Thursday, June 2, 2016

Eve on the Web

Eve on Instagram

My Flower Child

Dan is a Big Name in Water Issues on the Pecos River

Pecos River Resolution Corporation recently released via the University of Oklahoma Press the book they commissioned Patrick Dearen to write, Bitter Waters: The Struggles of the Pecos River. Dan Lathrop is quoted three times in the book.

Dan has studied and been involved in water issues in southeastern New Mexico all his life. He is a member of the board of the Pecos River Resolution Corporation. From 2001 to 2005, he was a member of the Ad-hoc committee appointed by the New Mexico Interstate Streams Commission assigned with the task of developing a plan on how to manage the waters of the Pecos River. He's a member of the Lower Pecos River Planning Committee, a state run group keeps the regional water use plan updated. He's president of the Hagerman Irrigation Company and of the Greenfield Water Co-operative.

Here are links to sites where you can learn more about the book:

Midland Reporter-Telegram interview with Patrick Dearen   


Buy the book on Amazon

Download the book from Google

Visit the Pecos River Resolution Corporation website

Buy the book from the University of Oklahoma Press 

Water Resources of the Lower Pecos Region Decision Makers Conference, 2003
 

Philip and Aaron at Work


If you visit Aaron's company site and click on his picture, he transforms into a dude ready for snowboarding.




Friday, March 11, 2016

About Cousin Rhonda

Rhonda is Horace Woodburn's daughter. Horace was Alvin's younger brother. Rhonda is the president of Hart Employment Services in Los Angeles, CA. In this video, made in 2011, her daughter stands beside her. This video celebrates opening a new agency in her new digs in Boerne, Texas.

Hart Employment Ribbon Cutting Ceremony


Thursday, March 10, 2016

Article About One of Our Kinfolks

Born into the business

Family put Scot Stinnett in the newspaper business, and inadvertently kept him from trying his craft at a bigger newspaper. One week after receiving a New Mexico reporter's highest honor, the Portales native insists that family put him there, too.
The 1974 Portales High graduate, who got his start at the Portales News-Tribune before he was a teenager and has run the De Baca County News for the last 20 years, was inducted Oct. 27 into the New Mexico Press Association Hall of Fame.

