The Missouri Foundation for Health has provided a grant of nearly $300,000 for local health advocates to promote exercise and nutrition.
We’re eager to see how the Jasper and Newton Counties Community Health Collaborative and the Alliance of Southwest Missouri plan to use the money. The organizations involve area health departments, hospitals and other agencies, and they will be working with city governments, schools, churches and other organizations in a campaign called LiveSmart to get people to eat more fruits and vegetables and live a more active lifestyle.
In a tight economy, spending this amount of money on something that seems so simple might seem reckless. But consider that about two-thirds of Missouri’s population is either overweight or obese. A sum like $300,000 is a drop in the bucket compared with the health care costs associated with obesity.
While it sounds like the program will be heavy on encouragement and public education, we hope it also includes some fun organized activities at our area parks and walking trails. The Joplin area offers up plenty of opportunities. For this program to work, there will have to be some incentive to move locals off the couch and away from the TV.
We’re looking forward to more information as LiveSmart is developed in our area and we would encourage groups that are contacted and asked for their participation to lead by example. And we’re willing to do our part by getting the information out to the public through our paper and online site.
Let’s face it. We’ve become a sedate society with a craving for junk food and bad TV.
We applaud this areawide focus on changing bad habits.
Editorial
In our view: A walk in the park
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In our view: Defending defense thinking
It is not making headlines, but Defense Secretary Robert Gates is moving rapidly to implement major cuts in overall Defense Department spending.
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Voices: Wood spirits and cross harp blues
Poised as a miffed child standing with pursed lips and crossed arms, the old Arizona senator defiantly asserted, “there will be no more cooperation the rest of this year.” Well, so much for “crossing the aisle.” Wanna take your toys and go home?
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Voices: No choice perfect
Jim Stone’s guest column (Globe, Aug. 29) on the surface seems well thought out and even persuasive. What it lacks is a basic understanding of what the access to some means of self-defense really is.
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Voices: ‘Yes’ correct answer
Joan Umphenour (Globe, Aug. 19), who has a master’s degree, is upset because most of us Missourians apparently didn’t understand the ballot in Missouri about the health care bill because she couldn’t understand it. She apparently thinks we voted “yes” meaning “no.”
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Voices: Up, up and away
It’s hard to keep a good plane down. When my husband was in the service during World War II, he was in the Air Force and his second home while he was stationed in England was a B-17 Flying Fortress.
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Guest columnist Robert M. Clayton III: Need help paying your phone bill?
Telephone service is a vital communication link to health care, family and friends. However, some Missourians do not have access to such a link because of financial difficulties. There are programs available to help qualified Missourians receive a discount on monthly telephone bills and provide a reduction in installation and connection fees.
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In our view: Caring for Jerry’s kids
They collect bucks in boots, wash cars, flip pancakes, sell baked goods and knock on doors.
They are the volunteers in our community who are taking care of “Jerry’s kids.” -
Voices: Volunteers needed
They come to Joplin Neighborhood Adult Literacy Read to improve their literacy skills in English, and we are committed to providing services to enable them to reach their full potential. To do that, we offer help in reading, math and English as a second language with one-on-one tutors and classes. Right now we are looking for a few more good volunteers who want to take the training to work with our students.
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Guest columnist Erin Noble: America should be clean energy leader
After nearly two years of work on a comprehensive climate change and clean energy bill, Senate Democrats recently abandoned efforts in exchange for a weakened “oil spill bill.” Citing their inabilities to overcome a Republican filibuster, the oil spill bill includes only minor clean energy provisions and completely fails to address the underlying causes of the climate crisis. Luckily, the weakened bill did not advance before the Senate’s August recess. This provides one last chance for the bill to be amended with a national Renewable Electricity Standard (RES) when the Senate reconvenes later this month.
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Voices: Hidden bias
I must admit the Globe did a pretty good job hiding obvious bias (In our view, Globe, Sept. 3), but you seem to have conveniently forgotten there is a very clear difference here in that one of the candidates here is of the party that got us in this mess and voted lock step with the (former) president who led us to this crisis to begin with.
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