Broadway in Orange County
Laguna Playhouse
Home Blog Page 1011

The Baby Bunnies Are Back At Blue Sky Studio

Current Specials
Baby Bunnies

Spring wouldn’t be complete without the Blue Sky’s Baby Bunnies. Their limited debut will be beginning this weekend (March 14-15, 2009). Saturday we will be shooting all day in our home studio. These shoots include baby bunnies in the studio as well as in our outdoor portrait park. We will provide vintage clothing, hats, dresses and other accessories. On Sunday afternoon, the baby bunnies will be traveling to Laguna Niguel Regional Park. From 1:00-6:00 PM we will be shooting in the park. These bunnies grow quickly so don’t hesitate to get your appointment scheduled! We will add additional weekend dates shortly.

Blue Sky’s Home Studio with both indoor and outdoor sets: $89 for a 45 minute shoot (optional clothing will be provided upon request). Portraits will be taken with and without the baby Bunnies.

LDS Singles Groups – WHO Is A MidSingle?

Welcome to the first LDS MidSingles Group of Southern California. With the approval of the Area Presidency, we created a singles group for singles between the ages of 27-42 who are members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. Our activities are held in Long Beach, California & extend to all singles within the greater Los Angeles area and beyond. Frequently, as singles reach the age of 31 and leave the young single adult programs, 30-something singles feel overwhelmed (read "frightened") by the huge age range when they join the "older" singles events. Our activities a safe social haven for those so overwhelmed. As you can tell from our activities, the concept is a huge success as we frequently have a turn out of anywhere between 100-250 fun midsingles. Our events currently include a large-scale activity on the 2nd Saturday of odd months and a fireside on the 2nd Sunday on even months (except Dec.). We also hold FHE every Monday and will add more activities as we grow. Be sure to check out our photo albums here and (NEW!) at http://www.pongyow.com/SoCalMidSingles (where you can see see short videos too) or at http://mingle.snapfish.com (where you can order photos from snapfish). You don't have to be LDS to come to our activities but we ask you to respect our guidelines for all all activities: 1) We kindly ask that your age be within the 27-42 age range. 2) You must be single (divorces must be final). 3) You must be willing to abide by high standards of moral conduct and come in modest dress. 4) No alcohol, no smoking, no illicit drugs, and no profane or vulgar language. 5) You must be willing to have some good, clean fun and make new friends! If you have any questions email info@socalmidsingles.org Hope to see you at our next activitiy!!!! -The SoCalMidSingles Committee P.S.: If you would like to learn more about our church, we invite you to visit www.mormon.org

Corpus Christi Catholic-Christian Community

March 14-15, 2009

The Networking and Employment Transition Support (“NETS”) Group is hosting a meeting for those seeking networking and employment opportunities, and parishioners who are looking for good talent to fill open positions. The mission of the group is to bring together parishioners who have open job positions with those who are looking for employment opportunities. Our next meeting will be held on Tuesday March 24th from 7:30 to 9:30 pm in rooms 3 and 4 and will feature a presentation on our parish networking and employment resources. If you are planning on attending please RSVP by Thursday March 19th by sending an email to networking@forums.belovedsons.org. Also, if your company has job openings that you would like to share with parishioners please attend our meeting. For questions about the Networking and Employment Support group contact Ed
Jordan at ejordan@ketelone.com or 949-389-1715.

“Joining Jesus in His Passion” – A Lenten Day of Reflection Saturday, March 21st, 8:45 am – 2:00 pm Santiago de Compostela Church Parish Hall 21682 Lake Forest Dr., Lake Forest, $10.00 registration fee includes continental breakfast and lunch For information or to register call: Irene Stockton 949-458-9611 or Mary Beth Harman 949-459-7528

JSerra Catholic High School Open House Join us for an Open House & Campus Tour Thursday, March 19 from 6:30-8:00pm In the JSerra Center Room. 26351 Junipero Serra Road • San Juan Capistrano, CA 92675 Phone: (949) 493-9307, option 2 • Fax: (949) 493-9308 Website: www.jserra.org

Please join us for a discussion of The Soloist by Steve Lopez. Be sure to check the author, there’s another book by the same title, but different author. We’ll meet in Room 4, April 6, at 7:00 P.M.