Stinnett
Publishes the De Baca County News
Stinnett, 56, joins grandfather M.M. Stinnett and great-uncle Gordon Greaves in the hall, with specific mention to his aggressive pursuits of government transparency.
The path that brought Stinnett to a career in newspapers dates nearly a half-century before he was even born, when great-grandfather J.G. Greaves homesteaded near Elida in 1907. Greaves moved from Texas to New Mexico to farm, and took newspaper jobs to make ends meet when Mother Nature wouldn't cooperate with rain.
In 1921, he took over the weekly Portales Valley News, which became the Portales Daily News in 1943.
In 1957, when Stinnett was about a year old, the paper merged with the Portales Tribune. It was only 10 more years before Scot Stinnett got his first job there as an 11-year-old substitute paper carrier; carriers had to be 12 to own their own route, but substitutes could be younger.
He worked in the circulation department at age 15, the darkroom at age 16, and was covering sports by the time he was 17.
"I covered Floyd and somebody," Stinnett said of his first assignment. "The reason I remember is Lynn Cooper, the Cooper twins' dad, he played at Floyd along with Scott Washburn and his older brother Curtis and Lonnie Best. All of those guys played for Floyd."
The Cooper twins, Jordyn and Jaylyn, are in their freshman year at Eastern New Mexico University.
With the exception of a two-year period working with the Quay County Sun in the late 1970s, Stinnett worked at the News-Tribune with his father Marshall until the end of 1991. He was usually working while attending Eastern New Mexico University, spending about a dozen years on a business degree he's three credits from completing and still mulls finishing.
He mulls slightly less about his most memorable time covering something.
"There was a fire, along half a block of buildings in Portales," Stinnett said. "It was during a state basketball tournament. We used to have a lot of sweet potato sheds where C&S Oil is. One of those caught on fire, and it was one of those days when the wind from the west was blowing hard. That movie theater burned down along with five or six buildings running north from there. "They weren't sure they could get the fire stopped; they evacuated everybody on the square.
"They evacuated the jail, which at that time was in the basement of the (Roosevelt County) courthouse. There's a picture of all of the prisoners handcuffed together around the sign pole. There was mutual aid from all over the place. I think people came from as far as Lovington, Hobbs and Roswell."
But Scot was busy outside of Portales too, as he dedicated plenty of time to membership in the New Mexico Press Association.
"My dad made these opportunities available to me; he allowed me to be a member of the New Mexico press board," Stinnett said. "That was something the Portales News Tribune had to support. If he hadn't done that, given me the time off to go and paid my expenses through the newspaper, I couldn't have done it."
Stinnett strives for open government records in his newspapers, to the point that he prints his own name in the public record whenever he gets a speeding ticket; it's sometimes how he meets new officers in Fort Sumner. Much of Stinnett's history includes fighting for that same level of government transparency, as records and meetings were kept secret with little recourse.
"If somebody didn't want to give you public records," Stinnett said, "they just said, 'I'm not giving them to you.' Why? 'Because I said so.' That was always the excuse governmental people gave us: 'Because I said so.'"
For years, the press association worked to get things changed in the Legislature, and often ran into legislators who weren't supportive; Stinnett will never forget Manny Aragon saying the matter was a press problem and not a public problem.
But Kent Walz, part of the Foundation for Open Government and the current editor of the Albuquerque Journal, said Stinnett still found a way to get the legislation through.
"He could, 'Aw, shucks,' his way right through the Roundhouse," Walz said in Stinnett's induction video. "He did it in a very civil way. I don't recall anybody saying they considered him an enemy. He was very effective, and for many years on many issues, Scot was the association's most effective lobbyist, even though that wasn't really his job."
The members eventually talked Gary Robbins into a bill that started an open records task force, which somehow passed and created legislation for open records. Gary King carried the legislation unsuccessfully in 1991, but most of the bill made its way into what would be the New Mexico Public Records Act two years later.
"No longer could they say, 'This guy's from the media; he's got a personal problem,'" Stinnett said. "We had members of (the Foundation for Open Government) from all walks of life. It was certainly a bipartisan thing. People don't remember what it was like when somebody decided to close a meeting because they wanted to. You couldn't do a thing about it."
Years before, when Eastern New Mexico University named Earl Diddle men's basketball coach, the News-Tribune sued to get resumes from the finalists. Judge Bill Bonem made what Stinnett considered a landmark ruling; that once a resume leaves a selection committee and references are checked, it's a public record.
Eventually, the Portales News-Tribune was sold. The buyer was Southern Newspapers, and they did things differently.
"I was working for my dad, and I was a little hard-headed … I was real hard-headed, and he was too. The changes he was forced to make, I didn't agree with. At some point, he got sick of me arguing with him and said we've got to do something different. I said he was right."
A job at the Albuquerque Journal was waiting for him, but he and wife Lisa had an 18-month old son, Berry. At the same time, the De Baca County News was available, and the decision was made that Fort Sumner would be a better place to raise Berry. It was for Berry, and after him Sara — ironically, now playing basketball for Earl Diddle at Howard College.
Fort Sumner, Stinnett said, has just enough citizens to support a small newspaper, and is far enough away from Clovis and Albuquerque that bigger papers wouldn't make the financial risk to capture the market.
"The best thing about Fort Sumner is there's not many people. That's also the most challenging thing about trying to make a living. If we were closer to Clovis like Melrose, we wouldn't have a newspaper."
The community understands the value of the newspaper. Mark Sena, a 1996 graduate of Fort Sumner High School, said the Stinnetts' involvement with the De Baca County News played a role in support for the athletic teams.
"He helps out tremendously," said Sena, now the school's athletic director. "He does a great job of covering all of our kids' activities, and that includes our junior high. He does a great job of promoting our athletic teams in other areas. He works pretty well with the people in Clovis.
"He's always covered Fort Sumner sports as if his kids were playing. You really couldn't tell the difference when his kids were playing as opposed to when they weren't."
Berry Stinnett, a current ENMU student and volunteer coach for the Foxes, said having a newspaper publisher for a father didn't get him fame. That never bugged Berry, because he grew up knowing about how newspapers have to avoid that type of conflict of interest.
"My picture didn't get in the paper that much, to be honest," Berry said. "He really didn't want people to think he was playing favorites."
Scot Stinnett said the sports are what gets noticed, but it's really just about covering a school.
"In a small town," Stinnett said, "and I think you'll find this just about anywhere, when you don't have a huge amount of people, the central part becomes the school because everybody's kids and grandkids are there. Any function is at the school. That becomes the central focus of your community.
"Growing up in Portales, what you learned was that most of the older people in Portales who were your readers either had family or had migrated in from one of the other communities. When you covered schools and covered sports in the little communities, you were appealing to the readers in Portales because their families were participating in those sports."
While Stinnett is now part of a family legacy in the NMPA hall of fame, family still drives the newspaper. Scot does the writing and the photos, and doesn't bother with bylines because everybody in Fort Sumner knows its him. Lisa does much of the other work, and his mother picks up the papers every Wednesday morning from the printer in Clovis.
"My dad made it happen for me, and my wife," he said. "We had an infant son, and I was always heading out of town to testify or go to meetings or hearings. She kind of got stuck raising Berry for the first year-and-a-half of his life, the hard part."

