Monday, April 6, 2015

Developing Model Policy Frameworks, Standards and Guidelines on Landslide Disaster Reduction

The Central Engineering Consultancy Bureau proudly presents the International E- conference under the theme of “Developing Model Policy Frameworks, Standards and Guidelines on Landslide Disaster Reduction ” as winning the award of World Centre of Excellence on Landslide Disaster Reduction 2014-2017. Our expectation is to establish a global cooperation platform for better understanding of Disaster Risk Management in the world as a whole and provide mitigatory action plans for a better tomorrow. The conference is scheduled to be held from 24th March – 24th April 2015 and free online registration will be available from 10th March 2015. We cordially invite all who are inspired to contemplate beyond the boundaries to explore new provisions in the field of Disaster Management.


Our Objectives:
  • Deliberate the prioritized areas required to develop humanitarian frameworks, standards and guidelines that are worthwhile to be followed
  • Create a cluster of communities to disseminate knowledge and exchange experiences related to disaster resilience
  • Open up a communication media to exchange future activities and action plans on disaster reduction
  • Design novel strategies and mitigatory action plans to minimize the risk in landslide prone areas considering the discussed particulars in the conference.
The Conference deliberations will be on the following sub themes. Each theme will be discussed for a period of 8-12 days. Participants may select one or more topics according to the interest during the time of registration.
Developing Conceptual Model Policy Frameworks to Understand Causes, Effects and Mitigations of Landslide Occurrences.
Duration: 24th March -31st March
Implementation of Applicable Guidelines / Teaching Tools to Establish Essential Synergies in Landslide Disaster Phenomena.
Duration: 1st April – 12th April
Originate Pertinent Standards for Humanitarian Activities in support of Effective Risk Reduction and Mitigations on Landslide Occurrences.
Duration: 13th April – 24th April
Join to the Global On-line Dialogue!
Registered users will be able to upload their documentary efforts on Landslide Disaster Management, related projects, research areas and report innovative technological background used in disaster mitigation in the world and also view the documentary work published by the keynote speakers.
You are able to comment on any uploaded document of a keynote expert / other participants and create a linkage between a global proficient team.
At the end of each Theme, the most imperative facts discussed throughout the conference will be extracted and presented as adialogue.
The final outcome of the three dialogues which will be summarized and presented as Summary

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http://www.e-conference.crdcecbsl.lk/View/UI/Pages/Home.aspx

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GBC Metals, LLC, Announces Sale of Its Interest in Japanese Joint Venture to Dowa Metaltech along with Establishment of Long-Term Technology License and Supply Agreements

GBC Metals, LLC, Announces Sale of Its Interest in Japanese Joint Venture to Dowa Metaltech along with Establishment of Long-Term Technology License and Supply Agreements

GBC Metals, LLC, Announces Sale of Its Interest in Japanese Joint Venture to Dowa Metaltech along with Establishment of Long-Term Technology License and Supply Agreements

GBC Metals, LLC, Announces Sale of Its Interest in Japanese Joint Venture to Dowa Metaltech along with Establishment of Long-Term Technology License and Supply Agreements

Israeli Parliament Solar Project Adopts JA Solar Modules

Israeli Parliament Solar Project Adopts JA Solar Modules

Israeli Parliament Solar Project Adopts JA Solar Modules

Israeli Parliament Solar Project Adopts JA Solar Modules

Israeli Parliament Solar Project Adopts JA Solar Modules

Israeli Parliament Solar Project Adopts JA Solar Modules

ZW HR Consulting Singapore Launches 2015 HR Salary Guide

ZW HR Consulting Singapore Launches 2015 HR Salary Guide

ZW HR Consulting Singapore Launches 2015 HR Salary Guide

ZW HR Consulting Singapore Launches 2015 HR Salary Guide

“The 5th LIXIL International University Architectural Competition” Top Three Universities Proceeding to Open Final Screening Announced

“The 5th LIXIL International University Architectural Competition” Top Three Universities Proceeding to Open Final Screening Announced

“The 5th LIXIL International University Architectural Competition” Top Three Universities Proceeding to Open Final Screening Announced

“The 5th LIXIL International University Architectural Competition” Top Three Universities Proceeding to Open Final Screening Announced

ZTE Blade S6 Plus Debuts Worldwide via eBay

ZTE Blade S6 Plus Debuts Worldwide via eBay

ZTE Blade S6 Plus Debuts Worldwide via eBay

ZTE Blade S6 Plus Debuts Worldwide via eBay

Friday, April 3, 2015

France votes to ban ultra-thin models in crackdown on anorexia






French MPs have approved tough measures in an attempt to combat anorexia that will make it a crime for fashion agencies to use dangerously thin or undernourished models. 


Members of the lower house of parliament also voted on Friday for measures that will make it illegal to promote anorexia on the internet and will oblige agencies to clearly mark all photographs of models that have been retouched to alter their body shape.

