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SPRING2013
DAY TRIP:Potosi
5 Ways To Work Out
WITH YOUR KIDS
SavingTimeYour hour is as good
as anyones at thenations biggest Time Bank
Why retirees are
waiting longer to quit
The art of a
three-course meal
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Grand GalaSupermodel, C indy Crawford
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SPRING 2013 YOUR FAMILY 3
A
TASTEO
F
SP
RING
From Your Hometown Grocer
Miller & Sons 210 S. Main St., Verona (608) 845-6478
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YOUR FAMILY SPRING 2013
FAMILY
INSIDE YOUR FAMILYBY LEE BORKOWSKI
Mystery loves company
Iust now you re go ng to ove t s ssue o
our am y magaz ne.
It has a fascinating cover story,
out an organ zat on t at s as ane
County as it gets: Its members barter time
w t eac ot er an create a commun ty nthe process. Its thebiggest such organiza-
t on n t e country, w t more t an ,
mem ers, an rea ng a out t m g t ust
hange the way you look at sharing, work-
ng an c ar ty.
But we have some other great content in
t s ssue as we , nc u ng suggest ons or
ett ng exerc se w e t e s are aroun ,
eep ng t at ew ears reso ut on a out
ett ng organ ze , an a ay-tr p p ece on
Potosi.
e a so eature a coo ng co umn wr t-
ten by Anthony Iozzo, which brought back
memor es o m y gran at er an t e n-
ners e en oye ost ng.
y gran pa wasn t necessar y t e greatoo t at nt ony s ut e newow
to give a whole new meaning to entertain-
ing. One of my all-time favorite memories
is the mystery menu dinner prepared by
ran pa t at my us an an were nv te
to atten .
e sat own w t e g t ot er coup es
xpect ng a a u ous
meal which we even-
tually got, but not before
we shared a lot of laugh-
ter! To begin, we were
told we would be enjoy-
ing a three-course meal
nd we would be given
c ec st rom w c
we cou se ect w c
tems we wante or
ac course.
e menu was t emystery. oo
tems an utens s
were escr e as
rypt c c ues.
my est to
ec p er eac c ue,
ut apparent y
wasnt very good at it.
or my rst course,
a green e - ,
toot p c an a
nap n. e secon
ourse mprove a
bit: an olive (which
I could eat withmy toothpick) a knife and two ice cubes.
Dessert was a slice of ham and a saltine
racker.
So, what had I ordered? Horses hooves
in a green pasture, a dentists friend and a
leepy relative as an appetizer; Popeyes
g r r en , t e r pper s c o ce, an tan c s
emise as my entre; and for dessert I
ose com c re e an o y s e g t.
e oo was great, an t e aug ter was
infectious. We concluded the evening by
s gn ng our names on t e r en s p ta e
ot . e next morn ng we stoppe over to
visit, and there sat Grandpa embroidering
ach name a permanent reminder of a
n g t spent w t goo r en s.
t a t me w en stat st cs s ow t at ess
than one-third of American families sit
own an s are a mea , t n t at t s
ou e a un que way to rev ta ze am y
time. And what could be a more perfect fit
to a nner o ntr gue t an to ma e t an
April Fools Day tradition?
Ive included the clues here, and the
answer to eac s ups e- own at t e ot-
tom o t e page. ave un ee orkowsk s the general manager
o Unifed Newspaper Group, which
publishes Your Family magazine.
1. FarmersAlarm 2. PollysDelight
3.GeorgeWashingtonsDemise
4.WeddingTradition 5. PerectCoinPlace 6.Hailtothe
ingoGreens 7. Earul 8.AntsonaLog 9.ExtraBeneft10.PuckerPower11.TitanicsDemise12. TheRippersChoice
13. TwoPaths14. Spo
rtyEnglishGal15. SmilesGalore16.Asmallraise17.Bonetopick18.OldRemedy19. FarmersFriend20. ComicRelie21. Idaho
Deconstructed22.DentistsFriend23.WickedBreakast24.SleepyRelative 5. SugarTransporter
Grandpas
Menu
MysteryMenusolution:1:Chicken,2:Cracker,3,CherryCheesecake,4:Rice,5:Mint,6:CaesarSalad,7:Corn,8:CeleryStickwithPeanutbutterandraisins,9:Gravy,10:Pickle,11:Ice,12:
Knife,13:Fork,14:CornishGameHen,15:Cheese,16:Bread,17:BBQRibs,18:ChickenSoup,19:Water,20:Ham,21:Mashedpotatoes,22:Toothpick,23:DeviledEggs,24:Napkin,25:Spoon.
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SPRING 2013 YOUR FAMILY 5
CONTENTSYOUR FAMILY SPRING 2013
ON THE COVERSAvIng tIMEDane County TimeBank founder StephanieRearick
holds some symbolic representations of the work
she does as a director for the organization, which
essentially turns peoples time and skills into a
barter system. Need your lawn mowed? Thatll
be one TimeBank hour and you can pay it back by
babysitting someones kids, driving someone to an
appointment, helping a person with their taxes or
just about anything else your time is good for. To
find out how all this works, see our cover story.
Photo credit Jeremy Jones
page 18
is published by
UNIFIED
NEWSPAPER GROUP
133 Enterprise Dr. PO Box 930427Verona WI 53593
(608) 845 9559
...................................GENERAL MANAGER
Lee Borkowski
EDITOR
Jim Ferolie
GRAPHIC DESIGNER
Ellen Koeller
PHOTO EDITOR
Jeremy Jones
...................................YOUR FAMILY STAFF
Diane Beaman, Mark Ignatowski,
Anthony Iozzo, Seth Jovaag,
Donna Larson, Terry Leonard,
Bill Livick, Diane Odegard,
Linda Trecek, Angie Roberts,
Carolyn Schultz, Derek Spellman,
Catherine Stang, Victoria Vlisides,
Kathy Woods
.................CONTACT US
Send all questions or submissions to
[emailprotected]
.................YOUR FAMILY
is printed four times a year by
Woodward Printing Services
If you would like to have a copy of Your Family
delivered to your home, the cost is $8.00 for 1 year.
Please call (608) 845-9559 for more information.
Publishers of the
Oregon Observer
Stoughton Courier Hub
Verona Press
ConnectFitchburg.com
Great Dane Shopping News
HEALTH
5 Ways To work out with your kids . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
FUN
Day Trip Brewery and outdoor recreation in Potosi . . . . . . .. . . .14
Hoofers brings outdoor interests together. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . .
22Calendar of Events. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . 32
LIFE
Publishers DeskMystery loves company . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .4The Organized HomeResolve to be more organized . . . .11
Estate PlanningWho is responsible for my parents debts? . .17
Countys new ADRC simplifies search for services . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . 24
Senior LivingPutting off retirement . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . 26
FOOD
The art of cooking for a group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12Recipes Cream Puffs, ChickenSalad, Donnas Applesauce Pie,Taco Salad . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
CHATTER
Whats your favorite part of spring? . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34
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YOUR FAMILY SPRING 2013
FAMILY
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SPRING 2013 YOUR FAMILY
FAMILY
Childrens Birthday Parties
OPEN BOWLING DAILY
all or lane availa ility
Corporate PartiesBanquet Facilities
Specia s onDrinks Food
he Sunday icket
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8 YOUR FAMILY SPRING 2013
Make friends at
www.anokijig.com 1-800-741-6931 Plymouth, WI
LEGACY ACADEMY
SUMMER CAMP PROGRAM
608) 270-9977 www.LegacyAcademy.info
ll Day Camp for Boys & Girls Ages 7-12
Daily Field Trips Swimming / Laser Tag / Pump It Up Movies /Roller Skating / Bowling Gymnastics Tumbling / Arts &Crafts
Day Trips to Wisconsin Dellseekly Tuition - $179, Daily Tuition- $45 / for one child.
nro men s ava a e or o wee s.
You can see the wonderful impact The Little Gym
can have on your child when you join us for a FREE
introductory class.
Now Enrolling for Winter/Spring!
Fitchburg or Middleton
www.thelittlegym.com
442-0608 or 836-3028
before heading out
for your summer fun!
210 S. Main St.
Verona, WI(608) 845-6478
Mon - Sat 6:30am - 9pm,
Sun 6:30am - 7pm
Stop at
nrolling O for Summer!
Early Childhood Music and Movementurriculum for ges Birth-5Years and the
dults Who Love hem.
Peoples UnitedMethodist Church
103 N. Alpine Parkway
Oregon
For more informationan ree emo c asses, ca or
mail: Eliza Tyksinski at334-2795
or [emailprotected]
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SPRING 2013 YOUR FAMILY 9
The CARING CENTER/
Verona Montessori House
Dont let your child miss out on the fun!
Now Enrolling Summer & Fall Programs
Traditional preschool
and Montessori classes
full or part time
02 W. Verona Ave., Verona, WI
www.caringcenter.com (608) 845-8620
Come join the fun!
NOW ENROLLINGRegister for OPI Preschool and
OSD Ready for Learning Pre-K classesor the 2013-2014 schoolyear!
OPI is Oregons onlyparent cooperative
preschool.
OPI is located inside St. Johns Lutheran Church625 EastNetherwood Street.
Registration information is available onlineatwww.oregonpreschool.org
or call 835-9216
ummer Classes!ges 3 to Adult
Pre Ballet BalletTap Jazz Polynesian
arys School ofance, LLC274-9611Summer
Registration825 S. Park St., Madison
Tuesday May 14:30-6:30pm
w.maryschoolofdance.com
Classes in Dance, Music & Drama Princess Dance Camps, ages3-4 yrs & 5-7yrs
Mommy & Me Movement Classes,18 mos-2 years
Hip Hop Boot Camp, 8-10 yrs & 11+
Triple Threat Camp - Dance, Drama and Voice, 5-7yrs, 8-10 yrs,11-14 yrs & 14+
Piano & Voice Classes, 5+
Summer Schedules available inApril 2013 online or via email
Stoughton Center for the Performing Arts15 East Main St.,Stoughton, WI 53589 (608) 873-0717
[emailprotected] www.stoughtonperformingarts.com
Register
Now!
