By Linda
Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Lt. Gov. Ronnie Musgrove and agricultural leaders
at Mississippi State University recently praised
Mississippi's Homemaker Volunteers for their efforts to
improve family life across the state. Musgrove
addressed the organization during their annual meeting at
MSU on May 18. "What
you do is try to improve the lives of children so they will
be more productive adults and better citizens," Musgrove
said. "The work you do across the state in our communities
is so important." Dr. Ron
Brown, director of the MSU Extension Service, commended the
members for almost $5 million in volunteer hours and service
to the state in 1998. Among other accomplishments, Brown
said the homemaker volunteers provide 3,000 therapy dolls
annually to the Children's Hospital in Jackson for use by
physicians and child-life specialists in teaching patients
about illnesses, treatments and surgical procedures -- a
$90,000 value. "Members
have conducted active statewide campaigns to increase
awareness of child abuse, and they successfully lobbied for
better child safety restraint laws and continue to make the
public more aware of the importance of buckling children in
vehicles," Brown said. "Many of you have volunteered as
mentors and tutors for young students and worked in
community beautification projects." The
homemaker volunteers also continue to work for a law
lowering the legal blood alcohol content for driving and
making seat belt usage a primary law in
Mississippi. Musgrove
encouraged the members to stay active in the legislative
process. He said those working in the Senate also want to
improve the lives of people in Mississippi and acknowledged
a loss of respect for people in authority. "We've
increased pay for teachers to try to entice and retain
teachers in the profession, and we still want to increase
their salaries to the Southeastern average," he said. "We've
increased funding for afterschool programs to help keep kids
off the street and further their education." Musgrove
encouraged the homemaker volunteers to continue their
efforts developing early morning and afterschool activities
for children and to stay involved in children's lives by
tutoring. "Other
than parents and ministers, no one can have a more positive
influence on our kids than our teachers," Musgrove
said. The
lieutenant governor stressed the importance of an educated,
trained workforce in the state to help attract
jobs. "Better
paying jobs will enable parents to spend more time with
their children by reducing the need for working two jobs to
make enough money," Musgrove said. Released:
May 24, 1999
Community
News
Musgrove Praises
Volunteer Efforts
Contact: Linda Breazeale, (662) 325-1717
Visit: DAFVM
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