Winter Approaches

A few people have told me that insulating the garage door would help keep the garage warmer, and by extension, the bedrooms that are above the garage. I was very skeptical, because the door is not tightly sealed, and every time you open the door, there is a huge air exchange.


It was a $150 gamble, but we gave it a whirl, and so far it has actually made a huge difference. Overnight, there has been a fifteen to thirty degree temperature difference between the inside of the garage and the outdoors – unheard of before I insulated.

I’m curious to see if there is a measurable savings in our natural gas bill over the upcoming cold season.

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Neutral Valuation

Written by Jonathan J. Miller, CRE CRP

Excerpt:

“As a real estate appraiser for the past 25 years, I’ve always viewed my role as a provider of a neutral valuation benchmark for clients to become empowered to make more informed decisions. Of course this is a fantasy-based, in-a-perfect-world depiction rather than an actual practice. In mortgage lending, residential real estate appraisers are not able to provide an independent market value without some sort of reprisal if the results do not match the client’s needs.”

“Since the credit crunch began with the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy that roiled the world economy in September 2008, our profession has actually strayed farther from being any sort of neutral valuation benchmark.”

Excellent article for appraisers!

Full article here.

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Iridescent Clouds

No Photoshop tricks – This is how they actually looked.

When parts of clouds are thin and have similar size droplets, diffraction can make them shine with rainbow colors. The effect is called cloud iridescence or irisation, terms derived from Iris, the Greek personification of the rainbow.

The usually delicate colors can be in almost random patches or bands at cloud edges. They are only organized into coronal rings when the droplet size is uniform right across the cloud. The bands and colors change or come and go as the cloud evolves, and occur most often in altocumulus, cirrocumulus and especially in lenticular clouds. Iridescence is seen mostly when part of a cloud is forming because then all the droplets have a similar history and consequently have a similar size.

Sometimes iridescence can be seen far from the sun but is most frequent near to it. Much rarer iridescence is that of nacreous or mother-of-pearl clouds (also known as Polar stratospheric clouds or PSCs). They can glow very brightly and are far higher than ordinary tropospheric clouds.

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Incommunicado

I am finally able to briefly come up for air. I will remember the Summer of 2011 as the summer I spent completing my degree.

I moved to Seattle in 2000, and tried twice to complete my degree over that distance. Both times, faculty were full of smiles and nods until decisions had to be made, and that’s when they stopped answering my phone calls and emails.

In October, 2008, I decided to try again. One of my former instructors, Dr. Stempniak, was the department chair of my major (INT), and I hoped he would remember me favorably and help me along. He said he did not remember me, but he referred me to Academic Support, where I met the person who changed everything: Dr. Roswell Park (“Ros”).

Over the years since I began my studies (1980), the entire curriculum has changed. Classes I took no longer exist, or have been combined or split and recombined and reconfigured into new classes. The first hurdle was to be reclassified into an older set of requirements (from GE2K to GEC), without which I would have to start over nearly from the beginning. My academic appeal was accepted, and my major changed from Industrial Technology to Individualized Studies, as the courses I have taken no longer match a current INT degree.

My initial audit showed that I needed eight more classes: 3 credits AST, 3 credits ART, 3 credits HUM, and ENG 101. Ros helped me write petitions that made most of those “go away,” leaving three: college-wide Global Issues and Diversity requirements, and a “writing intensive” course.

Diversity and Global Issues classes are mandated by New York State, so there was no way to wriggle out of those requirements. In June, I enrolled in classes at Cascadia Community College, and by August 25th, I had completed almost four hundred pages of essays in World Civilizations III and Multicultural Communications. I passed HIS 128 with 101.67% and CMST 150 with a 98.5%.

At the beginning of September, I petitioned to be excused from the W course. I asked the smartest people around me to critique my petition letter. Granted, it was a draft, but I was stunned that every single person found technical errors, and one completely rewrote the letter.

I fully expected the Director of College Writing to reply with, “Mr. Tabor. Please supply a 500 page double spaced examination of the evidence for the existence of a Supreme Being. Be sure to compare and contrast the works of Satre, Kant, Nietzsche, Lao Tzu, Confucius, Cheng Yi and Li Zhi and their cumulative effect on the development of fundamentalist cults in 19th Century America. Please submit by tomorrow, in APA format.” (I have detailed nightmares.)

Instead, it was over in a single email:

“Ros and Heather,

I will support his petition. He took Eng 300, which is a currently a WI course, and though it wasn’t listed as such then, it is a writing course – and so certainly was writing intensive.

Michele”

I asked Cascadia to forward my credits to BSC, and I have applied for my degree, which will (barring complications) be granted this coming December.

All the paperwork is completed. By the new year, I will be able to put letters after my name that will hopefully open doors to better employment opportunities.

Woo Hooooo!!!!