Celebrating24yearsin
Stoughton!
New Themes fr 2013
Exctn New Fed Trs
Chse ndvdua sessns
rjn us a summer
Chdren aes knderarten-13
State daycarecensed
1001 Demn Way, Madsn
831-6829www.swmymcam.cm
REgiSTER oNliNEoR iN pERSoN!
WISCONSINENNIS ASSOCIATION
2013 USTA League Season Adult Leagues
NEW Structure - More
pportunities to Play
Jr. Team Tennis
Midwest Youth Team Tennis
1 and Under Tennis
JOIN & PlAy WITh ThE US
[emailprotected]
414.352.9728
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10 YOUR FAMILY SPRING 2013
Providing Comprehensive Services
For Children Of All Ages
Two Convenient Locations2927 S. Fish Hatchery Road, Fitchburg,WI
762 Lois Drive, Sun Prairie, WI
608-819-6394 www.therapymadison.com
[emailprotected]
Please Call to Schedule A
FREE Consultation!
Speech/Language Therapy ccupat ona erapy
Physical Therapy
Social Skill Development
Music Therapy
quat c erapy
Academic Support
Transitional Services
List of Services:
Like Us!
Schedule YourSummer
Appointments!
DoYourKidsSmiles
NeedaCheckUp?
608.848.2000
Joans Tot SpotSummer Camp
Your child will love summer on the farm!
Ages 5 an up
Field Trips Swimming Art Music Literacy Science TeamBuilding
Sports Nature Walks Animal Husbandry Camping Gardening
Sign Up NOW and Waive Registration Fee!(LimitedAvailability)
all, email or visit our website for more information
www.joanstotspot.com
[emailprotected]
- -
The CARING CENTER/
Verona Montessori House
Dont let your child miss out on the fun!
Now Enrolling Summer & Fall Programs
Traditional preschool
and Montessori classes
full or part time
02 W. Verona Ave., Verona, WI
www.caringcenter.com (608) 845-8620
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SPRING 2013 YOUR FAMILY
FAMILY
(608) 233-7067
Tatania, Kristi, Amanda, TuVayra, Brad
In prepar ng t s art c e, a searc
n t e top ew ears eso ut ons or
2013. On every list I found eat healthier,
lose weight, quit smoking, save more
money spen ess an some orm o e
more organ ze .
With any of the items on the list, it is
mportant to remem er t at t ey o notappen overn g t. t s aprocess t at ta es
creating a plan and scheduling time to
mp ement t e p an.
o e ng more organ ze s on your
reso ut on ere are some gu e nes to e p
you e success u on your ourney.
Begin with the end in mindLike planning a vacation, you needto
now w ere you want to go. c e u e t me
on your ca en ar to wr te own your v s on
of the space; pantry, garage, basem*nt,
at room, c oset, or ome o ce. e as spe-
c c as poss e.
Some questions to ask include: What doyou want the space to looklike when you
are one at tems o you want to store
n t e space ow muc space w eac
item occupy? Do you want to see every-
t ng n t e space or o you want tems to
e e n oors ow w you now w at
was in the space if it is empty? How will the
space e a out
Gather suppliesOne of the first questions I get from cli-
ents s at s ou uy y answer s
always nothing.
You probably have organizing tools and
supp es aroun your ouse. a e t me topu a t ese tems toget er ntoone p ace
if possible. Empty boxes (small and large)
an as ets ma e great organ z ng too s.
n t a y, you can s op n your own sup-
p y store an t en s op or t ose tems you
m g t not a rea y own to u your v s on.
ou w a so want oxes or ags or t e
tems t at you w toss, recyc e, onate, or
relocate. Label these boxes to make it easy
to remem er w at eac ox w conta n.
Toss and group like itemsow t at you ave your too s supp es
gat ere , t s t me to remove unwante
items and group like items together that
you p an on eep ng n t e space.
se t e oxes, ags, as ets, etc. t at
you pulled together to contain items and
most mportant y a e t e conta ners. ont
orget to set up t e a e e oxes or ags
for recycle, donate or relocate.
s step may ta e t e ongest t ere
are ots o tems n t e space, espec a y
t ere are arge tems t at you want to
remove from the space.
o eep mov ng towar your v s on o t e
space, remem er to sc e u e t me on your
calendar. Having the containers labeled wille p you to eas y ntems n etween
t ese sc e u e t mes.
Set up the spacence you ave t e remove , tosse , an
grouped items, its time to set up the spac
as you envisioned it. If necessary, move fu
n ture aroun .
ssess t e tems, n t e a e e oxes,
that you are keeping in the space. What
conta ners organ z ng too s supp es or
oxes o you a rea y ave t at w o
the items? Where will they live (be placed
emem er, t e conta ners can a ways
e mo e , ut unt you n t e per ectones, you w e a e to n tems wen
needed and use the space for the intended
purpose.
Maintain the visionust e t ta es consc ous e ort an
p ann ng to eat r g t an ma nta n an exer
cise program, the same is true about your
new y organ ze space. t w ta e con-
c ous e ort an t e nvestment o t me to
ma nta n t e space an your v s on.Since time is a valuablecommodity, it is
important that you schedule time on your
a en ar to ocus on t e ma ntenance; a y,
ee y, quarter y, sem -annua y or annua y.
Being organized is more than having
t e v s on o an sett ng up t e space, t
s a out ma nta n ng t e space. o ow ng
these guidelines will lead you on a success-
u ourney to eep ng your reso ut on o
e ng an stay ng organ ze .
Nancy Kruschke McKinney, Certified
Professional Organizer and Certified
Productivity Coach, is the owner of
Successful Organizing Solutions (S.O.S.).
For more organizing tips, visit www.SOSorganize.net.
THE ORGANIZED HOMEBY nAncY KRUSchKE McKInnEY cPO
Resolve to be more organized
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YOUR FAMILY SPRING 2013
FAMILYFOOD
t is 5:30 p.m. on a Saturday evening.
People are beginning to trickle in, and
st ave to ma e t e a ava or my
ree -t eme mea .
It would be easy to stress out about
w et er w ave enoug oo or t e
oo w e goo enoug or anyone s
actually going to show up.
ut on t. ecause ave a p an, a u
get an enoug t me to ee peop e.
e p an s s mp e. w emp oy t e art
of the three-course meal -- an appetizer,
an entr e an a essert. t oesn t matter
if one of the items isnt enough for 10. All
three combined are. And all are unique but
re ate .
The appetizer is Greek caprese - sau-
t e eggp ant, eta an as toppe w t a
balsamic syrup. The entre is garlic-ginger-
ouzo marinated lamb with portobello mush-
rooms an eggp ant. e essert s a ava
- ayers o p y o oug e w t wa nuts,
pecans and cinnamon and topped with a
oney sauce.
veryone eats, en oys t e oo an s ps
on ouzo as a compliment to the baklava.
ey are u an say t ey en oye t e n-
ner. at s no acc ent.
y nner party m g t soun e t was
extremely expensive, but it really wasnt,
specially when thinking about the group I
e . e p an oesnt ave to e an e egant
east e prepare , ut t eres no reason t
ant be simple and affordable.
Altogether my meal cost a whopping $50,
including the ouzo. That is $5 a person in
my -person mea , an we a scons n
amb and fresh vegetables and spices.
you ma e a mea or your us an or
e an t ree c ren, t en you pro a y
houldnt be spending more than $5 a per
.
mea m g t ave soun e t me-con
um ng an cu t, ut s mp y wor e
ith the time I had.
Cooking for a groupThe art of a three-course meal
Story and Photos by Anthony Iozzo
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14
FAMILYFUN
Story by Jeremy Jones
Brewing up some fun Potosi offers recreation, greattourismDaytrip
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SPRING 2013 YOUR FAMILY
FAMILYFUN
On a tr p t roug otos t s w n-
ter, t was ar or me to e eve
ow muc t e qua nt tt e com-
munity had changed since my
last visit.
I grew up less than a half-hour away,
an my am y wou o ten r ve t roug t
on wee en ce s ng tr ps to ac water
spots a ong t e ss ss pp ver. n now,near y years ater, am rawnac to
t e area or numerous recreat ona an
tour sty act v t es.
n y an our-an -a- a rom a son
along the Great River Road in southwest
Wisconsins Grant County, Potosi and
ennyson are a ong way rom w at tour sts
can expect in a community like Galena, Ill.,
ust a s ort r ve away.
owever, w at t ac s n n c nac s
an restaurants, t e area more t an ma es
up or n eaut u scenery, recreat ona
pursu ts an story n t e eart o t e
Driftless Area of Southwest Wisconsin.
The breweryor a ts scen c an recreat ona attrac-
t ons, otos s st est nown or ts
iconic Potosi Brewing Company.
t eatures an extens ve eer museum an
See AlsoRead Download Favorite Brand Name 3 Books In 1 PDF – PDF DownloadAggie & Paris - Chapter 1 - canniclownEnjoy! - The Banner School...School. Tonight, “the green and gold, the Banner Bold” flies over the Jolly Bobcat thanks to your faith and commitment to the enrichment and future - [PDF Document]on-s te restaurant t at are wort v s t ng.
oun e n y a r e a an
John Albrecht, the Potosi brewery began
as a small destination to quench the thirst
of local farmers, fishermen and mines. At
ts pea , t e rewery grew to e t e t -
argest n scons n, s pp ng a var ety o
a e s, nc u ng oo otos acrosst e n te tates.
ut n , t e rewery cease opera-
t ons an c ose ts oors.
