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    Front Porch Music and Art Festival slated for Saturday – Washington Times Herald - October 10, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    On Saturday afternoon, grab your lawn chairs and blankets and head downtown to Washingtons first Front Porch Music and Arts Festival.

    Hosted by the Tri County Alliance for the Fine and Performing Arts, a newly formed organization that includes Daviess, Martin and Pike counties, the free event is open to all ages and begins at 3 p.m. with acoustic music from Chris Main on the front porch of the Rhonda Roach residence at 800 W. Walnut.

    At 4 p.m., the Power House, 709 E. Main, will play host to Three Girls and a Mustache and at 5, just down Main Street on the porch of A Wonderful Life will be music provided by Dan and Judah Maley.

    The music continues into the evening with Larry and Cherie Worley playing on the porch of Eric and Julie Basslers home at 12 N. Seventh St. at 6 p.m. Joe Howard and Jenna Clouse will entertain from the porch of Paula Van-Tyle Smith at 707 E. Walnut at 7 p.m. Jess Brower and Rhett Burton will perform at John and Nancy Wilkins porch at 8 p.m. before the upbeat sounds of Guilty As Charged return to Van-Tyle Smiths porch at 9 p.m.

    All COVID-19 guidelines will be in place including wearing a mask and social distancing. In an effort to help be in compliance with those guidelines, organizers ask that before heading out to hear the music, all attendees, sign in at the Power House where several vendors will be selling a variety of items ranging from body products to jewelry and everything in between.

    Several food trucks will also be set up near the Power House and on Walnut Street.

    Pumpkin painting, pony rides and other activities will also be offered at no cost to children and art demonstrations will take place at Roachs home.

    In the future, the Tri County Alliance for the Fine and Performing Arts hopes to use proceeds from the event to help raise money to build an indoor, 2,500 to 3,000 seat state-of-the-art auditorium. The other goals of the organization are to showcase local talent and bring in outside talent and grow an appreciation.

    We are making critical coverage of the coronavirus available for free. Please consider subscribing so we can continue to bring you the latest news and information on this developing story.

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    Front Porch Music and Art Festival slated for Saturday - Washington Times Herald

    Hawaii Has Authorized 1,527 New Housing Units in 2020 – Maui Now - October 10, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    A new report shows that an estimated 1,527 new housing units have been authorized in Hawaii in 2020which equates to 107.5 units for every 100,000 residents.

    The porch.com report notes that while home sales and new construction fell sharply during the onset of the pandemic, both have rebounded aggressively, fueled by a combination of low interest rates, increased demand and a growing preference for low-density housing.

    According to the report, thelockdowns delayed peak home buying season, creating pent up demand for new homes, compounding a longer-term trend in the housing market of millennials aging and entering their prime home-buying years.

    With this confluence of factors, prospective home buyers face a difficult situationwhile low interest rates are lowering the cost of a mortgage, the limited supply of existing homes is creating stiff competition for new homes and raising prices, according to the report.

    The report further states that it will take home builders years to bridge the gap between the existing supply of homes for sale and the large number of interested buyers. However, investment in new housing varies significantly across the United States.

    Many US states, particularly those in the South and Mountain regions, have been investing heavily in new housing this year despite the pandemic. Overall, Idaho, Utah, South Carolina, and Arizona have permitted the most new housing units per capita, while Texas and Florida have permitted the most units total. Northeastern states like Rhode Island, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, and New York are hardly investing in new homes at all.

    Porch analyzed data from the US Census Bureaus Building Permits Survey. To rank locations, Porch calculated the number of new housing units authorized during the first six months of 2020 per 100,000 residents. Their researchers also included the absolute number of new housing units authorized, the median home price of existing homes, and the estimated value of newly authorized homes.

