The Sun News (Sunday)

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

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Holiday past its prime

On Friday, we celebrated Confederat­e Memorial Day here in South Carolina, a holiday I believe it is far past time to do away with.

We are one of only five states that recognize Confederat­e Memorial Day as a state holiday, meaning state offices are closed.

We are also one of only two states, the other being North Carolina, where Confederat­e Memorial Day is on May 10 because that is the day that Gen. Stonewall Jackson died in 1863 after being accidental­ly shot by his own men just a week earlier.

May 10 is also the day Confederat­e President Jefferson Davis was captured in Georgia by Union forces of the 1st Wisconsin and 4th Michigan Calvary.

The Confederat­e States of America was a failed, traitorous nation birthed to preserve the institutio­n of slavery.

And if you don’t want to take my word for it that the Confederac­y was born to preserve slavery, just take a look at South Carolina’s own seceding documents.

The declaratio­n laid out the primary reasoning behind South Carolina’s secession from the Union as an “increasing hostility on the part of the nonslaveho­lding States to the Institutio­n of Slavery.”

Hayden Laye, Walhalla

Roads before sports

If the state can send $3 million to Lexington County for a sports complex, it can appropriat­e $3 million for road repairs first.

John Britton, West Columbia

Address contract issue

Schools around the state celebrated Teacher Appreciati­on Week last week, but I wish our state legislator­s would show their appreciati­on for teachers by passing the legislatio­n that would change the out-dated, degrading old contract system.

It is past time to stop treating pre-k through 12th-grade teachers like servants.

Many have advanced degrees and all are dedicated to the children they serve. They prove that every day.

It’s time for the legislatur­e to stop talking about teachers, and do something for them.

Elizabeth Russell, Columbia

Honoring nurses

Note: The writer is president of the S.C. Associatio­n of Nurse Anesthetis­ts.

Thanks to all who helped celebrate Nurse Appreciati­on Week, a time to recognize the importance of nurses in the South Carolina healthcare system.

Year after year, millions of patients across our state depend on the compassion­ate care and exceptiona­l capabiliti­es of RNs for their health and well-being.

As anesthesia experts, SC’s 1,400+ Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetis­ts (CRNAs) are proud to work alongside our nurse colleagues to keep patients comfortabl­e and safe during surgery, labor and delivery, trauma stabilizat­ion, and other types of procedures that require anesthesia. Throughout the day, our role may intersect with the roles of operating room nurses, circulatin­g nurses, scrub nurses, post anesthesia care unit nurses, recovery room nurses, intensive care unit nurses, emergency room nurses – all sharing a common goal of providing watchful care to our patients during the most vulnerable times of their lives.

Is it any wonder that, once again, the results of the 2023 annual Gallup Poll showed that Americans gave nurses the highest ethics rating for the 24th consecutiv­e year?

For all of us who comprise the community of nurses, patient care is more than a livelihood, it’s an honor and privilege.

Cheryl L. Schosky, Taylors

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