Posts Tagged ‘life’

John 3:16 Day and other March Holidays – San Diego Entertainer Magazine

Wednesday, March 16th, 2011

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Posted by Angel Star on March 16, 2011 · 1 Comment 

Monday was Pi Day, tomorrow is Saint Patrick’s Day and today is John 3 16 Day?

Peaking at 6am this morning, the #1 trending search was “John 3 16.”

Research showed that a listener on K-Love radio station, a listener supported contemporary Christian radio station, called in this morning and deemed today, March 16th to be “John 3 16 Day” referring to the Bible verse which reads, “For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.”

Wager Run News explained it this way, “They have a holiday for everything else. It is time that they make a holiday for something that is life changing…Many people think that salvation just means not going to hell. They are unaware that salvation means ‘the act of delivering from sin or saving from evil’. That is in this life as well. When you keep this in mind and read through the rest of the Bible John 3 16 is even more powerful as you see all of the covenant promises we can tap into each and every day.”

According to holidayinsights.com March has been deemed everything from: “Irish American Month” to “National Frozen Food Month” and this website lists each day’s celebrations.  Who came up with these daily dedications, who knows?

holidayinsights.com reports:

1 National Pig Day

1 Peanut Butter Lovers’ Day

2 Old Stuff Day

3 I Want You to be Happy Day

If Pets Had Thumbs Day

3 National Anthem Day

3 Peach Blossom Day

4 Employee Appreciation Day first Friday in March

4 Holy Experiment Day

4 Hug a GI Day

4 National Salesperson Day – first Friday in the month

5 Multiple Personality Day

6 Dentist’s Day

6 National Frozen Food Day

7 National Crown Roast of Pork Day

8 Be Nasty Day

8 International (Working) Women’s Day

9 Panic Day

10 Middle Name Pride Day

11 Johnny Appleseed Day

11 Worship of Tools Day – guys, you can relate

12 Girl Scouts Day

12 Plant a Flower Day

13 Ear Muff Day

13 Jewel Day

14 Learn about Butterflies Day

14 National Potato Chip Day

14 National Pi Day- Why today? Because today is 3.14, the value of Pi.

15 Everything You Think is Wrong Day

15 Ides of March

15 Incredible Kid Day

15 Dumbstruck Day

16 Everything You Do is Right Day

16 Freedom of Information Day

17 Submarine Day – the hero sandwich or the boat??

17 Saint Patrick’s Day

18 Goddess of Fertility Day

18 Supreme Sacrifice Day

19 National Quilting Day – third Saturday of month

19 Poultry Day

20 International Earth Day

20 Extraterrestrial Abductions Day

20 Proposal Day

21 Fragrance Day

22 National Goof Off Day

23 National Chip and Dip Day

23 Near Miss Day

24 National Chocolate Covered Raisin Day

25 Pecan Day

25 Waffle Day

26 Make Up Your Own Holiday Day

27 National “Joe” Day

28 Something on a Stick Day

29 National Mom and Pop Business Owners Day

29 Smoke and Mirrors Day

30 National Doctor’s Day

30 I am in Control Day

30 Take a Walk in the Park Day

31 Bunsen Burner Day

31 National Clam on the Half Shell Day

What holidays are you celebrating this month?

Answer time: TruTV, First Four danger and Final Four surprise

Wednesday, March 16th, 2011

DAYTON, Ohio — The NCAA tournament starts tonight on TruTV.

So the answer to your first question is 246.

You want to see Texas-San Antonio vs. Alabama State and Clemson vs. UAB, tune to channel 246 on DirecTV. That’s Two. Four. Six. I’ve said those numbers 194,000 times over the past three days, and I’m prepared to say them another 40,000 or 50,000 between now and tip-off. I might forget my parents’ birthdays, where I put my wallet, where I parked my car (every time I park my car) and lots of other important things. But I will never forget for the rest of my life that TruTV is channel 246 on DirecTV, and I hope you never forget, too. So go ahead and spend a few seconds etching that into your memory.

Got it?

Good.

Now let’s get ready for March Madness.

You ask the questions, I’ll provide the answers.

Can any of the First Four teams win a game once they’re in the main bracket?