Restoration of the facility began 23 years
later, after the nearly one square block of
buildings had just suffered a major fire
an most were eeme a tota oss. oca
woo wor ng art st ary av , w o pur-
c ase t e rewery w t ot er nvestors,
spent t ree years to restore w at a een
estroye , t en turne s attent on to t e
rewery tse .
In the midst of the effort, in 2004, the
Potosi Brewery Foundation was selected
y t e mer can rewer ana ssoc at on to
e t e ome o ts nat ona museum. otos
was c osen over suc c t es as wau ee
an t. ou s ecause o ts pass on or
eer, rewery story an eer-ma ng cu
ure.
t t e extens ve eer museum, patrons
an learn about the brewing history
throughout our state and enjoy an interac-
t ve tra n set.
ter tour ng t e rewery, e sure to
top by the on-site restaurant, where youll
e treate to a ow ng spr ng e ow t e
oor e ore samp ng oo rom t e e -
ous menu, as we as a se ect on o oca yrewe eers. you go n t e a, you can
lso check out Packers game on the big
creen.
Its hard to miss the gorgeously hand-
ra te ar, es gne y av mse .
as one rom wa nut, map e an oa
pays omage to t e story o rewery an
urroun ng commun ty.
n t e summer, you can a so en oy t e
re ax ng pat o an s pon , t oug you
re an ang er e me, t s not recommen e
that you bring a rod and reel to go after the
tocked rainbow trout.
ac a , t e otos rewery cyc e
tour kicks off in early September and
eatures r es o , , an m es
t roug out t e r t ess rea.
Continued on page 16
Randy Williams, left, dances with Dorothy Leppertwhile takingpart in the Potosi Brewfest.
Mike Burley/Telegraph Herald photo
Jeremy Jones photo
Jeremy Jones photo
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YOUR FAMILY SPRING 2013
FAMILYLIFEBREWING ontinued from page 15
SAT/ACT TEST PREP!
On PD at the Super Target (608) 395-3276
HAVE THE CONFIDENCE TO ACE THE TEST
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o contracts an proven results
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WW.TUTORINGCENTER.COM
Recreation Area
Any trip to Potosi should include a visit
to the Potosi Recreation Area, referred to
locally simply as the Point. Birders will
part cu ar y en oy t.
ocate ust o g way , t cons sts
o a nger o an exten ng . m es nto
t e ss ss pp ver, w ere more t an
spec es o an r s an water ow ave
been observed.
Upon the most likely victories you can
expect to find are eagles, snow geese,
mer can pe cans an swans. e re uges ts n one o t e ourt nort-sout m gra-
t on areas or r s t at w nter n t e sout .
an s ng an a oat ramp are a so
ava a e or s ng ent us asts.
nown as t e at s ap ta o
scons n, t e otos ennyson area, o
course, has to celebrate its most famous
freshwater friend. It does so the sec
ond weekend of August with the annual
Firemans Catfish Fry and Catfish Festival.
out o otos a ong t e an s o t e
Mississippi, youll also find the Grant River
ecreat on rea camp ng ac ty, w c
s owne an operate y t e . . rmy
Corps of Engineers.
n a t on to spott ng eag es an uc s
at t e r g t t me o year, ust as n t e
Potosi Recreation Area, the Grant River
area o ers summer an nterpret ve
programs and activities for visitors every
wee en etween emor a ay an
a or ay. c ory ar an t elocal campground are open for family
out ngs an out oor act v t es.
In town
t er attract ons wort c ec ng
out w e n otos nc u e t e assage
roug me museum, w c s e cate
to memora a o us nesses o ygone
years.
e museum s open a y rom ay
to approx mate y ept. , ues ay t roug
Saturday, noon to 4 p.m.
e otos owns p stor ca oc ety
a so o ers a se -gu e auto tour t roug -
out the Potosi area.
e youre cru s ng a ong t e ma n
drag, keep in mind that you are traveling on
the Worlds Longest Main Street without an
ntersect ng roa .
Another favorite spot is right across from
t e rewery, at sper ng u s.
ere, you can samp e a g ass o w ne,
local cheese or chocolate. Art from the
s ops owner s a so or sa e t roug out
t e store, an t a so ecorates t e com-
panys wine bottles. Its also a popular
spot or oca mus c ans to per orm.
ust down the road
Just down the road on the way from
a son to otos s t e qua nt tt e own
c eyv e, ome o t e wor - amous
rotto. onstructe y at us ernerus
etween an , t e c eyv e
rotto portrays a com nat on o re g ous
n patr ot c t emes.
ear y commun t es nc u e assv e,
hich is known as one of the best eagle-
viewing sites in the Midwest, as well as the
ome of Stonefield State Historic Site, a
turn-o -t e-century sett ng w t armstea ,
c oo , s ops an c urc . assv e a so
ows v s tors to ta e a r e across t e
ss ss pp on t e assv e ar erry or
n oy reat ta ng s g ts an a camp ng
xper ence at e son ewey tate ar .
t er stor ca attract ons nc u e t e
Historic Grant County Courthouse and
Cunningham Museum in Lancaster.
e at ona ss ss pp ver useum
n quar um ust across t e or er nu uque, owa, o ers an n ormat vean
nterta n ng exp orat on o aquar ums,
stor ca e x ts an nteract ve exper -
nces s owcas ng t e g ty ss ss pp .
n ust outs e attev e, you can
find the worlds largest M, on the Platte
ound and trace the history of Southwest
Wisconsins mining traditions with a stop
t t e n ng useum an t e o o
am son useum.
Kathy Kopp photo
Stone ie d Historic Site p oto
Jeremy Jones photo Photo from G.C. Travel Planner
Photo from G.C. Travel Planner
Jeremy Jones photo
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SPRING 2013 YOUR FAMILY
FAMILYFAMILY
OOver the years, I have received
many questions from clients
and others regarding estates. A
very common question is, Who will be
responsible for the debts of my parents
when they are gone?
This is most concerning when you
become aware that your parent(s) do
not have sufficient assets of their own
to pay their debts.
Children are not personally
responsible for their parents debts.
Your parents estate will be heldresponsible for his or herdebts, and if
there are any assets left over after all
debts and expenses have been paid, the
heirs of his or her estate will receive
the remaining amount according to the
terms of his or her will, or according to
the laws of intestate distribution of the
state in which he or she resided at the
time of his or her death.
If there are insufficient liquid assets
within the estate to pay all debts and
expenses, then real estate (along with
any other non-liquid assets) will need
to be liquidated in order to pay such
debts and expenses.
Also, note that t he beneficiary of a
life insurance policy is typically not
responsible for paying the debts of the
decedent or the expenses of his or her
estate from the proceeds of the life
insurance policy. This is because the
proceeds are not part of the probate
estate. Attorneys Michelle T.L. Hernandez
and Dera L. Johnsen-Tracy of Krueger
and Hernandez SC are members of the
American Academy of Estate Planning
Attorneys and have extensive legal
experience in the area of estate planning.
The information provided in this article
is not intended to serve as specificlegal advice. Viewing thisinformation
does not constitute an attorney-client
relationship.
Who will be responsible for my parents debts?
BY AttORnEYS MIchELLE t.L. hERnAndE. O SE - c
Our lives are built on connectionswith family, neighbors andfriends.Whether were celebrating or struggling, we know we can turnto asupportive community to share our joy or ease our sorrows.
As the areas hospice partner for 35 years, Agrace HospiceCare iswoven
into the fabric of this community. Easing the burdens of seriousillnessand enhancing quality of life is our mission. Serving you isour honor.Agrace HospiceCare is Here for Life.
Care & Support Through the Stages of Serious Illness
(800) 553-4289 agrace.org
Here for Life
7/29/2019 Yf 2013 Spring WebB
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FAMILY
YOUR FAMILY SPRING 2013
Wen a c erer nee e e p
putt ng a ence aroun er
garden seven years ago, she
figured her best bet was to
trade her cooking skills for a little carpen-
try.
er us an a gotten s c an
couldnt do the work, so she placed an ad
n a oca pu cat on o er ng to coo a
uge mea or s x peop e someone woue p me put up t e enc ng an pant my
garden.
That was when she discovered the Dane
County TimeBank. She got an e-mail from
someone suggest ng s e o n t e new orga-
n zat on, w c a a sma commun ty o
peop e s gne up to e p ot er mem ers.
ter c erer o ne an o ere an our
or two a mont ac to t e me an to
get er ence one, s e starte gett ng
more nvo ve . nce s e was ret re , s e
ended up giving several hours a week doing
administrative work for the organization.
A couple of years later, when Scherers
us an was agnose w t eu em a an
requ re a o er t me as a careg ver, t e
t me s e a nveste n t e organ zat on
turne out to e a go sen .
put out a me ca emergency a ert, an
peop e came out o t e woo wor , s ereca e . cou n t ave one t sw t out
all the help I had from the TimeBank com-
munity and neighbors.
Over the next four years, until her hus-
an e , c erer ocuse on car ng or
m. e exper ence e t er ex auste . ut
me an mem ers were a e to e p w t
suc t me-consum ng tas s as snow s ove -
ng n t e w nter an ass stance n count
ess ot er ways aroun er ome.
And TimeBank founder and director
Stephanie Rearick says TimeBank members
ould have helped Scherer even if she
adnt already invested the time. Because
peop e o n to e p ot ers.
t oug t e me an s set up as an
qua exc ange o mem ers t me an our
o ng anyt ng or anot er mem er earns
you an our o cre t no o y s watc ng
n wa t ng to ne you or runn ng up aeficit, like a conventionalbank might.
We are trying to deemphasize the tit-
or-tat not on t at peop e ave o rec proc
ty an ma e t c ear t at you nee a ot
e p r g t now, an you nee a ot more
e p t an you can prov e, t on y ene ts
o us to get you as muc e p as you
ee , ear c sa . ou can pay t
ac ater. you never pay t a ac ,
its OK.