Here's a link to another article and a video: NMPA Hall of Fame

Monday, January 18, 2016

Shifting From Parent/Teacher/Guide to Friend and Peer is Hard!

Becoming a friend to your children...

It's really hard to change hats from the parent hat to the friend hat. Especially when you see your child going through something you think you know something about--you want to jump in and share what you know. Sometimes I'm just totally out of line. I hate that. Sometimes I'm talking too much. When that happens, please know this: I am not that invested in your doing it the way I said you should, I just want you to listen and think about what I said and then make up your own mind. I will appreciate your listening.

The thing is, Lance Wallnau makes the point that if the parent is telling the child what to do, he's wearing the wrong hat and that shuts off discussion. I want to be a listener. That used to be one of my greatest strengths. I wish God could get me back to the person I was when I was 14. I could walk up to anybody and say anything that was on my mind and I seemed to know when that was the wise thing to do and I seemed to know the wise thing to say. The rest of the time I was quiet and listened a lot. Now I'm too much of a coward so I second guess myself and then when I speak up I'm a fail about half the time and I don't say whatever it is wisely or concisely.

Maybe one of these days God will get me back to what I was and bring me to where I should have come. The reason I didn't get there to start with is because one day when I was about 15 my Dad told me I was "good for nothing" and I believed him. It was the believing him part that ruined my life. That belief that I was good for nothing lodged in my heart like a poison arrow and the poison seeped into every aspect of my being--my attitude about myself, my attitude about whether or not I deserved to become a successful artist or successful at anything, whether or not a cute popular guy would keep dating me once he found out my true personality--it still follows me to this day tainting everything.

The big shift happened when we lived on Euclid in Albuquerque and I gave my life to God again. That's when He poured into me words about how He saw me. He saw me as a queen in His kingdom; He saw me as talented and competent; He saw me successful and blessed. Later, He told me that my books would be wildly popular--more popular than the Harry Potter series. He told me a lot of humongously amazing things. I haven't seen them happen yet, but on the other hand, I really only have one book out there for anybody to read. He's told me that for 2016 He'll do the work promoting my newest book and the previous one. I think He'll do a way better job than I ever could. He has a host of angels who can go out and get that done.

God has been good to me. I have six wonderful children. I don't want to be irrelevant when I get older. I want to be your friend. I hope you'll give me the chance to be a better listener and do less advising.