Not the 16 seeds. Those automatic qualifiers are automatic losers come Thursday and Friday against No. 1 Pittsburgh and No. 1 Ohio State. But the winner of Clemson-UAB and the winner of USC-VCU can absolutely win a second game because the UAB-Clemson winner plays West Virginia and the USC-VCU winner plays Georgetown, and West Virginia and Georgetown have shown, at various times, that they’re capable of losing to almost anybody. In fact, I’ll take the USC-VCU winner over Georgetown — especially if the winner is USC because I became a fan of Nikola Vucevic during a trip to California a few weeks back, and I think he’s good enough to punish Georgetown’s interior players. A dominant performance from Vucevic combined with a shaky effort from Chris Wright in his presumed return to the Georgetown lineup would put Kevin O’Neill into this weekend’s third round, which would be quite an achievement considering he spent last weekend suspended by his athletic director over an incident with an Arizona fan at a hotel in downtown Los Angeles.

Enough with the First Four. What about the Final Four. You sticking with Wisconsin?

There’s no going back now. My Wisconsin-to-the-Final-Four pick made headlines, and I’ve converted at least one Twitter follower over the past 24 hours. Is it risky? Yes. Could Belmont catch the Badgers on Thursday? Sure. But I wanted to take a chance in at least one regional, and the Southeast regional seemed like the place to do it. The No. 1 seed in the Southeast is Pittsburgh, and I’ve liked Pitt all season. But I just watched the Panthers lose in the quarterfinals of their league tournament to a team that finished in the bottom half of the Big East, so Pitt is clearly beatable. Beyond that, the No. 2 seed is a Florida team I’ve long believed is good and solid but not great. The No. 3 seed is a diminished BYU team. The No. 5 seed is a Kansas State team that closed strong but was unranked much of the season. So why not take the fourth-seeded Badgers with a great coach (Bo Ryan) and two great players (Jordan Taylor and Jon Leuer)? Again, I know it’s risky. (And I know they scored 33 points in their last game.) But projecting Butler and Michigan State to make the Final Four would’ve been deemed similarly risky last Selection Sunday, and you remember how that unfolded, right?

Any storylines you like from Thursday or Friday games?

The Xavier-Marquette game features two coaches in Chris Mack and Buzz Williams who will likely have huge offers arriving soon from other schools, which is always tough for fans because they know every win could enhance the odds of their coach leaving. Meantime, UNLV-Illinois has the Rebels’ Lon Kruger coaching against a school he once coached, and Memphis-Arizona has the Tigers’ Josh Pastner coaching against a school he once attended … and against a player he nearly signed.

That player is Derrick Williams.

He’s a CBSSports.com First Team All-American.

“We had him!” Pastner told me Monday while revisiting the recruiting battle between Arizona and Memphis that took place after USC let Williams out of his national letter of intent when Tim Floyd abruptly resigned. “The screensaver on his phone was the Memphis logo when he came on his visit, and I thought we were getting him. I told our guys, ‘We cannot let him leave here without committing.’”

But Williams had already promised his mother he’d visit Arizona, regardless.

So he left Memphis without committing and visited the Tucson campus.

Williams then opted to remain closer to his California home.

“Why in the heck would USC release him within the conference?” Pastner said with a laugh. “I don’t know. I blame everything on USC. … But Sean [Miller] has done a great job with him. I voted him National Player of the Year.”

So you really don’t think the Big East will have a Final Four representative?

I do not. What’s more is that I just realized my bracket doesn’t even have a Big East team in the Elite Eight. My Elite Eight has three Big Ten schools (Ohio State, Purdue, Wisconsin), two ACC schools (Duke, North Carolina) and one each from the Big 12 (Kansas), SEC (Florida) and Mountain West (San Diego State). The discouraging thing is that each of the 11 Big East representatives must lose their first, second or third game for me to be right, which seems unlikely just because. But what’s encouraging is that I completed my bracket off the top of my head five minutes after I saw it, and seven of my Elite Eight schools are among the eight most likely teams to win the national championship, according to Sportsbook.com.

The lone exception?

Wisconsin.

But we’ve been over that already.