Social bartering program has grown
to nations largest in less than a decade
by Bill Livick
Photos by Jeremy Jones
Time n
their side
Dane County TimeBank members provide a variety of services fromcarpentry, gardening and housekeeping to tutoring, legal assistanceand office support.Here, Gary Kuzynski practices reflexologymassage on fellow member Aubrey Weidhart at a recent TimeBankwellness fair.
Ant ony Iozzo p oto
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FAMILY IFE
A fast startAt more than 2,000 individual members
an organ zat ons, t e ane ounty
TimeBank in is the nations largest timeexc ange.
e mo e was create y attorney
an econom st gar a n, w o oun e
me an s n n as ngton,
D.C., and wrote the book, No More Throw-
Away People.
I was coming from much more a big-
picture economics framework, Rearick
said, and I kind of came into timebanking
through a side door.
oca t me an ng egan as a sma p ot
pro ect n a ne g or oo on a son s
nort s e n .
Rearick, a musician, co-owner of Mother
Fools Coffeehouse in Madison and a well-
known community organizer, approached
the Northside Planning Council with the
ea o start ng a me an .
e counc em race t, an w t
support rom t e ty o a son an
ane ounty, t e o rt s e e g or-to-
e g or me an was orn. t serve
as a mo e as t e ane ounty me an
expanded into other neighborhoods and
communities around the city and county.
ear c sa t too on y a out two
mont s to expan eyon t e or g na oca
t on.
We always intended to become county
w e ut starte w t one ne g or oo
p ot, s e exp a ne . or qu c y sprea ,
an y a coup e mont s ater we a
people wanting to join from various places,
mainly around Madison but also beyond.
We decided to let them join and try to give
t em rea st c expectat ons as t e rst n
t e r area, p us o ere me an ours to
t em to e p w t outreac n t e r own
ne g or oo s.
e concept s s mp e: xc ange mem-
ers t me an ta ent, an va ue a contr -
ut ons equa y.
Instead of paying with money, TimeBank
members pay with time hours. One hour
equa s one t me o ar, no matter w o g ves
or rece ves t.
Its nice to realize that everybody is
va ue t e same, regar ess o w at you
o, sa me an oar mem er m y
te nwe e.
ac mem er as an account t at starts
at zero and can accumulate hours or build
up a deficit and pay it off over time or
never pay it off.
em ers og ours nto an on ne ata-
ase. ere a mem er can post an o er o
service or request a service and record an
exchange of services in time hours. Again,
all hours are equal.em ers can a so get ass stance rom
t e me an coor nator, ary ess nger,
if theyre having trouble finding a service
t roug t e on ne rectory or are not a e
to nav gate t e we s te.
te nwe e sa s e earne a out t e
me an t roug wor -o -mout at a
meeting in her eastside neighborhood.
Thats how most people found out about
it, and the idea just sort of caught on, she
said. It provides help or services for peo-
ple who need it. I think its going to grow as
more peop e are re ant on oca commun ty
an on eac ot er. t e n te y u s com-
mun ty.
A community economye ea was a natura one or ear c ,
w o came to a son n a ter gra u-
at ng rom am n vers ty n o. e
a wor e w t t e env ronmenta act on
organ zat on reenpeace or a out s x
years, eventua y ecom ng ts oca o ce
rector.
That was a significant part of my forma-
tive years, Rearick said.
She later worked for the local political
party rogress ve ane an e pe esta
s a son ours oca currency.
ear c egan t n ng a out orm-
ng a me an a ter rea ng renowne
econom st ernar etaers e uture o
oney n , a oo s e says c ange
my life.
It helped her realize its not a foregone
conclusion that the monetary system in
the United States should result in such a
star spar ty etween r c an poor.
In the book, Lietaer shows how you
can rea own t e erent unct ons o
money to create a ternat ve econom es,
s e sa .
e s ows a t ese erent systems n
different times and places and how theyve
driven society in very different ways,
Rearick explained. It was one of those ah-
ha moments, like, it doesnt have to be this
way.
She realized it has been different, and
t ere s no reason we ave to o w ats
een one e ore. e can app y w ats
goo a out t ese erent systems over
time and combine it with whatever new
understandings and values we would like
to app y to t.
t n t at s very s gn cant n terms o
pen ng up erent poss t es o ow
e approach exchange and sharing.
Rearick views timebanking, with itsmphasis on cooperation andsharing, as
an antidote to the dominant economic
ystem thats based on competition and
resu ts n w nners an
one hour = one time dollar
ued on page 20sers..
- c care
- carpentry
og wa ng
gardening
ome v s s
housekeeping
- ega ass s ance
language lessons-ome repa r
respite care
- massage erapy
- yoga instruction
accoun managemen
writing
o o s
ofce/business support
tutoring
r v ng ns ruc on
ides
e very
SPRING 2013 YOUR FAMILY
Examplesof servicesgiven andreceived:
7/29/2019 Yf 2013 Spring WebB
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FAMILY
ap ta sm t r ves on com-
pet t on, w ereas t me an ng
thrives on cooperation, she said.
She also sees modern-day
apitalism as antithetical to
a sustainable future because
t e requ rement or constant
growth.
ear c sa s e opes to
u a commun ty economy
t roug t me an ng t at our-
s es a ongs e t e mar et
conomy.
The ultimate goal is that every-
body in Dane County who wants
to ene t rom t e me an n
some way does, she said. Were
ar rom reac ng t at goa n a
num er o ways. ut ts creat ng
t at commun ty economy t at
our s es on ts own terms.
Everyone is valuedess nger o ne t e
me an s ort y a ter t grew
eyon t e nort s e ne g or
oo . e s wor e w t menta y
sa e a u ts or years an
as seen peop e t r ve t roug
t e r nvo vement w t t e
TimeBank.
When he joined the TimeBank,
he was working for the nonprofit Community Living Alliance,where he assisted adults
w t menta sa t es ecome more ntegrate n soc ety.
Then, five years ago he became the TimeBanks community outreachcoordinator.
My position is on a grant with Dane County to help figure outhow to get folks with
sa t es more nvo ve w t t me an ng, e exp a ne .
e sa g v ng peop e an opportun ty to contr ute an ee va ue can cange ves.t can e pretty empower ng or peop e w o ave o ten een margna ze to scover
that they are valued equally and that they have something togive to others, Messinger
said.
He noted that for everyone, but especially the disabled,timebanking forges connec-
t ons an re at ons ps as t u s commun ty.
Thats something that money cant buy, he said.
ast year, ess nger sa , e wor e w t menta y sa e me an memers,
an t ey tota e , t me ours.
ere s t e t ng t at rea y exc te me, e sa . t at tota , were gven an
were ours rece ve .
Adding programss t e me an as evo ve over seven years, t s a eprograms to urt er t e
goa o ypass ng t e monetary economy an u ng a commun ty economyase on
mutua exc ange an rec proc ty.
r st n age was rawn to t e organ zat on ear y ecause o ernterest n ts
Wellness Project. The success of the program led Rearick tooffer her a position as the
TimeBanks wellness coordinator.
Before she took the job, Sage participated l ike lots of otherTimeBank members. She
gave peop e r es an o ere nstruct on n yoga. n return, s e receve e p w t a
website, had acupuncture treatments and even got help paintingher apartment things
that for me are almost like gifts, she said.
s we ness coor nator, s e egan organ z ng wor s ops w ere part cpants cou
earn suc tec n ques as se massage an acupressure.
YOUR FAMILY SPRING 2013
TIME ON Continued from page 19
Allied Community CoopA joint effort with several neighborhoodas-
sociations and neighborhood residents, its
aim is to identify and create resources and
activities that people want for their commu-
nity. It has already helped start a container
gar en ng pro ec , a ne g or oo ea er
project, Mothers in the Neighborhood group
and green carts selling fresh produce.
Food Security:
Access to Essential Services
Partnering with Second Harvest FoodBank
of Southwestern Wisconsin, it addresses
the needs of seniors and other vulnerable
citizens to diminish food insecurity in the
county.Buildng a Human-Scaled Economy
This partnership with Madison Hours is
rethinking local economics. In 2012, they
organ za ons egan eva ua ng e oca
economy, a e coopera ve econom c
tools at their disposal and how to employ
them to create the healthiest local econo-
my poss e.
Homecoming Community Justice
Prisoners can earn TimeBank Hours work-
ng w non-pro agenc es an neg
borhood groups, with the goal of creating
a safety net before they are released and
u pos ve commun y connec ons an
.Medical Transportation
Drivers help people in need of rides for
ea -rea e appon men s. r v ers re
ceive TimeBank hours for their time driv-
ing and a modest stipend for gas. It also
wor s w ney a ys s cen ers aroun
the Dane County.
PowerTime
rov ers s ow me an mem ers s m
ple ways to save energy in their home or
apartment and highlight the signifcant im-
pac ese measures may ave on e r
u y .
Wellness Project
The project provides health-improvement
oppor un es roug qua y mea s, com
panionship, information to enable healthy
living, and access to essential services.
Youth Court
The Youth Court provides an alternative to
the juvenile justice system to encourage
a ng respons y or ac ons, ma ng
amen s an u ng ea y an pro uc
tive relationships.