The legislation will attempt to impose an as-yet-unspecified minimum body mass index (BMI) for models EMPLOYED by agencies, who will be under threat of prison and a fine for flouting the law.

Although the measures will only APPLY within France, they will have a symbolic impact on the fashion industry given Paris’s role within it.

French health minister Marisol Touraine supported the ban on overly thin models – most of whom are women – presented as an amendment to her health bill, saying their use was worrying.

The legislation has yet to define the minimum BMI below which the law will APPLY. Under World Health Organisation guidelines an adult with a BMI below 18.5 is considered underweight, 18 malnourished, and 17 severely malnourished. The average model measuring 1.75m (5ft 9in) and weighing 50kg (7st 12lb) has a BMI of 16.

Agencies who use models whose BMIs fall below the stipulated figure will face a fine of €75,000 (£55,000) and staff face up to six months in prison. Failure to state when photos have been retouched will incur a fine of €37,500 or up to 30% of the amount spent on the advertising featuring the model.

French MPs also voted for a further clause in the health bill making it illegal to glorify anorexia on the internet. It fixes a maximum fine of €10,000 and a year in jail for “provoking people to excessive thinness by encouraging prolonged dietary restrictions that could expose them to a danger of death or directly impair their health”.

The amendments were immediately lambasted by French model agencies who warned against confusing anorexia and thinness, and accused the government of stigmatising agencies.

“It’s very serious to conflate anorexia with the thinness of models and it ignores the fact that anorexia is a psychogenic illness,” Isabelle Saint-Felix, secretary general of Synam, which represents around 40 modelling agencies in France, told AFP.

An attempt to legislate against “inciting someone to excessive thinness” in 2008 was voted on by MPs but the bill ran out of time to be presented to the upper house, the senate.

Xavier Pommereau, a psychiatrist, told Libération he was doubtful the measure against internet sites would make much difference.

“The girls who go on to these sites are already sick. They are already suffering from an obsession to impress others and show off their incredible thinness,” Pommereau said.

“It passes the message that showing dangerous images of suicide or other such things is wrong, but we are in a world that is completely internationalised and these sites and images are not confined to our borders.”

Marie-Rose Moro, psychoanalyst and psychiatrist, agreed the law would solve nothing. “It would be better to provide more resources to care for anorexic patients,” she said, adding that there should be “more awareness to eating disorders in society”.

As many as 40,000 people suffer from anorexia in France; 90% of them are women, according to health ministry figures.

Spain already bars models below a certain BMI from taking part in Madrid fashion shows and Italy demands health certificates for those on the catwalk.

France votes to ban ultra-thin models in crackdown on anorexia






French MPs have approved tough measures in an attempt to combat anorexia that will make it a crime for fashion agencies to use dangerously thin or undernourished models. 


Members of the lower house of parliament also voted on Friday for measures that will make it illegal to promote anorexia on the internet and will oblige agencies to clearly mark all photographs of models that have been retouched to alter their body shape.

The legislation will attempt to impose an as-yet-unspecified minimum body mass index (BMI) for models EMPLOYED by agencies, who will be under threat of prison and a fine for flouting the law.

Although the measures will only APPLY within France, they will have a symbolic impact on the fashion industry given Paris’s role within it.

French health minister Marisol Touraine supported the ban on overly thin models – most of whom are women – presented as an amendment to her health bill, saying their use was worrying.

The legislation has yet to define the minimum BMI below which the law will APPLY. Under World Health Organisation guidelines an adult with a BMI below 18.5 is considered underweight, 18 malnourished, and 17 severely malnourished. The average model measuring 1.75m (5ft 9in) and weighing 50kg (7st 12lb) has a BMI of 16.

Agencies who use models whose BMIs fall below the stipulated figure will face a fine of €75,000 (£55,000) and staff face up to six months in prison. Failure to state when photos have been retouched will incur a fine of €37,500 or up to 30% of the amount spent on the advertising featuring the model.

French MPs also voted for a further clause in the health bill making it illegal to glorify anorexia on the internet. It fixes a maximum fine of €10,000 and a year in jail for “provoking people to excessive thinness by encouraging prolonged dietary restrictions that could expose them to a danger of death or directly impair their health”.

The amendments were immediately lambasted by French model agencies who warned against confusing anorexia and thinness, and accused the government of stigmatising agencies.

“It’s very serious to conflate anorexia with the thinness of models and it ignores the fact that anorexia is a psychogenic illness,” Isabelle Saint-Felix, secretary general of Synam, which represents around 40 modelling agencies in France, told AFP.

An attempt to legislate against “inciting someone to excessive thinness” in 2008 was voted on by MPs but the bill ran out of time to be presented to the upper house, the senate.