    A summary of data for Hawaii includes the following:

    In comparison, United States data includes the following:

    For more information, a detailed methodology, and complete results, you can find the original report on Porchs website: https://porch.com/advice/cities-investing-most-new-housing

    Continued here:
    Hawaii Has Authorized 1,527 New Housing Units in 2020 - Maui Now

    Two shots fired at mourning family while on their homes porch: Cleveland Heights police blotter – cleveland.com - September 20, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    CLEVELAND HEIGHTS, Ohio -- Improper discharging of a firearm: Kensington Road

    At 10:50 p.m. Sept. 15, police were called to a home on a report of shots fired. At the scene, police learned that a male resident of the home, 23, had been murdered in Cleveland Heights two days earlier.

    The deceased mans brother, 24, and other family members were on their homes front porch when a car drove up and slowed while a male in the car shouted an obscenity about the dead man. The car was believed to be occupied by several males.

    The car drove away, but returned less than a minute later. From the car, a male reached out and fired two shots before the car continued eastbound on Kensington Road. Witnesses were unsure if the shots were fired in the air or towards the home. No bullet holes were found in the home and no one was injured.

    Police found two shell casings on the ground and an army fatigue hat in the street, which may have belonged to the shooter. The detective bureau is investigating.

    Domestic violence: Bainbridge Road

    At 6:55 p.m. Sept. 14, police were called to a home for a reported disturbance involving a family member. Officers arrived to find several people outside the home, and a man yelling at women.

    The man then laid down in the front yard as one of the women yelled that he needed to go to a psych ward. The man said to police, You going to take me to jail real quick. He then told his mother to shut up.

    The man became aggressive and, as his sister approached him, he took a swing at her. The sister dodged the swing, but was struck on the arm. Police then grabbed the man and took him to the ground. Police arrested the man and charged him with domestic violence and assault.

    Upon his arrest, his family members became uncooperative with officers, refusing to complete written statements and telling police they didnt want any action taken.

    Aggravated menacing: Blanche Road

    At 9:50 a.m. Sept. 11, an inspector with the citys housing department reported that he was completing an exterior inspection of a home when a man came outside and began to berate him. The man said he was going to go to city hall with a machine gun and shoot everyone. A warrant was issued for the mans arrest.

    At 4:30 p.m. Sept. 14, police went to an East Cleveland home and arrested the man who made the threats. The man was arrested on charges of aggravated menacing and inducing panic. Cleveland Heights police also wanted the suspect on previous outstanding warrants.

    Improper discharging of a firearm: Renrock Road

    At 9 a.m. Sept. 11, police were called to a three-floor multiple dwelling where several gunshots had been fired. A woman, 55, called police after being told to do so by a 25-year-old man who lives above her on the third floor.

    As officers attempted to enter the closed first floor door, they heard from behind the door the 25-year-old stating that he needed help, that there were people after him, and that, according to the police report, it wasnt him. Police entered and found the man standing with his hands on his head. The man told police he had a knife tucked in his shorts. Police removed the knife and handcuffed the man. The man told officers that an unloaded gun was upstairs. Police found the gun, a rifle, on the second floor stairwell landing.

    In the mans third-floor residence, police found several spent shell casings and a damaged window. No one was inside.

    The man went on to tell police that he thought he was being followed by his ex-girlfriend and a man he does not know and that he could hear them walking inside the house. He believed they wanted to kill him.

    The man told police that, in his head, he could hear the unknown male saying, She wants you dead. I am going to kill you. He also said the couple followed him home from work that morning, and that they could hear and see everything he was doing, and that they tapped his phone. He said he knew what he did was wrong, but that he was afraid they were going to kill him. Police had the man taken to the hospital for a psychological examination, where he was placed in a lockdown facility.

    Officers found five gunshots had struck the rear of a neighboring house. Witnesses heard varying amounts of gunshots being fired, but saw no one suspicious in the area. The woman who called police said that the man came to her door and told her to call police.

    The detective bureau is investigating.

    See more Sun Press news here.

    Read more here:
    Two shots fired at mourning family while on their homes porch: Cleveland Heights police blotter - cleveland.com

    Walter Scott: You never know what may be lurking in the darkness – West Central Tribune - September 20, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    I grab my cup of coffee and go sit on the porch while Billie runs around and does what he needs to do. His routine includes circling the house, checking for deer in the yard and smelling all the scents left by anything that may have passed through his yard at night while he was inside.

