Home Builder Developer - Interior Renovation and Design
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January 3, 2021 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Performance venues across the country are anxiously awaiting a post-pandemic environment when they can throw open their doors to waiting crowds and hear the sweet sound of thunderous applause.
The Lyric Theater in historic Overtown is no exception, and its operators are more than ready with a restored theater auditorium and brand-new stage. All it needs is the green light from public health officials to reopen.
Shortly after theaters were forced to shutter in March, rotting stage floor boards at the Lyric led to the discovery of a termite infestation. Thats when the decision was made to quickly eradicate the pests, demolish and rebuild the stage, and undergo a full blown auditorium renovation during this unplanned intermission.
What awaits the public in 2021 is a historic space restored to the opulence and grandeur of the original 1913 playhouse. The Lyric Theater is on the National Register of Historic Places and is the last remaining original structure from Miamis segregation-era Harlem of the South.
Geder Walker, the Black businessman who built the Lyric Theater, was a well-traveled man, and when he decided to construct this building in Miamis Colored Town, he did so with the beautiful and grand opera houses and theaters from Europe in mind, said Timothy A. Barber, Lyrics executive director.
Over the years the theater has seen many different iterations, but the current interior more closely resembles the magnificence of the original space, hailed by a 1915 newspaper as the most beautiful and costly playhouse owned by colored people in all of the Southland, said Barber.
The $120,000 restoration was made possible with funding from the Southeast Overtown Park West Community Redevelopment Agency, Miami-Dade County through the office of then chairwoman Audrey Edmonson and volunteers from the Overtown community.
Besides the complete rebuilding of its 2,600-square-foot stage, theater enhancements include interior painting in the auditorium and historic lobby; custom woodwork in the theater on the proscenium, walls and doors; new built-in stairs for the stage; carpet installation; custom door painting; and bespoke fixtures installed on doors. Local residents were hired for demolition. Vendors who worked on this labor of love include Ronys Fine Carpentry, Nutting Engineers, National Concrete Polishing, Alliance Fabrication, Tito Miller and Jerry Mack. The entire project was designed and overseen by Barber himself.
Timothy A. Barber, executive director of the Historic Lyric Theater and Black Archives, unveiling the theaters renovated auditorium and stage in November 2020.
Front and center on the stage foundation is the face of a lion, which is the logo of The Black Archives, History and Research Foundation of South Florida, which acquired the Lyric Theater in 1988. The lion comes from the African proverb, Until the lion tells the story, tales of the hunt will glorify the hunter. The foundation believes the proverb is the essence of the archives, whose mission is to collect, preserve and disseminate Miamis Black history from 1896 to present, and tell its untold stories and ensure that history is preserved for future generations.
Inside the restored Lyric Theater facing the balcony.
Built in 1913, the Lyric Theater quickly became a major entertainment center for Black Americans in Miami. The 400-seat theater was built, owned and operated by Walker, an enterprising Georgian who came to Miami prior to 1900. The theater anchored the district known as Little Broadway, an area alive with hotels, restaurants and nightclubs frequented by Black and white tourists and residents. It served the community as a movie and vaudeville theater for almost 50 years, and was a symbol of Black economic influence free of discrimination and a source of pride and culture within Overtown.
An image of the Lyric Theater in its segregation-era heyday is displayed on the wall of the theaters original lobby.
A view of Lyrics new 2,600-square-foot stage, recently rebuilt after a termite infestation.
After his death in 1919, Walkers wife, Henrietta, continued to operate the Lyric, which was also used as a community auditorium. School children and civic groups performed on its stage and special events such as commencement ceremonies were held there. Visiting luminaries like Mary McLeod Bethune, Ethel Waters and the Fisk Jubilee Singers lectured and sang at the venue.
The Lyric continued to operate as a movie theater until 1959, when it became a church of the General Assembly of the Church of the Lord Jesus Christ of the Apostolic Faith. When Overtown began to deteriorate in the 1960s the Lyric closed and would remain shuttered for decades.
Phase one of restoration of the former showplace began in 1989. In 2000, after extensive rehabilitation and funding from the Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs, the newly restored Lyric Theater opened once again.
This is the first time in 20 years that the theater has been closed to audiences, but it is persevering through the generosity of its funders.
As a Black-owned nonprofit organization, we are not strangers to funding difficulties and the stretching of resources. The Black Archives has always had to be extra vigilant about obtaining and safeguarding our coffers. Thankfully, we were able to practice good stewardship over our resources, said Barber.
