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Sunday, August 26, 2012

Ticket

August 26, 2012

School starts tomorrow, and I feel like a bride--Something Old (my usual graduate project management course), Something New (new students, new semester, new school year), and Something Really, Really Old:  a course that I haven't taught since the spring that Davis was born.

As usual, I took a day the week before the start of classes to hang out at Davis and Erin's elementary school, Mary Branch, and have a lanyard extravaganza.  Not that many teachers from Davis's years there remain, though his kindergarten teacher and his 5th grade teacher are still in the teaching yoke and remember him fondly.

Even a number of those who taught Erin have moved on.  Still, her presence and influence still pervades the campus.  Several of the teachers brought new grade-level colleagues down to our display to initiate them into the school year and the appropriate ID-wear.

One of the long-time first grade teachers kept returning to the library to run up her tab, and during one of her stops she told me a story about Erin I had never heard.

Apparently, Erin started the student council at Mary Branch.  Maybe I knew that at the time, but forgot.  Anyway, one of their first initiatives (that is still going on, I think) was her pet project to turn the campus green (not with paint, but with environmental friendliness and energy conservation).  As Ms. Hodnett told the story, certain student council members, including Erin, formed an official energy conservation patrol.  They carried ticket books and could write up and issue tickets to anyone, including adults, who were wasting energy (by leaving lights on or water running or otherwise participating in wasteful activities).  Besides whatever actual consequence receiving a ticket had (a fine, perhaps?), there was also the good-natured teasing that came from purer colleagues who had not yet been caught.

Ms. Hodnett had left her room one afternoon to check her mail or stop in the restroom or some such thing.  She left a pair of maintenance workers doing some sort of minor repair to her classroom.  When she returned, the workers were gone, the lights were still burning, and Erin had strolled up with her ticket book and begun filling out an energy citation.


Ms. Hodnett pleaded with her not to give her a ticket.  Erin looked at her skeptically, just like an old-hand cop waiting to hear some manufactured excuse or a teacher listening as a student explained how her dog ate her homework.  Finally, Ms. Hodnett said that it just wasn't fair for her to get the ticket when the workmen had left the lights on.  Erin responded, "Okay, Ms. Hodnett.  Just this once, I'll let you off with a warning, but next time it will mean big trouble."

She really doesn't look that wicked, do you think?



Erin's classmates start tenth grade tomorrow.  I wish them the best school year ever and peace for their parents as they become licensed drivers this year.   And, of course, that they receive warnings instead of tickets, if they ever get stopped.

I've been wondering:  if I leave my lights on and the faucet running, maybe she'll show up and write me a ticket.

16 comments:

  1. Love this. Thank you for sharing!

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  2. And if I taught school in your neck of the woods, I could very well have had Erin as a student this fall...I promise to tell my students and coworkers about your little dynamo, and to have them "choose their verb" in honor of Erin!

    Love you guys!
    Tanya Loewen

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    1. Wouldn't that be awesome! Have a great semester. Mine is off to a galloping start.

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  3. Her legacy lives on! Never even met her, but she's still my hero.
    from the Giraffe Lady in Idaho

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    1. Thank you Jenny. I thought of you on Sunday when I was cleaning out one of Erin's closets and found a set of well used stencils of giraffes. Who would have thought such a thing existed?

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  4. Yes, I too received a couple of those tickets in my office! As I recall that was a project that earned Branch a small financial bonus for cutting our electricity bill that year. Ali Kutzenberger was the sponsor for that group. She and Miss Erin were big buddies. I continue to think of her so often. Will always love that sweet girl.
    Have a great semester and tell Davis and Walter hello for me!

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    1. I actually can't imagine anyone having the guts to ticket you. Thanks for rounding the story out.

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  5. This is such a classic Erin story! It really made me smile. Thank you for sharing it. Best wishes for the first day of classes!

    Kimberly Reeves

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    1. Kimberly, Thanks for the kind note, and for sending the Bush student my way. It looks like your little tribe is doing very well these days (but even Tiffany is all grown up and in high school this year. . . where does the time go?).

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  6. What a wonderful story, thank you for sharing. I had the pleasure of teaching Davis (8th science@Long) and I think of Erin every time I put one of my lanyards on :) Best wishes for a great school year! ~N.Housley

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    1. Nancy, I can never forget you. You and the whole science team made that year fantastic -- everything from Davis's accurate model of DNA ( even showing the single and double bonds) to the Science Bowl team and just generally getting those kids absolutely ready for high school. Thank you!

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  7. Oh my! Tenth grade!?! I just had this image of her running for her first (of an unprecedented three) terms as student body president this fall. Love that kid!!!

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    1. I'm pretty sure you would be right about that.

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  8. Awesome story. All the best for the start of school.

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    1. Thanks. Has Amelia started back yet. Tell her I wish her all the best as well.

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