Connecticut
#ff @chcconnecticut #gkas #chc #fqhc #hcsm #hcr
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 02/04/2011 - 07:05Okay. I got up early to head off on a big adventure today, only to get hit by a few snags, so I’m running behind schedule. So, this will be a quick Follow Friday post, pretty much just hashtags.
#ff is, of course, Follow Friday. Every Friday I try to write a blog post about things to follow on Twitter. Usually, it is people, or maybe organizations. Today, I’m following some hashtags. A hashtag is a convenient way of marking a tweet so that people can find the messages. It starts with a hashmark (#). Since I use TwitterFeed, the headline of my post and a link to it will show up in Twitter a little later.
My big adventure today is for Give Kids A Smile Day. This is National Children’s Dental Health Month. During this month is Give Kids A Smile day, when many dentists and health centers provide free dental work to children without insurance.
Community Health Center, Inc. (@CHCConnecticut) here in Connecticut is participating. I am their social media manager and I’ll spend a bit of the day traveling to different locations to help and to gather stories. Note: what I am writing here in my Follow Friday post is my personal thoughts and not anything official from CHC.
CHC is as #chc and a #fqhc. That is, a community health center and a Federally qualified health center. These are two other hashtags worth following.
Finally, I’ll mention #hcsm, Health Care Social Media. Yup. That’s essentially a hashtag that sums up my job. It covers a wide array of topics. Much of #hcsm seems to be on a more corporate, hospital, medical device, etc. bent. I’m enjoy writing about an important, and too often over looked aspect of health care. This leads me to my final hashtag, #hcr, or Health Care Reform. There are a lot of people still fighting over health care reform. Some are defending the Affordable Care Act. Others are attacking it. We need to move past all of this and focus on meaningful health care reform. #CHCs are an important part of this and I’m glad to be part of working for real improvements in our country’s health care.
“Fire and Ice”
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Thu, 02/03/2011 - 08:35Some say the world will end in fire,
Some say in ice.
The words of Robert Frost come to mind this morning as I sit down to confront my day. Yesterday, I had parked at the end of my driveway, and although the storm was raging, I managed to safely drive to work. The roads weren’t that bad and there were very few people on the road. When I got to the office, there were very few people there as well.
At ten, I had a conference call and was on the phone for the next hour or so. During the call, I started getting emails, about a roof falling in. A building about a block and a half away from where I was working collapsed under the weight of the ice. I stopped by and spoke with the only other person that had made it into the top two floors of the building I worked in. He said that he felt our building shake about that time and wondered what was going on. I had missed that. I guess I was too engrossed in my conference call.
Soon the road was blocked off and there were all kinds of vehicles dealing with the collapse. Surrounding buildings were evacuated and the cleanup began.
I had to take a detour on my way home, circumventing the area around the collapse, but the drive home was uneventful. My wife had called and talked about how icy everything was and wondering if I would even be able to walk up our driveway.
The entrance to our driveway is fairly wide as it lets out onto a state highway. When the driveway has been bad, I’ve parked at the end of the driveway in order to be able to get in and out easily. Beyond the wide entrance, there is a section of steep hill. This part is shared by four houses. It is often icy and difficult to traverse. I had thought that this is what Kim was concerned about. Yet when I got into our driveway, I saw that the hill was mostly dry pavement and I drove up the hill without a problem.
At the top of the hill, our driveway turns off to the right. It was still snow covered, but the snow didn’t look very deep except for one little pile that I managed to get past. What I didn’t realize, until I tried to turn around, was that although it was shallow, it was almost nothing but ice. So, now my car is safely in the driveway with no way of backing out.
We’ve been trying to get in touch with our landlord as well as the plow guys in hopes that we can get our driveway properly plowed out so that Kim and I will be able to get out of the driveway. Until then, Kim and I have no way to get to our offices.
Fortunately, Fiona spent the storm and her grandparents house. We have a delayed opening for school, and they should be able to get her to school.
Meanwhile, I’ve been reading various reports of other buildings that have collapsed under the weight of the ice. There have been quite a few in Connecticut.
To return to the words of Robert Frost,
...for destruction ice
Is also great
Be safe, everyone.
Wordless Wednesday
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 02/02/2011 - 11:57Wordless Wednesday
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 01/19/2011 - 07:32Wordless Wednesday, Almost
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 01/12/2011 - 06:42It is snowing HARD here in Connecticut. 5 AM estimates are that we've gotten about 12 inches of snow already with the possibility of twice that by the time the storm ends. Governor Malloy has signed a Declaration of Civil Preparedness Emergency, ordering all non-essential state employees to report to work no earlier than noon. I've gotten a phone call letting me know that Fiona's school is closed. Yesterday at work, I received an email saying that even CHC, which almost never has a delay won't open until 9:45, and given the Governor's order even that might change. I plan on working from home as long as possible today, and perhaps turning on SnowCam or at least uploading some pictures later today.
So, that’s today’s weather here in Connecticut. We need to keep in mind, however, that we are not the only ones getting extreme weather. For today’s Wordless Wednesday, I share this video I found on Youtube of the Toowoomba flooding in Australia. It left me wordless.