The Black Archives has had to pivot from public in-person events to virtual activities due to the coronavirus pandemic, like many cultural institutions throughout the nation. It has been presenting thoughtfully curated online programming for the last 10 months, from live Black history trivia shows and childrens storytime, to panels on race, religion and social justice. The date for the next fully public event is tentatively slated for February 2021.
Because the Lyric does not host its own theater company and has typically served as a performance venue for others, developing original programming is a new enterprise that entails careful planning under current conditions that makes economic sense.
While we are still watching the developments with COVID-19 and the current surge, we are hopeful that at the top of 2021, we will be able to bring back in-person activities. Things will be different than before, taking into account safety measures and social distancing, but we are looking forward to returning with signature programming like our amateur night showcase, Lyric Live, Barber said. We know that people are really craving live entertainment and we hope to bring it back to Overtown in a safe and well-thought-out way.
Miami anxiously awaits that day.
An old photograph of when the Lyric Theater fell into disrepair in the 1960s while being used as a church.
Officially renamed The Black Archives Historic Lyric Theater Cultural Arts Complex, the venue is now the oldest legitimate theater in Miami. Adjacent to the citys central downtown business district, it is an anchor site of the Historic Overtown Folklife Village. Just as in Overtowns glory days during the early part of the 20th century, the theater is poised to once again become, in the 21st century, a symbol of Black economic influence, as well as a social gathering place and a source of pride and culture.
The Black Archives History and Research Foundation of South Florida is a photographic and manuscript archival research repository dedicated to documenting the history of people of the African Diaspora in Miami-Dade County. Founded in 1977 by Dorothy Jenkins Fields, it has became one to the largest repositories for the history of Black Americans in Miami. The nonprofit organization is housed at the Lyric complex.
An exterior view of the present day Black Archives Historic Lyric Theater Cultural Arts Complex.
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Lyric welcomes the new year with new stage - The Miami Times
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January 3, 2021 by
Mr HomeBuilder
With the addition of snow and ice under our feet, the fear of falling heightens for many. However, Mother Nature is not the only culprit when it comes to falls. Many falls happen in the home, where you may think you are most safe.
Fortunately, there are ways to make your home a safer place with a few easy adjustments, according to RiverView Healths Coordinator of Physical Therapy Lindsey Ebertowski, DPT.
Before the snow even fell, we were seeing a higher number of falls taking place throughout the community, Ebertowski shared. I think its due to the lack of exercise with more people being homebound and getting deconditioned.
RiverViews Physical Therapy Team can help with any mobility issues you or a loved one might be experiencing.
There are actions you can take today, and as you age, to help keep you safe and independent tomorrow, she stated. Make a plan today. Stay independent tomorrow.
Ebertowski suggests the following:
Check the floors in each room in your home and reduce tripping hazards:
Check the kitchen:
Check the bedrooms:
Check inside and outside stairs and steps:
Check the bathrooms:
Falls are also more likely when wearing inappropriate footwear, such as flip-flops that dont cover the heel. Wear safe shoes that fit well, have a firm heel to provide stability, and have a textured sole to prevent slipping.
Falls and a fear of falling can diminish your ability to lead a full and independent life, Ebertowski stated. Although one in every four older adults falls each year, falling is not a part of normal aging. You have the power to reduce your risk of falls.
Ebertowski and RiverViews Physical Therapy Team are movement experts who improve quality of life through hands-on care, patient education, and prescribed movement. If you worry about falls, have had a fall, or have experienced a loss of balance, talk to your primary care provider about having a physical therapy evaluation. For more information, call RiverViews Rehab Services at 218.281.9463.
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RIVERVIEW'S PHYSICAL THERAPY TEAM OFFERS FALL PREVENTION TIPS, SERVICES - kroxam.com
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January 3, 2021 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Talk about a stark contrast ...
Couple weeks ago, I got down on the floor to play with my granddaughter.
For years Ive been wearing knee pads whenever a task involved getting down on my hands and knees. Some prior surgery, and 60 years of wear and tear made it necessary. Going without felt like kneeling on a Lego block.
When I asked my doctor about it years ago, he said he couldnt recommend ever getting down on your hands and knees. Physical therapists smile when I tell them what the doc said.
How about the guys who install carpets for a living, I thought.
But this was something new. It was a really sharp pain in my right knee, like someone heating up an ice pick and stabbing it in right below the kneecap.
Just what I need, I thought as I struggled to get back up from the floor from playing with my granddaughter, another trip to the orthopedic surgeon.