    Jag, the terrier, sleeps in one of the chairs on the porch where he can watch the yard and protect us from invaders. It is fairly common for him to start barking viciously at some time in the middle of the night.

    His bout of attentiveness is normally brought on by a passing deer, which is usually chased off by his barking. This saves him the trouble of getting off his chair and actually doing something. It also causes me to get up and go yell at him as he is barking right below our bedroom window.

    Friday night was typical. Jag started barking as though the whole Chinese army was coming over the hill. By the time I got up and got to the door, the barking had stopped, and Jag was nowhere to be seen. That was good enough for me. Whatever the problem was, it must have been solved, saving me the trouble of going outside to yell at him.

    Saturday morning, as per our routine, Billie and I went out in the early morning darkness. I sat down with my coffee in the chair next to Jag. He looked like the king of the world, propped up in his chair, satisfied with another night of protecting us.

    Billie was only gone a couple of minutes, which is unusual. It usually takes 10 or 15 minutes to do a thorough check of his yard. When he came back, he was still tracking something, across the porch, past Jag and me, and around the corner.

    The porch wraps around the house on three sides. I could hear Billie trotting to the far side, nose to the floor. A few seconds later, he came back with something brown in his mouth. He was proudly trying to show me his prize, but I was not about to take an unidentified object from him before I found out what it was and if it was alive. I reached into the house and flipped on the light.

    Billie was standing there with a muskrat in his mouth. Fortunately for both of us, it was dead. Jag sat proudly in his chair as though he was saying, yes, that is mine, but you guys can have it. I did not really want it but took it anyway.

    I am not sure why a muskrat would wander close enough to the house to cause Jag to go after it. I am sure Jag did not venture too far from his chair on the porch in the middle of the night to go hunting. Muskrats will travel away from water at times, but this one will not make mistake again of coming into the yard.

    In the middle of the night when Jag is barking and growling, you never know what might be lurking in the darkness. Apparently, Jag knows, and he will take care of it.

    Read the original here:
    Walter Scott: You never know what may be lurking in the darkness - West Central Tribune

    Porch and mini Valleyfest parade deadlines near, but organizers say they are flexible due to smoke, COVID danger – The Spokesman-Review - September 20, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Participants have until this weekend to sign up for most events in the 2020 Valleyfest Parade, but will be allowed some flexibility due to smoke danger, COVID-19 restrictions and going back to school.

    Executive Director for Valleyfest Peggy Doering said the smoke has made it difficult for Valleyfest organizers and court to prepare for the event, and she knows it must be challenging for others who are struggling with similar situations.

    Because of our circumstances, I am not holding anybody to a deadline, Doering said.

    She said participants will be able to do almost every event from home and the deadline to participate in the Marvelous Mini Parade and the Lilly Pad Procession is Sept. 19, but there is flexibility if meeting that is a challenge for most.

    Participants can use anything to build shoebox entries into the miniparade including paint, markers, action figures or flowers.

    Floats must be at least 12 inches long and 10 inches high, but there is not a maximum size. Themes must be family friendly and cannot include political candidates or issues.

    To be eligible for a prize, participants must submit a photo of the float from the front. Organizers also ask that participants post their floats on social media and make videos of around 15 seconds to show how they made their floats, and tag the images with @SpokValleyFest or use the hashtag #MarvelousMiniParade.

    Displays for the Valleyfest Lilly-Pad Procession should be up and registered by Sept. 19 at noon as well. Any theme can be used to decorate a porch as long the theme isnt political or religious. A few suggested by organizers include honoring people who have Hearts of Gold, harvest or honoring first responders.

    The display should remain up between Sept. 19 and 30, On Sept. 26 between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., a procession that includes the festival royal court and community groups will visit the neighborhood.

    The first 50 people to sign up will receive a Lilly-Pad Procession sign. Homes selected to be visited directly by the procession will be notified a day in advance and members of the procession will throw candy.

