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FCTA 剪贴簿

新任董事带领 FCTA 向前发展

尽管凯文·凯利的职位发生了变化,但他仍然从事“人员运输”业务。

前 KenTenn EMS 总监 Kelley 于 2022 年 11 月 21 日星期一正式接任富尔顿县交通管理局执行董事职位。FCTA 董事会在 2022 年 11 月 3 日召开的特别会议上选择 Kelley 担任该职位。

凯利在申请该职位之前辞去了 FCTA 董事会的职务。

FCTA 董事会主席 Mike Gunn 表示:“Kevin Kelley 将成为一位充满激情的领导者,将为 FCTA 带来奉献精神、诚信和沟通。” “他是执行董事职位的不二人选,因为他与社区对未来有着共同的愿景。他仍然准备好努力工作,让我们到达那里。凯文能够识别人才,并且能够成为支持周围人取得成功的领导者。”

冈恩在个人和职业上认识凯利数十年,甚至在富尔顿市消防局护理人员中一起工作。

“在我过去 20 多年与他共事的过程中,凯文并不害怕跳出众所周知的‘框框’来完成工作,”冈恩说。 “他是那种引导组织走向未来而不是让未来引导组织的领导者。”

凯利的近期计划是招募更多人员,以应对 FCTA 最近面临的客流量增长。

凯利补充道:“我希望继续推动富尔顿交通向前发展,并继续以尽可能有效和高效的方式满足我们所服务的社区的交通需求。”

凯利 1987 年毕业于德累斯顿高中 (TN),在田纳西州杰克逊的杰克逊州立社区学院接受了急诊医学培训。他于 1995 年获得了 EMT Basic 证书,于 1996 年获得了 EMT IV 证书,并于 1998 年完成了成为护理人员的课程。

到目前为止,凯利的全部职业生涯都是在紧急服务领域工作。凯利曾在德累斯顿消防局、威克利县救援队和富尔顿市消防局服役。 1996 年至 2003 年,他在威克利县 EMS 工作; 2003 年至 2005 年在亨利县医疗中心工作,2005 年至 2013 年在田纳西州马丁的 Air-Evac Lifeteam 31 工作。

凯利在中断十年后最近回到富尔顿消防局。

除了提供实际护理外,凯利还发挥领导作用,确保双城地区在紧急情况下获得专业护理。 Kelley 于 2013 年至 2017 年担任 Tri-Cities EMS 总监。在 Parkway Regional Hospital 关闭且 CHS 停止向该地区提供救护车服务后,Kelley 帮助建立了 KenTenn EMS 并从 2017 年至今担任该处总监。

2019 年,Kelley 帮助建立了 KenTenn EMS 学院。该计划提供 EMT 和高级 EMT 课程,并将很快举办 RN 到 EMT 课程。未来的计划包括在富尔顿提供护理人员课程。所有这些课程均在 KenTenn EMS 基地教授。自学院成立以来,凯利一直担任该学院的项目总监。

凯利 (Kelley) 就任 FCTA 执行董事的第一天是 11 月 21 日星期一。

加德纳荣获 2022 年 FCTA 最高荣誉

司机主管 Jo Ann Gardiner 被评为富尔顿县交通管理局 2022 年年度最佳员工。

该荣誉由 FCTA 员工通过个人投票选出,传统上是在每年圣诞节前宣布。

从宣布名字时她的表情来看,这个荣誉对加德纳来说是完全意外的。

“当你拿起电话给乔安打电话时,事情就处理好了,”负责计票的 FCTA 助理主任克里斯汀·格鲁姆斯 (Kristin Grooms) 说道。 “她很可靠;你永远可以信赖她。我相信这就是她的同事今年选择乔安的原因。”