‘Let the Children Come to Me’
Corpus Christi Catholic-Christian Community
presents
The Tenth Annual South Orange County Good Friday Prayer Breakfast
Guest Speakers:
Michael Driscoll:, was 15 when diagnosed with Melanoma that had spread to his lymph nodes. He is now 20 and an English Major at UCI with dreams of Notre Dame.
Sean O’Donoghue: was born with 8 Heart Defects and suffered a paralyzing stroke at 4-months. At age 4 Sean received a new heart and is now, a jr. black belt in Tae Kwan Do & a 5th grader at Serra Catholic School.
Darla DuAmarell – At age 6 a recurring neck pain led to the discovery of a tumor encasing her spinal cord. Given 3 months to live Darla has been in remission for six years and is 5th grader at St. Catherine’s.
Friday, April 10, 2009 7:00 a.m. – 9:30 a.m.
The St. Regis Monarch Beach Resort & Spa, Grand Ballroom
$55.00 per person
RSVP seating for entire tables of 10 (insuring that your entire party will be seated together) may be reserved for an additional $5 per person
Corporate Sponsorships Available: Platinum $2500 Gold $1500 Silver $1000
RSVP by April7, 2009. For more information, please call Jackie Kleinhammes (949-837-4441)

Will you be in High School in 2009-2010?
Might you be interested in gaining and practicing leadership skills here at Corpus Christi?

Corpus Christi’s Youth Leadership Ministry program is a springboard for talented and motivated teens to become leaders and at church, school and beyond. Working as peer leaders and mentors in Corpus Christi’s JAMs and HAVEN ministries, members of the youth leadership team learn the communication, negotiation and planning skills needed to effectively lead and motivate others. They also gain tools to develop self-confidence and grow into strong witnesses for the Catholic faith. High School students, whose families are registered and active within the parish, are admitted to the program based on written applications and personal interviews. Only a limited number of slots are available. Students who are selected will (must) attend a 3-night Youth Leadership Summit in Big Bear from August 18-21. Here they will prepare for leadership and mentor roles in JAMS and/or HAVEN. After that, they meet twice a month to sharpen their leadership skills and socialize with fellow team members. Applications for Youth Leadership are now being accepted and are available on the concierge shelves or by contacting Linda Palomino 290-3424 or palomino6@cox.net. The application deadline is April 1.

‘Catholics’ Best Kept Secret’
Shawn Wehan invites you to join him in a fresh look at the development of Catholic Social teaching from its early beginning with Rerum Novarum (Leo XIII, 1891) through Vatican II (1965), to the recent encyclicals of Pope John Paul II. The course will be offered on Tuesday morning from 6:30 a.m. -7:45 am and repeated on Tuesday evenings from 7 pm -8:15 p.m. The remaining meetings are March 17, 24 & 31.
Please sir, more soup sir….
Again overseen by our Adult Faith Formation coordinator, Mr. Shawn Wehan, you are invited to join with others of our Corpus Christi parish community for a simple soup supper served in the lower hall on Fridays March 20th and 27th with presentations entitled ‘A Call to Service’ and ‘The Night Christ Died’ respectively. The evening of March 27th will be a drama and art presentation by Corpus Christi parishioners. ($5 per person donation to offset cost of supper and presentation supplies is requested.)
FISH (Faith Initiative Starts are HOME) invites you and your children to a wonderful, interactive way to experience the Stations of the Cross on Friday, March 20th (with a rain date of March 27th if necessary) from 6:00 pm to 8:00 pm. Arriving at your leisure (which means any time between 6 and 8) take a self-guided candle-lit walk with your family down the outdoor Stations of the Cross meditation path. A take-home family booklet with a pictorial story of the Passion of Christ will be available. Dress warmly and wear walking shoes. Please note, the path is not accessible for strollers

Our Corpus Christi Music Ministry is THROWING OPEN their doors in search of NEW members. On Wednesday, March 25th, come to the Music Room in the lower level between 6:oo and 7:00 p.m. for information on how YOU can be a part of the Corpus Christi Music Ministry family. They are looking for musicians, non-musicians, vocalists…anyone that wants to help make Corpus Christi music vibrant. For more information or to RSVP please give a call to Jonathan Kim at 297-8515. Thanks.