    Those in the Lilly-Pad Procession must live in Spokane Valley, but the Marvelous Mini Parade participants can be from anywhere.

    Instead of having a walk-through booth event, Valleyfest will have a Virtual Vendor Village. A link will be posted on the Valleyfest website where they will be available for live chats about their products. Live music will be streamed and will be available from Sept. 26 to Oct. 26 from to 4 p.m.

    Nonprofits can also sign up for a social service booth, but must register by Sept. 20. Political candidates and political parties will be able to sign up for these types of booths.

    Doering said live music will include favorites from past Valleyfest events including the Master Class Big Band and country artist Justin James.

    In addition to parades, Valleyfest organizers are encouraging participates to get outside if the smoke clears up by event time.

    It may impact challenges, Doering said, Hopefully some of this will clear up.

    The festival will include a multisport challenge encouraging participants to participate in 10 outdoor challenges over 10 days, from Sept. 19 to 27. The challenges include, run, walk, bike or roller blade down the Appleway Trail and do the same on other trails and parks throughout the area. Registration is $5 plus a $1.58 processing fee.

    Valleyfest will also host a free drive-in movie showing of The Sandlot when festivities begin on Sept. 26. Participants are encouraged to sign up in advance because space is limited. The movie will be shown outside of the Hub Sports Center in Spokane Valley. Participants must sign up in advance by going to hubsportscenter.org/events/9-26-movie/.

    Registration for all other events can be found atvalleyfest.org.

    Original post:
    Porch and mini Valleyfest parade deadlines near, but organizers say they are flexible due to smoke, COVID danger - The Spokesman-Review

    Calgary photographers portraits move from porches to the walls of the Glenbow Museum – Global News - September 20, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    From the porch to the walls of the Glenbow Museum, one Calgary photographer is honoured to have his personal work on display for the city to see.

    Neil Zellers #porchrait initiative started as a way to bring smiles to Calgarians faces during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, his personal portraits have since turned into Glenbows newest exhibit.

    Its so much to take in to be a part of the Glenbow because its such an institution in Calgary and the world, really, Zeller said in an interview with Global News Radio 770 CHQR on Friday.

    Me and my family got a sneak peek prior to the opening last weekend, and when we walked around the corner and saw my name on the wall, we were all pretty weepy.

    It was an incredible moment.

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    Zeller said the idea for the porch portraits came from a similar initiative in Yellowknife, where photographer Pat Kane offered to take photographs of residents through their windows.

    Wanting to offer a similar sense of excitement to Calgarians, Zeller began to offer family portraits on residents porches in March while adhering to physical-distancing regulations and public health protocols.

    I jumped at the opportunity to do it myself here in Calgary, so I ran down the street to a friends house, took a photo of them on the porch and then started a ticketing site. Then four to five months later, I had photographed over 600 families in Calgary, he said.

    It was done with long lenses and they had a scheduled time that I would arrive, so they knew I was coming and I didnt even have to knock on doors.

    After seeing his work, Glenbow worked with Zeller to create the first new exhibit since the museum reopened its doors to the public at the beginning of August.

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    Jenny Conway Fisher, Glenbows director of communications and marketing, said the museum is excited to host the exhibit as it offers a unique viewpoint of Calgarians amid the pandemic.

    Neils Porchrait project captured a historic moment that we all experienced in different ways, Fisher said.

    In these photographs, you recognize a kindred spirit, you see people really coming together as families and as friends and finding ways to deal with stress and loneliness and hardship.

    The results are heartwarming and funny and poignant.

    Since opening on Sept. 5, the exhibit has struck a chord with audiences and brought many visitors back through the museums doors, Fisher said.

    We saw all our timed-ticket spots fully booked on the opening three days of the Porchraits exhibition, and this past weekend was almost fully booked too, she said.

    Weve had lots of people reconnecting with Glenbow and purchasing or renewing memberships. It feels great to have people back in the museum after five months of closure.

