280 Living November 2014

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280 Living

November 2014 | Volume 8 | Issue 3

DISCOVER THE MANY REASONS HOMEOWNERS ARE GIVING THANKS THIS holiday season. AV

Proudly keeping homes cleaner and healthier since 1987

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neighborly news & entertainment

Singing sensation

www.MAIDS.com

Referred for a reason.

‘Express’ 280

In this issue, read about the singer from Spain Park High School. Jessie Pitts joined Team Gwen on The Voice after her blind audition.

See page A27

Shooting hoops

Bus route moves forward By SYDNEY CROMWELL Basketball season is back, so find out how your high school teams rank in our basketball previews. Read the details inside.

See page B18

INSIDE Sponsors ............. A4 280 News ............ A6 Business...........A11 Food...................A14 Faith...............A30

Opinion..............A31 Community.........B6 School House .. .B10 Sports ................B13 Calendar ...........B28

Pre-Sort Standard U.S. Postage PAID Memphis, TN Permit #830

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A proposed bus route for U.S. Highway 280 could save commuters from high gas prices and traffic stresses beginning Nov. 17. The Birmingham-Jefferson County Transit Authority (BJCTA) is piloting a new bus

program called Route 201, which would run four times per day between the Walmart located at 5335 U.S. 280 and downtown Birmingham. Walmart has agreed to let riders use its parking lot as a “park-and-ride.” Two inbound buses will run at 5:45 and 6:30 a.m., and the outbound buses will run at 4:30 and 5:30 p.m. Along the

The MAX bus system allows commuters an alternative form of transportation to places like the Walmart on U.S. 280. Photo by Jessa Pease.

way, the bus will make stops at The Summit, St. Vincent’s Hospital, UAB, the central business district and the downtown business district. BJCTA Chief of Staff Barbara Murdock said the bus route is being created because the

See BUS ROUTE | page A29

Delivering hope Area family to serve meals for Thanksgiving

By JESSA PEASE Delivering meals to shut-ins and the elderly isn’t something new for Tad Hill. He still vividly remembers one particular Thanksgiving when he visited an elderly woman with his mother, a social worker who also led a Meals on Wheels program. As a 10-year-old, Tad said seeing a person dependent on an oxygen tank was a little scary, but her gratitude made an impression on him. He remembers her

hugging him and telling him how wonderful it was to have him and his mother there. “The thing that I took from that experience is that it feels good to help other people,” Tad said. “The Bible says it is more blessed to give than to receive, and when you are a kid you are like, ‘What? That’s the stupidest thing I have ever heard.’ Then you get older and you realize life isn’t about your stuff, it is about the

See SERVES | page A29

280 residents Tad and Toni Hill believe it is their duty, pleasure and honor to help other people. Photo by Karim Shamsi-Basha.


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