TimeBankprograms
At the wellness fair, members took chair yoga anddance classes.Top, free dance led by Kristen Forde
(second from left). Bottom, Lizzie Severson (left), a dietandnutrition consu tant, participates in c air yoga wit
Judy Skog (middle) and Rhonda Ritchie.Anthony Iozzo photos
7/29/2019 Yf 2013 Spring WebB
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SPRING 2013 YOUR FAMILY
FAMILY
stoughtonhospital.com
Trusted Health Education
As part of our mission, Stoughton Hospital is dedicated toproviding qualityhealth and wellness education to improve the livesof the people and
communities we serve.
aring For Kids - Ba ysittingBoys an gir s ages 11 an upearnbabysitting s i s. P ease bring a saclunch. March 23 (Sat),orune 8 Sat 9 am - 1:30 pm
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ome on our wnFor c i ren ages 9 an up w o maybe ome or a ew ourswit out ana u t. e ocus is on ma ing wisean sa e c oices on rst ai, re sa ety
and emergency situations.une 10 Mon 9 am - 11 am
$25 To register, ca 08-277-8810
900 Ridge StreetStoughton, WI 53589
Affiliated with SSM Health Care of WI
ur Aging Eyes Free presentationJoin op t a mo ogist Dr. CristinaDe any-Ric ar son, to earn aboutcommon con itions o t eaging eyean w at to o about t em. S e wia so s are t e atest in eyeea t antreatment or specic eye con itions.
Wednesday, March 13th at 6:00 pm.Bryant E ucation Center -owereve . P ease ca Sonja at 873-235 toregister or e-mai pr3@stoosp.com.
We give people ideas, ways and means
to care for their own health, she said.
en s e got t e ea o o ow ng eac
wor s op w t a commun ty mea ma e
y me an vo unteers.
or s op part c pants get toget er n
the early afternoon to enjoy each others
company, along with a big pot of soup
an a res sa a an rea rom t e oca
bakery, Sage said. I was a big catalyst for
t s ea ecause ve y myse , an eat
ng a one s a rag.
e stresse t at t e e ness ro ect
s ocuse on t ose aspects o ea t t at
everyone can o, t at you on t ave to e
a professional to do.
Sage said a big part of the TimeBanks
value is helping people connect with each
other at the same time theyre giving or
rece v ng a serv ce. e we ness wor -
s ops an commun ty mea s are part ot at reconnect on.
ere s ot o peop e w o ont ave a
menta ness or a p ys ca sa ty u t
are st n nee o peer support an a con-
nection to other people, she said. They
need community. It can be just needing
some o y to ta to, or some o y w o s
e er y an so ate w o wou o we
to ave some o y g ve t em a ca once a
wee an c ec n.
tep an e ear c s pass on or
soc a ust ce stems rom va ues
of fairness and ethics that she
says her family instilled in her.
She told Your Family magaz nea out some o t e ot er ear y
n uences on er t n ng an
s ares some t oug ts on ma ng
a etter commun ty.
YF: ou ment one t at commun ty ust ce was a g reason you
starte t e me an . ere oes t at mpu se come rom
SR: Im not certain, but I have a really visceral reaction tothe
level of unfairness and day-to-day suffering our society imposeson
people. Its quite unnecessary.
wou e to ee sa e. wou e to ee goo a out o w
were treating other people. I guess thats all kind ofself-serving,
ut w en earne ow very ar trary, un a r an un ust our sys-
tem s, ust e t a to o somet ng a out t .
t n w en went to co ege, t ats w ere got my eyesopene a outerent n ust ces n t e wor . ere was a oo
and presentation called American Pictures that impacted me a
great deal.
A Finnish photographer named Jacob Holdt had traveled across
t e country tc ng. e a meant to ust pass t roug t e
n te tates ut nstea e en e up stay ng ere. n t en
hitchhiking around the country, he only stayed with verypoor
people or very rich people.
e came to my sc oo an a s e presentat on, an t was
a rea y pro oun y eye-open ng exper ence or me rea y some-w attraumat c, ut very mportant. t n t at e pe a ot as ar
as gett ng a an e on ow t ngs are appen ng.
not er t ng ear y n my co ege career t at a a ma or n u-
ence was tu s er e . s oo , mer can reams ost an
oun , was pro oun or me.
YF: Youve said two questions you always ask when thinking
about timebanking are: What would you do to improve yourcom-
munity if you could? And what if money were no object? How
wou you answer t ose quest ons
SR: wou ave yout courts. wou ave c rc es o support
or peop e com ng out o pr son. wou ave energy co-ops. n
wou e to e o ng a ot more n terms o t e arts, an rea y
e p ng prov e a way t at peop e can pursue t e r art n watever
way an to w atever extent t ey want to, w t out av ng togetthree crappy jobs instead of spending their time doing theirart.
Thats something I havent been able to give enough attentionto,
but I hope to very soon.
Im a musician, and thats what I would be doing full time ina
per ect wor .
About the founder...
Continued on page 28
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YOUR FAMILY SPRING 2013
FAMILY
Te . . ava ca emy as t e
argest co eg ate eet o sa -
oats n t e country.
But the second largest might
be more of a surprise: the University of
Wisconsin-Madisons Hoofer Sailing Club.
Its one of half-dozen outdoor recre-
at on c u s t e un vers ty o ers or t ose
w o ove t e out oors an ove recre-
at on.
ver t e eca es t s een aroun , t e
scons n oo ers as grown nto s x -
ferent clubs, as well as five competitivecollegiate teams. Eachclub focuses on
a different form of outdoor recreation:
outing (which covers activities like
snows oe ng, ac pac ng, canoe ng an
ng , mounta neer ng, r ng, scu a
v ng, sa ng an s ng an snow oar -
ng. em ers p n t e s x c u s s open
to - a son stu ents an acu ty an
mem ers o t e scons n n on.
e types o mem ers t e c u s raw
are e n te y a across t e oar , sa
John Griffin, a member of the executive
board for the Hoofer skiing and snow-
oar ng c u .
Some of those who seek to join are
a rea y out oor ent us asts, r n
said, but the clubs do attract a lot of
eg nners. omet mes, t e newcomers
m g t ave a an nterest n sa ng, or
examp e, ut ac e t e t me, access or
resources to pursue that interest.
The Hoofers offer a way for those peo-ple to learn the activity,oftentimes from
someone w o s a rea y exper ence , an
make friends doing it, Griffin said.
You can join any of the clubs, and you
can get as ser ous was you want w t t,
e sa .
e organ zat on o c a y ates ac
to t e s, w en t ree stu ents an
non-students started an outing club
t . e group too t e name t e
Wisconsin Hoofers and modeled itself
fter the Dartmouth Outing Club. Its logo,
ac orses oe super mpose on a
red W, underscored that members went
places under their own power (hoof it),
ccor ng to t e oo ers we s te.
e organ zat on wou grow over t e
years. ew c u s oome aroun nter
sts e arc ery, unt ng an a oon ng.
Some of those clubs dissolved.
oday Hoofers consist of six different
lubs.e sa ng c u s per aps t e most
e - nown an g y regar e an as
t e most mem ers p, r n sa .
e a ng u as more t an
erent oats an sa oar s or ts
mem ers str ute over e g t erent
eets, accor ng to t e c u we s te. n
xchange for membership dues, which
vary depending on the whether the
UW clubs offer mountain climbing, scuba diving and more
7/29/2019 Yf 2013 Spring WebB
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SPRING 2013 YOUR FAMILY
FAMILY
mem er s a stu ent, acu ty or un on
member and on whether they join for a
season, full year or four-year, members
get instruction in how to sail and access
to t e s ps. e eet s ma nta ne y
t e mem ers, ena ng t e c u to eep
t e costs muc ower t an w at sa ors
wou n at a yac t c u , t e we s te
sa . e c u a so osts ts own racessevera ays a wee ur ng t e usysea-
son or rate mem ers as we as soc a s
and special events.
Griffin said the Hoofer Ski and
Snowboard Club is the probably the next-
largest club. For a $35 membership fee,
mem ers rece ve a ree at or an ana
an scounts on tr ps.
r n ac now e ge t at t e m w n-
ters o t e ast coup e years ave een
toug or s ng an snow oar ng,
although the club also takes trips to plac
es like Montana, where there is almost
always snow.
oun ng out t e e are c u s orga-
n ze aroun orse ac r ng, mounta n-
eer ng, scu a ver an genera out oor
recreat on.
e oo ers ng u as ts
own orses an manages t e oo er
questr an enter, a oar ng ac ty
with 30 stalls, according to its website.
The club offers members riding lessons at
a eve s.
The Mountaineering Club takes regu-
lar climbing trips to Devils Lake and
somet mes ta es tr ps to p aces e to
osem te at ona ar n a orn a,
orses oe anyon anc n r ansas
an t e e ver, accor ng to ts we -
site. In the winter, clubs go ice climbing
in southern Wisconsin. Members also get
deals through Boulders Climbing Gym.
The Outing Club covers a gamut of
act v t es an goes year-roun : ng,
aya ng, canoe ng an roc c m ng n
warm weat er, s ng n co weat er,
an cav ng, ac pac ng an camp ng a
year, accor ng to t e c u we s te. n
a t on to oca tr ps, mem ers can trav-
el to places like the Smokey Mountains,
Lake Superior, Canada, Colorado, Utah
an yom ng, accor ng to t e we s te.
The Scuba Club offers a variety of
classes depending on the divers experi
ence eve , nc u ng even c asses n res
cue v ng.
r n sa t s not unusua or un ver
s t es to o er out oor recreat on c u s,
but what makes UW unique it is structure,
where each of the six clubs has its own
officers and governing structure but they
a a un er one scons n oo ers
um re a organ zat on.
The Clu sOuting
Snowshoeing, backpacking,canoeing, biking
Mountaineering
Riding
Scuba diving
Sailing
Skiing and snowboarding www. o .
