Featured Articles Archive
Popular UUSM Accompanist Australia Bound
Popular UUSM Accompanist Australia Bound Congregants, music lovers, and members of the choir are sad to lose the vibrant Danny Gledhill, UUSM accompanist for the past five years, who is leaving the piano bench vacant as he moves to Australia this month.
Danny’s musical gifts have enriched UUSM’s worship as he interpreted hymns and other sacred music, and offered his own compositions and improvisations during Sunday worship services. He also participated regularly in musical fundraisers and community-building events throughout his tenure with UUSM.
“Getting to know people, and feeling connected to this congregation, has been amazing,” says Danny. “I loved being part of the choir and its growth. The UU canon is so interesting. I will miss it all.”
“Working with Danny is wonderful because he is so intuitively musical that it often feels like he is reading my mind,” says Dr. Zanaida Robles, UUSM Music Director. “But what makes him extraordinary is the fact that he is such a brilliant soloist. It’s rare to find someone whose accompanying skills are matched by their skills as a virtuoso pianist. And, to top it off, he is a first-rate composer.
“We benefited from Danny’s artistry every single week at our church, both in rehearsal and in worship,” Zanaida continues. “What’s more, he is a beautiful human being, and I will personally miss his mellow manner, his pleasant demeanor, and his sunny smile. His absence will be keenly felt.”
The choir gave Danny a send-off party in December, and his last time on the chancel was Sunday, December 24. (See sidebar for song by Cindy Kelly.)
He leaves for Melbourne, Australia, where he will live for at least 18 months while his fiancé, Jon Grosland, studies film production. They plan to wed when they return to the U.S. in 2019.
“I have felt so much love and generosity from the UUSM congregation,” Danny says. “I am very grateful for all the support I have received from this community.”
Danny Gledhill was recruited to UUSM by our former music director, DeReau K. Farrar, whom he met through a mutual friend. He was an interim accompanist for a four- to five-month period during the hiring process, and then joined the staff of the music department at UUSM.
During the search for a permanent successor, UUSM friend and frequent substitute pianist Travis Reynolds will serve as interim accompanist. With aid from a hiring team that consists of representatives from the choir, the music committee, and the personnel committee, the hiring process is expected to conclude in early March.
— Abby Arnold
PIANO MAN, FOR DANNY
UUSM Joins Santa Monica Vigil Against Gun Violence
RIGHT RELATIONS TASK FORCE REPORT
Covenant of Right Relations Approved by Board
• Supporting each other in times of joy as well as in times of struggle, pain, and grief
• Asking for help when needed and being open to accepting care from others
• Being welcoming and hospitable
• Striving to hear every voice and letting others speak for themselves
• Practicing deep, open, and respectful listening
• Respectfully acknowledging others’ perspectives
• Turning from reaction and judgment to wonder and inquiry in understanding others
• Trusting the sincerity of apologies and striving for forgiveness
• Refraining from making assumptions about others’ intentions and motivations
• Remaining engaged with one another; emphasizing building and mending relationships
• Admitting to my biases and being open to shifts in my perspective
• Accepting others as they are and being intentionally inclusive
• Being empathetic and celebrating diversity
• Embracing our shared humanity and supporting our individual journeys
• Making an effort to get to know others and allowing others to get to know me
• Showing up, being present, and honoring commitments
• Striving to collaborate, compromise, and seek consensus
Judith Meyer's Pipes lecture, "Falling Out: alienation and Community in Divisive Times"
Right Relations Task Force Report
Living into Our Covenant of Right Relations: Love
Special Christmas Eve Offering
MEET YOUR NOMINATING COMMITTEE
2017 Thanksgiving Feast
UU Congregations Experience Disaster in California, Florida, and Puerto Rico
For Unitarian Universalist congregations in Northern California, Florida, and Puerto Rico, connections with those of us in safer areas bring comfort and relief. Phone calls to congregations in Santa Rosa and Napa, California in October found people who were grateful to hear from our Santa Monica congregation, and glad for our support of their efforts to keep their churches open for neighbors and their members who suffered devastating losses.
UUSM sent financial support to congregations in Santa Rosa and Napa, California, where many church members lost their homes during the October fires, which lasted more than two weeks. As part of an international network of Unitarian Universalist congregations, we are able to help those in need. The Unitarian Universalist Service Committee, our international human rights organization, is actively aiding the people of Puerto Rico, Florida, and northern California as they live with the trauma of destruction and recovery. To support the UUSC, visit their website at www.uusc.org.
