Merry &Bright

Victoria Pazchosennew generalmanager of Harbor Center
Slidell-area resident will take reinsfromretiring GM KathyLowrey
BY ANDREW CANULETTE
Staff writer
The Harbor Center Boardof Commissioners searched throughoutthe Gulf South to find areplacement forretiring General Manager Kathy Lowrey
Heroes at homeshare endlesslove, compassion fordogs
BY MADDIE SCOTT
Contributing writer
Every community has good Samaritans.
They are the people whoserve quietly,without fanfare. They get thingsdone outside the spotlight. Their work is as importantas that of elected ofļ¬cials andnonproļ¬t leaders. They are the foot soldiers in the armies of compassion, empathy, grace. The St. Tammany Farmer sought out six of these people and is featuring them through theremainder of 2024.Wethink these people, their stories, are remind-
Some 80 applications, and ahandful of interviewslater,and the board decided the best candidate for the job was very close to home.

Victoria Paz, a10-year Slidell resident who is director of salesand marketing at Silver Slipper Casino and Hotel in Bay St. Louis, Mississippi,was chosen to succeed Lowrey,who has managed the Harbor Center near Slidell since 2007.
Paz has been with the Silver Slipper for 16 years, starting as aretail clerk and working
her way through the ranks to her most recent position with the business. Paz previouslyworkedasthe Slipperās Advertising and Publicity Manager and she remains involved withvarious northshore civic and nonproļ¬t groups. In apress release, theHarbor Center Boardsaid Pazāsāexperience in sales, marketing, and operations, combined with her deep connectiontothe St. Tammany Parish and Hancock County communities, makes heranideal ļ¬t to lead

BY GRANTTHERKILDSEN
Emanuel and Marissa Giglio sit on the couch withsomeoftheir dogs after Thanksgiving
ers of the good things people do for oneanother
Weāre calling them āUnsung Heroes.ā But now is time to sing theirpraises
Most families haveadog or two, maybe acat. Not the Giglio family
Emanuel Giglio and his wife, Marissa Giglio, have housed more than ahundredcanines since 2021. Theyāveeven sacriļ¬ced their master bathroom to
provide temporary housing for puppy litters in their 8foot by 8 foot shower āI missthat shower,ā he said, cracking asmile. āIt was very nice.ā
The Giglio family temporarily houses, or fosters, homeless dogs at thedrop of ahat for the Northshore Humane Society,a nonproļ¬t,no-kill animal rescue and clinic near Covington. One




BY WILLIE SWETT Staff writer
The Harbor Center.ā They noted she previously servedaschair of the East St.Tammany Chamber of Commerce boardof directors, is agraduate of the Leadership Northshore development program, and was chosen to receive theAthenaYoung Professional Award in 2023, amongother accolades. Lowrey,who was amanager at the HarborCenterwhenitopened in 2005 shortly before Hurricane Katrina devastated the
Aproposed $30 million STEM and healthcare facilityinLacombe, where high school students could receive advanced certiļ¬cations and training, came under scrutiny on Dec.12asthe St. Tammany Parish School Board debated andultimately agreed to put its largest ever capitalimprovements planonthe ballot in May
Though the facility represents less than 10% of thetotal $325 million bond,all the attention was on the STEM facilityduring theSchool Boardāsļ¬nalmeeting of 2024. Acadre of people fromthe parishāsbusiness communityshowedupinforce to support the proposal, and board members pressed formore details
St. Tammany SchoolsSuperintendent Frank Jabbia said the facility would offer advanced courses in programming, nursing and other
health care and STEM (science, technology, engineering andmath) subjects.
It would consolidate existing STEM and health care education resources that are now spread out around theparish, Jabbia said, and would create opportunitiesfor students at schoolsthatmay notoffer certainadvanced courses.
āThe better we educate and train them, the better career opportunities they will have at higher-paying jobsthatare in demand,ā saidboard member Roslyn Hanson, oneof many who enthusiastically supported theproject.
Local leaders fromcompanies like Chevronand educational institutions like Southeastern Louisiana University spoke in support of the facility, arguing it would ļ¬ll agrowing need in theparish forSTEM and health care workers while better


















Kids Konnection

Families bringthe spirit of ChristmastoKoopDrive


31.

