School custodians care for children, too
I can’t help but wonder why we custodians and personnel who are charged with keeping our public schools sanitary and mechanically operational get no or very little consideration for having a certain love and regard for the children we are responsible for.
I’m thinking of the custodian who ran through corridors of that school in Connecticut, warning of the danger that existed.
I spent 30 years as custodian and maintenance person, not because that department was such an advantageous place to be employed. My love and care for all children who needed me kept me there.
What makes our parents think principals and teachers are the ones who care the most for the kids? I cried, as did hundreds of other people, when those little people were taken from us by a person who had no business being in the presence of those children in the first place.
When I saw a person in one of my buildings I didn’t recognize, I made it my business to take or send the person or persons to the principal or person of some authority.
I want people to know we janitors, custodians and maintenance people are just as important to the population of a school building as teachers.
Malcolm F. Bender, Kokomo
Letters
Letter to the editor - Friday, Dec. 28, 2012
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May 22, 2013: Letters to the editor
Servicemen enemies of U.S. Constitution?
One of the enduring features of our constitutional republic is the right of its citizens to know what their government is doing. The current administration has decided to develop new policies on religious tolerance in the military.
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May 21, 2013: Letters to the editor
Tipton development: A study in contrasts
These are exciting times for Tipton County, with Chrysler coming to the county and bringing more than 800 legitimate jobs.
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Letter to the Editor: May 13, 2013
Good people wouldn’t do this to their neighbors. This common refrain is being heard over eastern Howard County where industrial development is planned for our farmland in the form of massive wind turbines.
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Letters to the Editor: May 12, 2013
How fortunate, that after years of trying to bring top-notch wind energy companies to Tipton County, this great choice is here for us — just at the right time. Tipton County badly needs the revenue from clean wind farm companies.
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Letter to the Editor: May 10, 2013
As a taxpayer and concerned citizen of eastern Howard County, I have read some of the latest scholarly and peer-reviewed information available on industrial wind turbines. It’s not something I ever wanted to do or expected to do, and I do not pretend to be an expert even after reading much information.
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Letters to the Editor: May 9, 2013
More than 1,500 Hoosier children just received an early death sentence from the Indiana Legislature. By slashing the state budget for tobacco prevention and cessation by 38 percent, our lawmakers told us that the health and future of our children isn’t important.
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Letters to the Editor: May 8, 2013
The citizens of Howard County have watched Tipton County’s elected officials deal with growing opposition to wind farms. They have responded to the concern of their citizens and are reviewing their ordinances related to wind development.
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May 5, 2013: Letters to the editor
All at IU Kokomo deserve recognition
This week, nearly 550 Indiana University Kokomo students will reach a milestone they will treasure for a lifetime when they become IU Kokomo's newest graduates.
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May 2, 2013: Letters to the editor
Reports of climate change span decades
From an article in The Washington Post:
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May 1, 2013: Letters to the editor
Turbine setbacks fail to protect vulnerable
Counties throughout Indiana are now beginning to rewrite their zoning ordinances pertaining to industrial wind turbines, due to new health and safety information coming out almost daily.
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May 22, 2013: Letters to the editor






