Tommy learns to read
DISCOVER YOUR PUBLIC LIBRARY
Each Monday morning at 10 a.m. sharp, as the nearby Presbyterian
Church bells chime and our library doors swing open, Tommy Harris
strides purposefully into his classroom.
Cradling a black satchel, a stack of index cards and a quiver of
sharp pencils, Tommy is a man on a mission. You see, at age 61,
Tommy’s learning to read and write. Within a minute or two, his
soft-spoken tutor Joan Harrison, a long-time Laguna resident,
arrives. They are soon happily busy at their literary work.
Alabama-born and raised, Tommy dropped out of school before he
could read and went to work.
“Without an education, it’s hard to make it on your own,” Harris
said.
But make it on his own he did! He was careful, however, that his
jobs did not require that he read. As he tells it, his first job was
a roofer. Then he helped widen a road. This was followed by washing
cars and later working in a circus.
When Harris arrived in Laguna in 1977, he worked as a restaurant
dishwasher. One day the hot water heater broke and stayed that way
for several weeks. When Harris told his supervisor he couldn’t wash
the dishes in cold water and get the grease off, the supervisor told
him to wash them anyway. Harris refused and was fired.
Now, fortunately for Laguna Beach, Harris works for our city’s
Public Works Department. How did he get the job, you ask, if he could
not read or write?
“A friend helped me fill out the application,” Harris said. “I
checked on my application every week -- twice or three or four times.
“Finally, the man at City Hall said, ‘You know what? I’m going to
give you the job. I’m tired of looking at you.’”
And for eight years our community has had Harris to thank for
helping keep our village clean and safe. Last year, it was vigilant,
hard-working Harris who found the razor blades planted in the sand at
Main Beach. Harris’ current supervisor, Parks and Buildings Manager
Vic Hillstead, calls Harris “a treasure, always cheerful and
enthusiastic to take on extra work assignments.”
So, it was with great pride this week when Harris’ friend and
tutor, Harrison, and the library’s literacy program READ, awarded
this very diligent student his Certificate of Accomplishment for 100
hours of instruction. Harris has never forgotten what his father told
him long ago: “You’re never too old to learn.” Amen.
If you, or someone you know, are interested in becoming a literacy
tutor, please contact the library at (949) 497-1733 or Orange County
Public Library’s READ program at (714) 566-3070. After all, literacy
changes lives. Just ask Tommy Harris and Joan Harrison about that!
* MARIANNA HOF is the Laguna Beach branch librarian
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