passed away. Simultaneously, I became a member of the Chi Psi Chapter of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Incorporated. Through that experience, I gained brothers who supported me through my loss and continue to act as extended family. None of that would have been possible without LeMoyne-Owen.

The emotional and spiritual encouragement of my sister, Netasha Wooten, my girlfriend, Savannah Scruggs, and our church and biological families have been my support on the journey of this semester.

Now that my undergraduate college career has ended, I will continue to move forward as I always do, and thanks to LeMoyne-Owen College and self-determination, I have options for my future. I have been accepted into Florida International University’s marine biology graduate program for Fall 2020. I also want to reenter the diving profession.

LeMoyne-Owen still plans to host a commencement ceremony when it’s safe to do so. As every graduate has their own personal reasons for wanting to “walk,” I will proudly participate to honor my mother and fulfill her wishes, even in her death.

The pandemic has changed what we thought that special day would have been, but to the Class of 2020, I say turn up and celebrate yourselves anyway, safely. Just because the degree doesn’t come in the way you imagined doesn’t mean it isn’t valuable. Your future still matters!

The Preacher’s Daughter honors father with action

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Shandria Carter made some pandemic-related adjustments while shopping for this year’s #ShansBdayProject outreach through The Preacher’s Daughter, Inc. (Courtesy photo)

“Growing up my father always emphasized that it was more important how you lived out the Gospel of Christ than it was for you to just say you are a Christian,” said Shandria Carter, founder of The Preacher’s Daughter, Inc.

The Preacher’s Daughter, Inc. is a non-profit that focuses on strengthening neighborhoods and improving the quality of life for citizens of the Memphis metropolitan community through outreach and community service projects.

Shandria Carter grew up in a strict Christian and military (Navy) home at the Guantanamo Bay Detention Camp (Git-Mo), a notorious United States military prison located on a naval base in Cuba. Her father served as the Pentecostal chaplain on the island until he was transferred to Navy operations in Millington.

“I founded The Preacher’s Daughter, Inc., as a means of embracing my heart to serve others in dire situations, as well as to honor my father, who passed away from pancreatic cancer six years ago (on May 12),” said Carter.

Three years ago, Carter started celebrating her birthday through #ShansBdayProject, where she serves meals, coffee and gives parents sweet treats at Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital.

“Since 2009, I have been serving at Le Bonheur. Initially, it was via the now defunct, Habitat for Hope,” said Carter.

On Friday (May 8), a day before Carter’s birthday, she continued to go through with her third annual #ShansB- dayProject, by delivering food/snacks, face masks and toiletry bags.

Because of social distancing requirements resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic, #ShansBdayProject had to rearrange its original format.

Shandria Carter and supporters of #ShansBdayProject make their way into Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital with food/snacks, face masks, toiletry bags and more. (Courtesy photo)

“In previous years, we catered a gourmet meal from a restaurant and served families, there is always three-four social workers (outside of myself) there who are ready to provide services to families in need, then there’s a team to help occupy siblings so that parents can enjoy the meal provided, and (upon their request) we have people there who pray with the families,” Carter said.

Despite all of the changes, their mission remained the same — to serve.

“We specifically served the neurology floor because February marked 20 years since my older brother, Quantel Carter, had successful brain surgery there,” said Carter. “This was a way of honoring his life, but also a reminder to myself that God had given me another year to love and serve others.”

“This year’s #ShansBdayProject took more flexibility and intentionality than the past two years. I didn’t want The Preacher’s Daughter to just do a project to say we did something, but instead wanted to ensure that it was impactful,” she said.

“All the same, once visitors were no longer allowed in the hospital, we had to become creative in how we used the money that was raised for #ShansBday- Project.”

One of the big things the non-profit intentionally addresses is food insecurity.

“A lot of times people don’t think about the cost of eating out when you have a relative in the hospital. However, it’s expense,” Carter said. “So, as we coordinated with the Volunteer Services, we were intentional about helping address this need, just as we had in previous years.”

Carter works as a social worker at Advance Memphis.

“The organization has been around for 21 years, and we emphasize walking alongside clients in real time,” said Carter. “I teach our clients how to get and maintain a job. The curriculum is Bible based and was developed in South Memphis.”

She recently started a program there called Thrive. “It seeks to teach coping skills and address mental health issues that may serve as a barrier to our clients being able to keep a job,” she said.

“My goal is to be the hands and feet of Christ in a very practical and intentional way — through service,” said Carter. “I want to be, to these families, the support system my family had when my brother was being treated.”

LEGACY: Dr. Mose Yvonne Hooks — July 1, 1939-May 15, 2020

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Teacher, professor, superintendent and educational advocate, Dr. Mose Yvonne Hooks died on Friday after a brief hospital stay; more details to come.

Dr. Hooks, who had a long history of community-engagement service in Memphis and elsewhere, had served as an administrator at Langston University in Oklahoma for several years.

In 2016, Dr. Mose Yvonne Hooks shared with the Memphis in May board her experience as a founding board member 40 years earlier. (Facebook)

The New Tri-State Defender is developing a story on Dr. Hooks’ life and legacy. It will be featured in the May 21-27 edition. Also, check back here to read more at TSDMemphis.com.

“Crossroads to Freedom” — Rhodes College’s digital archive of materials telling the story of  the civil rights era in Memphis — includes a segment in which Dr. Hooks details much of career and life, including a discussion of “how her parents tried to protect her and her siblings from the ills of racism.”

Services for Dr. Hooks are pending. N.J. Ford and Sons Funeral Home has charge.