Hey DADs….POPs is NEXT SATURDAY
What is POPs going to be?
POPs will be an outreach to the men of our Corpus Christi parish community who are dads. DADs, along with their kids, are invited to gather every other month (roughly) to socialize, network and simply share the experience of being dads with each other.
Why is POPs being started?
While our Men’s Fellowship provides a network opportunity for a particular component of our parish, a vastly larger component of men, those who are dad’s, has been left un-served. POPs will hopefully rectify this by providing an opportunity for dads to mingle with other dads in a non-structured way, while their kids benefit from mingling and socializing with each other.
Is this primarily an outreach for men or for kids?
POPs responds to TWO particular expressed needs within our community: creating an opportunity for the DADS of our parish to conveniently gather and ALSO provide an additional opportunity for our kids to be able to enjoy each other’s company while doing things with their dads. While dads are a primary focus of POPs, this won’t work if the kids don’t get behind it. Thus, events will always be things that kids will enjoy doing with their dads…and that dads will enjoy doing with their kids while being around other dads.
If a man does not have kids can he still participate with POPs?
That would be rather awkward and odd. No.
If a man has grown children can he participate with POPs?
The spirit of POPs is oriented toward dads with kids up to 18. Men with grown kids would probably be more comfortable affiliating with other men’s ministries.
What if there is no ‘dad’ in the family, how can my kid participate.
A reminder, this is primarily an outreach to MEN who are dads, along WITH their kids. If there is a regular male figure who is consistently filling the role of a dad in a child’s life, then that man together with the child, can attend. The ‘dad surrogate’ does should, however, be a registered and regular participant within Corpus Christi.
What is the first event?
It will be a breakfast, perhaps pancakes, perhaps something else, on Saturday morning, March 21st at 8 am. Please RSVP to the names below so that sufficient food can be prepared.
Who do I contact for more information?
That would be Dave Bell at davebell@cox.net 362-0494 and/or Rosario Rodriguez at Rosario@MyOCLiving.com 429-7411.
Extra POPs flyers and RSVP breakfast forms are on the concierge shelves.

Corpus Christi DINERS is BACK….and celebrating the return of the Swallows to Orange County THIS Thursday, March 19th with an ALL DAY extravaganza at BJs Restaurant on El Toro Road across from the Laguna Hills Mall. From 11:00 am until midnight, if you bring in the special flyer (available in THIS week’s Bulletin) Corpus Christi’s Building Fund will receive a 15% rebate on all food and beverage (excluding alcohol) purchases! So, round up your co-workers, gather the family, celebrate the Swallow’s (or St. Joseph’s Day if you are not into birds) and head over to BJ’s Restaurant on the 19th.

Pulling ourselves up by our own BOOTSTRAPS….