The Rev. Judith Meyer to Address “Divisive Times” at Annual Pipes Lecture on Sunday, November 5
The Rev. Judith Meyer, Minister Emerita of UUSM, will give the annual Erine Pipes Lecture on Sunday, November 5 at 2:30 pm in the sanctuary. The title of Rev. Meyer’s talk for the Pipes Lecture is “Falling Out: Alienation and Community in Divisive Times.” Rev. Meyer, who now lives in Knoxville, TN, will offer reflections on life in a red state, especially during this perilous year, and suggest ways to cope with the widening and hostile differences in our country. The congregation will host Rev. Meyer at a tea on Saturday, November 4 at 3 pm in Forbes Hall. The Pipes Lecture is an endowed annual event established in honor of Minister Emeritus the Rev. Ernest Pipes, who served this congregation for 35 years, and retired in 1991.
How I Spent the Morning of October 7 at the Right Relations Covenant Workshop
by Audrey Lyness
“An ethic of right relations acknowledges that disconnecting and estrangement, conflict and breakdown, disappointment and hurt, can happen in relating. Relating is how we change, forgive, learn, heal, and grow. Relating is not only how everything happens. Relating is how anything ever happens. . . . An ethic of right relations is the moral implication of interdependence.” — from Creating Safe Congregations: Toward an Ethic of Right Relations. Published by the UUA, edited by William B. Sinkford and Pat Hoertdoerfer
A Letter from a UUSM Member on Behalf of the Stewardship Committee
Heart to Heart Circles - New Groups for 2018
Reverend Greg Ward Begins His UUSM Tenure
Rev. Greg Ward (he prefers to be called Greg) officially joined UUSM as our minister on September 1, 2017. Ministers come to congregations with varied specialties. Though he’s a talented Sunday speaker and seasoned pastoral presence, Greg has a particular love for helping individuals and churches become unstuck by understanding and engaging with what matters most.
As our developmental minister, he will spend the next 2+ years working with us on (1) grounding our congregation in covenantal relations; (2) reconnecting with and recommitting to a shared mission and vision; (3) revitalizing membership and leadership; (4) expanding what learning, connecting, and caring look like in our congregation; (5) becoming stronger in stewardship of the programs and resources that fuel our mission and vision; and (6) addressing structural issues in governance that may make our congregational work harder than it needs to be.
“Church is the instrument of transforming society,” he says. “Our overarching goal should be covenanted community that facilitates that transformation.”
He spent September acquainting himself with the way things work in our congregation and is meeting one-on-one and in small groups with congregational leaders. Meetings will continue throughout the fall. If you’d like to schedule a one-on-one, please make an appointment through archive.uusm.org/for-members/ ministerial-transition. In the meantime, you’ll find him in the pulpit most Sundays or you can email him at revgreg@uusm.org.
— Jacki Weber
Right Relations Task Force Report:
Congregation-Wide Workshop on Covenant of Right Relations
“A behavioral covenant is a written document…agreed to and owned by its creators, and practiced on a daily basis as a spiritual discipline. Practicing the discipline described by the behavioral covenant IS an action of faith, since practicing such helpful and healthy behaviors IS an acting out of one’s stated beliefs and values.”
— Gil Rendle, Behavioral Covenants in Congregations
“Our first principle…. the inherent worth and dignity of every person … remains a touchstone out of our remarkable tradition, a covenant of relationship that supports the other principles and orients us remarkably quickly when we lose our way.”
— Rev. Marilyn Sewell
A covenant is a promise between people, a concept which holds a central place within Unitarian Universalist communities. Every Sunday, we covenant with each other and with the wider Unitarian Universalist population. We covenant to support one another in our intellectual, spiritual, and service-oriented journeys, and to uphold the importance of love.
As UU congregants have lived in covenant with one another, we have come to realize that the way we uphold these promises with each other is equally as important as the promises themselves. For this reason, many Unitarian Universalist congregations have developed covenants of right relations as promises about how people will interact with one another in relationship, both in times of harmony and of challenge.