But I figured a guy cant go through life without getting down on the floor with grandkids and Labrador retrievers. So I called the clinic where that orthopedic surgeon works. And this is what I posted on Facebook (because, like, we put everything on Facebook these days):
A sharp pain in my right knee flared up last weekend. On Tuesday I called (the clinic one town over) for an appointment with the doc who fixed my other knee and both shoulders. Hes in (my town) today, the scheduler said. Can you be there at 1:40?
You betcha.
So I had my appointment within four hours, my post continued. X-rays were taken, and I had my diagnosis of bursitis by mid afternoon. Then I was able to get right in to see the physical therapist Ive gone to in the past. Its now three days later, Ive had two physical therapy sessions, and Im well on my way to recovery.
This is not a health care system I want to fundamentally change.
The surgeon I saw who is also the team physician for our university football team fixed my left knee when I tore my quadriceps tendon 11 years ago. Then he fixed rotator cuffs on both my port and starboard shoulders. Great guy.
I wasnt on Medicare for those surgeries, but I am today. So Im not the most attractive patient with a bum knee. Nevertheless, I got great care.
So I put all that on Facebook. And I soon got a response from a young mom overseas, who I have known all of her life, who was born in the United States but now has two sons and a daughter in a country that has nationalized health care. This is what she wrote:
Dave in (my countrys) health care. Pain in knee. Call Dr., appointment in two weeks. Goes to appointment, told to take Paracet. Gets sick leave. Dave calls Dr. again a month later, gets another appointment in two weeks. Goes back in. Gets told to try some rub-on pain killer prescription. Longer sick leave. Dave calls back still in pain. Another two weeks waiting for appointment. Dave insists on X-ray. Dr. agrees just to get him to quiet down. X-ray is scheduled in three months down the road. X-ray Dr. looks and says there is nothing wrong with it. Dave gets sick leave for extended period. Dave is pissed he cant get decent healthcare and is willing to pay more for diagnosis. Dave goes home to Wyoming where he should have never left.
She added that when her son was 18 months old, he needed to see a dermatologist.
I called in January to find out his appointment was for November, she wrote.
I know our health care in the United States isnt perfect. I know how fortunate I am to have such great care available so quickly.
I just think the folks who are determined to turn our health care over to the government should talk to folks, like this young friend of mine, who are living with it every day.
Lets not screw up what, at least in my experience, is some pretty wonderful care.
Dave Simpson has been a newsman for four decades, working as a reporter, editor, publisher and columnist. He lives in Cheyenne. He can be reached at davesimpson145@hotmail.com.
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Two sides of the health care coin | Rocketminer | wyomingnews.com - Wyoming Tribune
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January 3, 2021 by
Mr HomeBuilder
The riverboat captain is a storyteller, and Captain Don Sanders will be sharing the stories of his long association with the river from discovery to a way of love and life. This a part of a long and continuing story.
By Capt. Don SandersSpecial to NKyTribune
Thank goodness 2020 is three days behind us. The day before the turn of the calendar, I found myself reflecting on New Years days gone by.
The steamboat cruising season began in Spring lay-up, and once started, lasted until nearly the end of the year sometime around Thanksgiving.
There were never any Christmas or New Years Eve celebrations aboard the DELTA QUEEN when I was there. Before the end of each year, the crew was laid off and collecting their unemployment checks at least I was. In fact, I looked forward to the break at the end of the year as we had no off-days, vacations, or other forms of time-off. The steamboat cruising season began in Spring lay-up, and once started, lasted until nearly the end of the year sometime around Thanksgiving, usually. The official Logbook of the DELTA QUEEN, 1971, notes:
Sun. Nov 28. The End of the Trip and the end of the 1971 Season. Most of the crew paid off, and [boat] departed Podras Street Wharf for Avondale Shipyard.
On Thursday, 25 November 1971, Thanksgiving had no annotation in the Log commemorating the holiday. If there was a special celebratory meal served on the Main Deck for the passengers in the Orleans Room dining area, the festivity failed to spread below to the Crews Mess. Later crews may tell a different story when the DELTA QUEEN ran later into the year.
However, holidays aboard the Casino Boats of the late 1990s and early to mid-2000s were a different tune. On the five gambling boats I commanded, the DIAMOND LADY, EMERALD LADY, PLAYERS, GRAND VICTORIA I, and the GRAND VICTORIA II, holidays were special times of celebration as they were when most people were off work and available to patronize the vessels. Of my five casino boats, I remember the GRAND VICTORIA II the best, where 16 years of my life were invested in that lovely stern paddlewheeler.
I remember the GRAND VICTORIA II the best, where 16 years of my life were invested in that lovely stern paddlewheeler.