HEROES
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of the largest animal welfare organizations in Louisiana,the nonproļ¬t has relied on volunteers like the Giglios since opening in 1953
āI canātevenbegin to count howmany puppies theyāve fostered,ā said Northshore Rescue Supervisor Jamesy Jenkins. āThey give these pets and puppies thelove, trainingand care needed to help place theminto (permanent) homes.ā Jenkins said she sees one of the Giglios at the Humane Society at least one to two times aweek, whether itāstovaccinate a puppy or to host ameet-and-greet with a prospective owner.The couple has even been featured in aFacebook reel on the shelterāsFacebook.
āWeāre looking for the forever home for these dogs,ā Marissa Giglio said. Itāsimportant to make sure each puppy is agood ļ¬t for its prospective family,the Giglios andhumane ofļ¬cials agree.Ifa puppy is high-strung, for example, it may not be agood ļ¬t for afamily with young kids.And families shouldnātfeel guilty aboutbringing dogs back if the match isnāt right, they said,because compatibility is critical. As for the Giglios, it seemsasthough all dogs ļ¬t into theirMandeville home, whether as atemporary foster just passing through for afew weeks or monthsorasa permanent part of the family



latest rescue on Nov. 30
āNot many people are willingtotake in six, eight, 10, 12 dogs at onetime,āMarissa Giglio said. āItāsa lot, and Emanuelāshome all day.And for the most part, Iām home most of the day unless Iām running around for work, so it gives him something to do.ā
Emanuel Giglio is adisabled combat veteran, and the dogshavebrought him a source of joy,she said. The most puppies theyāvefostered at one time was 19.
In thebeginning
It all started in January of 2021 when ahusky named Cuba wandered intothe
front yard of the Giglio home. Despite his scary,wolf-like exterior,Cuba was agentle sweetheart and great with kids.
After learning that the original owner didnātwant him anymore, the Giglios decided to foster Cuba until Northshore Humane could ļ¬nd him apermanent home and forever family of his own.
āHe found us, and he really drove us to do this,ā Marisa Giglio said of Cuba.
The couple has fostered puppies, rescues and critical-care dogs ever since.
Some of the fosters so completely win the Gigliosā hearts, they never leave. The couple has accumulated seven adult dogs of their own, and the canines under their roof eat their way through a50-pound bag of dog food every month āand that doesnātinclude any special food they need for young pups.
āMost days, Emanuel is in the garage in his man cave,ā Marissa Giglio said. āAnd heāslaying on his recliner watching TV, and thereāsabout ļ¬ve dogs laying on the recliner with him. Or heāsatafoster event (seeking forever homes for dogs).ā
The Giglios often invite family and friends over to help socialize their foster pups, who need to learn comfort in social situations before being adopted. Their neighbor,10-year-old Sophia, has become the Gigliosā expert puppy assistant. After she ļ¬nishes her homework, Sophia teaches the puppies how to sit, helps clean up and hosts playtime to wear out the zoomies.
The couple also receives lots of help from their teenage son. He doesnātvolunteer,but he gets āvolun-told,ā his dad explained. The coupleās19-year-old daughter helps, as well, when sheāshome on the
weekend from Loyola University,providing her with atherapeutic, puppy-ļ¬lled getaway
As puppies have streamed in, the Giglios renovated their house to curate the perfect puppy paradise. They re-epoxied their garage ļ¬oor to accommodate for accidents. They installed aseparate washer and dryer fordoggy towels and blankets, in addition to adog-washing station like professional groomers have.
The couple has collected tons of stories over the years. ThereāsRosie, acriticalcare dog that wasnātexpected to live long because of her refusal to eat āuntil she had Parmesan cheese forthe ļ¬rst time. After discovering Parmesan, she started eating again and was adopted in June.
āWho knew the dog was Italian?ā Emanuel Gigilo said.
Thereāsalso Chi-chi, acritical-care chihuahua with cerebral hypoplasia who has overcome lifeāsobstacles. He wasnātin good shape when they adopted him, but after ļ¬nding ahome with the Giglios three years ago, heāsfound agood little life. Chi-chi runs the show now,Marissa said. He has some trouble walking, so often he runs into the other dogs or leans on them.
āHeāll run into them, lay on them,ā Emanuel said. āTheyāre just like, āItāsChi-chi; what are you going to do?ā ā And who could forget Hugginā Helen, a sweet pit bull who would stand on her hind legs every night before bed and wait for ahug to help her cope with postpartum depression. Certainly not the Giglios. After six weeks of hugs and love, she was adopted by anewly retired woman who wanted a canine companion to share her life.