Union Recorder 200 Years | Page 19

B efore becoming a news reporter, the phrase ‘happy work envi- ronment” seemed like a foreign language to me, but that’s exactly how I would describe my time at The Union-Recorder. After working in the field of education as a teacher for close to 10 years, I decided to take a break from teaching to pursue another career field that would provide me another chance to serve the public in a different capaci- ty, while not losing my hair from added tension and anxiety. Don’t get me wrong, I loved being an educator, but by 2012, I was burned out and in desperate need of a job where I could just breathe. Some people may think I was walking out of one hectic environment right into a more stressful situation, but that wasn’t the case with The Union-Recorder. My time at the newspaper did more than just give me a new career direction; it also gave me a peace that I hadn’t felt at work in a long time. We were a close-knit com- munity of reporters and there were times when my sides would hurt from laughing so much. From the first day I set foot in the newsroom I felt genuine sincerity from each and every employee I came in contact with. There was a camaraderie between the news reporters and it didn’t take long for me to feel the rich warmth of co-worker friendship. I can remember the first day I sat at my desk in my small cubicle I breathed a sigh of relief—some- thing I hadn’t done in a very long time. But of course, it wasn’t a slow-paced job. There were deadlines that needed to be met in a timely manner. I was the crime and education reporter so my two beats always kept me on the go. Crimi- nals are not set on your work schedule so the unexpected always kept me on my toes. And somewhere between school board meetings, spelling bees, science fair projects, traffic accidents, armed robberies, and house fires, I had to find time to eat lunch and give birth to at least three news articles before deadline. But through all that chaos, I found content- ment. We were a family and till this day, I still keep in touch with my fellow news writers, even though we all have moved on to different Public Relations careers. In fact, it was our time we spent at The Union-Recorder, which helped us get to an elevated level of communicating that opened new doors for us. I will never forget the day Milledgeville Police Chief Dray Swicord called me to his office and offered a Public Information Officer (PIO) position to me. He expressed to me that he saw my potential to be a great PIO through the fair and unbiased work I did as a crime reporter. It was the encouragement I received from my managing editor, Natalie Davis Linder, that helped push me to do a great job reporting. Although we are the same age, she became a wonderful mentor for me. Overall, my experience at The Union-Recorder was a great one. It was bittersweet when I left the job in 2015 to enter my PIO position, but I still hold the memories, the laughs and the good times deep within the crevices of my heart. Even though I’ve put in a 4 years as the police department’s PIO, I can still walk in to a restaurant and local grocery and have someone come up to me and say “aren’t you the Felicia Cummings who worked at Union-Recorder.” I suppose some things will never change! 200th l 19