From Christmas Eve through New Years Day, the GRAND VIC II, or GVII, on the Middle Ohio River, Mile 506 at Rising Sun, Indiana, and across the river from Rabbit Hash, Kentucky, was one of the busiest and most lucrative times of the year. Onboard the boat, inside the spacious shoreside pavilion, and around the grounds and roadways belonging to the property, all took on a holiday air thanks to the vessel and shoreside crews working diligently under the marine departments command with the Captains and the Marine Director in charge.
During that special week, employee and crew vacations and requests for days off for the holidays were denied. Every hand available was necessary for the rush of anticipated patrons flocking to the lure of the gaily, although gaudy, decorations.
On Christmas Day, the casino closed from 3 a.m. until noon giving most of the employees, except for the on-duty mariners required to be aboard the GVII according to the vessels Certificate of Inspection, some holiday time at home with their families. By noon, though, a crowd stood waiting beyond the turnstiles for the gates to the boarding ramp to open. Unless a rare emergency arose, such as exceptionally high water on the Ohio River rising to such a level to flood the roads leading to the property, Christmas morning was the only time gaming closed during the year.
An outside contractor came aboard specializing in installing inflated balloons inside a huge net suspended from the overhead atop the vast open space above the escalators.
Of all the holidays, New Years Eve was the grandest and most celebrated on the GRAND VIC II. While gaming continued after the Christmas Day rush, an outside contractor came aboard specializing in installing inflated balloons inside a huge net suspended from the overhead atop the vast open space above the escalators. A pull line attached to the nets bottom was the trigger that released the balloons with a hard yank. Once the net and contents were in place a few days before the beginning of the upcoming year, the rope had to be secured and guarded until the countdown reached zero when a hardy tug unleashed the balloons onto the revelers heralding in the coming year below. Tensions remained high for several days before the big night lest some prankster pulled the cord prematurely, thereby jeopardizing the captain-in-charges employment security.
New Years Eve aboard the GRAND VICTORIA II was a super-gala event. Instead of just one group of celebrants aboard the vessel, the evening was divided into three separate cruises.
Each had their time aboard the boat, and after the lesser sub-groups had their turn, the primary party-goers crowded aboard for the countdown to midnight. Everyone dressed their best, and my costume was the full-dress uniform with a shiny, silk bowtie and the ornate high-pressure Captains Cap.
My costume was the full-dress uniform with a shiny, silk bowtie and the ornate high-pressure Captains Cap.
Everyone from the General Manager to all the company directors was aboard. The pilothouse became the hub of activity where a TV, tuned to the balls drop in Times Square in New York City, coordinated the drop of the festive balloons inside the vessel beneath the Captains quarters.
During the hours before the anticipated stroke of the clock announcing the approaching new year, the pilothouse hosted various department heads who needed the assurance that everything was in readiness for the anticipated drop of the inflated rubber bladders hanging high above the opening beneath the roof to the carpet of the Main Deck, some five stories below.
The visitors most welcome in the wheelhouse were Tom Sanders, Director of Marine Operations, and Arland Boyd, Director of Security. Except for the General Managers occasional appearance, the other big shots were accorded their ranks courtesy. Still, they were regarded as no more than curious interlopers in the delicately-tuned operation.
A quarter of an hour before the countdown, either the Bridge Mate or the Deck Mate took charge of the scene at the net.
A quarter of an hour before the countdown, either the Bridge Mate or the Deck Mate took charge of the scene at the net and carefully readied the pull cord while the deckhands stood by to clear the, then stopped, escalators of the balloons after the release. Of course, all of the participants co-ordinated the exercise with two-way radios they carried; assigned to Channel 9, the mariners channel.
With the television tuned to the station carrying the traditional merrymakers in Times Square, the Captain-on-Watch (me on several occasions), watched carefully, and with a hand on the switch controlling the microphone to the public address system throughout the vessel, followed along with the count from New York City:
FIVE FOUR THREE TWO ONE HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!
That goes for this year, too
HAPPY NEW YEAR, 2021!!!
HAPPY NEW YEAR, 2021!!!
Captain Don Sanders is a river man. He has been a riverboat captain with the Delta Queen Steamboat Company and with Rising Star Casino. He learned to fly an airplane before he learned to drive a machine and became a captain in the USAF. He is an adventurer, a historian, and a storyteller. Now, he is a columnist for the NKyTribune and will share his stories of growing up in Covington and his stories of the river. Hang on for the ride the river never looked so good.
