When I read the story – a story I'd anticipated because it was going
to be about the community I love and lead – not only was I concerned
about the perception McEvers drew, but I was saddened for all of us
who call Lincoln home, whether we live here now or once did.
Kelly returned to Lincoln in September for a week after having
served several years as one of the Middle East correspondents for
NPR. She interviewed a lot of people in Lincoln. She spent an hour
with me and an hour with Chamber of Commerce Executive Director Andi
Hake.
In her story, though, Kelly used two comments from her school
friends and an incident that occurred when she was on a ride-along
with the police chief to describe what she felt "had happened" to
her hometown. The result was Lincoln came out looking like, well, "a
bunch of paranoid drug addicts."
She got applause for her efforts from some, but to a lot of us
the word that came to mind was unfair. Do we have problems? Yes. Are
they serious? Yes. Are drugs on that list of problems? Yes. Are more
and better job opportunities on that list? Yes. While I'm proudly
protective of this place I and my children call home, I am fully
aware Lincoln has struggles.
But we're so much more than a list of our problems. To ignore
that is to ignore the true story of Lincoln and of small towns in
the Midwest.
We're not defined by a commentary run on NPR, and we're not
defined by what is in the news. Lincoln is us. We are 14,500
stories. We're people living and working, businesses producing,
organizations serving, and all us trying to get along and improve.
We are Lincoln.
We are the people who go to church on Sunday morning. We are the
kids who go to school on Monday. We are the single moms who work
hard but still make it to school activities on Tuesday evening. We
are the senior citizens who go to IGA for discounts on Wednesday. We
are the exhausted home health care providers who take care of
clients on Thursday. We are the workers who enjoy a beer after
making it to another Friday evening. We are the neighbors who go to
a benefit pancake breakfast Saturday morning, visit family in the
nursing home that afternoon and enjoy a meal at Bonanza at the close
of another week. We are Lincoln.
We're the classmates of Kelly McEvers who are still in Lincoln
and who work every single day to make a difference. Classmates like
Dolan Dalpoas, the CEO of one of the top 100 critical-access
hospitals in the United States, Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital,
and city Aldermen Tom O'Donohue and David Wilmert.
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We're Lincoln natives who went away for a time, but who came back
to make opportunities, not only for ourselves but for others.
Lincoln natives like Patrick Doolin, founder and CEO of Integrity
Data, a top-tier partner of Microsoft, and David Lanterman, owner of
Beans & Such and Lincoln Theater 4 and renovator of the "twin
sisters" houses and the former Oasis building
We are doctors and educators who grew up in Lincoln, but who came
back because their passion is to serve here. People like Dr. Paul
Kasa, Dr. Don Sielaff, Dr. Todd Nobbe, Paul Beaver, Laura Schonauer,
Andy McDonald and Amy Neece.
We are Lincoln.
We're the people who moved to Lincoln, who adopted it as their
own hometown, and whose passion is to help. People like Ellen
Burbage, who was a native of West Virginia, but who now proudly
calls Lincoln her home, works at Community Action and is recognized
as a community leader volunteering with the Humane Society, Crime
Stoppers and the Oasis.
We are the organizations and events that raise hundreds of
thousands of dollars to help other people. To only name a fraction,
we're Germanfest, the Harvest of Talents, the Kiwanis spaghetti
dinner, the Zonta turkey dinner, the Methodist Men's pancake
breakfast, the Rotary citrus sale, the Logan County Food Pantry, the
Marine Corps League Toys for Tots, and the Carroll Catholic
Christmas bazaar.
We are Lincoln.
We are people who care and who show it. We are Together for
Lincoln and the hundreds of projects that we've completed over six
years. We are the Guzzardos who give away 400 meals every
Thanksgiving. We are the friends who organize prayer vigils in
parks. We are the poker runs and the benefits. We are the food
drives and the Logan County Food Pantry. We are the Girl Scouts, the
Boy Scouts and the Cub Scouts. We are friends and family members who
walk alongside those entangled in addiction. We are neighbors who
cut grass and rake leaves for widows.
We are Lincoln Railer basketball games in the winter. We are red
tulips in the spring. We are garage sales in the summer. We are
races on Friday night and concerts in the park on Sunday night. We
are the 4th of July water fight between the kids and the fire
department. We are the Art & Balloon Festival. We are the Route 66
Shootout soccer tournament.
And I've only scratched the surface. Have you got something
you're passionate or proud about in Lincoln? Share your "We are
Lincoln" story with me, so we can continue to define our community:
proactively, positively and accurately.
We are Lincoln.
[By KEITH
SNYDER, Lincoln mayor]
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