    Story continues below advertisement

    The exhibit showcases 59 of the more than 600 families Zeller photographed throughout the pandemic.

    Zeller said he hopes the images he chose reflects the importance of family and the citys resilience during these unprecedented times.

    We co-curated it in a way that showed the diversity of Calgary, he said.

    It was a really difficult decision, but we made a diverse show that everyone can grab onto and maybe even see a bit of themselves in some of them.

    The exhibit doesnt have a scheduled end date, but officials said Porchraits will run throughout October.

    2020 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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    Calgary photographers portraits move from porches to the walls of the Glenbow Museum - Global News

    100 YEARS OF THE WOMENS VOTE: On the front porch of history – Palm Beach Post - September 9, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Jan Tuckwood| Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

    Alice Moore put both hands on Tim Hullihans face and stared into his eyes.

    I am going to serve you breakfast on my porch, the lifelong educator told the architect.

    This was in October 2009, when Hullihan had just saved a two-story rooming house, built in 1921 by Moores adoptive father, Haley Mickens, from demolition.

    Moores porch was across the street from the rooming house, behind the white picket fence. It wraps around the stately two-story home Mickens built for himself and his wife, Alice Frederick Mickens, in 1917.

    That porch has seen a lot of important people and things.

    Moore had been crying when she grasped Hullihans face, so desperate was the then-92-year-old to save her familys history and heritage an important heritage that would have been forgotten now if not for Hullihan and a small band of fellow historians.

    The look in her eyes and the strength and sincerity of her voice said that she trusted me and that she was counting on me to do what she was no longer able to, Hullihan said in his eulogy for Moore, who died Jan. 13, 2014, at 96. The invitation for a meal in her home was more than a traditional Southern gesture of friendship. It recalled the numerous important moments her front porch had witnessed and evoked her neighborhoods affluent past.

    Thats right. Moores neighborhood, the Historic Northwest neighborhood in West Palm Beach, had been affluent once upon a time.

    The Mickens family home had been impressive, one of many impressive homes built by upper-middle-class Blacks around 1920.

    Moore told Hullihan how the Mickens family and their home at 801 4th St. played host to Count Basie and Louis Armstrong, and how members of their bands stayed across the street, at the Mickens rooming house.

    She regaled him with tales from the porch, where Nobel Peace Prize recipient Ralph Bunche had once shared tea, and where Asa Philip Randolph, who had organized the first predominantly Black labor union, the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, had chatted with Haley and Alice Mickens in the 1920s.

    And where Mary McLeod Bethune, who founded Bethune-Cookman College in Daytona Beach in 1929, worked with Mrs. Mickens to raise money and persuade the state Legislature to build a home for young Black women who would have otherwise been put in prison.

    They both worked to get women the vote, though that was particularly tough for Black women.

    Florida was still the South in 1920. Although Congress had passed the 19th Amendment giving women the right to vote and 36 states had ratified it by 1920 making it the law of the land not every state voted to ratify it at the time, and racial tensions often kept Black women from voting.

    The Voting Rights Act of 1965 prohibited racial discrimination in voting. Florida women had been voting since 1920 but it took the Legislature until 1969 to finally ratify the 19th Amendment.

    It takes time to change minds and hearts. Women like Bethune, Mickens and Moore knew that and kept the wheels of womens equality moving.

    In her obituary in The Palm Beach Post, Alice Mickens, who died in 1988 at 99, was called an ambassador of interracial good will.

    She served as a trustee at Bethune-Cookman for more than three decades and received an honorary doctorate from the university. A science hall there is named for her, and another hall is named for Alice Moore.

    Their legacy of education continues, beyond their deaths, because of their friends, who remember.

    Dr. Moores front porch was a classroom for those willing to listen, Hullihan said in his eulogy for Moore.Sitting with her, I learned that during the 1920s, 30s and 40s, when at least one of the teams in the Negro Baseball League used Lincoln Park (now Coleman Park) as their spring training site, it was a Mickens family standard to host Sunday afternoon garden parties for the professional baseball players of both the home and visiting teams.As I listened to the prideful and confident voice of a retired educator, I imagined Satchel Paige and Josh Gibson making their way up the front porch steps and being welcomed into her home.