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The River: Reflecting on New Year's days gone by on riverboats and saying a relieved goodbye to 2020 - User-generated content
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January 3, 2021 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Alan Froman|ThisWeek group
For many people, the primary focus for 2020 was to just get through the trying year of the COVID-19 pandemic, an economicdowntown, social unrest and a contentious presidential election, making it a year they'll likely always remember but want to forget.
Meanwhile, Grove City officials are entering 2021 with a focus on planning for the next 20 years and beyond, Mayor Richard "Ike" Stage said.
"We're usually in a constant state of long-range planning," he said. "We've survived the pandemicyear quite well as a community financially and in the impact on our economy."
The city was helped by being one of the most diversified in central Ohio, offering a mix of housing and jobopportunities anda blend of businesses, he said.
"That diversity is shown in the mix of housing and job opportunities we have," Stage said. "It's the blend of all the industries we have in Grove City, from high tech to logistics and lots of thingsin between."
No amount of planning could have prepared the city for something as unexpected as the pandemic, however, council president Christine Houk said.
Both the council and the administration were dedicated to providing support that residents and businesses needed, she said.
"That was on the front burner for the nation and for our community," Houk said."We will continue on that front, but I can't really make a crystal-ball projection" regarding what form that support will take in 2021.
The pandemic did force the city to reprioritize its 2020 plans and delayed progress on a number of projects that should get started or ramp up over the next 12 months, Stage said.
That includes the Columbus Street extension that will serve to connect Grove City's Town Center with the new Beulah Park Living development.
"We hope to start construction before the end of January, and it will be a four- or five-month project," Stage said.
The Columbus Street project originally was expected to get underway in 2020, but the pandemic and the process of the city negotiating with the owners of 18 properties affected by the planned expansion to buy a portion or all of their parcels lead to pushing the starting date back, Stage said.
The city also expects to take the first steps toward developing the 30-acre park that will be in the middle of the Beulah Park development area, he said.
It's still to be determined the entire slate of amenities for the new park, but during 2021, "our goal is to make it begin to look like a park," Stage said.
The initial work will include completing additional grading, placing a path around the perimeter of the park and planting trees, he said.
An amphitheater is planned as a centerpiece, but a timeline for development of one still is being finalized, Stage said.
The city has applied for $1 million from the state's capital budget to help fund the $3.5 million amphitheater project, he said.
Beulah Park is one of three public recreational-space projects the city has preliminary concepts for,but details still must be worked out,Houk said.
The other planned projects are the redevelopment of the old Grove City Public Library parcel on Park Street and an adjacent city-owned parcel into a park site and the creation of a new in the Pinnacle development.
"All three of them are in the concept form right now, but we have not yet committed to what the amenities are going to be in those parks," Houk said.
The decisions regarding the parks at Beulah and the old library site will be shaped in part by the recommendations in the Town Center conceptual framework, which is expected to be adopted this year, she said.
"Both the City Council and the planning commission were presented with a draft version of the framework in 2019, and we're expecting to receive the document in its final form early in the new year," Houk said.
The framework will help provide guidelines to develop a vision for the new parks, she said, but 2021 also likely will include an effort to determine cost estimates for potential amenities that could be included at the sites.
"Those cost estimates will help us determine what we think we can afford and want to do at the parks, what some funding opportunities might be and prioritizing the order in which we want to try to get these projects completed," Houk said.
Last February, council approved a resolution that Houk and Stage had originated to form a substance-addiction and mental-health action-plan committee for the Grove City community.
Creating an opioid action plan was one of the goals council had set for 2019, Houk said.
"The committee is a partnership with ADAMH and a number of local partners in our community," she said. "The first goal was to get a community roundtable discussion organized to include representatives from South-Western City Schools, mental-health clinicians and health-care providers to talk about theissues they are seeing involving addiction and mental health."
The pandemic's rise made it difficult to get everyone togetherfor the public discussion, but the committee has begun meeting on a regular basis, Houk said.
"The stress of the pandemic has affected a lot of people's mentalhealth, and some people are copingthrough addiction," she said. "We need an effort like this even more than before."
The pandemic forced the temporary closure of the city's Evans Senior Center, and the facility remains closed because of concerns about the higher risk of contracting COVID-19 among older adults.
The closure has allowed the city to complete some planned sprucing up in the building, including upgrading the restrooms, repainting walls and ceilings, making the building more handicapped accessible, installing new carpet and reconfiguring some rooms to provide more space for activities, Stage said.
