Author of the article: Tom Morrison
Publishing date: Dec 15, 2020  â¢Â December 15, 2020  â¢Â 3 minute read  â¢Â The 100+ Men Who Care Chatham-Kent presented a $8,600 cheque to TJ Stables for its Acceptional Riders therapeutic riding program on Dec. 11. Shown standing here, from left to right, are Jon Eenink, David Dawson, Chatham-Kent Mayor Darrin Canniff, Chris Summerfield, Ed Carney, Chris Appleton, TJ Stables owner Terry Jenkins, Dane Appleton and Daryn Trainor. On the horses are Margaret, left, and Trevon. (Handout/Postmedia Network)
Article content
Faced with some financial challenges this year, the owners of TJ Stables have received another donation â this time from 100+ Men Who Care Chatham-Kent â to help out the Acceptional Riders program.
Author of the article: Tom Morrison
Publishing date: Dec 15, 2020  â¢Â December 15, 2020  â¢Â 3 minute read  â¢Â The 100+ Men Who Care Chatham-Kent presented a $8,600 cheque to TJ Stables for its Acceptional Riders therapeutic riding program on Dec. 11. Shown standing here, from left to right, are Jon Eenink, David Dawson, Chatham-Kent Mayor Darrin Canniff, Chris Summerfield, Ed Carney, Chris Appleton, TJ Stables owner Terry Jenkins, Dane Appleton and Daryn Trainor. On the horses are Margaret, left, and Trevon. (Handout/Postmedia Network)
Article content
Faced with some financial challenges this year, the owners of TJ Stables have received another donation â this time from 100+ Men Who Care Chatham-Kent â to help out the Acceptional Riders program.
One in an occasional series about Philadelphia’s unchecked gun violence. Every trip outside the house for Jackee Nichols brings a new reminder of the pain. Nichols is from a part of South Philadelphia that has been embroiled in a shooting conflict for as long as anyone can remember. In October 2018, that violence claimed her 15-year-old grandson. Police believe he was gunned down for living on the wrong block but, like most shootings in Philadelphia, no one has been charged in the crime. Now Nichols faces the daily torment of living among the people she suspects killed her grandson, Rasul Benson, leaving trauma to resurface in unexpected moments.