Our beloved congregation will be taking part in this tradition beginning this fall as your Right Relations Team facilitates the creation of a Covenant of Right Relations. The first opportunity to engage in this endeavor will be on the morning of Saturday, October 7, as our right relations consultant Nancy Edmundson leads us in a Covenantal Workshop. At this interactive event, you will get a chance to deepen your understanding of covenants, in general, and of covenants of right relations, in particular. You will also be able to voice your ideas about what should be included in our community’s covenant and to connect with other members of our church in a meaningful way.
It is important that we, members of our congregation, participate in developing this covenant so that we own it and take responsibility for living in it. We strongly encourage everyone who is able to attend the workshop and take advantage of this opportunity to share what our covenant of right relations will encompass.
The workshop will begin promptly at 9 am and last until noon. Participants are welcome to arrive at 8:30 for refreshments and fellowship, and to leave plenty of time for parking and childcare. Please let us know if you will be attending either by signing up at the Right Relations table in Forbes Hall after services or by email at rightrelations@uusm.org.
We look forward to working with you on October 7! The Right Relations Task Force welcomes new members Audrey Lyness, Linda Marten, and Cassandra Winters, and we are very happy to have them jump in. At this time, we also thank Helen Brown for her valuable service as she steps off of the task force and team.
We held an engaging Listening Circle on August 10, with 18 persons participating, and a rewarding retreat with Rev. Greg on September 9. Finally, we have been studying best practices in right relations policies from other congregations. As always, please visit us at the Right Relations table in Forbes Hall after services to find out more about the work we are doing. You might be wondering what happens after the October 7 workshop – we are glad you asked! Using the input from the morning workshop, the RRTF will construct a draft Covenant of Right Relations. This draft will also be informed by the processes we offered last year – Sharing Stories of Personal Meaning, and Sharing Stories of Conflict Transformation. We expect to share this draft Covenant in October and to invite responses and feedback through several facilitated follow-up feedback conversations in October and November. Watch for announcements with more details. The draft Covenant will then be finalized and sent to the Board of Directors for their consideration. We hope the Board will vote to recommend adoption by the entire congregation and set a date for a congregational meeting for that purpose.
Once our congregation has adopted a Covenant of Right Relations, our work together as an entire congregation will continue, as we learn and practice together.
Right Relations Task Force and Team: Vicky Foxworth, Wendi Gladstone, Cindy Kelly, Alison Kendall, Emily Linnemeier, Audrey Lyness, Linda Marten, Vilma Ortiz (Co-chair), Margot Page, Tom Peters, Kim Santiago-Kalmanson, Nalani Santiago-Kalmanson, Beth Rendeiro, Rima Snyder, Joe Straw, Sue Stoyanoff (Co-chair), Linda van Ligten, Cassandra Winters, James Witker, Patricia Wright, Steve Young, and Sylvia Young. Nancy Edmundson, our Right Relations consultant.ylvia Young, Nancy Edmundson, our Right Relations consultant.
— Emily Linnemeier
Annual Church Camp Weekend: A Wonderful Time Had By All
Aalmost 100 members of the UUSM congregation spent a fun-filled weekend at Camp de Benneville Pines at our annual church weekend retreat September 15-17. People age 4 to 94 hiked, meditated, went to workshops, tie-dyed shirts, and ate wonderful meals together. Highlights included making and racing soapbox derby cars, and the Saturday night talent show. The weekend ended with a glorious worship service outdoors in the pines.
— Abby Arnold
Rev. Susan Frederick Gray Elected to Lead UUA; Faith Meets in NOLA to Worship, Learn, and Govern
Right Relations Task Force Report
FOOD MINISTRY OF ALL KINDS IN 2017-2018:
You are invited to join in making our work more ful”filling” and “fruit”ful
Join fellow UUSMers and help our UU Camp Secure its Water Storage Future
UUSM Family Camp 2017- Friday, September 15 – Sunday, September 17
Saying “YES, AND” to Camp De Benneville Pines
CELEBRATION AND RELEASE:
Departure of Rev. Rebecca Benefiel Bijur
DeReau Farrar’s Tribute to Rev. Rebecca
UUSM Member Cassie Winters’ Chalice Lighting and Extinguishing for Rev. Rebecca’s Final Sunday on June 4
Chalice Lighting
Good Morning.
My name is Cassie… and well, I’m just Cassie. I’m not a minister, a board president, or even a lay leader.