Exactly when the Evans Center will be able to reopen is unknown, he said, but when the public is able to return to the center, "they will find a more enhanced facility," he said.
afroman@thisweeknews.com
@ThisWeekAfroman
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Grove City in 2021: Focus is on planning, not just for this year but for next 20-plus - ThisWeek Community News
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January 3, 2021 by
Mr HomeBuilder
The Telegraph
Chinese billionaire Jack Ma, who hasnt been seen in public for several weeks after criticising Chinas financial regulatory system, has now disappeared as a judge on a TV talent show that he created. Mr Ma was absent from the final of The Apprentice-style Africas Business Heroes, a show that offers budding African entrepreneurs the chance to compete for a share of US$1.5 million (1.1 million) in prize money. Mr Ma was originally due to be part of the panel that judged contestants business ideas. But he was replaced as a judge by an executive from Alibaba, the ecommerce company that he founded, in the November final. His photograph has also been taken down from the judging webpage and he was left out of a promotional video, according to the Financial Times, which also reported that broadcast of the final has been delayed until the spring. The paper cited a spokesperson for Alibaba as saying that Mr Ma could no longer be part of the judging panel due to a schedule conflict. One of Chinas most successful entrepreneurs, Mr Ma appears to have fallen foul of its leaders after he criticised the countrys regulators and its state-owned banks in late October. In a speech in Shanghai, he called for reform of the regulatory system, which he said was stifling innovation. About a week later, the Shanghai Stock Exchange ordered a US$37 billion initial public offering of Ant Group, a financial technology firm co-founded by Mr Ma, to be suspended. Mr Ma reportedly hasnt been seen in public since then. In late December, Chinese authorities announced an investigation into Alibaba for suspected monopolistic behaviour, and ordered Ant Group to restructure its operations to meet regulatory guidelines. Chinese authorities are trying to tighten oversight of the countrys financial sector, but are also seen as wanting to rein in the huge influence of private tech giants. Mr Ma is a popular figure in China, and one of the countrys best-known businesspeople abroad. Formerly an English teacher, he founded Alibaba in 1999, which became Chinas biggest online ecommerce company. He stepped down as the companys chairman in 2019, but is still one of its largest shareholders.
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Crystals installed on Times Square New Year's ball - Yahoo News
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January 3, 2021 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Bangor High School athletic director Steve Vanidestine said preparations are underway for the $2.73 million renovation of Cameron Stadium behind the Cohen Middle School on Garland Street.
Bangor voters approved the project in the Nov. 3 election through a bond issue. The renovations will include artificial turf to replace the grass surface on the football field and an eight-lane, all-weather track.
Test borings were done on Christmas Eve to examine the existing condition of the ground under the field and the track. Early indications are workers didnt find any areas of concern, according to Vanidestine.
Carpenter Associates of Old Town and Tighe & Bond of Portsmouth, New Hampshire, have been hired to develop a blueprint for the work before the Bangor School Department puts it out to bid. The engineering firms are receiving input from Vanidestine, Bangor schools maintenance director Abe Chase and Joe Nelson, who oversees the departments athletic facilities.
Tighe & Bond and Carpenter Associates will also oversee the project to make sure the work meets specifications and stays within budget constraints.
Vanidestine said the hope is to award the bid by the end of February and to have the work begin in mid to late March, depending upon the severity of the winter.
The artificial turf field will be the first order of business, followed by the track.
I would like to have our teams playing on the new surface this fall, Vanidestine said. And we could bid to hold a regional or a state track meet in 2022.
However, he pointed out that because of the COVID-19 pandemic, it may take longer to get needed materials for the project.
One of the reasons we would like to get this started early is to avoid issues caused by variables like the weather and COVID-19 and to be able to secure the supplies we need, Vanidestine said.
Once the artificial turf is installed, the next step will be to put down asphalt for the eight-lane track.
Vanidestine said once that settles, they will install the latex surface on the track.
It has to be at least 50 degrees to put down the latex, he said.
Once the latex is laid on top of the asphalt, Vanidestine said they will avoid having games on the field for a couple of weeks to make sure it settles and they can add the lane lines.
We will just play away games during that period, he said.
Vanidestine said there will be a 12-foot rubberized carpet that can be placed across the track so anyone who needs to access the field wont damage the latex surface.
Vanidestine, who in May was the recipient of the Robert Lahey Administrator of the Year Award by the Maine Interscholastic Athletic Administrators Association, said small cameras will be installed at the site so people can watch the progress of the project.
Teams from Bangor schools and other youth programs will be able to use the artificial turf field, which will remain a consistent playing surface despite significantly increased use or inclement weather. Football, soccer, lacrosse and field hockey teams will also be able to use the facility.
Vanidestine, Bangor Highs AD since 1984, said the hope is to provide the community with a safe multisport facility through a project that is completed on time and within the budget.