Why I Need Sister Wives – Babble (blog)

Monday, March 14th, 2011

About Being Pregnant
Kate is a stay-at-home mom to two little ones: Daniel (2 in July), and Bekah (3). She spends a lot of time in the kitchen, cooking and creating recipes. Outside the kitchen, she writes at Modern Alternative Mama, where she blogs about parenting, real food, natural health, and other things that come to mind. She’s currently in the process of writing her latest cookbook. Now that the weather’s finally nicer, Kate spends a lot of time chasing her little ones outside and dreaming of #3, due in early August.

Erin Behan spent many years as an editor and writer at Citysearch.com before jumping into the freelancing fray. She works from her Brooklyn home, where she lives with her husband, 3-year-old son and two cats. Her life goals are to live in an apartment with a washer and dryer and to raise two well-behaved city kids — her second is due in September.

Molly Thornberg is pregnant, again. After having a baby in March 2010 her and her husband Sean are keeping life interesting and the world populated by adding kid #4 to the mix this summer. In addition to raising her kids & growing #4, Molly is a working mom. She has a slight obsession with all things tech, blogging and capturing life digitally. When not babbling pregnancy on Babble she’s blogging at digitalmomblog.com.

Stevee Curtis is a work-from-home mom with an 18-month-old daughter, and baby #2 (a boy) on the way. She and her hubby made big changes so she could stay home with her little one, including leaving her job to become a freelance writer. In between her daughter’s nap schedule, Stevee likes to get out and enjoy her life in Nashville, TN, and most often in the middle of the night you’ll find her crafting, cooking, cleaning and fantasizing about wearing high heeled shoes.

John Cave Osborne was baptized by fire, when it comes to the institution of parenting. In a span of just thirteen months, he morphed from consummate bachelor into father of four thanks to marrying a single mom, then quickly conceiving triplets. The author and freelance writer lives with his loud and delightfully dysfunctional brood in Knoxville, TN. On the rare occasions when he is not with his family, you can most certainly find him somewhere in the woods, most likely backpacking along the Appalachian Trail.

Ceridwen Morris is a writer, mother and childbirth educator. She is co-author of It’s All Your Fault and From the Hips as well as several screenplays (for Miramax and HBO). Ceridwen is on the board of The Childbirth Education Association of Metropolitan New York and teaches childbirth classes at Tribeca Parenting. She lives in New York City with her husband and two children.

Rebecca Odes is a writer, artist and mother. She was inspired to write From The Hips during her first pregnancy when she discovered that every pregnancy book she came across made her feel either anxious or irritated. Before becoming obsessed with the transition to motherhood, Rebecca co-authored three books about body, sexuality and identity issues for young women. She lives in New York City with her husband and two children.

Danielle Elwood is a Connecticut Mother to two boys, Camden, and Benjamin, and wife to William, a volunteer firefighter and veteran marine. She is expecting her third and very unexpected child in May of 2011. Danielle’s personal blog Momotics led to such projects as Lamaze’s Giving Birth with Confidence, and Pregnancy.Pampers.com. She’s also a Lamaze Educated Childbirth Educator in Training, and Doula. Be sure to catch her on Twitter @BirthBabiesBlog

Monica Bielanko was born and raised on the wild frontier of late 1970′s Utah. She once went to see an unknown band from Philly and three months later she married the guitar player. They are still hitched six years later. She lived in Brooklyn, New York for a few years and she misses the Big Apple bad. She works in TV news. She loves nachos and beer and music and books and her two black labs. Her heart belongs to her toddler, Violet and her newborn little boy, Henry. Oh yeah, she also likes wine. When she’s not babbling you can find her at thegirlwho.net.

Michelle Horton has covered everything from beauty to lifestyle to politics, but since having her son at the ripe age of 23, she’s been a regular contributor to Babble.com where she blogs at FamilyStyle. She lives in upstate New York with her husband and son, and occasionally updates her blog at Mama Never Said.

The Story of From The Hips: When we got pregnant, we were good friends with a lot in common. We bonded over the same physical dramas and difficult decisions, but we often took different approaches. Having babies brought us closer, but also put our differences in high relief. From The Hips reflects this huge range of experiences and attitudes. Because no matter how much the media tends to generalize, pregnancy is as unique an experience as anything else.

Greg Biffle’s Day At The Races – The Columbian

Sunday, March 13th, 2011

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Greg Biffle sits quietly in his race car, listening to the voices in his head.