加德纳 (Gardiner) 最初在 FCTA 担任司机,今年 10 月庆祝了她在该机构的四周年纪念日。

尽管 Gardiner 是一位团队合作者,对同事非常友善和乐于助人,但她承认 FCTA 所服务的四个县的人们是她每天努力做好工作的真正原因。

“最好的部分是我们的客户,”加德纳说。 “他们让这份工作变得值得。我们这里有一些很棒的同事。另一个好处是在家,这让一切变得不同。

除了获得这一头衔之外,加德纳还获得了一张镶框证书,宣扬她的荣誉,一枚新铸造的 ID 徽章,顶部印有 2022 年度最佳员工,以及同事们送的一些礼物。

FCTA 大使是真正的地区财富

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Darryl Sims 是 FCTA 骑行时间最长的客户。作为 FCTA 大使,Sims 经常代表 FCTA 参加各种活动。

Everybody loves Darrell Sims.

In the four-county area Fulton County Transit Authority serves – Fulton, Hickman, Graves, and Carlisle – there possibly aren’t a handful of other people someone could make that blanket statement about. For Darrell Sims, though, it’s true.

“Darrell knows and loves everyone, and everyone knows and loves Darrell,” said Kenney Etherton, former FCTA Executive Director. “He has been a FCTA client for more than 20 years and is the best FCTA driver trainer on the route he rides. If you are having a bad day, Darrell can change that by just saying good morning to you.”

Etherton thinks Darrell has never had a bad day in his life.

“He has an infectious smile and a kind word for everyone,” Etherton said. “He loves UK basketball and most of the time he is wearing something blue to show support for his UK basketball team and blue for FCTA. Darrell loves his God, his churches, UK Basketball, his job, FCTA, and he LOVED his Mother unconditionally.”

Several years ago, some members of the FCTA staff approached Etherton to do something special for Darrell because of the love for and support he’d offered the agency throughout the years. After much thought, those FCTA staff members decided to bestow upon Darrell the title of FCTA Ambassador.

“The word ambassador describes Darrell to a ‘T.’ He is one of our best supporters and advertisers. Darrell is quick to tell anyone and everyone about FCTA and the good things we do,” Etherton said. “I sometimes think if we could take a page from the life of Darrell Sims, it would say, ‘Just be happy and treat everyone with respect.’ We would have a much better world. I could tell Darrell stories all day long. He is one of the most loving and respectful people I know in the world. He’s never met a stranger and will never forget a name.”

Darrell takes his job as FCTA Ambassador very seriously.

“I like everything about being Ambassador,” Darrell said when asked recently. “I like representing FCTA.”

FCTA began its mission as a “people mover” in the mid-1980s. At 25 years, Darrell holds the record for most continual ridership of any client. Currently, Darrell rides in a FCTA vehicle daily from his home in Clinton to his job at Mayfield’s Food Giant. He celebrated his 28th year of employment there in November. Prior to working at Food Giant, Darrell worked at Smith’s for nine years.

“Guess I’ll probably work forever,” Darrell said, laughing. “You never know.”

Darrell was born in Chicago and moved to Clinton when he was 13 years old.

“I had family here,” Darrell said while explaining why they moved to the Hickman County town. “Clinton is a good place to grow up.”

On February 3, Darrell celebrated his 62nd birthday spectacularly.

“My birthday is the same day as Morgan Fairchild’s birthday,” Darrell said, smiling. For those of you who DON’T recognize her name, she’s a longtime actress from soap operas, TV shows, and movies.

Being FCTA Ambassador does have its perks. Darrell and the late Sam Jones, a longtime driver for FCTA, traveled to Frankfort to represent the agency for Transit Day at the Capitol one year. Darrell also represents FCTA at various public events around the four-county area. During the recent holidays, FCTA staff members kept Darrell busy riding in a Transit van on a five Christmas parade schedule including Mayfield, Arlington, Fulton, Clinton, and Hickman. Each September, Darrell represents FCTA in the Twin Cities’ Banana Festival Parade. In October, he can always be seen waving from a FCTA vehicle participating in the Clinton/Hickman County Halloween Parade.

The FCTA Ambassador is so faithful to go to church, he attends two of them weekly.