Over the years you have seen repeat and frequent appeals for financial support for our ever-growing Youth Ministry outreaches and efforts. While some of this may continue (sponsorships for the summer Leadership Summit, etc.) the appeals endeavor to minimize the associated costs of retreats, bus transportation and to help cover a portion of the costs for the teen and adult leadership teams who end up participating with virtually ALL of the outreaches. The parish has always chipped in with subsidies, but with the growth of youth events, this is becoming a significant budgetary item. In an effort to generate a regular ‘flow of money’ for HAVEN and JAMS events, we are pleased to announce the formation of ‘BOOTSTRAPS’, a hospitality outreach that will sell ‘youth prepared food’ after all the Masses on designated weekends, roughly every other month. To be overseen by Mr. Scotty Eisenbart, BOOTSTRAPS will be modeled somewhat on the very successful efforts by our Eagle Scout candidates who have sold food to fund their Eagle Scout projects…generating anywhere from $1500 to $2000+ on a single weekend! Keeping in mind that bus transportation for one retreat at Big Bear costs $1800 for ONE BUS….BOOTSRAPS will provide valuable aid in keeping retreat costs to a minimum. BOOTSRAPS will involve the teens in preparing and selling the food, but is also open to other adults who would like to volunteer and be a part of this new outreach of service directly linked to supporting OUR youth. If you are interested in helping, please give a call to Mr. Scotty Eisenbart at 859-3890. (Please note that the standard Diocesan fingerprinting and Safe Environment training is a pre-requisite for all volunteer involvement.)

‘Feeding Our Family Weekends’
The last weekend of each month will be a food collection opportunity to help our local and Diocesan food banks. Non-perishable food items, NO CLOTHING and NO perishable foods. Bring your canned or other non-perishable food on March 28-29th. Thanks!

ROCKERS RAISE AWARENESS FOR DISPLACED TEENS

ROCK-A-WAY” HOMELESSNESS

ROCKERS RAISE AWARENESS FOR DISPLACED TEENS

NEWPORT BEACH, CALIF.(March 10, 2009)- With more than 1.5 million children, teens and young adults trying to survive on our streets today, national awareness and attention is needed more than ever to address the issue of teenage homelessness. The Rock-A-Thon event is a philanthropic effort to raise consciousness and proceeds to support this effort.

StandUp For Kids, a non-profit organization committed to helping homeless and street kids is teaming up with Our Lady Queen of Angels Youth Ministry, for a Rock-A-Thon. Over thirty teenagers and young adults will be participating in the seventeen-hour rocking marathon starting on Saturday, March 28, at 7:00 p.m. and concluding on Sunday, March 29, at 12:00 p.m. The venue will be Our Lady Queen of Angels, Parish Hall 2046 located at Mar Vista Drive, Newport Beach, CA 92660.

. The Rock-A-Thon will have a tremendous impact on improving awareness of teenage homelessness. Simultaneously, the event will provide an opportunity for the participants to socialize and give them a sense of purpose as they actively support at-risk youth in their community.

This event is the introduction of the Rock-A-Thon into Southern California, after it successfully raised over $30,000 in Michigan in 2008. “Nobody here has ever heard of anything like this,” said Pat Krebs who has been coordinating this entertaining fund raiser in her native state of Michigan. “We are looking forward to launching the event to this new audience.”

Rockers who have signed for the event include students from schools such as; Corona del Mar High School, Our Lady Queen of Angels School (K-8), Mater Dei High School, Sage Hill School, Servite High School, Orange County High School of the Arts and University High School.

“It is vital to continue to devise unique ways to raise awareness of the issue of homelessness,” said Justine Madison. “The Rock-A-Thon, I believe will be an engaging event that will provide a platform to educate young adults on the necessity of making a difference in their community.”

Rockers or volunteers wishing to participate in the Rock-A-Thon on March 28, 2009, should contact Pat Krebs at 949-219-1418 or pkrebs@olqa.org. 100% of the proceeds from this event will benefit StandUp For Kids in their endeavor to help the homeless youth in OrangeCounty. For information about StandUp For Kids visit: http://www.standupforkids.org/local/california/Orange%20County/
###

Local Girl Nikki Stewart Continues To Make AV Proud

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Savannah College of Art and Design’s Nikki Stewart has been selected as The Sun Conference’s Women’s Golf Athlete of the Month.

Stewart, a freshman from Aliso Viejo, Calif., was named to the All-SCAD Spring Invitational Tournament team as she finished in a tie for second place at the tournament that was played at the Wilmington Island Club March 2-3. Stewart tallied rounds of 78 and 79 under cold and blustery conditions to finish in a tie for second place at 157 and helped the Bees finished in third place as a team.