The helmet, driver suit, and body-hugging race seat insulate the Vancouver native from the chaotic choreography that surrounds him, while 10 uniformed crew members crowd around his car in a garage so small there is barely enough room to pump the handle on the floor jack.

The men talk to one another on radios, calling out what needs to be done and what has already been accomplished . . . and what they might try if the current round of changes doesn’t make Biffle’s car any faster.

Biffle hears it all through the earbuds in his helmet as he sits, seemingly passively, strapped into the driver’s seat.

There is little he can do but wait until the work is completed and he heads back to the oval for another few laps to see if the changes make the car better . . . or worse.

Two men change the front shock absorbers beneath the raised hood. Another pair work under the rear, checking how high it is off the track surface. Two additional crew members move blocks of lead weight in and out of the car’s frame rails as they try to adjust the chassis to compensate for the worn out surface at Phoenix International Raceway.

Every change, no matter how seemingly insignificant, is documented.

It is Friday of a three-day race weekend at Phoenix, another stop on the NASCAR Sprint Cup schedule. Some say it is the first race of the “real season,” contending that the Daytona 500 is so different from any other race that it is a season unto itself.

Biffle, 41, is beginning his ninth full year in NASCAR’s top series and his 14th since Jack Roush plucked the talented youngster from a tin-roofed shop on the east side of Vancouver, where he built his own stock cars. It took Biffle three years to win the Craftsman Truck Series title for Roush, and another two to take the championship in the Busch Series. In 2005, he won a season-high six races in the top series and finished in second place, just 35 points behind the Cup series champion.

But past performance is no guarantee of success. Consider that 20-year-old Trevor Bayne won the biggest race of his career on the last lap of the 2011 Daytona 500. Five days later, on the first lap of practice at Phoenix, he slammed the outside wall and his Ford came back into the garage area on the business end of a wrecker.

“There are no guarantees,” says Biffle, recognized as among the hardest-charging drivers in the garage.

Style and substance

That hang-it-on-the-fence driving style hasn’t diminished with age or experience, and it is among the reasons Biffle has developed a cadre of fans who will wake up at 5 a.m. to be first in line at his souvenir trailer to get an autographed T-shirt, or stand for hours in the Arizona sun hoping to get his signature on a “hero card.”

Larry Norman says he spotted Biffle about five years ago when the driver was competing in the former Busch series at Phoenix.

“He’s a hell of a driver,” says the Phoenix fan as he stands in the garage area, hoping to get an autograph.

“I like the way he drives, and I like him because he’s a ‘duner’ who takes his toys out in the sand dunes to play. I also got the chance to meet him at Las Vegas. We played craps with him.

“He didn’t have a good night,” Norman says with a smile.

Fans and sponsors, the lifeblood of auto racing, can consume a great deal of a driver’s time and energy.

“A lot of people figure we have a pretty easy schedule . . . we just get to work weekends,” Biffle jokes. But the reality is that the pressures to build solid relations with sponsors and fans can be a huge distraction for a driver.

Retired driver Kyle Petty once said it is the hidden schedule — the Monday post-race meetings, the Tuesday flight across the country for a sponsor appearance, and the Wednesday test session before packing up to leave on Thursday for the next race — that is the real reason many drivers burn out.

And the more successful you become, the more people want a piece of your time.

A few years ago, NASCAR dismissed complaints from drivers that too many fans were clogging up the garage area and presenting a safety issue.

When NASCAR ignored the pleas for tighter controls, Dale Earnhardt Jr., the most popular driver in the series, simply sat down on the tailgate of NASCAR’s mobile office, and smiled as hundreds of fans surrounded the trailer. The crowd of eager autograph seekers brought all official work to a halt.

NASCAR caved in with tighter requirements to get into the garage area when work is being done.

While Biffle isn’t as popular as Earnhardt or Jeff Gordon, he can’t cross from the team hauler to the garage without being stopped for an autograph. He tries to accommodate every fan.

The popularity is a part of racing that didn’t come comfortably for Biffle.

In his early years in NASCAR, he often was considered aloof by other drivers, the media and race fans. While racing at the now-defunct Portland Speedway, all he had to do was show up, unload the car and put on a good show. In NASCAR, it took him years to grow comfortable in his role as a driver/personality.