And because of that, I want to say that I feel like it is a huge honor to speak at Rebecca’s last service…I mean, it may not be…but it certainly feels that way to me.
Well, we have certainly taken the extremely long way around this very prickly thistle patch of leave-taking and heartfelt and sorrowful goodbyes… and I want to thank you, Rebecca, for that… for having the heart space to hold all our grief. It is my hope that your work in our grieving process and the work we must continue to do will leave us in a better space to welcome a new person…a space that is potentially better than the space to which you came.
I am hoping that you will be gracious with me for a bit as I speak here today as I know that I have only been coming here for almost a year and a half now, and I was not here when all of this began. For those of you who were here when I spoke last…remember when I asked about a few different scenarios and if it would be emotionally difficult for you to ask for help? I must confide in you that this is extremely emotionally difficult for me to ask for your help when I am keenly aware that it might not be well received by some of us. And even though asking for a bunch of socks and underwear was big…this ask feels even more intimate than underwear.
And after all of the beautiful and eloquent speeches yesterday I am feeling that what I have to say does not compare or measure up. And I feel so emotional and vulnerable right now that I worry that what I say will not be as coherent and as eloquent as I would like.
There is this part of me that wants to help heal the hurt in the congregation and the hurt with Rebecca…but I cannot go back in time. And so, all I can do now is to try to help us heal now and to help us not repeat what has happened in the past.
Maya Angelou is often misquoted as saying, “when you know better…you do better” … even by me. But, what she really said was, “I did then what I knew how to do. Now that I know better, I do better.”
And it is similar and means mostly the same thing. But I think that what she said emphasizes a FORGIVENESS of ourselves for when we knew less. Because you cannot know something until you know it.
But she also issues a challenge…well, now that you know better… it is up to you to do better. And as Rebecca once said, “Our desire alone to do better…sometimes falls short.”
And why is that? Mostly, it is because we are human and we come with baggage and patterns of behavior that often stem all the way from our childhoods. We also, and this is very important especially here with Unitarian Universalists who tend to be very intellectual but also very big hearted…we also sometimes have feelings that are contrary to how we think we SHOULD feel.
I’ve spent the greater part of this year talking to many of you and listening to your stories…your stories in the church and your personal stories. And one of the most important things I heard was that you felt a certain way about something…like you felt hurt, abandoned, or not important. And then sometimes you felt guilty for having those feelings because they did not match what you now know and what you value. And very often, when we feel something that we don’t think we should feel…we stuff it down…we try to pretend that we don’t feel this way. The problem with that is that those feelings are still there, and the more we ignore them the more resentful we become. And we begin to not come to church, to not work on that committee, to not interact with that person, and even sometimes — to not treat that person well. It is ok to have a feeling that you don’t necessarily agree with. The important part though is to still talk with the person with whom you have this conflict.
So many of the conflict stories I’ve heard involve us having our feelings hurt about something that, 90% of the time, the other person has no idea that we are hurt or angry.
And so, I ASK these TWO things of us.
One: Please, when you have a conflict with someone where you feel hurt or angry or even just frustrated, please go and talk with that person. You will very likely find that once you tell someone how something made you feel… a couple of things will happen. One, you will feel better for putting it out there. Two, you will probably get a better understanding of where the other person is coming from. And three, you may feel heard…and sometimes, especially when we still don’t get our way…being heard is enough and helps us move forward.
And Two:
Let us endeavor to do better.
Let us turn our hindsight into foresight
So that when we fall short or veer from our course,
We can make corrective adjustments right away.
Let us endeavor to do better.
Let us hold each other in our grief
And accept that we grieve over different things.
Let us make space for human compassion in our relations
Because we are responsible for not only ourselves
But for each other
Let us endeavor to do better.
As Rebecca once said,
“When you pay attention to what matters most
ou let go of the little things.”
And because we know now what we may not have known before
We know that if we do not do this
We cannot do better
AND… let us endeavor to do better.
Chalice Extinguishing
RIGHT RELATIONS: Harvesting Best Behaviors
Your Right Relations Team held three successful Sharing Stories of Conflict Transformation events in May and June, and approximately 50 of you participated. Over the summer and into the fall, the Right Relations Team will harvest your stories to identify the behaviors that our congregation identifies as necessary to being in community and working through challenges and conflict. These will form our Covenant of Right Relations, which we will present in the fall.