    Dr. Moores front porch is part of a home and a neighborhood listed on the National Register of Historic Places largely because of her persistent efforts to keep their rich histories alive.

    And of Hullihans persistent efforts.

    As she reminisced, I let my eyes look upon the historic neighborhood her adopted father helped establish and she had called home for 80-plus years, Hullihan said. As my eyes wandered, I hoped her 92-year-old eyes could not see it as it was.I hoped in her minds eye it was still a thriving and prosperous neighborhood.It was then that I realized that this front porch deserves to face a better future a future more like its affluent past.It was then that I realized that I was friends with an extraordinary lady who deserved my very best efforts in preserving her familys legacy.

    Hullihan drew up plans for Mickens Village, a plan for the 1917 Mickens house, the 1921 boarding house and a 1903 house also built by Haley Mickens.

    That plan was a dream it went nowhere for years, and it may never succeed.

    But today, the wheels keep moving, slowly.

    West Palm Beachs Community Redevelopment Agency has plans to move another historic structure The Edgewater, a two-story hotel built by white pioneer George Potter 100 years ago from 316 Gardenia St., to a spot on the Mickens property where their garage once stood.

    The hotel was supposed to be moved in June, and then in August. Perhaps it will be moved this fall, but the coronavirus pandemicis one of many complicating factors.

    Whether these projects work or not depends on several factors the most important is filling a need, Hullihan, a West Palm Beach native, said. Too often grand projects are out of step with the community that will surround it. In the case of Mickens Village, it is intended to be in step with the community and be part of it.

    The idea is to make the Edgewater a bed-and-breakfast, and the proprietor of the B&B would live in the historic Mickens house.

    Creating a bed-and-breakfast creates an opportunity for a local business person to earn and keep local dollars in the community, says Hullihan, who has been involved in preserving many downtown buildings, including the 1917 courthouse, now home to the Richard and Pat Johnson Palm Beach County History Museum. That's very different from grand projects that often overlook the key element of success: local proprietors keeping local dollars in the community.

    Across Division Avenue from the Mickens house, a three-building local history museum is planned, using the two-story Mickens boarding house, a home Haley Mickens built in 1903, and a 1920 house recreation. The three buildings would be linked by a storytelling plaza, a public gathering space.

    Telling the story of the Northwest neighborhood and preserving it for future generations was Dr. Moore's dream, Hullihan says. With a B&B across the street, the potential to tie the museum in with heritage tourism makes a lot of sense to me. Keeping the neighborhood's history alive in present and future generations is essential.

    Women making history: 100 years of the womens vote

    To celebrate a century of suffrage, The Palm Beach Post is featuring a series on influential women.

    Next Tuesday: How sororities in historically black colleges and universities have supported local women, personally and professionally

    On Sept. 22: Local women who have spent most of their lives volunteering with the League of Women Voters

    On Sept. 29: 2020 Election Guide, produced by the League of Women Voters, appears in The Post

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    100 YEARS OF THE WOMENS VOTE: On the front porch of history - Palm Beach Post

    Man killed after gunman shoots into group sitting on porch of Cleveland home, police say – cleveland.com - September 9, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    CLEVELAND, Ohio A gunman fired shots into a group sitting on the front porch of home, killing a 42-year-old man, according to police.

    Raymond Lawson of Cleveland died in the drive-by shooting, according to police. Five others sitting on the porch at the time of the shooting were not hit by bullets. No arrests have been made in the case.

    The shooting happened about 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at a home on East 112th Street and Kinsman Avenue.

    All six people were sitting on the front porch when someone in a large SUV drove by the home and fired several shots, according to police.

    A bullet hit Lawson in the neck, killing him.

    The SUV sped off. Investigators searched city-owned surveillance videos in the area to see if they recorded the shooting or getaway.