But he has. Over the years, he has emerged as among the most quoted — and most quotable — drivers in the garage.

“He’s one of the good ones,” says Patti Ennis, a producer for NASCAR’s Media Group. “He’s a good interview and makes himself available.”

He’s also articulate and not afraid of tackling some subjects other drivers shy away from.

A look at the future

Biffle is in the last year of a contract with Roush-Fenway Racing, and he’s enjoying some of the attention that comes with being a free agent.

While there has been no speculation about him and Roush parting ways, the driver has been quoted saying that the days of rich contracts and big sponsor checks are over, at least for now. Sponsorship money is harder to come by, and drivers and teams must be willing to extend themselves to keep the checks coming in.

Racing has done well by Biffle, even though he gets to keep only a portion of the millions of dollars he has won. The money has allowed him to live the life most drivers can only dream about.

He has a beautiful wife, a huge home in North Carolina, and a shop filled with high-speed and high-priced toys. He also owns a mountain retreat within easy flying distance from home, using his own plane or helicopter. Biffle also is part owner of Sunset Speedway in Banks, Ore., west of Portland, and Grays Harbor Raceway in Elma, both small dirt-track ovals.

His passion — one shared by his wife, Nicole — is animal rescue. They have their own nationwide foundation, and each year he and Nicole foot the bill for a calendar featuring NASCAR drivers and their pets. The calendars are made available at no cost to participating shelters, which sell them to raise funds.

The cars, the homes, the planes and the race tracks are the benefits of success, both by Biffle and the team that surrounds his car.

The crew is as tight-knit as any military squad. They travel together, work together, live together. Members are expected to be perfect in the routine of preparing the race car weekend after weekend. Each knows that any failure could spell an early finish on race day, or worse.

Biffle goes out for a couple more laps, radios to crew chief Greg Erwin how the car feels, and then hustles the Ford back into the garage for the next round of changes.

“Greg is very, very good in the car,” Erwin says. “We can’t use any data collection while we are at the race track, so we have to rely on him to tell us what is going on.”

During simulations and testing, the crew can equip the car with sensors that measure every nuance as the car corners, brakes and accelerates.

“What we learned during the times that we can use data sensors, is that Greg will feel really minor things in the car that the sensors will confirm,” Erwin says. “If there is a problem with Greg, it’s that sometimes he is too sensitive.”

Last season, a conflict emerged between what a driver feels and what the data said, and the Ford teams struggled at the early races.

The problem was an issue with the computer simulation used in testing. It said one thing; the drivers said something else.

It was a case of no data being better than wrong data.

“When you get false information and you go to a track — the track’s real green and has a lot of grip — and you go and figure out here’s the right bump stop, here’s the right shock, here’s the right spring. You come back, it’s hot, it’s sunny, it’s slick — all those things are wrong,” Biffle explains. “We would have been better off with no data.”

It was difficult, according to Biffle, not knowing when to trust the computer and when to trust his own instincts.

Looking for an edge

This afternoon, the team is trusting Biffle’s instincts.

On the track, he’s pressing hard to find the limits. With about 10 minutes left in the session, he brings the car back into the garage with a four-foot long scar on the right rear fender, when he kissed the wall.

Roush comes by for a look, grins and says, “That was close. It could have been a lot worse.”

The crew ignores the damage and scurries around the car for one last round of swapping suspension pieces, making adjustments, and checking tire temperatures and pressure. How a tire looks and feels after a hard run is one of the major predictors of how a car will handle on race day.

Then they send Biffle back out for one last round of laps on the oval. At the end of the session, he is 10th-fastest of 44 cars.

It’s good, but not good enough.

They have the rest of the afternoon and most of the following morning to take what they’ve learned and try to make the car better. Erwin and Biffle will trade information with other Roush drivers and crew leaders to learn what they tried and what worked.

The objective isn’t to have the fastest car in qualifying, but to come up with one that will be quick throughout the entire race. To do that that takes experimentation, testing and developing a platform that a crew can work with as the oval changes personality over the duration of the race. While starting up front is nice, finishing there is even better.