SCAD returns March 16 when they travel to Mesquite, Nev., for the Spring Break Collegiate Tournament.

http://www.scadathletics.com/news/2009/3/10/WGOLF_0310090921.aspx

http://www.fscsports.com/pow.asp?path=wgolf&type=pom&season=2008-09

Seabreeze Management Company Earns Highly Coveted Industry Accreditation

Seabreeze Management Company Earns Highly Coveted Industry Accreditation

Seabreeze joins an elite group of seven community management companies in California also accredited by the Community Associations Institute.

Aliso Viejo, CA – Seabreeze Management Company, Inc. is one of only 140 community management firms in the United States to earn the distinction of being an Accredited Association Management Company (AAMC). This highly coveted accreditation is a tremendous achievement, one that represents an unsurpassed commitment to sound ethical practices, superior account service and continuing education.

“Our AAMC credential is an ideal example of what distinguishes Seabreeze from other community management companies,” shares Lisa Dale, Chief Executive Officer and founder of Seabreeze Management Company, Inc. “We place integrity on a pedestal and are committed to providing our clients with a high standard of professional service.”

One of the requirements for companies that seek the AAMC is a significant commitment to continuing education. At least half of the company’s managers must have earned their credential as a Certified Manager of Community Organizations (CMCA), Association Management Specialist (AMS) or Community Association Manager (PCAM).

“In today’s intensely competitive marketplace, the AAMC is an impressive accomplishment among management companies,” says Susan Larson, President of Seabreeze Management Company, Inc. “It helps to demonstrate our commitment to education and our desire to provide excellent service through educated professionals to our clients.”

To learn more about Seabreeze Management Company, Inc., and their outstanding management practices, please visit www.seabreeze-management.com.

CUSD TRUSTEES VOTE TO TERMINATE SUPERINTENDENT’S CONTRACT

CUSD TRUSTEES VOTE TO TERMINATE SUPERINTENDENT’S CONTRACT

At its Board Meeting on March 9, 2009 the Capistrano Unified School District Trustees voted unanimously to terminate the contract of Superintendent A. Woodrow Carter. Trustees cited a “material breach of contract” led to the decision. Counsel will be preparing a statement consistent with this decision which will be released to the public.

Staff will continue to work with Trustees to assume district responsibilities until such a time that a new Superintendent is appointed.

Lady Wolverine Lacrosse – Soup Plantation Fundraiser March 12

Join Us for a Fun-Raiser Night!!

Benefitting

Lady Wolverine Lacrosse

What’s the Deal?
Souplantation will donate 15% of sales generated by
Lady Wolverine Lacrosse

What to do:
Bring the flyer between 5:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. on March 12, 2009
Purchase a meal and a beverage and enjoy a great meal and help a great organization!!

Where to Do It:
Souplantation only, located at 23870 Aliso Creek Rd. Laguna Niguel
(949) 831-6055

Every great deal has a catch. Here is ours:

Participants must purchase a beverage with their meal in order to receive credit towards organization. Under no circumstances are flyers to be handed out in the restaurant or parking facility. Failure to comply will result in a voided contract. Coupons or discounts will not be honored in conjunction with any approved Fun-Raisers. Must present this flyer at time of purchase.

CUSD News/ – Layoffs

CUSD TRUSTEES APPROVE LAYOFFS

The following statement was read by President Ellen M. Addonizio at the Capistrano Unified School District Board Meeting on March 9, 2009.

The Capistrano Unified School District has been forced to make budgetary cuts over the last few years. This has come with unpleasant consequences. Educational opportunities and support programs considered important have had to be scaled back or eliminated. Sadly, we have been deprived of the funding necessary to continue at our already reduced funding levels.

The California Legislature recently passed a budget which shorts us the funding we desperately need. We are going to have to cut another 25 million dollars from our budget and fear it might even be more. This has placed us in a most unenviable position.