    Its the 15th homicide in 16 days in Cleveland. There have been 111 homicides in Cleveland so far this year. There were 80 homicides in Cleveland through Sept. 2, 2019, when there were 132 homicides for that year.

    Read more from cleveland.com:

    Man shot to death in Garfield Heights, police say

    Cuyahoga County Jail officer convicted in attack on inmate suspended 15 days

    Man charged shooting that killed one, wounded another at Cleveland gas station

    Link:
    Man killed after gunman shoots into group sitting on porch of Cleveland home, police say - cleveland.com

    Memorial Hermann’s In the Pink of Health Celebrates 20 Years with A Porch Affair Virtual Event Oct. 23 – Woodlands Online - September 9, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    THE WOODLANDS, TX -- Cancer never takes a break, and neither does Memorial Hermanns In the Pink of Health. The annual event, presented by SGL Foundation, is a longstanding tradition in The Woodlands. For 20 years, ladies and gentlemen have donned their pink and teal and enjoyed a full host of activities: a champagne reception, auctions, and a boutique, culminating with the luncheon that featured a celebrity speaker and a testimonial from a local cancer survivor. People gathered to raise money to help reduce the incidence of breast and ovarian cancers and to support cancer survivors and their families.

    Like many other events, guests will not be gathering at the Marriott this year, but will be celebrating from the safety of their home and enjoying the program on screen. The medium may have changed, but the mission remains the same.

    'During this time of increased unemployment, high stress and uncertainty, the need for In the Pink of Health to continue providing services for our friends and neighbors is greater than ever. We appreciate those who can us help us fulfill our mission by safely celebrating A Porch Affair with guests, whether its on a porch, a back yard, or in the comfort of your home,' remarked Dee Gelsomini, In the Pink of Health co-chair.

    In the Pink of Health welcomes back the support of many sponsors, including top sponsors SGL, Tricia and Jack Futcher, Adcetera, Makeup Junkie, and Mary Ann and Marty Young.

    'We are so thankful to our community partners for their support of Memorial Hermanns In the Pink of Health. This year we are celebrating our 20th anniversary and we are proud to say that we have reinvested over $6.6 million back to our community here in Montgomery County, said Debra Cooper, In the Pink of Health co-chair.

    This year, sponsors will receive a Celebration Kit full of surprises to help them celebrate the day of the event. A friendly In the Pink of Health committee member will deliver it to each sponsors home or business the week before the event.

    Its a way to show our appreciation and include them in the celebration at noon on Oct. 23, said Ann Wolford, event consultant.

    To underscore the Porch Affair theme, In the Pink of Health has partnered with Woodlands Style House who will completely decorate a sponsors porch, patio, lawn or dining room for the event. This auction item will be available at the end of September and awarded the second week of October. As a result of the 2019 luncheon, the In the Pink of Health allocations committee disbursed $500,000 to help cancer survivors in and around the greater Montgomery County area:

    $225,000 to Canopy, a cancer survivorship center on the campus of Memorial Hermann The Woodlands Medical Center; $100,000 to Interfaith Community Clinic to provide 3D mammograms for underserved women and support breast cancer education and outreach; $50,000 for continued investment in state-of-the-art technology at the Memorial Hermann Breast Care Center at Memorial Hermann The Woodlands Medical Center; $50,000 to The Rose for breast screening, diagnostics, and treatment for women of all ages; $25,000 to Ovarcome to assist in its mission to increase awareness of ovarian cancer and its symptoms and provide financial support to patients in Montgomery County; $32,000 for wigs and wig care kits through the oncology nurse navigator at Memorial Hermann The Woodlands Medical Center; and $18,000 was held in reserve for special projects.

    To join A Porch Affair on Oct. 23, please visit http://www.inthepinkofhealth.org or contact Ann Wolford at awolford@thewolfordgroup.com. Sponsorships are still available.