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Rascal Flatts Talk About Their Justin Bieber Collaboration in the TV Special ‘Nothing like This’

Sunday, March 13th, 2011

Country music’s multi-platinum, powerhouse trio Rascal Flatts was born in what they describe as “a smoky little club in Nashville, Tennessee called the Fiddle and Steel Guitar Bar.” In a recent exclusive interview, they talked about the fact that their spark was immediate. Lead guitarist Joe Don Rooney described the magical moment, saying, “I think we knew instantly that we had something that none of us had ever had before in any band or any kind of group and the many years that we had before moving to Nashville. I think it was one of those divine things we were supposed to be together. We’re supposed to sing together. We’re supposed to create Rascal Flatts together and have this history already together in ten years and the success. It was supposed to happen. It was divine intervention. And I think we all felt how special this thing could be the first night we really sang together for sure.”

Rascal Flatts Bring Their Live Show to ABC on Saturday Night

Fans who have been lucky enough to see Rooney and his bandmates, second cousins Gary LeVox and Jay DeMarcus, on the road have witnessed their musical magnetism firsthand. But for the many fans that haven’t been fortunate enough to see them in person, Rascal Flatts is bringing the show to ABC this Saturday night.

Rooney gave a sneak peak of what fans will get when they tune in to their first TV special, ” Rascal Flatts : Nothing Like This .” “They’re gonna get to see our live show, if they’ve never been to one before they’re gonna see what we do. Kind of like a day in the life of Rascal Flatts… back stage, on stage.” And Most importantly, they’ll get to see Flatts do what they do best, play country music. “They’ll get to see a great show, a lot of energy.”

Rascal Flatts Collaborate with Justin Bieber and Natasha Bedingfield

And the special should please more than just country devotees. Rascal Flatts have a few special guests up their sleeve – Justin Bieber and Natasha Bedingfield.” Rooney recounted how the collaboration with J.B., a world premiere video duet, came to be. “It’s called, ‘That Should Be Me.’ It was a song on his record and he did a remix of his last album and his management reached out to us and pitched it to us and said, ‘Justin would love to do a duet with us’ and get his hair cut… So we did ‘em both.”

As for the collaboration with Bedingfield, DeMarcus revealed, “We’ve been big fans of hers for a long time and she’s just one of those great, extremely gifted singers. And we had the song ‘Easy’ pitched to us and we just decided it should be a duet. And she was at the top of a very short list of people that we thought could hang with Gary vocally. And it’s one of my absolutely favorite moments of the special.”

Rascal Flatts Enjoy Collaborating with Artists from Different Genres

LeVox explained why he felt that working with artists from the different genres, like the more pop oriented Bieber and Bedingfield, is so important. “It’s just really cool to bring other people from other genres of music in and put some country on ‘em… and be able to touch the masses.”

And he noted that more and more acts seem to be drawn to Rascal Flatts’ chosen genre. He remarked, “Everybody seems to be evolving towards country music. Because I know as a kid growing up, I never thought I’d hear Bon Jovi on country radio. But it’s great to take something kind of different and off the wall and do it with another artist from another genre. It’s really cool to collaborate and see how they do their stuff and how we do our stuff and kind of marry the two together and see what we can come up with.”

Rascal Flatts Discuss Their Dream Collaborators

Rascal Flatts is certainly getting that opportunity. In addition to Bieber and Bedingfield, they’ve been teaming up with a few of their personal favorites recently. Rooney recalled, “We actually got to work in the last couple of weeks with two of our musical heroes – Lionel Richie and Michael Bolton.” But their list of dream collaborators goes on and on. He added, “It’s every one from George Jones to Conway Twitty to Ronnie Milsap to Stevie Wonder to Prince – all across the board.”

LeVox’ pondered the question before chiming in, “Gosh there’s so many. I’d love to do something with Stevie Wonder one day. And I sure wish I would have had an opportunity to sing with Keith Whitley.”

DeMarcus threw in a few names of his own, “For me it would be Merle Haggard. I’d love to perform with Merle Haggard. He’s one of my all time favorites.” But his top choice can, sadly, never become a reality. He added, “From any genre? My dream would have been to have done something with Elvis. It’s a shame that he’s not here anymore. It would have been so much fun to perform with him… You know what I’m sayin’? Holler back at me one time.”

Catch “Rascal Flatts : Nothing Like This Presented by JCPenney” on Saturday, March 12 at 9 p.m. EST/8 p.m. Central on ABC.

