Count-E-News
Bringing you News that Counts

February 25, 2008

 

IN THIS ISSUE

 

·        Mid-County Senior Center Opens

·        Officials Attend Lantana Road Branch Library Groundbreaking

·        County Offering Neighborhood Partnership Grants

·        Join the “Palm Beach County Saves” Campaign

·        Lifeguards Honored at Annual Banquet

·        Waste to Energy Provides Reusable Resource

·        More Upcoming Events

 

For more information about Palm Beach County’s programs and services, visit us online at www.pbcgov.com. If you have any questions or to provide feedback, you can e-mail us at countenews@pbcgov.com or call 355-2754. To unsubscribe to Count-e-News, click here.

 


Mid-County Senior Center Opens

 

Visitors are now welcome at the new Mid-County Senior Center located at 3680 Lake Worth Road in Lake Worth.

 

The spacious 26,000-square-foot facility offers a variety of activities including painting classes, weekly blood pressure screenings, language and computer classes, ballroom dancing, piano lessons, camera clinics and more.

 

The Mid-County Senior Center is a community focal point where residents ages 60 and older can come together for services and activities to enhance their dignity, support their independence and encourage their involvement. Congregate meals are also served daily to senior center participants.

 

The center also offers an adult day care program where participants are provided with structured therapeutic, rehabilitative, social and leisure programs. Staff provides a supportive, safe and caring environment which includes advocacy, counseling, nutritious meals, recreation, respite care, socialization, supervision, exercise, sing-a-long sessions., transportation through Palm Tran Connection, health screenings and education.

 

The senior center is open Monday though Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. For more information, call 561-357-7100.

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Officials Attend Lantana Road Branch Library Groundbreaking

County officials recently attended a groundbreaking ceremony for the new Lantana Road Branch library.

 

The Feb. 14 event celebrated the new 29,000-square-foot branch, which will be located at 4020 Lantana Road on the southwest corner of Lawrence and Lantana roads.

 

The Lantana Road Branch is one of five projects currently underway as part of a library expansion project funded by a $55-million bond referendum passed by Palm Beach County residents in 2002.

 

The new facility will include ample meeting space, a public conference room, more than 50 public computers with Internet access and word processing software, five private study rooms, a large study room, a teen room dedicated to young adults, a children’s area with its own children’s story time room and a family restroom with child-size facilities.

 

The new library is scheduled to open in summer 2009.

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County Offering Neighborhood Partnership Grants

Grants are available to informal neighborhood and business associations for improvement projects in areas designated by the Countywide Community Revitalization Team and the Glades area, including Pahokee, South Bay and Belle Glade. These are low-income areas that the County is revitalizing to maintain affordable neighborhoods. The Office of Community Revitalization (OCR) will host workshops at four locations throughout Palm Beach County (locations listed below).

This is the eighth year OCR has issued neighborhood partnership grants. Examples of how these funds can be used include recreational improvements, entryways, street sign toppers, right-of-way landscaping, exterior painting, tree planting, fencing and art murals.

The deadline for filing an application is June 20, 2008. Application packets are available at the Vista Center, located at 2300 North Jog Road, West Palm Beach and may be downloaded starting February 18, 2008 from the OCR Web site at http://www.pbcgov.com/ocr.

Potential applicants must submit a letter of intent by April 28, 2008 and attend one of the four application workshops to review the application criteria and grant guidelines.

Here are the workshop locations:

March 19, 2008: South County - PBC Southeast Administrative Complex
345 South Congress Ave., Room 108, Delray Beach

March 20, 2008: Glades Region – Belle Glade City Hall, Commission Chambers
110 Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. Belle Glade

March 26, 2008: Central County – Vista Center
2300 North Jog Road, West Palm Beach

March 27, 2008: North County - West Jupiter Recreation Center
6415 Indiantown Rd., Jupiter

All workshops are held from 6 to 8 p.m. If you have any questions, contact Chrystal Mathews, Senior Planner at (561) 233-5565 or cmathews@pbcgov.com

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Join the “Palm Beach County Saves” Campaign

 

Most Americans do not have adequate savings to meet major emergencies, let alone accumulate enough savings for retirement. The typical American household has less than $100,000 in net wealth, including home equity and 401K accumulations, and only about $10,000 in net financial assets. The fact that the national savings rate is negative, while the prices of homes and securities are basically stagnant, suggests, in terms of household savings, we are moving backwards. Taking control of your spending is a basic step in cutting the cost of living. Research shows that people worry more about money than any other family problem. If families communicate and everyone understands what the financial situation is, there will be greater cooperation in using the family financial resources. Here are some suggestions to jumpstart your savings:

 

  • Take a look at your expenses. If you have a budget, you're a step ahead of the game. If you don't have a current spending plan, it's time to start tallying numbers, from groceries to entertainment, mortgage or rent, utilities and so forth.
  • How low, or high, you set your retirement age depends on a number of personal factors, such as plans for traveling, personal savings, health insurance costs and mortgage payment.
  • Project today's costs into the future. Don't panic. It's not that difficult to do. Most retirement calculators simply let you plug in an inflation rate which historically, has been around three percent. Follow the advice of your financial advisor if you have one.  