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YOUR FAMILY SPRING 2013
FAMILY
ane ounty as a story o strong
soc a serv ces, rang ng rom sen or care
to support or peop e w t sa t es. ut
finding out what services are available isnt
always easy. A phone call to arrange trans-
portation for a senior loved one might not
e t e same p ace you ca to n out a out
in-home care options. Thats where Dane
Countys Aging and Disability Resource
enter s nes, says ane ounty xecut ve
oe ar s . e wea t o serv ces or
peop e w t sa t es or ag ng nee s
can sometimes be overwhelming, Parisi
explained to Your Family this winter. The
whole concept of the ADRC is you dont
have to figure out, Where do I go? Parisi
said. You come to the ADRC and they will
help you figure that out. Dane Countys
opene n ate ovem er n
t e ort s e own enter s opp ng p aza
near arner ar an as serve more
t an peop e n ts rst mont .
How it worksrector enn er sc er sa
t e process or gett ng e p s usua y
s mp e. e center we comes wa - ns or
phone calls from people looking for assis-
tance. When you call (608) 240-7400, that
comes nto our p one an an someone
answers t e p one, sc er sa . e
ca er as some opt ons. ome s mp e
questions can be handled right there on
the phone, Fischer said. The information
an ass stance spec a st may e a e to
oo up a serv ce t at cou e p t e ca er
r g t away. ore comp ex quest ons m g t
requ re an n-person v s t.
ey can come out an meet w t you
n person an r ng resources out to you,
sc er sa . ey can a so ass st you n
applying for benefits. The ADRC can assist
with helping people find a wide range of
services. The ADRC can direct people to
serv ces e n- ome care, resp te care,
transportat on nee s an n ng nutr t on
programs an ome- e vere mea s. ey
can a so rect peop e w ere to n ous-
ng, nanc a ass stance w t programs e
oc a ecur ty an sa ty programs.
wor ers can prov e n s to men
tal health professionals, vocational services
and health management resources.
The ADRC also provides long-term
care counse ng, ene ts counse ng an
n ormat on a out ea t an we ness pro-
rams.
o matter w at serv ce a person s oo -
ng or, t e wor er w try to ma e
ure that people find what theyre looking
for and that the service worked for the per-
on who needed help.
Whether its a phone call, a home visit
r a walk-in, were going to say, Can we
follow up with you, Fischer said. Can we
ee t at t e n ormat on t at we prov e
you was w at you were oo ng or an
t at you n t run nto any arr ers; t at
you were able to get what you wanted.
Who will helpe ane ounty as n orma-
t on an ass stance spec a sts an w
ave once t e center s u y open some-
time in the next six months. Fischer said
the soft rollout has helped the center work
ut some kinks. Theres not really a typical
pro e or t e n ormat on an ass stance
pec a sts, sc er sa , ut state contracts
requ re t em to ave a our-year egree n
ea t or uman serv ces e an at east
ne year o exper ence wor ng w t o er
u ts or peop e w t sa t es. e
eauty o t at s t at t e wor ers n our
uilding bring a wide array of specialties,
Fischer said. We have some workers who
ave been a case manger in a (senior cen-
ter), we have workers who have been at
t e o center an ro ers n t e eve op-
ment disability field.
e sta nc u es two spec a sts uent
n pan s an one w o spea mong,
sc er sa .
Whoever takes the initial call from a
person looking for help is responsible
for following up on those cases, Fischer
a . at ensures t at peop e oo ng or
e p w spea to t e same person, w c
means ess exp anat on an more ass s
ance.
About ADRCse ea o t e center s s ort-term e p
enter or peop e n nee , s er sa . tate
ontracts m t case management serv ces
to ays, ut t ere s no m t to t e num-
er o t mes peop e can see e p or er
nt ssues, sc er sa .
You may call for one issue, and two
The one-stopsocial service shop
by Mark Ignatowski
Photos by Jeremy Jones
ADRC Elderly, families withdisabilities can find
services in times of
need at ADRC
The Dane County Aging and Disability Resource center employsinformation and assistance specialistswho help residents find avariety of services for seniors and the disabled.
7/29/2019 Yf 2013 Spring WebB
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SPRING 2013 YOUR FAMILY
FAMILY
months later you may have a different issu
you want information about, Fischer said.
Although we dont see people and keep
t em as an ongo ng case oa , peop e can
come to us as many t mes as t ey nee us.
person oo ng or transportat on may
ave quest ons ater a out n- ome care
ater, or examp e. at same person can
get help with their Social Security benefits,
too, Fisher said.
People can continue to call us for more
information, Fischer said. We want peo-
ple to continue to see us as things change.
Parisi said the ADRC doesnt create or
up cate any serv ces e transporta
t on or sen ors or n- ome mea e very;
rat er, t e ps ma e n ng t ose serv ces
eas er or am es. e serv ces t at ex st
are the same, Parisi said. The ADRC helps
people navigate those services and get
connected to those services. The expan-
sion of ADRCs throughout the state was a
epartment o uman erv ces n t at ve n
t e - state u get. ane ounty,w t ts array o oca sen or centers,was
t e ast county n scons n to open an
.
The countys ADRC is budgeted for
orm n n e s a e, some sen or cen ers
were unsure of how their operations wouldbe affected by the newinformation site.
Given Dane Countys history of provid-
ng case management serv ces t roug
t e r oca po nts sen or centers , some
sen or centers were concerne t at t e r
case managers wou see an ncrease or
ecrease n cases at t e r centers.
ut ar s sa t e an t e county
wont take over the services already offered
in the county.
I dont envision us offering different ser
vices than we offer now, Parisi said, add-
ng t at some serv ces t e rects
peop e to are o ere t roug ane ounty
an some are not. see t s as e p ng toconnect peop e to t oseserv ces.
e eauty o t e s t at t e ps
reduce the stress people have when trying
to find social services, Parisi said. On top
t e c a enges an stress t ese types o
tuat ons can cause n ones persona e,
to have to deal with navigating the system
to find what resources are available adds a
hole another level of stress, Parisi said.The ADRC can go a longway to not add to
t e stress someone m g t e exper enc ng.
av ng someone you can turn to or e p
s extreme y e p u .
Dane County Aging
and Disability
Resource Center
2865 N. Sherman Avenue,
Madison Northside Town Center
240-7400daneadrc.org
Open 7:45 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
Monday through Friday
Peopl ghbors
Cress Funeral & Cremaon people you know and trust.
For generaons, providing the Circle of Care, before, during andaer the loss of your loved one.
Day or Night (800) 235-9681 www.CressFuneralService.com
cFarland ~ Deerfield ~ Stoughton
ast Madison ~ West Madison
Middleton ~ Waunakee ~ Sun Prairie
The same specialist who takes the initial call willhelp theperson throughout the time they need
help finding a service.
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YOUR FAMILY SPRING 2013
FAMILY
My rot er as een wor ng
ince he was 11.
He started with a paper route
an wor e at a grocery store t roug out
g sc oo an w t t e ra roa ur ng
college. After three years in the employ of
nc e am n etnam an a an , e
s gne up w t t e e era government,
and though he retired from that job and
w e t s year, e as een se -
emp oye or t e past years.
e says e en oys t, w c s part y
true. not er part o t at trut s t at e
n t save or t t roug out t e years.
Theres something to be said for
continuing to work past 65 and not
ret r ng, e sa . you are ortunate
enough to enjoy what you do and it isnt
stressful, then why not keep working?
ran y, on t now w at wou o
if I retired. Id probably find some other
activity that provided the same amount ofst mu at on.
o ay, t as ecome muc more
common or peop e, e to cont nue
working past 65. Whether its because
t eyre mot vate to stay act ve n a
career, want to ma e a erence n t e
world or are struggling with skyrocketing
s, percent o . . emp oyees over
now say t ey p an to wor onger t an
they once expected.
n act, accor ng to a survey
con ucte y t e oc ety o ctuar es,
35 percent of adults near retirement age
said last year they simply dont expect to
ret re. at was up rom percent twoyears ear er.
There is a core group of people
earn ng a payc ec w o ee , or w atever
reason, they arent going to be able to
support themselves in their retirement
years, sa aro ogos an, an actuary
and retirement expert. At the same time,
t e o er segment o t e wor orce as a
wea t o exper ence, perspect ve, ta ent
an energy to o er t e r emp oyers.
Half of retirees (51 percent) report
t at t ey ret re e ore age . ut ust
percent now t n t ey w ret re t at
ear y, w t a o pre-ret rees w o expectto retire saying they willwait at least until
age , an per aps unt .
at gap, com ne w t t e a ure
of many people to plan for a long enough
ret rement per o , may n cate s gn cant
uture nanc a pro ems or many, s.
Bogosian notes.
more rea st c p an m g t e to wor
two or t ree years onger t an you may
or g na y ave expecte to earn a t ona
income and maximize your Social Security
ncome, s e sa . n wor ers n t e r
50s need to think strategically about
what skills they need to acquire to keep
wor ng onger, w et er n t e r currentcareer or a new ne o wor.
The increased labor-force participation
rate or t e most sen or mer cans s
part y t e to more women o n ng t e
wor orce over t me, t oug men ave
s own arge ncreases, too.
eop e may e wor ng onger ecause
t ey are n etter ea t n t e r ate
60s and expect to live longer than their
counterparts a coup e o eca es ear er.
ut t ey may a so ave greater nanc a
responsibilities today than in the past.
t n t e -an -over popu at on,
t ose rom to a t e ggest ump
in labor-force participation. Across both
gen ers n t s narrower age range, t e
rate ncrease to . percent n
from 21.8 percent in 1990.
The long recession and slow recovery
n t e economy ave orce m ons o
mer cans to g ve up t e r reams o
retiring at the traditional age of 65. Thats
not surpr s ng, espec a y g ven t at ewer
t an a o a mer cans ave manage
to save even $25,000.
ome say t at t ose w o avent save
enoug or ret rement can s gn cant y
oost t e r ncome n t e r ater years y
wor ng unt t e age o , nstea o t e
tra t ona . ere s sagreement on
t s po nt.A recent report by the Center for
et rement esearc at oston
o ege oun t at percent o
households would be prepared to retire
y . at report a so oun a re at ve y
sma gap etween t e ret rement
readiness of low-income and high-income
ouse o s.
ut a stu y y t e mp oyee ene t
Research Institute (EBRI) concluded
that about a third of todays households
ou n t e nanc a y rea y even t ey
or e to age .