I want our [high school] seniors to be able to play on that facility, he said.
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Blueprint in the works for $2.73 million renovation to Bangor sports complex - Bangor Daily News
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January 3, 2021 by
Mr HomeBuilder
FAIRFIELD As the state continues to investigate water and farmland in Fairfield that are contaminated with forever chemicals, the town and some of its residents are mobilizing to come up with long-term solutions in 2021.
Lifelong Fairfield resident Stana McLeod, 74, has formed a Facebook group that now has more than 40 members.
McLeod posts information to educate residents about the ongoing investigation and a similar situation that unfolded more than 20 years ago, both involving the spreading of sludge.
So far, the Maine Department of Environmental Protection has discovered 18 wells in Fairfield that have levels of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances PFOA and PFOS that are higher than the 70-parts-per-trillion limit allowed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
The discoveries came after a test was conducted by the Maine Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry in February that showed milk from Tozier Dairy Farm along Ohio Hill Road had levels of perfluorooctanesulfonic acid that were higher than the state-allowed limit of 210 parts per trillion.
Milk samples from the farm had levels of 12,700, 14,900 and 32,200 parts per trillion. The farms products have been pulled from shelves.
Jerri-Lee Cookson, 65, who lives less than a mile from two fields owned by the Toziers and 3 miles from the farm, is among those who have had their water sources tested.
Maine Department of Environmental Protection officials discovered in September 2020 that Cooksons water contained such high levels of PFOS and PFOA that she was advised to stop drinking it.
Cooksons neighbor, Judy Poulin, 77, had even higher levels of the chemicals in her water and was told to stop using it, too.
My right to clean water has been taken away from me, and I didnt have anything to do with it, Poulin said in November 2020. Im not a happy camper.
In October, Poulin began hauling five-gallon containers of fresh water to her house for drinking and cooking.
Those things are heavy, she said. I have to wait for somebody to come to bring them in the house for me.
PFAS are a group of manmade chemicals introduced in the 1940s. They were used in consumer products, such as carpeting, fabric, clothing, food packaging and pots and pans. They were also used in firefighting foams used at airports, training facilities and military bases.
They are called forever chemicals because their bond is strong and they do not break down easily in the environment or in the body.
Studies have shown exposure can cause health issues, such as elevated cholesterol, thyroid disease, damage to the liver and kidneys, adverse effects on fertility and low birth weight. Other studies show links between PFAS and the elevated risk of certain cancers, according to the U.S. EPA and other sources.
In 2021, McLeod said she will continue following the investigation so she and other residents can file a class-action lawsuit through Susan A. Faunce, a personal-injury lawyer from Lewiston.
(Faunce) handles things like this, and they suggested that I as people find out their wells are contaminated I would have them call there and talk to her, McLeod said in December. They will keep a record of these people, and then we can talk about the class-action lawsuit.
McLeod said she remembered a similar situation that arose from the disposal of paper mill waste in a Fairfield landfill in the 1970s and 1980s. From McLeods grandmothers house, the landfill could be seen glowing in the dark, sometimes catching fire, smelling horrible and being connected to a cancer cluster.
With PFAS chemicals, the threat became insidious because the sludge was billed as beneficial to farmland and lasting forever, according to reports.
I feel like we are doomed out here, McLeod said in an interview in December, adding her efforts to bring the situation to the attention of local and state officials were not getting through.
Meanwhile, Fairfield will continue providing bottled water to residents who have been told to stop drinking from their wells while the state installs filtration systems.
The Department of Environmental protection has assured me that they will continue to make water available to residents with effected wells until they can install the granular activated carbon filtration systems at each private home, Town Manager Michelle Flewelling wrote in a Dec. 23 email.
The Town provides updates to residents, that are received from DEP, with the weekly water pick up. Those updates are then posted to our website under the PFAS notification section.
In November, Poland Spring, the bottler of spring water, donated 960 gallons of water for the town to distribute to residents. The town of Skowhegan has also donated 900 gallons of water that was left from the apparent contamination of its drinking water system that resulted in a do not drink order.
Fairfield is also looking to expand its water system as another long-term solution.
The Town is currently investigating the extension of the Kennebec Water Districts infrastructure so that public water can be provided as a long term solution, Flewelling wrote in her email.
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Year in review: 'Forever chemicals' contaminate Fairfield wells - Kennebec Journal and Morning Sentinel
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January 3, 2021 by
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January 3, 2021 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Each day, Mike Petty looks through the archives of the Cambridge News. Below are some of the stories that made the headlines on January 3.