The Board is going to have to cut virtually every program not mandated in law. We will also be entering contract negotiations with the employee bargaining units of this District for the 2009-10 school year. Our ability to restore programs will be determined by what we are able to negotiate in the way of salary and benefits with our employees.

Hopefully, we can negotiate contracts that will result in no employees being laid off and some programs being restored. This will require salary rollbacks since roughly 85 percent of our general fund goes to labor expenses. CUSD personnel didn’t experience salary rollbacks this year like so many in the private sector.

California is in a dire financial situation. Unemployment has passed 10 percent with the income of those working often being substantially reduced. We can’t delude ourselves into thinking we will be immune to the crisis surrounding us.

However, I have every confidence in the parents, students, faculty and staff of this District. We can get through this but it will require everyone’s effort. Many hands make for a light load.

LDS News – Food Storage

Family Home Storage:

“Family Home Storage: A New Message,” Liahona, Mar 2009, 10–14

Check the expiration date on your ideas about home storage. You may need to throw some of them out.

“We can begin ever so modestly,” President Hinckley taught. “We can begin with a one week’s food supply and gradually build it to a month, and then to three months.”1

A New Approach
In the spirit of President Hinckley’s remarks, Church leaders decided to closely reexamine their approach to self-reliance, looking for ways to reinforce the concepts of home storage and financial preparedness. As a result, the Church published the pamphlet All Is Safely Gathered In: Family Home Storage,outlining new guidelines for home preparedness that give Church members a simplified, four-step approach to building their home storage.

They are as follows:

1. Gradually build a small supply of food that is part of your normal, daily diet until it is sufficient for three months.

2. Store drinking water.

3. Establish a financial reserve by setting aside a little money each week, and gradually increase it to a reasonable amount.

4. Once families have achieved the first three objectives, they are counseled to expand their efforts, as circumstances allow, into a supply of long-term basic foods such as grains, legumes, and other staples.

Of the new guidelines, Presiding Bishop H. David Burton says, “Our objective was to establish a simple, inexpensive, and achievable program that would help people become self-reliant. We are confident that by introducing these few, simple steps we can, over time, have more success.”

Guideline 1: Build your three-month supply gradually.
Start small and do the best you can. Begin by purchasing a few extra items to add to your storage each week. Strive to build a one-week supply; then expand it to a one-month supply, then a three-month supply. By building your supply slowly, you can avoid financial strain and start down the path toward self-reliance.

The Lugo family of Valencia, Venezuela, learned that this new approach of starting small and being consistent can pay big dividends. After listening to general conference, Brother Omar Lugo, a Church member in the Falcón Venezuela District, felt inspired to begin his own home storage. He discussed the matter with his family, and they agreed to follow the prophet’s counsel.

They began setting aside food, water, and money, a little at a time. At first the difference was hardly noticeable. But after a while the Lugos found that they had accumulated a substantial reserve. Several months after they began building their home storage, a worker’s strike in Venezuela put many local workers’ jobs in jeopardy. Brother Lugo was among those who eventually lost their jobs.

For a time his family lived on savings. Seven months later the Lugo family was relying exclusively on the food they had stored. It took nearly two years for Brother Lugo to find work again, but his family was able to survive the difficult challenges of unemployment. They had built their reserve gradually, and when adversity struck, they were prepared and the Lord blessed them.

Like the Lugo family, Church members will be blessed for their obedience to the First Presidency’s counsel as they gradually build home storage. “We ask that you be wise as you store food and water and build your savings,” the First Presidency explains. “Do not go to extremes; it is not prudent, for example, to go into debt to establish your food storage all at once.” Rather, they suggest a modest, consistent approach. “With careful planning, you can, over time, establish a home storage supply and a financial reserve.”2

Guideline 2: Store drinking water.
In times of need, having water to drink can be the difference between life and death—or at least between peace and anxiety. Just ask the Kawai family, members of the São Paulo Brazil Stake. They have been storing food and water for 20 years. Although their small apartment doesn’t have much room to spare, the Kawais decided to make home storage a priority.