“I go to First Baptist on Sunday and the Assembly of God on Wednesday,” Darrell said, smiling broadly.

Following a recent Hickman County Spring Chicken Festival, employees who manned an informational booth for FCTA reported back at work that several people told them Darrell has the people at the churches he attends pray for Transit employees every Sunday or Wednesday.

“They said Darrell even calls most of us by name when he prays for FCTA,” one of the employees recalled. “I don’t think we could have a better Ambassador than one who asks God to bless FCTA and those of us who work here.”

When not working or representing FCTA at events, Darrell said he likes to listen to music, keep up with St. Louis Cardinals baseball, or hang out with friends. Many who know Darrell probably don’t know about one of his many skills. He doesn’t just listen to music, but Darrell apparently has memorized who sang every song he has ever heard. Recently, while hanging out with some of his FCTA friends, they began singing a line or two from songs they knew – including obscure ones from the early 1970s. Every line they would sing, Darrell would answer, “Alright, Tammy Wynette!” or “Alright, Aerosmith!” If two people or groups had recorded the song, Darrell was quick to educate those singing the lyrics for him about that fact as well.

Almost daily, Darrell will call the FCTA Dispatch Office on his ride home from work to check in and ask how everyone at Transit is doing. Often Darrell has heard about an illness, a death in a family, or something that has happened to one of the FCTA employees. He never fails to ask about those situations first.
“When he calls in you obviously know who he is because he has that cheery disposition,” said FCTA Dispatch/Scheduling Supervisor Christy Snow. “Darrell asks about everyone, and he always leaves us a good word for the end of the day. Darrell always tells us to tell everyone to have a good day and a good evening and that he is ready for the next day for us to pick him up.”

FCTA Operations Manager Rachel Cook considers Darrell unique and an integral part of the FCTA canvas.

“Darrell Sims is one of a kind,” Cook explained. “His personality is big and his love for life is bigger. He knows how to make anyone’s day. I remember the first day I met him, he gave me a big hug and welcomed me to the FCTA family. Since that day, Darrell has been such a positive staple in my career.”

According to Cook, Darrell can remember anything and everything.

“Darrell never forgets a face or a birthday,” Cook explained. “His birthday call each year is one I look forward to. I am so thankful that I have had the privilege to know and spend time with Darrell.”

Cook is not the only employee impacted by knowing Darrell.

“Darrell means a lot to all of our employees, and we mean a lot to him,” Cook said. “He had a very special relationship with Sam Jones and Charles Cavaness, two FCTA Drivers who have passed away. Every time I get to sit down and chat with Darrell, he reminds me how much he misses them both and how they were his family. We are his family and Darrell is ours. I couldn’t imagine a better person to represent us.”