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Bank of America to pay whistle-blower $930,000

Excerpt:

“It’s clear from our investigation that Bank of America used illegal retaliatory tactics against this [Countrywide] employee,” said OSHA Assistant Secretary David Michaels. “This employee showed great courage reporting potential fraud and standing up for the rights of other employees to do the same.”

Full article is here.

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20/20: The Sixth Sense

A re-run of the story of the death of James Kim.

The Wrong Turn: The Kati Kim Story: Like a scene from a chilling horror movie, a young family is trapped in a snowstorm in isolated woods miles away from any help and surrounded by grizzly bears. Snowed in and unable to move their vehicle, the Kims spend nine long days stranded in south-western Oregon’s remote bear infested wilderness, some 33 miles from the nearest town. Rationing their meager food supplies, surviving off local berries and spending their nights in sub-zero temperatures, the frightened family resort to burning their possessions in an attempt to signal help – and stay alive. Reported missing by friends and family, the Kims strange disappearance makes national news.

How did the Kims survive such an extreme environment? What clues did the family leave the heroic search teams? And what happened when dad, James Kim, decided to leave the car and looks for help? After years of silence and with an exclusive, never before seen interview, mom and survivor, Kati Kim, tells her story and gives us a heartfelt insight into how a family Christmas vacation ended in a struggle for survival, an intensive search and rescue effort – and a family tragedy. Jay Schadler reports. (OAD: 2/11/11)

It disgusts me that no mention is ever made of the fact that very little is clearly labeled in the Pacific Northwest. James Kim would not have died if people in the Northwest were courteous enough, decent enough, or intelligent enough to post clear, consistent signage for travelers.

James Kim’s only mistake was applying expectations to the Northwest that are customary and reasonable in other parts of the United States. There is a cultural bias here that says, in effect, “I live here, so I know where I’m going and I don’t need no signs, so I ain’t payin’ no taxes for ’em.” Northwesterners would rather pay thousands of dollars for helicopter search and rescue missions (perhaps so they can have something dramatic to watch on the TV), than to post signs that help travelers stay alive and safe. It is the same kind of thinking that led Ford to sell Pintos in spite of a design flaw that resulted in the incineration of some luckless drivers: a few lawsuits cost less than a recall. Or road signs.  Besides – it’s your problem, not mine.

In his open letter in the San Francisco Chronicle, James Kim’s father, Spencer, asks for more oversight on logging roads. “Such measures might not have stopped James and his family from being misled by a map that depicted the road they chose through the Coast Range as a major thoroughfare, but they would have prevented the ill-fated turn that led them into a maze of logging roads and across treacherous terrain that travelers never should have had access to in the first place.”

It will never happen. There are over 5,000 miles of logging roads in Oregon, and inadequate manpower to monitor gates and access. It is possible, however, to omit those roads from maps – or at least properly describe and show them as marginally passable – and to post adequate signage to keep travelers on main roads.

The Oregon State Police reported that the Kims were using an official State of Oregon highway map. It took this inexcusable tragedy for the State of Oregon to redraw their maps, so that the route the Kims took “is no longer shown as viable.”

People coming from other places have no reason to expect that the Pacific Northwest has more in common with rural Alaska than the rest of the developed areas in the lower 48, especially with Seattle’s reputation for being a high-tech Mecca. The infrastructure is underdeveloped and under-designed in ways that push additional time and fuel consumption costs onto residents, a significant number of whom who do not seem to mind.

Locals routinely vilify outsiders as ignorant and careless, as if everyone has full knowledge that the area is primitive, and that it is easy for anyone to become truly, thoroughly lost.

If you’re coming here, you should be forewarned that the maps for the developed areas – including online mapping services – are inaccurate. I live in a development that is six years old and it is still not in Mapquest or Microsoft Streets & Trips. The USPS regularly delivers our mail to an incorrect address nearly 4 miles to the east.

For undeveloped areas, you are on your own. Travel at your own risk. A compass, navigational skills, weapons and extra provisions are essential. Knowledge of orienteering and survival techniques are a plus. Buy an emergency beacon, and let someone out in civilization know your itinerary, and when you are expected to hit points on the map. And for God’s sake, don’t make a mistake reading the few signs that are posted. You could easily share James Kim’s fate.

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Fraud in Real Estate – Corrupt City Employees

“St. Petersburg City Employees Encourage False Real Estate Appraisals”

Excerpt:

“A 10 News Investigation into recent land-buys by the City of St. Petersburg indicates employees in the city’s real estate department are influencing the appraisal values of properties they plan on purchasing.”

“But employees aren’t asking local appraisers to underestimate the values of the homes they examine; they’re asking for higher-than-market value appraisals. It allows the real estate department to justify meeting holdout homeowners’ inflated demands for property.”

Full article is here.

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