Xavier Pommereau, a psychiatrist, told Libération he was doubtful the measure against internet sites would make much difference.

“The girls who go on to these sites are already sick. They are already suffering from an obsession to impress others and show off their incredible thinness,” Pommereau said.

“It passes the message that showing dangerous images of suicide or other such things is wrong, but we are in a world that is completely internationalised and these sites and images are not confined to our borders.”

Marie-Rose Moro, psychoanalyst and psychiatrist, agreed the law would solve nothing. “It would be better to provide more resources to care for anorexic patients,” she said, adding that there should be “more awareness to eating disorders in society”.

As many as 40,000 people suffer from anorexia in France; 90% of them are women, according to health ministry figures.

Spain already bars models below a certain BMI from taking part in Madrid fashion shows and Italy demands health certificates for those on the catwalk.

Filipino devotees nailed to crosses in Good Friday rites








SAN PEDRO CUTUD, Philippines (AP) — Screaming in pain, Filipino devotees had themselves nailed to wooden crosses to mimic the suffering of Jesus Christ on Good Friday in Asia's largest Roman Catholic nation.

Church leaders have spoken against the annual practice mixing Catholic devotion with folk belief, but it continues to draw big crowds, particularly in northern Pampanga province.

Painter Ruben Enaje, 54, was among half a dozen men whose hands and feet were rubbed with alcohol before locals dressed as Roman soldiers hammered sterilized nails into his flesh.

He has repeated the same act for the last 29 years as part of giving thanks after surviving a fall from a building. This year, he added a gadget— a small microphone near his mouth, although a technical glitch made it difficult to hear him utter Christ's last words.

The reenactment of Christ's crucifixion at a dusty mound in San Pedro Cutud village drew at least 4,000 spectators and tourists, dozens of them foreigners. Unlike in the past, organizers this year banned foreigners from being nailed to crosses to prevent the event from "becoming a circus," said Councilor Harvey Quiwa.

After they were lowered from the crosses, medical workers carried the devotees on a stretcher and made sure there were no complications from their injuries.

"I think it takes an incredible amount of dedication and commitment to really go through something like that," said American tourist Tracy Sengillo. "It's really fascinating."

Devotees undergo the crucifixions in the belief that such extreme sacrifices are a way to atone for their sins, attain MIRACLE CURES for illnesses or give thanks to God.

Similar reenactments were held in other villages around Pampanga and in other provinces, but San Pedro Cutud attracts most crowds.

Before the crucifixions, hundreds of barefoot devotees walked the streets whipping their bare backs with bamboo sticks dangling from a rope.

"I started doing this when my mother got sick, kidney problem. I vowed and prayed to God so that she could be cured," said electrician Marvin Tao, 25, who has been a flagellant for nine years.

___

Associated Press writer Teresa Cerojano in Manila, Philippines, contributed to this report.





Filipino devotees nailed to crosses in Good Friday rites








SAN PEDRO CUTUD, Philippines (AP) — Screaming in pain, Filipino devotees had themselves nailed to wooden crosses to mimic the suffering of Jesus Christ on Good Friday in Asia's largest Roman Catholic nation.

Church leaders have spoken against the annual practice mixing Catholic devotion with folk belief, but it continues to draw big crowds, particularly in northern Pampanga province.

Painter Ruben Enaje, 54, was among half a dozen men whose hands and feet were rubbed with alcohol before locals dressed as Roman soldiers hammered sterilized nails into his flesh.

He has repeated the same act for the last 29 years as part of giving thanks after surviving a fall from a building. This year, he added a gadget— a small microphone near his mouth, although a technical glitch made it difficult to hear him utter Christ's last words.

The reenactment of Christ's crucifixion at a dusty mound in San Pedro Cutud village drew at least 4,000 spectators and tourists, dozens of them foreigners. Unlike in the past, organizers this year banned foreigners from being nailed to crosses to prevent the event from "becoming a circus," said Councilor Harvey Quiwa.

After they were lowered from the crosses, medical workers carried the devotees on a stretcher and made sure there were no complications from their injuries.

"I think it takes an incredible amount of dedication and commitment to really go through something like that," said American tourist Tracy Sengillo. "It's really fascinating."

Devotees undergo the crucifixions in the belief that such extreme sacrifices are a way to atone for their sins, attain MIRACLE CURES for illnesses or give thanks to God.

Similar reenactments were held in other villages around Pampanga and in other provinces, but San Pedro Cutud attracts most crowds.

Before the crucifixions, hundreds of barefoot devotees walked the streets whipping their bare backs with bamboo sticks dangling from a rope.

"I started doing this when my mother got sick, kidney problem. I vowed and prayed to God so that she could be cured," said electrician Marvin Tao, 25, who has been a flagellant for nine years.

___

Associated Press writer Teresa Cerojano in Manila, Philippines, contributed to this report.