团体为龙卷风地区带来食物和资金

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营销总监 Kim Jobe 拍摄的照片

项目参与者 - 富尔顿县交通局最近为受 2021 年 12 月 10 日龙卷风影响的人们提供了送餐服务。 1 月 28 日,由 Barbecue、Southern Boyz Outdoors、历史频道“沼泽人民”的布鲁斯·米切尔和罗尼·亚当斯、路易斯安那州奥尔巴尼市消防队长和警察局长以及来自路易斯安那州哈蒙德地区的其他志愿者联合在富尔顿准备餐食。 30.该团体由富尔顿第一联合卫理公会教堂主办,许多富尔顿和南富尔顿地区的居民也加入了该小组,帮助做饭和装盘子。该团体的目标是分享爱、希望和食物。到周日,整个团队已经准备并送出了3121份餐食。周五,一名 FCTA 司机向梅菲尔德地区的执法人员和急救人员送午餐,另外两名司机则向凯西和克林顿送餐。周六(1 月 29 日)中午前不久,来自路易斯安那州的几名成员登上了一辆载有 600 份餐食的 FCTA 巴士,前往梅菲尔德-格雷夫斯县集市。这群人包括米切尔、亚当斯、奥尔巴尼警察局长博伊德·怀尔德和南方博伊兹户外公司的老板金尼恩·班克斯顿。前往梅菲尔德的人们花了一个多小时拜访了展会现场的人们,其中包括受龙卷风影响的人们以及当天在展会现场工作的志愿者。 “沼泽人”和 Southern Boyz Outdoors 的粉丝与米切尔、亚当斯和班克斯顿拍了很多照片。然后,该小组前往梅菲尔德市中心,亲眼目睹了他们在电视新闻广播和其他地区看到的破坏情况。米切尔、亚当斯和班克斯顿在市中心散步,在各自的 Facebook 页面上直播,向粉丝展示那里的破坏情况,并鼓励他们考虑帮助该地区的居民。公交司机在市中心停了几站,让乘客下车并与附近的人交谈。在一站期间,该小组拜访了一些自 12 月 10 日后几天以来一直在向人们提供食物和其他物品的个人。在重新登上 FCTA 巴士之前,该小组向志愿者赠送了几张沃尔玛礼品卡,以送给一些那些路过并似乎需要真正的金钱祝福的人。这些礼品卡是由路易斯安那州奥尔巴尼地区的学生提供的,他们在学校筹集资金,将礼品卡寄给肯塔基州和田纳西州的风暴受害者。学生们筹集了大约4,000美元。 FCTA 员工在整个周末帮助装货和送餐,其中包括执行董事 Kenney Etherton;营销总监 Kim Jobe;和车手通达·凯西;肖恩·德斯特拉蒂斯;珍妮·埃文斯、阿尔梅塔·约翰逊;金·鲁斯特;和戈尔迪·泰勒。更多活动照片可在本网站的相册页面查看。

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BGCAP 司机 Rebecca Hafley(左)和 RTEC 司机 Michael Dixon(上)是梅菲尔德/格雷夫斯县地区免费救援乘车活动的参与者之一。

英联邦“骑兵”帮助 FCTA 的龙卷风救援计划继续进行

By Kim Jobe

Fulton County Transit Authority Marketing Director

Just like in the old TV Westerns, Fulton County Transit Authority put out a call for help and the “Transit cavalry” showed up.

On December 17, a week after a tornado tore through portions of Western Kentucky, FCTA Executive Director Kenney Etherton sent out a call to members of the Kentucky Public Transit Association for assistance – in the form of 10 vehicles and 10 drivers - to help with relief efforts in Cayce and Mayfield/Graves County.  

KPTA answered quickly and largely.

Later that day, the FCTA Leadership Team put together a plan of action for the tornado relief transportation utilizing FCTA personnel and the visiting drivers from across the Commonwealth. That weekend, drivers from Paducah Area Transit System (PATS), Murray-Calloway Transit Agency, Audubon Area Community Services, Inc., and Pennyrile Allied Community Services Organization, Inc. arrived in Mayfield to work.

Under the leadership of FCTA Operations Manager Rachel Cook and FCTA Driver Supervisor Frank Glisson, the volunteer drivers transported those displaced residents from local hotels and shelters to seek assistance from state and governmental agencies as well as food and supplies from donation sites around the area on Saturday and Sunday. Some of the drivers transported those assigned to the area Kentucky State Parks, with what belongings they had gathered up, to their temporary shelter. 

Sunday evening, three vehicles and three drivers from Bluegrass Community Action Partnership, Inc. arrived in Fulton to go to work in the Mayfield area Monday morning. Throughout the week before Christmas and the next week, drivers from Federated Transportation Service of the Bluegrass (FTSB), Rural Transit Enterprises Coordinated, Inc. (RTEC), Frankfort Transit System, and Transit Authority of River City (TARC) also arrived ready to do what they do best – moving people from place to place.

Transit Authority of River City (TARC) also brought a Louisville city bus loaded with supplies and employees to the area to help make certain water, baby formula, diapers, and other items were available for those needing them.

When asked, many of the drivers said they really didn’t know what to expect from their assignment.

