[blparent] Making a Case for Parenting Classes

Peggy pshald at neb.rr.com
Fri Feb 24 02:17:28 UTC 2012


I don't know if any parenting classes can help some of these people though, 
some people are just sick people, forcing her to run three hours, common 
sense should tell a person that that's not right.  Or the recent stories 
about duct taping children to walls or furniture and such.  I agree, that 
with new scared mothers, parenting classes would be helpful, however, with 
some of these people no matter how many parent classes they take if they 
lack common sense or a heart for the love and care of a child, then they 
will not be helped.



-----Original Message----- 
From: Jo Elizabeth Pinto
Sent: Thursday, February 23, 2012 5:36 PM
To: NFBnet Blind Parents Mailing List
Subject: [blparent] Making a Case for Parenting Classes

I just saw this article and was thinking about the parenting classes that 
had come up in our discussion.



ATTALLA, Ala. (AP) - Roger Simpson said he looked down the road and saw a 
little girl running outside her home but didn't give it another thought. 
Police, however, said the man witnessed a murder in progress.
Authorities say 9-year-old Savannah Hardin died after being forced to run 
for three hours as punishment for having lied to her grandmother about 
eating candy bars. Severely dehydrated, the girl had a seizure and died days 
later. Now, her grandmother and stepmother who police say meted out the 
punishment were taken to jail Wednesday and face murder charges.

Witnesses told deputies Savannah was told to run and not allowed to stop for 
three hours on Friday, an Etowah County Sheriff's Office spokeswoman said. 
The girl's stepmother, 27-year-old Jessica Mae Hardin, called police at 6:45 
p.m., telling them Savannah was having a seizure and was unresponsive.

Simpson said he saw a little girl running at around 4 p.m., but didn't see 
anybody chasing or coercing her.

"I saw her running down there, that's what I told the detectives," Simpson 
said from his home on a hill overlooking the Hardins. "But I don't see how 
that would kill her."

Authorities are still trying to determine whether Savannah was forced to run 
by physical coercion or by verbal commands. Deputies were told the girl was 
made to run after lying to her grandmother, 46-year-old Joyce Hardin 
Garrard, about having eaten the candy, sheriff's office spokeswoman Natalie 
Barton said.

Savannah Hardin died Monday at Children's Hospital in Birmingham, according 
to a news release from the sheriff's office. The sheriff's release said an 
autopsy report showed the girl was extremely dehydrated and had a very low 
sodium level. A state pathologist ruled it a homicide.

The sheriff's office received calls from concerned citizens who witnessed 
the girl running. No other details were released, but an official with the 
local volunteer fire department said rescuers thought something seemed odd 
when they responded to a call about the child.

"One of the ones who were down there said he didn't feel like everything was 
right," said Ruby Ward, vice president of the Mountainboro Volunteer Fire 
Department.

Gail Denny and her husband Phil, live just up a dirt road from the home. 
They've known the family since they moved to the area in northeastern 
Alabama seven years ago.

The couple said they were used to seeing Savannah and other neighborhood 
children out waiting on the school bus in the morning. Gail Denny said her 
grandson had a crush on Savannah.

"My grandson asked her to be his girlfriend on Valentine's Day, and she said 
'yes,'" she said before dissolving into tears. She left a candle and stuffed 
animal outside the girl's home Wednesday night, saying a prayer as she 
paused beside the road.

The trailer where Savannah lived was surrounded by a wooden fence, 
playground equipment and toys. Neighbors say they never saw children playing 
in the yard.

They told The Associated Press that Garrard owned a lot of property along 
the road and much of her family lived in homes on that property.

"It seems like a very happy extended family around here," Denny said. "There 
are mothers, grandmothers, kids. It sounds like a punishment that got out of 
hand."

Garrard and Jessica Mae Hardin are being held in the Etowah County Detention 
Center, each on a $500,000 cash bond.

Court records show that Robert Hardin filed for divorce in August of 2010. 
In his complaint, he asserted his wife was bi-polar and had alcoholic 
tendencies. He accused her previously of having run off with the couple's 
own child. In her response, Jessica denied all of Robert's allegations.

Five months after filing for divorce, the two asked a judge to dismiss their 
case.

Savannah Hardin was a third-grader at Carlisle Elementary School. 
Superintendent Alan Cosby said her desk had been turned into a makeshift 
memorial where her classmates could leave notes and mementos. He said 
counselors and social workers were made available for students.

"This is obviously a very tragic, devastating, heartbreaking situation," 
Cosby said. "Nothing like this has ever happened before."


Jo Elizabeth

"How far you go in life depends on you being tender with the young, 
compassionate with the aged, sympathetic with the striving, and tolerant of 
the weak and the strong.  Because someday in life you will have been all of 
these."--George Washington Carver, 1864-1943, American scientist
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