 

If your savings lag behind your spending requirements, take comfort in the fact that you can take steps to close the gap and get on track. Once you have figured out how much you will need in retirement, increase your retirement plan contributions or make changes to your investment distributions.

 

America Saves is a national social marketing campaign that encourages individuals, particularly low and moderate income persons, to save money, reduce debt and build wealth. Currently more than 90,000 individuals are enrolled as American Savers. Visit www.americasaves.org for more information.

 

Feb. 24 - March 02, 2008 is America Saves Week. The Cooperative Extension Service in collaboration with local banks and credit unions will host Palm Beach County Saves on Thursday, Feb. 28, 2008. This event will promote positive financial actions, such as credit/debt management, savings, and wise use of financial institutions.

This free activity will be from 6:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. at the Extension office, 559 North Military Trail, West Palm Beach. For more information and to register please call (561) 233-1742 or visit.

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Lifeguards to Be Honored at Annual Banquet

 

Palm Beach County Ocean Lifeguards Bryan Theiss and John Gepp were presented with the Florida Beach Patrol Chief Association Meritorious Award at the annual banquet on Feb. 22.

 

The lifeguards were honored for saving four swimmers caught in a rip current outside county property and after work hours on October 28, 2007. Theiss and Gepp entered the dangerous surf without any equipment or back up and swam 100 yards offshore to save the victims. Without their swift actions, the day would have likely ended in tragedy.

 

Another example of bravery occurred on Jan. 26, 2008 at Carlin Park in Jupiter. Lifeguards Lou Kanitsch and Ben Demonstranti saved three swimmers caught in a rip current. The seas were four to six feet high and the victims were pulled 75 yards offshore by the rip current. The lifeguards pulled the three troubled victims to shore. One of the victims, a little girl, had aspirated water. The lifeguards took her pulse, checked her respirations and blood pressure and listened to her lungs. Luckily, she was not in serious condition. They consoled and covered the other shivering victims with blankets. Another tragedy was avoided, thanks to these heroic lifeguards.

 

Ocean Rescue is fortunate to have employees who are committed and dedicated to the training necessary to perform lifeguarding at its highest level.

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Waste to Energy Provides Reusable Resource

Did you know that your garbage is used to create electricity? The Solid Waste Authority of Palm Beach County (SWA) is home to an innovative Waste to Energy facility where garbage is shredded into refuse derived fuel (RDF) and then burned to generate electricity.  The Waste to Energy facility generates enough electricity to power 30,000 homes as well as the SWA’s Jog Road facilities in West Palm Beach.

 

The Waste to Energy facility is home to two power plant boilers, two dry scrubbers and two electrostatic precipitators that aid in air-pollution control to ensure that emissions from the plant’s stack are well below the Environmental Protection Agency’s allowable limits.  The ash which is leftover as a result of the process is what actually makes it to the landfill.  The operation of this facility aids in reducing the volume of garbage that actually ends up in the landfill. This helps to extend the life of landfills.

 

The Waste to Energy facility processes 2,500 tons or five million pounds of garbage each day.  SWA estimates that each Palm Beach County resident generates on average about eight pounds of garbage per person per day. (The national average is about four pounds per person per day.) One day of garbage is equivalent to covering an entire football field 10 feet high.

 

The Waste to Energy facility is another example of how the SWA is working to create a brighter future for Palm Beach County residents.  For more information, visit our Web site at www.swa.org.

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More Upcoming Events

 

  • The Palm Beach County Kids Bass Fishing Trail will begin on Saturday, March 15, in John Prince Park at the Osborne Pavilion from 7:30 to 10:30 am. Westgate Park and Recreation Center will be taking registrations Monday through Friday from of 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. All anglers must pre-register for this tournament. Anyone age 16 and under may participate in this tournament and must be accompanied by an adult. John Prince Park is located at 2700 6th Ave. S in Lake Worth. For more information on this and other programs available through the Palm Beach County Parks and Recreation Department, visit us at www.pbcparks.com.
  • Westgate Park and Recreation Center is now offering open gym free of charge for adults ages 19 and up. Open gym will be available from 10 a.m. to noon on Tuesdays, Feb. 26 through May 27, with the exception of Tuesday, April 8 where the gym will be closed for Spring Break Camp. Westgate Park and Recreation Center is located at 3691 Oswego Avenue in West Palm Beach. For more information on this and other programs available through the Palm Beach County Parks and Recreation Department, visit us online at www.pbcparks.com.

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