“I took a guy over to his apartment building near downtown Mayfield,” said Rebecca Hafley, a driver from Bluegrass Community Action Partnership, Inc. in Frankfort. “He had lived on the third floor. The whole upstairs was gone.”

The man, Hafley said, told her that he heard a tornado was headed their way and attempted to get his neighbors to evacuate to the building’s basement with him. One refused, Hafley recalled the man saying, and was found later under a fallen wall where she perished.

“You can see his belongings and his clothes still hanging in the closet there,” Hafley said, pointing to the apartment building and the area where the man had once resided.

Driving through a neighborhood near downtown Mayfield where cleanup had yet to begin, Hafley said the devastation was amazing and weighed somewhat heavily on her emotions.

“I’ve been through downtown way too many times,” the driver added. “It’s very sad.”

Hafley also said seeing the Mayfield/Graves County area in person gives you a better perspective of the power of the storm than seeing it on TV.

“You’re more desensitized sitting at home,” Hafley explained.

Driving a woman from a church in Mayfield to a hotel in Paducah, Hafley said the woman began sharing about her experience during the tornado.

“She said during the storm she fell on her knees and began praying, ‘Lord, Jesus, save me!’,” Hafley recalled. “And he did.”

Hafley also recalled transporting a woman who was at home in a Mayfield housing project prior to the storm.

“She said her apartment is the only thing still upright there,” Hafley said. “She opened the front window and a back window and locked her and her doggie in the bathroom. She believes that saved them.”

The kindness and goodness of humanity made a real mark on the BGCAP driver while in the Mayfield/Graves County area.

“People from everywhere have come to Mayfield and are making a difference,” Hafley said. “I took some people to Mayfield High School. When we pulled up, some volunteers asked one man how many children he had. When he told them two, they gave him two gift cards with $500 each on them – one for each child – and age-appropriate toys for the children as well.”

Given the widespread damage and the amount of people forced from their homes because of the tornado, Hafley thought she would be busier.

“We have transported quite a few people, though,” she added.

Her last day spent volunteering in the area had Hafley driving to and from Mayfield and two of the state parks housing area residents which did keep her from being idle too much.

Hafley admitted the only thing she didn’t know what to expect about the area was what was available and what wasn’t for herself, her husband – who is also a BGCAP driver – and their coworker.

“I was worried about what would be available to eat,” Hafley admitted. “So, we went to the store and got Pop Tarts, honey buns, dry cereal, instant oatmeal, peanut butter and crackers – “snacky” stuff we could eat on if we had to. But we really haven’t needed it.”

Michael Dixon, Operations Manager for Rural Transit Enterprises Coordinated, Inc. (RTEC) in Mount Vernon was another driver who was impacted by his time spent helping those who were displaced by the December 10 storm.

“I had a few thoughts in my head on what the City of Mayfield would look like once we got there,” Dixon said. “It’s safe to say the pictures and media didn’t do it justice on what it looks like in person. I was overwhelmed.”

The destruction of all the buildings and houses are a memory that Dixon said would always be with him.

“One of the ladies I took to the high school to get supplies, she and her daughter were in the candle factory that night. She said she was on top of her daughter covering her up and they were trapped for five hours,” Dixon recalled. “They were unhurt, but their friend was five feet from them, and she passed away. That’s sad.”

A veteran of the United States Navy, Dixon said he has joined in relief work oversees in other countries.

“This was by far the worst destruction I have been a part of,” Dixon said. “Hopefully they will be able to build back this beautiful town soon.”

Other volunteer drivers may not have openly shared their experiences with the tornado relief, but many left visibly changed from their time spent in Mayfield/Graves County. One driver left Mayfield in tears as she was heading towards home. Several others told Glisson, their FCTA guide in the area, that the time spent driving those residents displaced by the storm gave them a more heartwarming and profound definition of the “spirit of giving” during the holiday season.