    Photos: All photos by Nicole Oman, Relics of Rainbows Photo

    See the original post:
    Memorial Hermann's In the Pink of Health Celebrates 20 Years with A Porch Affair Virtual Event Oct. 23 - Woodlands Online

    Bayview home built for the generations – Washington Daily News – thewashingtondailynews.com - September 9, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    BAYVIEW Standing on the front porch of Ruby and Larkin Littles home at Bayview, the breeze from the wide Pamlico River whispering through the screens and the lap of waves against the bulkhead may be the only sounds heard. Theres plenty to see: piers jutting out into the water, a big blue sky and an opposite tree-lined shore nearly two miles away.

    The peace of their surroundings, the sunrises and sunsets, were what drew the couple to the land nearly three decades ago. They were living in Greenville and found Bayview to be just their kind of getaway, without going too far away.

    For a number of years, we had a trailer here with a big old porch on it, Larkin Little said.

    By 1993, they were ready to build, so they built the house right next door to their current one its stucco exterior and wall of windows facing the river modeled on a home theyd seen while in Ft. Myers, Florida. It suited them, until the Littles got a random visit one day.

    In 2004, some people walked up to our door and said they wanted to buy it, Larkin Little said.

    I looked at Larkin and said, You want to sell this house? Ruby Little laughed.

    It turns out, they did.

    THREE SEASONS: A three-seasons porch takes advantage of the river breeze in a space that has the comfort of indoors, outdoors.

    We were gone six months a year, off and on. I felt I needed something a little more closed in, because we werent here to check on it all the time, Ruby Little said.

    The next house was built to last.

    Because its so well-engineered, theres a lot of things you dont see that add a lot of value to the property, said Century 21 REALTOR Scott Campbell. Its got an irrigation system, a deep well, three zones for heat and air, 50-year-warranty metal roof, French drains around the property.

    We built this house as a forever house. When they said use 2-by-4s, we used 2-by-6s, Ruby Little said.

    A PLACE TO RELAX: A daybed on the three-seasons porch makes for an ideal spot to take a nap, with the river breeze and the sound of the waves against the bulkhead.

    Ruby Little served as general contractor on the house, and nary a space went unused. Where drywall would have covered a nook, she instead had the space converted into a recessed bookcase; where a closet would have been built a certain size, she requested it be expanded to fit beneath the slope of the roofline. The kitchen is a cooks dream, with all the extras: double ovens, a walk-in pantry, all Thermidor appliances including refrigerator plus two additional refrigerated drawers in an island.

    COOKS KITCHEN: With all Thermidor appliances and bonuses such as a bread drawer and additional refrigerated drawer space in the center island, this kitchen is made for someone who loves to cook.

    Its maxed out, Ruby Little laughed. Larkin gave me free reign and we used it.

    That extends to a three-seasons porch that runs along the front of the house and a master bathroom with a shower in one room and soaking tub with views of the river in another, separated by an enormous walk-through closet.

    The Littles designed the house not only for themselves, but for their children and grandchildren upstairs bedrooms with their own sitting room, along with a playroom, provide plenty of space to spread out.

    When we built this and moved down here, we had 11 grandchildren. They were down here all the time, running around, Larkin Little said.

    Now everybodys grown up and gone to college or moved to other states, Ruby Little said.

    Their childrens and grandchildrens moves have precipitated the Littles move to Washington. There, they still have views of the water in their Moss Landing home on Water Street, and the pool that came with the property is Ruby Littles new river.

    Ive never lived in town in my life, but we can walk places, and weve enjoyed that when weve been able to do it, Larkin Little said.

    The couple said theyve enjoyed their Bayview home for many years.

    LOTS OF LIGHT: With hardwood floors and windows and doors opening onto the porch, the living room is bright and airy.

    Weve enjoyed the space and being able to spread out and all the entertaining, Larkin Little said.

    Sitting on the porch, youre right there on the river, and the breeze feels so good, Ruby Little said. Its a happy place.

    For more information about 113 Boada St., Bayview, contact Scott Campbell (252-362-1569) or Alexis Davis (252-702-9697) at Century 21 The Realty Group in Washington.

    The rest is here:
    Bayview home built for the generations - Washington Daily News - thewashingtondailynews.com

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