Sister Kawai tells of one experience when that decision paid off. “I was in the hospital having just given birth when I learned that there was a problem with the city’s water pipes,” Sister Kawai explains. “Hundreds of thousands of people were without water. But I wasn’t concerned about going home. I had peace of mind knowing that my family would have water to drink.”

Guideline 3: Set aside a little money.
From the First Presidency comes this counsel: “We encourage you wherever you may live in the world to prepare for adversity by looking to the condition of your finances. We urge you to be modest in your expenditures. … Save a little money regularly to gradually build a financial reserve.”3

In the April 2007 general conference Bishop Keith B. McMullin, Second Counselor in the Presiding Bishopric, reinforced this principle, exhorting Church members to “save some money, if only a few coins each week. This modest approach will soon enable them to have several months’ reserve.”4

By gradually building a financial reserve, we will be prepared for unforeseen trials and have an added measure of security and peace in our hearts.

Guideline 4: Where possible, gradually establish a longer-term supply.
“For longer-term needs,” explains the All Is Safely Gathered In pamphlet, “gradually build a supply of food that will last a long time and that you can use to stay alive, such as wheat, white rice, and beans.”5

Establishing long-term storage is easier than some might think. Dr. Oscar Pike and his colleagues in the Brigham Young University Department of Nutrition, Dietetics, and Food Science have done several in-depth studies on long-term food storage. They discovered something surprising: properly packaged and stored low-moisture food retains much of its sensory (taste) quality and nutritional value for 20 to 30 or more years after being placed in storage—much longer than previously supposed.

This means Church members can store certain foods long-term without the worry of regularly rotating the food. They can be confident that their supply will be there to keep them alive if they have nothing else to eat.

The Time to Begin Is Now
“Perhaps in the past accumulating a year’s supply of food may have been a little intimidating and even illegal in some places,” says Dennis Lifferth, managing director of Church Welfare Services. “But this new approach asks us to do the best we can, even if all we can do is to set aside a can or two each week. If the prophet asks us to do something, we can find a way to fulfill the commandment and receive the blessings.”

“This new program is within everyone’s grasp,” explains Bishop Burton. “The first step is to begin. The second is to continue. It doesn’t matter how fast we get there so much as that we begin and continue according to our abilities.”

Prophetic Counsel about Home Storage
“Many more people could ride out the storm-tossed waves in their economic lives if they had their … supply of food … and were debt-free. Today we find that many have followed this counsel in reverse: they have at least a year’s supply of debt and are food-free.”

President Thomas S. Monson, “That Noble Gift—Love at Home,” Church News, May 12, 2001, 7.

“Everyone who owns a home recognizes the need for fire insurance. We hope and pray that there will never be a fire. Nevertheless, we pay for insurance to cover such a catastrophe, should it occur. We ought to do the same with reference to family welfare.”

President Gordon B. Hinckley (1910–2008), “To Men of the Priesthood,” Liahona and Ensign, Nov. 2002, 58.

“In the day of plenty, prepare for the day of scarcity.”

First Presidency, “Message of the First Presidency,” in Conference Report, Apr. 1942, 89.

“Learn to sustain yourselves; lay up grain and flour, and save it against a day of scarcity.”

President Brigham Young (1801–77), Discourses of Brigham Young, sel. John A. Widtsoe (1954), 293.

Shelf Life of Long-Term Storage Items
Research shows that these common longer-term food storage items, if they are properly packaged and stored at or below room temperature (75 degrees F; 24 degrees C), remain nutritious and edible much longer than previously thought. Even after long-term storage, these foods can help sustain life in an emergency.

Food

Shelf-Life Estimate in Years,

Wheat – 30+, White Rice – 30+, Corn – 30+, Pinto Beans – 30

Dried Apple Slices – 30, Macaroni – 30, Rolled Oats – 30, Potato Flakes – 30,

Powdered Milk – 20,