FCTA drivers were not absent during the early part of the tornado relief in the storm damaged areas. Several spent their workday staged near First Baptist Church in Cayce assisting those in need of transportation or ready to move volunteers from one place to another. Other FCTA drivers spent time between their medical or other calls shuttling displaced residents from sites to receive federal, state, or local assistance to churches and other areas to get supplies or a hot meal. Much of the time the drivers were someone to listen as survivors recalled their personal stories of December 10 and how the storm affected them.

“This really helped put a purpose to why we exist,” FCTA Executive Director Kenney Etherton said. “It’s about helping people and providing for their needs no matter the situation. We are more than taking people to the grocery store or to medical visits. Helping people in disasters is part of our mission as well.”

The agency leader has had a mantra of sorts during his years of service to the community.

“I have said many times when I lay my head on the pillow at night that I know we helped people that day,” Etherton said. “We proudly serve four counties. We are a part of every community we serve. We are there for them no matter what even in the day-to-day transportation.”

Etherton knows FCTA is fortunate that the foresight was there 35 years ago when it was established.

“We are an asset to these four counties,” Etherton added “We are truly going and coming your way, no matter what the way is.”

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FCTA 执行董事 Kenney Etherton、运营经理 Rachel Cook 和司机主管 Frank Glisson 帮助 River City 交通局员工将他们在路易斯维尔收集的捐款捐给地区龙卷风受害者。该组织通过一辆城市巴士运送了价值约 7,500 美元的物资。

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交通机构通过城市公交车运送物资

最近,该地区的居民以为自己看到了一辆大型灰色城市公交车在 69 号州际公路和普切斯大道上行驶,但他们并没有看到错觉。这确实是一辆城市公交车。

河城交通局 (TARC) 派出了一辆较新的巴士从路易斯维尔前往肯塔基州西部。巴士上的标志表明该车正在执行龙卷风救援任务。车上有该机构的员工和大量物资,包括瓶装水、尿布、婴儿配方奶粉、牙刷、牙膏以及梅菲尔德和格雷夫斯县居民的其他必需品。

富尔顿县交通管理局执行董事肯尼·埃瑟顿 (Kenney Etherton) 表示:“我们非常感谢大家收集物资。” “这表明,联邦各行各业都在其他肯塔基州有需要的地方聚集在一起。”

运营经理 Rachel Cook 和营销总监 Kim Jobe 驾驶 FCTA 车辆,带领 TARC 巴士前往梅菲尔德/格雷夫斯县集市。 FCTA 司机主管弗兰克·格里森 (Frank Glisson) 在展览会场会见了该小组,协助运送物品。两家机构的员工与“内场”的志愿者一起,帮助将捐款放在木托盘上,以便根据需要分发到区域内的站点以供领取。

这并不是第一个向 12 月 10 日龙卷风受损地区提供援助的交通机构。

“我们有代理机构为我们提供司机和车辆,”埃瑟顿解释道。 “过去两周,我们已经为富尔顿县和格雷夫斯县的流离失所居民提供了 300 多次志愿司机乘车服务。如果没有我们合作伙伴机构的帮助,我们将无法提供目前所需的服务。”

FCTA 领导人非常感谢那些提供帮助的人。

埃瑟顿说:“感谢是对我们所获得的帮助的简短表达。” “12 月 10 日龙卷风袭击梅菲尔德/格雷夫斯县地区时,我们北九街办公室的车队损失了 11 辆车。这就是为什么我们的合作伙伴的帮助如此受到重视。总体支持有时在情感上几乎是压倒性的,这证明人类仍然有很多善良,邻里之间互相帮助。”

 

优秀员工 - 肯尼·帕特森 (Kenny Patterson) 被评为富尔顿县交通管理局 2021 年度最佳员工。该年度荣誉由 FCTA 员工通过无记名投票选出。 Patterson 是克林顿的居民,担任 FCTA 机械师已经五年了。 “Kenny 是我们维护团队的重要成员,”FCTA 执行董事 Kenney Etherton 说道。图中(从左到右)是帕特森和埃瑟顿。

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