Youre not going to magically be fineyou wor a ew more years, saac
an er e , researc rector or an
ut or o t e report.
an er e sa t e ana ys s n t
actor n t e pro t ve y g costs o
nursing home care, which typically isnt
fully covered by Medicare and is only
overe y e ca n some cases. s
wn met o o ogy nc u e t e pro a ty
f nursing home expenses and arrived at a
ess opt m st c conc us on.
t a so pro ecte a muc gger gap
etween rich and poor: While 90 percent
f those making at least $72,500 would
ave a percent c ance o meet ng t e rretirement income needs byage 65, those
making $11,700 and below would need to
ork until 84 to have the same probability
success.
e t er stu y spec ca y e nes
the percentage of working income that
ret ree wou nee to rep ace to e
ons ere a equate y prepare .
EBRIs findings werent all bleak,
owever: e stu y oun t at wor ers
o part c pate n a p an at age
oosted their retirement readiness by 20
percentage points.
e many wor ers are cons er ng
e ay ng ret rement to e more rea y, notveryone has that luxury,however.
n s et rement on ence
urvey, percent o current ret rees
reported they left the workforce earlier
t an p anne - ecause o ea t concerns
or t emse ves or t e r spouse, c anges at
t e r company or ot er reasons. ey may
e p ague w t money ssues ur ng t e r
ret rement.
e ottom ne says owers atson:
It is never too early to plan for your
ret rement. te t e u et an save t e
t ona money. ave money ear y, save
it often and invest it well.
en en oy t. now my rot er
en oy s ret rement w en t na yomes.
Stephen P. Rudolph is the owner of
om ort eeper o outh entral scons n.
udolph has a asters egree n ealth
Care Administration, is Board Certified
n ealth are anagement, a ellow
n the mer can ollege o ealth are
Executives(FACHE, is a Certified Senior
Advisor (CSA) and a member of the Society
ert ed en or dv sors .
SENIOR LIVING
BY StEPhEn RUdOLPh
For many retirees, 70 may be the new 65
7/29/2019 Yf 2013 Spring WebB
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SPRING 2013 YOUR FAMILY
FAMILY
Beautiful campus, quiet residential neighborhood,
walking paths, comfortable outdoor spaces,
continuum of care.
Independent CondomInIums
AssIsted LIvIng
therApy And WeLLness Center
skILLed nursIng
memory CAre
saalretIrement servICes
400 n mi s s, WI 53589 608.873.5651 www.aal.c
Theyre staying longer in jobs with
employer-paid benefits because
pr vate ea t nsurance s so
expens ve. ore t an two-t r spercent) cite health coverage.
Theyre saddled with debt. Older
mer cans are s n ng un er cre t
car , me ca an ot er s;
percent of workers said they were actively
pay ng o e t, more t an ou e t e
num er rom .
Their homes are mortgaged to the hilt
or can t se n t e current mar et.
ey tappe nto ret rement sav ngs
accounts during the recession.
e ty nvestments reporte t at
among ts act ve p an part c pants
percent borrowed or withdrew funds fromt e r accounts ur ng t eyear en ng n
June 2012. Thats a 10-year high.
They worry disappearing pensions
w ma e t ar er to stop wor ng.
nanc a p ann ng experts ta
a out t e t ree- egge stoo t at supports
retirement security: Social Security,
n v ua ret rement sav ngs an pens ons.
ut a t ree egs oo wo y, nc u ng
defined benefit pensions, which have
evaporate n t e pr vate sector.
Theyre caring for ailing parents,
putting kids through college or
ot . an w c enerat on oomers
are grapp ng w t ow to e p ag ng
parents who cant or dont want to stay
in their homes but want alternatives to
osp ta - e care ac t e s
They havent had the talk. Its
common for couples, even if theyve
een toget er or many years, to
put o ta ng a out ret rement top cs,
including when to stop working and where
t ey want to ve once t ey o.
8eyre n ng new opportun t es
n t e o mar et. s t e economy
picks up, the need for experienced
pro ess ona s s greater or more seasone
pro ess ona s w o requ re ess ramp-uptime and are able to make alarger impact
n a s orter amount o t me.
ey pre er to eep wor ng as ong as
theyre able. Boston College researchers
ote one n ve wor ers an o er
as ret re rom a career o ut wor s or
pay in what the researchers call a retirement
job or a bridge job. Separate research says
percent o peop e an over expect to
wor n some type o secon act o .
ey want to ma e a
difference. Aside from
nanc a reasons, many peop e
eep wor ng ecause t ey want to stayctive or contribute and beproductive,
researchers at Boston College found.
ore peop e are ta ng secon careers,
tart us nesses or o ow ong- e aye
reams to serve their communities, social
ntrepreneurs p p oneer an start c v c
ventures.
Delaying RetirementTop reasons people give for postponingretirement:
Source: Towers Watson, Boston Colleges Sloan
enter on Aging & Work, except as noted
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YOUR FAMILY SPRING 2013
FAMILYTIME ON Continued from page 21There are these very simpleways that
we can be caring for each other, she
a e , an t e me an s rea y t e
per ect ve c e. ome o y sa o t s
approac : t s anc ent, ut ts not recent.
e compares t to t e sort o ne g -
borly involvement that existed 100 years
ago, when people came together for a barnraising or to replace aneighbors roof that
was own o ur ng a severe weat er
event.
Medical drivers, dialysisAnother way that reconnection hap-
pens s y me an mem ers g v ng
someone a ride, whether its to a medical
appo ntment or to t e grocery store or
e sew ere, an earn ng ours or t e ser-
v ce.n er t e me ca r vers program,
mem ers can rece ve a m eage re m urse-
ment.
Last October Sage initiated the dialysis
driving program, which began as a seed
project last year and weve gotten it fund
ed again this year.
e exp a ne t at t e county prov es
transportat on or peop e w t part cu ar
sa t es w o ave tt e money.
ut t ere are a num er o peop e w o
dont fit within the guidelines, especially
people who need dialysis, Sage said.
They dont fit within the mold.
The TimeBanks program is focused ongett ng a ys s pat ents toone o t ree
centers n ane ounty, a ocate n
a son.
eop e w o ve n out y ng commun t es
e toug ton or un ra r e an ont
ave t e r own transportat on are ace
with the added burden of finding a way to
et to an rom an appo ntment. n t e
a ys s tse o ten saps pat ents energy.
omet mes peop e are e er y or ave
t er con t ons an nee a r e, age
a . t ey ont ave t e r own trans-
portation, the county is paying for a cab
ride to the city and back again, which
ould conceivably be like a $60 cab ride.So its a great cost ifthe county pays
for it and its a great cost if the individual
pays or t.
e a ys s r v ng program s try ng
to t at gap. oug t uses me an
r vers, t oesn t requ re peop e to o n
the TimeBank to get the service. It takes
referrals from the county and local dialysis
enters.
I like to think of it like reciprocity has a
ong arc, Sage said.
a ys s s on a set sc e u e, w c
ma es t eas er to n peop e to comm t
to r v ng at a certa n t me eac wee .
age sa t e program tr es to n r verso can ma e a wee y commtment.
he county does a criminal background
heck on drivers and also checks their
r v ng recor s.
We are doing some screening and mak
ing sure were getting people who are safe
n e ect ve r vers, s e sa . ea y,
e wou expan t s program to nc u e
ny n o recurr ng me ca appo nt-
ment.
o become a medical driver for the
imeBank, contact Sage through the orga-
izations website or call (608) 630-6435.
Social justicee me an as a ost o ot er
programs t at are es gne to u com-
munity and create a more caring and just
ociety.
Its Youth Court program is one example.
n t, teens tra ne n restorat ve ust ce
orm a peer ury to ear cases as an a ter
at ve to t e uven e ust ce system.
t c et or ot er orma consequence
may e e n a eyance w e t e young
person s g ven t e c ance to pursue t s
ternate course o act on. e peer ury
enerally sentences youth to serve on the
jury and to take part in activities writing
etters o apo ogy to v ct ms or o ng sometype o commun ty serv cet at can e p
t em succee n t e ong run.
en sentences are comp ete, s ave
t e opt on to cont nue t e r serv ce an
arn me an ours.
e goa s to eep young peop e
ngaged in programs that they enjoy and
re benefiting from, Rearick said. They
an build a stronger social network and
ane ounty me an
me ra ers ort - s an
Milwaukee Area Time Exchange
entra scons n me an - os nee
oc our ommun ty -
Rock County/Evansville
c an e g or-to- e g or
me an - c an enter
Kettle Moraine Community
TimeBank - West Bend
usta n e erson
me an - e erson ounty
Community TimeBank of
entra scons n - tevens o nt
ppewa a ey me an - au a re
TimeBanks
in Wisconsin
Incomparable School Age Camp
Discv Diffc
Karate Gymnastics Cooking Film and Photography
Gardening Nature Studies Art Sports
(608) 845-3245 | www.KidsExpress.com
3276 S. High Point Road, Madison, WI 53719
Summer on the Farm
June 11th - August 22nd | Ages 6 Weeks - 5th Grade
Continued on page 31
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Cream Puffs
Donnas Applesauce Pie
Chicken Salad
Taco Salad
SPRING 2013 YOUR FAMILY 29
7/29/2019 Yf 2013 Spring WebB
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30 YOUR FAMILY SPRING 2013
Submitted by: Donna Strandlie
4 cups cooked chicken breasts chopped or cut into smallpieces
1 cup celery chopped nely
1 cup mayonnaise
1/2 cup heavy cream whipped
2 Tbsp. parsley2 tsp. salt
Mix all together, olding in whipped cream at end. Add 1 cupseedlessgrapes cut in hal. Best when made the day beore and chilledovernight.Serve on croissants or cream pus
Chicken Salad
Send your favorite recipe(s) to [emailprotected]
Taco Salad
Submitted by: Carolyn Schultz
1 3 oz. pkg. cream cheese (sotened)
1 8 oz. pkg. sour cream
1 1/2 lbs. hamburger (may vary as to how much you want in)
1 pkg. taco seasoning mix
1 small jar mild taco sauce
1 small can tomato paste
diced lettuce (should cover one whole layer)
3 diced tomatoes
1 jar salad olives (chopped)
1 pkg. mozzarella cheese (I usually use the 3 cup pkg.)