1978
A tornado cut a two-mile swathe through Newmarket. Roofs were ripped off buildings, windows smashed and cars overturned. Every window in the railway station signal box was smashed.
Chief inspector Trevor Hewitt of Newmarket police said: Its a disaster area. It was just a freak storm and only lasted a couple of minutes.
"The damage is appalling. Roofs have caved in, windows have been smashed and cars overturned.
In Cambridge, the wind lifted the roof from a house in King Street.
1976
Almost all the stock of top class boats being built by St Neots Rowing Club were lost when the wall of the boathouse collapsed during the recent storm.
They included a brand new boat that was to have been used by the elite four who had been invited to take part in Olympic trials at Henley.
Also lost were some old clinker sculls and clinker fours, now virtually irreplaceable.
There was also widespread damage in the area. At Alconbury, the police office roof was damaged and council workmen were kept busy during the night clearing fallen trees on most major roads, including the dual carriageway A.1 north-bound road at Southoe.
1961
The farthing died its tiny death with scarcely a single serious mourner in Cambridge.
Thousands of pounds worth will never be cashed. Some people will keep them for their sentimental value, others as part of a coin collection while many will simply not know that they still have farthings in the bottom of an untidy drawer.
They will be used as tokens for playing cards, by children playing shop, or by handymen as washers.
The coin will, however, be missed by drapers who kept a stock for their eleven-three-farthings prices.
* Anyone with forgotten farthings in untidy drawers could still spend them in the Antarctic and other faraway places until October 31, 1971.
1953
Cambridge will be one of the first cities in England to be lit almost entirely by 'sodium' street lighting. And, said the mayor, it will be one of the best-lighted in the world.
A motorist can appreciate sodium lighting better than any pedestrian can. Black spots and fog are obliterated. Trunk roads will be lit, stopping at the inner ring-road, as this type of light is not thought suitable for the historic city centre.
A completely new type of lantern is being used which gives an exceptionally high light output in relation to the electrical energy consumed.
1939
Sir Teversham people cannot understand why we are not going to be allowed to have electric light brought into our houses. Two years ago, an inspector came and condemned our pumps and put up notices saying, not fit to drink. Still we are waiting for the piped water supply. It seems as though the chief objection to electric light is against poles being stuck up in the village. But what about the lovely looking building on the corner of Teversham Road a machine gun range. We are going to have all the noise from guns, aeroplanes, etc, but not a little comfort and cleaner water. Lightwater
1925
Schoolmasters complain that the wireless fascination is becoming a menace to education.
It is the exception for the schoolboy not to interest himself in wireless and it is he who, in a vast number of cases, has installed it in the home.
The youthful enthusiast usually makes his own set and prefers to occupy himself in this way to poring over home lessons. Sometimes, however, there is no convenient place in which to do his homework if the rest of the family want to listen to a loud speaker.
This should not be allowed by parents, and there is the alternative of the silent headphones.
1908
On Saturday morning, a badger was noticed sitting in a hole near a haystack at High Town Drove, Burwell.
The animal appeared to be very fierce and attacked a dog whose owner promptly killed it.
It was shown to the vicar who pronounced it a very fine specimen of the English badger.
The owner took it to Newmarket for sale, where he was offered five shillings for it. He refused and took it back to Burwell where he eventually accepted one-and-six.
It is many years since a badger has been seen here.
1904
The eastern vacuum cleaning company has cleaned two of the large rooms the coffee room and the commercial room of the Lion Hotel in Petty Cury, Cambridge, and the result is remarkable.
The carpets are rich, large carpets so large, in fact, as to be almost unwieldy under the old method of beating but under this system, they have been cleaned in the most perfect manner and not a particle of dust can be found.
Out of one carpet, 28 lbs of dust and dirt was extracted and now the whole of the hotel is to be dealt with in similar manner.
1899
A most extraordinary story has just come to light respecting the matrimonial affairs of a young woman residing in Cambridge.
It appears she has been keeping company with a young man who lived away from Cambridge and it was arranged that the wedding should take place on Christmas Day.
It transpired, however, that the laws with respect to residence in the district had not been complied with and the wedding was postponed until Sunday. The appointed hour drew near, but no bridegroom turned up, nor has he been seen since.
Upon being shown the grooms photograph, a police officer identified him as being wanted in connection with an assault which has since proved fatal.
It is hoped the efforts of the police to bring such a heartless fellow to justice will prove successful.
Learn more about Cambridge history at Fenland History on Facebook.
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Jan 03 On this day in Cambridgeshire history - In Your Area
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