Even though we finished holding sharing groups, we still need your Stories of Conflict Transformation (submit through the Google form found at https://tinyurl.com/uuconflictstories or by emailing us at rightrelations@uusm.org). If you did not attend one of the groups, we encourage you to add your story by using this link. The Google form will instruct you in the process! If you would like to speak to a member of the Right Relations team about your story, please contact us; we are here to help.
As we have held our sharing groups, we are mindful that many members are sharing stories of conflict that do not get resolved or transformed. That doesn’t mean that transformation is not possible in the future. It does reflect that as a congregation we have practiced a habit of tolerating or avoiding conflict. Therefore, we seek to initiate and strengthen conflict transformation practices and habits. As you reflect on and share your stories, we encourage you to tell a story through the lens of appreciation and transformation! Your stories of conflict transformation will directly support the drafting of our Covenant of Right Relations.
Please plan on attending our fall events on congregation covenant. Meanwhile we are here over the summer with regular Listening Circles, our Sunday information table, and as a resource for support by using “Note to RRTF” (http://archive.uusm.org/system/files/members-only/a_note_to_rrtf_. pdf).
Our Right Relations Task Force and Interview Team look forward to hearing from you and hearing your story: Helen Brown, Liza Cranis, Vicky Foxworth, Wendi Gladstone, Cindy Kelly, Audrey Lyness, Linda Marten, Emily Linnemeier, Margot Page, Tom Peters, Vilma Ortiz (co-chair), Kim Santiago-Kalmanson, Nalani Santiago-Kalmanson, Alison Kendall, Beth Rendeiro, Rima Snyder, Joe Straw, Sue Stoyanoff (co-chair), John Sussman, Linda van Ligten, Cassandra Winters, James Witker, Patricia Wright, Steve Young, and Sylvia Young.
We share the folling story from Karl Lisovsky. At the end, Karl reflects on the behaviors that he sees as turning the conflict to conflict resolution.
“WHO GETS THE SANCTUARY? A STORY OF CONFLICT RESOLUTION”
We had not had a Sunday Spotlight in at least a year. This occasional Church event, an open mic kind of thing that we do after a Second Sunday Supper, has recently fallen off the calendar for lack of interest on the part of organizers and participants. I decided to re-animate the practice by doing a small concert. It would be Kai Landauer (my artist name) and Eric Scerri, my buddy and lead guitarist. I scheduled the Sanctuary for June 11th and began making preparations: getting my niece to do some publicity graphics, and preparing the music. I was told when I scheduled the room that there would be “something having to do with Right Relations going on in Forbes.” I didn’t give this much thought.
On May 18th, Beth Rendeiro emailed me, and said that on June 11th, Right Relations (RR) would be hosting Second Sunday Supper and holding the final Conflict Transformation Circle afterwards. She said that it “wouldn’t be a good thing” for the Spotlight and the RR meeting to happen at the same time. She offered that if the Spotlight was a definite, that RR would have to reschedule. “Or... would [I] be open to changing the Spotlight to July?” I responded that in my mind the Spotlight was “a definite”.
On May 19th, Vilma Ortiz was more direct. She said that there was a conflict between Right Relations’ scheduled event and the Spotlight. She acknowledged that through her own oversight, RR had not scheduled the Sanctuary. Would I please “be willing to reschedule Sunday Spotlight,” for if I didn’t, the sharing group simply could not happen, as busy summer schedules would preclude the sharing circle from taking place.
Somehow, on this second email, I was able to get out of my own space enough to see that RR was in a serious bind: they had been working for over a year hosting meetings and working together for the good of the Church community. Now, at the end of this year, they wanted to have one culminating event, beginning by hosting the Second Sunday Supper, and then having the final sharing circle. The only thing that stood in the way of this plan was the Spotlight that I was planning. Once I came to appreciate the situation in this way, I could see no reason for insisting on the Spotlight, and agreed to reschedule.
Here’s what I get from all this, the “behaviors” to be “harvested” (to use RR’s vocabulary):
• Beth began the exchange by gently sensitizing me to the situation, and then simply posing a question (was the Spotlight a “definite”)
• I initially stood by my plan.
• Next, Vilma made the case more strongly that the two events were incompatible.
• Furthermore, she took responsibility for not scheduling the room in the first place.