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Gun owners rally for rights at Illinois Capitol – The State Journal-Register

Friday, March 11th, 2011

Yellow-clad gun owners swarmed the Illinois Statehouse for the annual Illinois Gun Owners Lobby Day on Thursday. Their message: Let us carry concealed firearms, and keep the fact that we have FOID cards private.

“I believe every citizen should support the Second Amendment,” said Joel Gain, 74, a Petersburg cabinetmaker. “It’s just as important as the First Amendment. The Second Amendment bought and paid for the First Amendment, and a lot of people don’t realize that.”

The event drew an estimated 1,000 to 1,500 gun owners to the Statehouse, according to a representative of the Secretary of State’s Office, which oversees the building.

“We’ll flood the Capitol, and everyone will be wearing yellow shirts and yellow caps, so they’ll know who we are,” Illinois State Rifle Association president Donald Moran said before the rally.

The event started at the Prairie Capital Convention Center, where the lobby was crowded with people wearing yellow caps, shirts, sweaters and jackets.

Among speakers were state Treasurer Dan Rutherford and Otis McDonald, whose U.S. Supreme Court case against the city of Chicago overturned that city’s handgun ban.

“Let there be no doubt about it, Dan Rutherford supports concealed carry in the state of Illinois,” Rutherford told the crowd, which responded with a standing ovation.

Concealed carry was top priority for many in attendance.

“I’m in favor of concealed carry,” said Jeff Motler, 45, a Springfield engineer with AT&T. “We have the right to protect ourselves in our homes, but not in the street.”

Opponents, who have bottled up concealed-carry laws in the legislature in the past, say concealed weapons would simply worsen gun violence in Illinois. Concealed-carry supporters, however, believe the current General Assembly is more open to the idea. Illinois is one of only two states that don’t allow some form of concealed-carry now.

Also on the minds and petition cards of the attendees was Attorney General Lisa Madigan’s recent ruling that the names of people who hold Firearms Owners Identification cards are public information under Illinois law.

“I don’t think that anyone needs to have that information,” said Lorraine Fidonik, 62, a paramedic from Addison. “I can’t see what good could come of it.”

The Illinois Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence is in favor of keeping those names public.

“One of the things being lost in the debate is that it’s just a list of the names of people with FOID cards,” campaign director Mark Walsh said. “It allows some transparency and also allows the opportunity to make sure that there is a system is in place to follow up with law enforcement when people become on the prohibited purchasers list.”

Andy Brownfield can be reached at 782-3095.

Firearms Services Bureau carries out FOID law

By ANDY BROWNFIELD

STATE CAPITOL BUREAU

andy.brownfield@sj-r.com

 

The Firearms Services Bureau of the Illinois State Police looks like a normal office, with tall beige dividers, motivational posters and personal knick-knacks, like plush monkeys, adorning the cubicles.

Lt. John Coffman, the bureau chief, said he doesn’t know whether Attorney General Lisa Madigan’s recent ruling that the names of Illinois Firearms Owners Identification cards are public information would increase the office’s workload. The bureau already suffers from a staff shortage, he said.

The quiet office of 26 employees handles hundreds of thousands of FOID card applications yearly. It also performs background checks and feeds FBI databases.

Coffman wouldn’t comment otherwise on Madigan’s decision, except to say a list of FOID card owners wouldn’t necessarily equate to a list of gun owners, because Illinois doesn’t register guns themselves.

“Recently, we’ve been processing about 25,000 applications a month,” Coffman said. “The last three years have been the three busiest years in the 43 to 44 years history of the bureau.”

The heaviest year on record was 2009, when the office handled more than 326,000 applications. Coffman said 230,000 a year is more typical. He attributes the surge to a recent law extending the validity of the card from five to 10 years, as well as national political debate over gun control and the 2010 U.S. Supreme Court case that overturned Chicago’s handgun ban.

Most of the applications in any given year are renewals, Coffman said. The busiest period is between August and February, when people are renewing their cards for hunting season.

In that busy year of 2009, only 10,222 of the 320,000 applications were denied and 5,952 revoked.

One of the primary public safety tasks of the bureau is to make sure nobody gets a FOID card who shouldn’t, Coffman said.