1 pkg. mild cheddar cheese (I usually use the 3 cup pkg.)
Mix cream cheese & sour cream together & put on thebottom o a square9 x 13 pan. Mix taco sauce & tomato pastetogether, put on top o cheese
mixture. Brown hamburger, drain and add pkg. o taco seasoningmix & putthis as the next layer, then put a layer o dicedlettuce, tomatos & olives. Mixthe mozzarella & cheddarcheese together in a bowl and put this as the toplayer.Rerigerate
Send your favorite recipe(s) to [emailprotected]
Submitted by: Donna Strandlie
1 cup water
1/2 cup butter
1 cup four
4 eggs
Heat water and butter to rolling boil. Stir in four and stirvigorously overlow heat about 1 minute or until mixture orms ball.Remove rom heat.
Beat in eggs all at once, continuing to beat until mixture issmooth. Dropdough by scant 1/4 cupuls (size will depend on how muchdough you use oreach pu) about 3 inches apart onto ungreased bakingsheet. Bake at 400 or35 to 40 minutes or until pued and golden.Cool.
Cut o tops and very gently pull out any laments o sot doughromcenter. Let dry out some and ll each with Chicken Salad.
Cream Puffs
Send your favorite recipe(s) to [emailprotected]
Donnas Applesauce Pie
Submitted by: Donna Strandlie
Pie Crust (for 2 - 9" pies)
2 cups four1/2 t. salt
1 T. lemon juice
6 T. EACH cold butter and cold Crisco (both cut into smallpieces)
2 T. ice cold water
In ood processor, pulse four, salt and cut up butter and Criscountilmixture resembles coarse crumbs. Add 1 T. lemon juice, pulse,add 1 T. waterat a time until dough separates rom sides o bowl.
Roll into a ball and press into a disk. Wrap in plastic wrap andrerigerate1 hour or until rm enough to roll out.
Filling
3 lbs. McIntosh apples peeled and sliced thin
1/2 cup sugar
1 t. cinnamon
2 T. four
Mix together and spoon into pastry lined pie plate
Crumbly Topping
3/4 cup four
1/2 cup butter (cut into small pieces)
1/2 cup sugar
Mix together in ood processor until crumbly. Spoon over pielling
Bake at 425 or 15 minutes, lower heat to 350 and continue bakingor1-1/2 hours or until topping is golden brown.
Send your favorite recipe(s) to [emailprotected]
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SPRING 2013 YOUR FAMILY
FAMILYTIME ON Continued from page 28
u t e r s s, capac t es, an wor
exper ence.
e me an out ourt s now
un er way n a son s est, ast an
a o ette g sc oo s.
In the past year, TimeBank planners
have been looking into ways to help adult
offenders, as well.
At Progressive Dane, I was active in
rug po cy. n w en rst earne
a out t e out ourt, t oug t we
s ou ave an a u t court e t s, too,
espec a y or t ngs e rug o enses
an ot er nonv o ent an ow- eve o ens-
es, ear c sa .
She noted that municipal judge Dan
Koval brought up the idea at one of the
TimeBanks Builders Workshops last year,
atten e anot er wor s op n anuary
an s ntereste n mov ng a ea w t t.
cou n t ave een more t r e , s e
sa . t oo s pretty goo . on t t n t
w e a pro em to try t as a tt e p ot
somew ere. ou never now. e o c a
is initiating the project, so thats quite
hopeful.
A growing movemente ane ounty me an s recog
nized as a national leader in the timebank-
ing movement and its influence is clearly
evident throughout Wisconisin as well.
t as spawne a most a ozen s m ar
e orts, nc u ng two new me an sn t e past year n count es aacent to
ane ounty t e oc our ommun ty
me an n oc ounty an t e usta n
e erson me an n e erson ounty.
ont see any reason w y we s ou
be these isolated timebank communities,
Messinger said. We should be able to
connect and work and grow together.
e note t at w en e o ne t e
me an n a son ve years ago
t a ust mem ers an as s nce
rown to more t an , .
e wou e to see t at success up -
ate n ot er me an s an t n s t ey
an help each other thrive. He noted some
f the Rock Hour TimeBank members
have been giving dialysis rides to Dane
County members and hopes to see that
type o cooperat on expan t roug out
t e state.
t n ts a great opportun ty to
exten t e commun ty, e sa .
or er part, ear c says s e as
never thought timebanking would be the
answer. She sees it as a piece of a larger
e ort to re es gn soc a nteract ons an
nst tut ons rom t e groun up an
even t n s t me an ng tse cou e
app e erent y.n o p cture t e pa ng rom
t e ot er s e o t e canoe, s e sa .
ets ust o t erent y an exper -
ment. I think we need to try things in
order to figure out how it can really go to
scale, because right now its not anywhere
near go ng to sca e anyw ere. e nee
sort of a redesign.
e opes t e me an mo e can
encourage peop e to o w at t ey e
w e a so so v ng pro ems n t e r com-
mun t es.
wou e to create a s tuat on w ere
people can safely make it their job to do
what they want to do in their communityto mprove t an o w at tey ove an
e a e to ve o t at n a ecent man-
ner, Rearick said. Timebanking can help
to ac tate t at, an t w ave to e
app e n new ways an t w ave to
wor a ongs e ot er nnovat ve, coopera-
t ve n s o pract ces.
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FAQs
How to generate PDF in Spring Boot application? ›
Setting Up the Spring Boot Project Let's start by creating a new Spring Boot project using Spring Initializr or your preferred IDE. Make sure to include the necessary dependencies, such as spring-boot-starter-web for creating the REST API and itext7-core the last version for PDF generation.
How to create PDF in Spring MVC? ›Here, we have created a PDFController and UserPDFView. iText library deals with the PDF file formats and will convert the data to a PDF document. Once you are done with creating source and configuration files, export your application. Right click on your application, use Export → WAR File option and save the TestWeb.
How to fix a PDF error? ›- Go to the Repair PDF tool.
- Select and upload the PDF you want to repair from your computer, Google Drive or Dropbox account.
- Click the Repair PDF button.
- Click Download file to download your repaired file.
Your PDF reader or preferred program is out of date and needs an update. Your PDF application is potentially damaged or needs to be rebooted. The PDF is potentially damaged or tampered with. A potential virus or malicious attack is embedded into a PDF file.
How to print a PDF in Java Spring Boot? ›- Install Java library to print PDF files.
- Utilize PdfDocument class to load existing PDF file.
- Use printWithoutDialog method to print immediately with default printer.
- Change printer settings to get customized output in Java.
- Print PDF after configuration with print method.
- Open the document you want to save as a PDF.
- Click on the File tab.
- In Word, click Save As | PDF from the drop-down menu. In Google Docs, click File | Download | PDF. ...
- In the file name box, . pdf will automatically appear at the end of your file name.
Misconfigured settings or issues with the web browser. The PDF file gets corrupted or damaged. Problematic PDF viewer extensions. Corrupted cache or cookies in the browser.
How to fix a PDF file not opening? ›- Check Your Adobe Reader/Acrobat. Update Adobe Reader/Acrobat: Disable the Protected Mode at Startup: ...
- Repair Your Corrupted PDF Files. EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard. ...
- Use Another PDF Reader Program or Re-transfer Files.
An outdated or corrupted browser cache is a common reason for elements on a web page, including PDFs, to not display correctly. Clearing your browser cache should prompt your browser to download up to date content and hopefully fix the issue with rendering your PDFs properly.
How to repair a PDF document? ›Find your PDF in your files, right click and select Restore previous versions. This will bring up a list of the previously saved versions that are backed up. You can select a file to open and restore, which will bring up a previous, uncorrupted version.
Why am I unable to open certain PDF files? ›
1-Please try to check those PDF files and photos in another software. 2-Update your Windows and reinstall your PDF software. 3-Move those files in different location and check their permissions. 4-Those files can be corrupted also.
How do I get my PDF to open? ›Find the PDF you want to open in your Files and double click to open. Select Adobe Acrobat (or whichever reader you downloaded) from the list of available options. If no list appears or the page opens in another application, you can right-click the file and select Open With to choose your PDF reader. Click Open.
How to generate a PDF file in Java? ›- Instantiate a Document object.
- Add a Page to document object.
- Create a TextFragment object.
- Add TextFragment to Paragraph collection of the page.
- Save the resultant PDF document.
- Install 'Aspose. Cells for Java'.
- Add a library reference (import the library) to your Java project.
- Load JSON file with an instance of Workbook class.
- Convert JSON to PDF by calling Workbook. save method.
- Get the conversion result of JSON to PDF.
- Step 1: Creating a PdfWriter object. The PdfWriter class represents the Doc Writer for a PDF. ...
- Step 2: Creating a PdfDocument object. ...
- Step 3: Adding an empty page. ...
- Step 4: Creating a Document object. ...
- Step 5: Closing the Document.
To create a PDF document from scratch, use document creation software like Adobe Acrobat or Microsoft Word. In Adobe Acrobat, open the program, select "Create PDF," and design your document. In Microsoft Word, compose your document, then go to "Save As" and choose the PDF format.