• I realized that the Right Relations event was time sensitive, needed to happen on that date, at that time, while my Spotlight could happen at some later date. So I rescheduled the Spotlight.
Lesson: When the community’s purpose comes up against an individual’s agenda, that individual ought to think carefully about pushing too hard and thus compromising the larger group’s purpose.
Worth noting: this whole affair represented a challenge of, well, right relations; we simply had to find a way to resolve this rather minor conflict.
UUSM 90th Annual Congregational Meeting
A Farewell Party for Long-Time UUSM Leaders; A Thank You from Peggy and Rick Rhoads
Highlights of Rev. Rebecca’s Ministry at UUSM
Board Hires Developmental Minister
Quotes about Embodiment, from Lois Hutchinson
RIGHT RELATIONS TASK FORCE: What Are Our Core Values?
Members Endorse Hiring a Developmental Minister
Self-interest, Irresistible Destiny, or Covenant?
Right Relations Task Force Report: Stories of Personal Meaning and Stories of Conflict
So far almost 50 stories have been shared; Leslie Beauvais shares this story:
Quotations Related to Transformation
Elections Are on the Way
Standing on the Side of Love
Scheduled to begin Tuesday, May 30, in Santa Ana. Support these anti-racists by demonstrating in front of the courthouse. More info at the FIA Table.
Monday, May 1, Downtown LA, time and location TBA
Sunday, June 11, West Hollywood.
The Joy of Generosity - Thank You to Those Who Pledged for 2017
Stepping Up to Help a Fellow Congregant
Right Relations Task Force Report
I had been attending this church for several years before I finally joined (in 2014, I believe). For some reason, I could never take that final step towards committing to the church. One Sunday, Rev. Rebecca spoke about the topic of membership in her sermon and it was as if she were speaking directly to me. She voiced exactly the concerns I had that made me hesitate. She spoke about her own reluctance to commit to joining the church she’d been attending (I believe it was the first UU church she attended). Finally, she said, she realized “I can have this.” She (and, by extension, I) were deserving of this community we’d been rather bashfully observing from the sidelines. It felt as if she were speaking directly to me, inviting me into the center, away from the sidelines and into this community.—Sheila Cummins
Core Values are “the essential and enduring tenets of an organization. A small set of timeless guiding principles, core values require no external justifications; they have intrinsic value and importance to those inside the organization.”(Collins & Porras, Harvard Business Review, 96501)
The next part of the Right Relations process is to share stories of conflicts we have faced with others where these were turned into opportunities to strengthen and transfom relationships, even if we continue to disagree on the issues. Starting mid-month, we will be offering several occasions to Share Stories of Conflict Transformation. These include open groups which you may sign up for at the Right Relations table or by using the Google form at http://tinyurl.com/right-relations-share-stories.
We encourage you to participate by sharing a conflict you experienced and were able to resolve while maintaining and deepening relationships. With this collection of stories, the Right Relations Team will begin to develop our Covenant of Right Relations, to be presented to the church and affirmed at a future meeting.
A Covenant of Good (Right) Relations is a brief set of agreements made between members of a congregation about how they would like to live and work with one another, in good times and in difficult times. Covenants, unlike legal agreements, acknowledge our humanity and provide forgiveness and room to begin again if and when mistakes are made. Because of the historical religious significance of covenants these agreements are highly relevant in church communities.
A Little hUUmor
Update on Developmental Ministry
Quotations Related to Risk
Helen Brown Still Flying High at 95
A Warm Welcome Celebrates Kathleen Hogue
Right Relations Task Force Report: What is Happening with Right Relations at UUSM?
Ministerial Transition Update
Developmental Ministry is a type of transitional ministry that occurs between two long-term called/settled ministries, generally over a period of three to five years (and as long as seven). It’s ideal for a congregation that has three to four specific goals it wants to work on before calling its next long-term minister. The goals are set by the congregational leadership and approved by our UUA. Based on those specific goals, the congregation is matched with a minister who can help us achieve our goals.
7) Why is there not a congregationally-chosen search committee involved in the process?
February 2017 – The Rev. Jonipher Kwong, our UUA Congregational Life Representative, will work with the Transitions Office and its director, Keith Kron, to identify candidates that would be appropriate for us.
April 2017 – interviews may take place
May 2017 – an offer may be made
July-September 2017 – a minister may start.