“Those folks that are in our FOID database are reviewed hourly for recent criminal history and events,” he said. “It’s almost a real-time public safety function that allows us to identify those folks who probably shouldn’t have a gun.”

If criminal activity pops up, state police can work with local police to have the person’s card revoked and any guns he or she owns taken out of the person’s possession within a day.

If it is necessary to remove a gun, police don’t confiscate it. Instead, they arrange for another qualified owner, such as a family member, to take possession of the firearm.

An event such as an arrest warrant or order of protection can land a cardholder on a medium-risk list, but activity that demonstrates immediate danger to the gun owner or another person, such as calls regarding domestic violence, is considered high-risk. That merits immediate action, Coffman said.

 

– Andy Brownfield can be reached at 782-3095.

 

 

Some other states disclose gun permit information

On March 1, Attorney General Lisa Madigan ruled that the names of Illinois gun permit holders are public information and should be made available if requested under the state Freedom of Information Act.

Twenty-five other states either explicitly say information on gun permits or concealed-carry licenses is public or do not specifically address the matter, meaning the records are presumed open.

Iowa is the only state that borders Illinois that has open gun records. That provision dates back to 1978, according to Sam Knowles of the Iowa Department of Public Safety.

“There’s been no controversy over the years,” Knowles said. “It doesn’t seem to have been that big an issue in Iowa.”

There was some pushback when several newspapers published lists of people who had been issued concealed-carry permits, Knowles said. The records were kept by the county sheriffs that issued the permits and were obtained under the Freedom of Information Act.

“The gun lobby was certainly not happy,” he said.

Illinois’ gun lobby has similar concerns.

“Our names are not for public consumption just because some do-gooder in the news media thinks they are,” National Rifle Association lobbyist Todd Vandermyde said before a crowd at the Thursday’s Illinois Gun Owner Lobby Day. “Our privacy trumps your First Amendment.”

– Andy Brownfield 

 

Quotes

 

“I support the Second Amendment. You are your own protector of yourself – not the police, not the federal government, you’re supposed to learn to take care of yourself in this life, that’s what your momma told you.”

– Joel Gain, 74, Petersburg.

 

“I think that (Attorney General Lisa Madigan’s ruling that names of FOID card holders be made public) basically is a way for criminals to actually exploit our own system against us. Armed citizens tend to be a little more polite to each other.”

– Jeff Motler, 45, Springfield.

 

“We’ve already banned assault weapons. I think what most people consider assault weapons are not really assault weapons. Tools geared toward the military, which are fully automatic, are not available to the public anyway.”

– Lorraine Fidonik, 62, Addison.

 

“Gun ownership is not only a constitutional right, it’s a human right, it’s a part of the autonomy of a free citizen so we are not completely dependent on the authorities for our safety and our freedom.”

– John Sutton, 59, Chicago.

 

“Approach this with common sense. Approach this from the standpoint of doing the right thing for people throughout the state. I know geographically there’s a difference of opinion, but I would ask those people who maybe have traditionally been a little closed-minded about this to look at the broader picture.”

– Arl Aten, who said he is in his 60s, Sumner.

 

“I believe that I should be able to protect myself and my children from criminals that are attacking us, whether it be at home or whether it be out at McDonald’s eating.”

– Cindy Courson, 35, Danville, who attended with her three children, ages 4, 3 and 2.

 

 

A sampling of major gun-related legislation in the General Assembly

 

– House Bill 7 would bar disclosure of the names of Firearms Owner Identification cards except to law enforcement authorities.

– House Bill 148 would allow registered Illinois gun owners to carry concealed firearms if they pass criminal background and mental health checks and undergo eight hours of training.

– House Bill 203 would limit Illinoisans to one handgun purchase per 30-day period.

– House Bill 1274 would impose an additional 2 percent sales tax on ammunition.

– House Bill 1294 would outlaw assault weapons and ammunition, high-capacity ammunition feeders, and .50 caliber rifles and bullets.

– House Bill 1296 would require all handgun sales, including those between private citizens, to take place at the premises of a federally licensed dealer, who would be required to submit a background check on the purchaser.

– House Bill 1906 would require all handgun dealers to be licensed with the state.

– Senate Bill 77 would allow military reenactors to possess vintage rifles or modern reproductions, the short barrels of which violate current state law.