IN HER OWN WORDS:

Dr. Mose Yvonne Hooks (Screen capture)

 

 

Living with COVID-19 — Part VII

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Back at his craft after a pandemic-forced break, William Gandy Jr. trims the hair of Melvin Cole, a long-time customer. (Photo: Gary S. Whitlow/GSW Enterprises)

by Jerome Wright —

At 6 a.m. Monday (May 11), William Gandy Jr. was back behind his barber’s chair quaffing a customer for the first time since mid-March, when Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland ordered nonessential businesses to close to slow the spread of the COVID-19 virus.

Gandy, who works at the Trimmers on Winchester just west of Elvis Presley Boulevard, had 21 customers scheduled for Monday, including the writer of this story, all eager to get a haircut.

Melvin Cole, a retired photographer and welder, said he was overdue for a haircut and glad to be back in William Gandy Jr.’s barber’s chair. (Photo: Gary S. Whitlow/GSW Enterprises)

A new health directive for Shelby County allowed hair salons and barbershops to open Wednesday (May 6), under strict guidelines, in the first phase of the Back to Business plan for Memphis and Shelby County.

But, Gandy, his fellow barbers and the owner of the Trimmers shops around the city needed time to prepare to comply with the guidelines, so the shop did not open until Monday.

Gandy had the shop to himself Monday. His fellow barbers did not begin work until Tuesday (May 12).

Asked if he felt safe, he said,  “I don’t really have a choice. I need to get back to work. I pray …Then I think about the doctors and nurses, who are out there dealing with this, and it puts my situation in a better perspective.”

Still, when he got home at night, he washed the clothes he wore that day and showered.

His feelings about getting back to work mirrors national, state and local debates around the country about the necessity to get the economy rolling again versus the safety of workers and consumers as the pandemic continues.

Beyond the safety concerns, Gandy said he had to get used to being back on his feet all day. “If you haven’t been doing something for a long time, it takes a while to get back to where you were.”

William Gandy Jr. sprays his barber’s chair after a customer — now standard procedure. (Photo: Gary S. Whitlow/GSW Enterprises)

The opening guidelines included:

■ Maintaining an appointment book with customer details.

■ All employees should wear face coverings and gloves when providing services.

■ Items such as capes, smocks and neck strips should be one time use between cleanings or disposable.

■ Customers must be served by appointment, with walk-ins permitted if they wait in their vehicle.

The writer of this story was ninth on Gandy’s appointment schedule Monday. He wore a face mask and rubber gloves. Gandy wore gloves, a face mask and a plastic face shield.

As the writer walked through the door, Gandy was spraying a cleaning solution on his barber chair.

He scheduled his appointments 30 minutes apart to give himself time to serve a customer and to sanitize his equipment before his next appointment. His system was working.

He said he started at 6 a.m. because so many men were desperate to get a haircut. He also, started at 6 a.m. Tuesday, although that was not his original intention.

“I planned to start around 8 or 8:30 a.m., “but so many people called me and said they needed to come in Tuesday, I said, okay if you need to come in that badly, can you come early.”

He had 13 appointments Tuesday and 10 booked for Wednesday, although he expected that number to increase.

“I had a chance to coast (Tuesday) and I appreciated it,” he said.

His customers, he said, seemed at ease with the process, although one customer cancelled his appointment Tuesday because of COVID-19 concerns.

“He got nervous and cancelled. He said he had family members who had a contracted the virus, including some who had died. His wife was nervous about it,” Gandy said.

For the most part, though, everyone at the shop was following the guidelines. One of the barbers had a customer come in without a mask, but they made him go outside. Several people tried to drop in without an appointment, but they were turned away.

As for Gandy, he is just glad to be back at work and earning some money.

“I was eating hotdogs and now I can move up to a steak burger,” he said with a laugh.

Serving others spawns an idea

Margaret Cowan (right) and Sheleah Grace of Living Grace, Inc. at the food giveaway in Cordova. (Courtesy photo)

Margaret Cowan, founding keeper of the nonprofit I Am My Sister’s Keeper, and her three daughters spent Saturday (May 2) helping distribute about 300 bags of food in Cordova.

The effort seeded a project idea for the nonprofit, which works with single working mothers to increase their earning potential.

She has been busy trying to get resources to make “essential boxes,” that will contain items beyond food.

“I got to thinking about the food giveaway, where bags of random food items were distributed. Our boxes will have actual complete meals, feminine products and cleaning products – basics things that people need,” she explained.

The nonprofit’s goal is to complete 50 boxes with the help of the Mid-South Food Bank, individual donors and Sister Supply, a nonprofit organization that supplies “pads and tampons for those who need them, like high school students and the homeless.”

Cowan plans to have all the boxes assembled in two weeks and initially distributed to the 20 mothers she works with and to hand out the rest through referrals.

Cowan has been working with a member of the organization’s board of directors to complete a strategic plan.

“I turned in all my homework,” needed to get that completed. The plan, when fully ready, will become part of the nonprofit’s “core materials” binder, “so that when we get ready to apply for a grant, everything will be right there.”

Life happens

James Cook

James Cook, who has been cutting grass and working for another Lenny’s franchisee since he had to close his two businesses in Memphis International Airport — Runway 901 Bar & Grill and Lenny’s Grill and Subs – in March because of a lack of airport passenger traffic, had a traffic accident Friday (May 8).

A careless driver rear-ended his beloved Mercedes-Benz S500, totaling it. “I loved that car,” he said, adding that it was paid for.

The resulting soreness caused him to miss time from work.

And, as anyone who has had their vehicle totaled in an accident knows, there is the issue of dealing with the insurance company regarding a settlement.

Meanwhile, Cook said “you really can’t take off in the restaurant business,” explaining that, even though he is hurting, he still had to help prepare a breakfast order for a group of nurses at a local hospital.


LIVING THROUGH COVID-19 ARCHIVES

Maneuvering through the perils of COVID-19