Thursday, April 2, 2015

97% of S’poreans willing to go abroad to work: Poll

97% of S’poreans willing to go abroad to work: Poll

97% of S’poreans willing to go abroad to work: Poll

97% of S’poreans willing to go abroad to work: Poll

Russian trawler sinks in freezing waters - At least 54 dead

At least 54 dead as Russian trawler sinks in freezing waters off far east coast


The Russian factory ship Dalniy Vostok with 132 people on board has sunk in icy waters off the Kamchatka Peninsula. Photograph: Brian Fisher/www.shipspotting.com


At least 54 people have died and 15 are missing after a Russian trawler sank late on Wednesday in the western Pacific ocean near the Kamchatka Peninsula, news agencies have reported.

There were 132 people on board the Dalniy Vostok freezer trawler when it went down in waters close to freezing, the TASS news agency reported, citing an officer at a maritime rescue coordination centre in the area.

“We have recovered the bodies of 54 victims. Sixty-three crew members have been rescued alive,” Russian news agency Tass reported rescuers as saying. Fifteen were still missing.

Sixty-three people were rescued from the sea and from lifeboats, many of them suffering hypothermia.

More than 25 fishing boats in the area were helping to rescue the missing crew members, the emergency services said in a statement on their website.


The ship was carrying 78 Russian nationals, as well as 54 crew from other countries including Myanmar, Ukraine, Lithuania and Vanuatu, the news agency said.


Russia’s TASS news agency cited a deputy head of the Kamchatka region as saying the crew might have violated safety rules by exceeding the capacity of cargo storage.

“According to preliminary information, the shipwreck occurred while hauling a 100-tonne fishing seine,” TASS cited Sergei Khabarov as saying.


The Russian Interfax news agency cited an unidentified source at the region’s rescue centre as saying that large amounts of drifting ice might have damaged the body of the ship, which sank within 15 minutes.

Russia has a dismal air, road and water safety record, with negligence and corruption often the cause of accidents. In 2011, an ageing, overcrowded tourist boat sank in the Volga river, killing nearly 130 people in one of the worst post-Soviet ship disasters.

The accident happened in the Sea of Okhotsk, 330 km (205 miles) west of Krutogorovsky in the Kamchatka region and 250 km south of Magadan.


The home port of the trawler, which was owned by Magellan, was Nevelsk in Russia’s Sakhalin region.

Russian trawler sinks in freezing waters - At least 54 dead

At least 54 dead as Russian trawler sinks in freezing waters off far east coast


The Russian factory ship Dalniy Vostok with 132 people on board has sunk in icy waters off the Kamchatka Peninsula. Photograph: Brian Fisher/www.shipspotting.com


At least 54 people have died and 15 are missing after a Russian trawler sank late on Wednesday in the western Pacific ocean near the Kamchatka Peninsula, news agencies have reported.

There were 132 people on board the Dalniy Vostok freezer trawler when it went down in waters close to freezing, the TASS news agency reported, citing an officer at a maritime rescue coordination centre in the area.

“We have recovered the bodies of 54 victims. Sixty-three crew members have been rescued alive,” Russian news agency Tass reported rescuers as saying. Fifteen were still missing.

Sixty-three people were rescued from the sea and from lifeboats, many of them suffering hypothermia.

More than 25 fishing boats in the area were helping to rescue the missing crew members, the emergency services said in a statement on their website.


The ship was carrying 78 Russian nationals, as well as 54 crew from other countries including Myanmar, Ukraine, Lithuania and Vanuatu, the news agency said.


Russia’s TASS news agency cited a deputy head of the Kamchatka region as saying the crew might have violated safety rules by exceeding the capacity of cargo storage.

“According to preliminary information, the shipwreck occurred while hauling a 100-tonne fishing seine,” TASS cited Sergei Khabarov as saying.


The Russian Interfax news agency cited an unidentified source at the region’s rescue centre as saying that large amounts of drifting ice might have damaged the body of the ship, which sank within 15 minutes.

Russia has a dismal air, road and water safety record, with negligence and corruption often the cause of accidents. In 2011, an ageing, overcrowded tourist boat sank in the Volga river, killing nearly 130 people in one of the worst post-Soviet ship disasters.

The accident happened in the Sea of Okhotsk, 330 km (205 miles) west of Krutogorovsky in the Kamchatka region and 250 km south of Magadan.


The home port of the trawler, which was owned by Magellan, was Nevelsk in Russia’s Sakhalin region.

(Video) Muttiah Muralitharan 8/70 vs England, 3rd Test, Trent Bridge, 2006 [HD]

(Video) Muttiah Muralitharan 8/70 vs England, 3rd Test, Trent Bridge, 2006 [HD]

(Video) Muttiah Muralitharan 8/70 vs England, 3rd Test, Trent Bridge, 2006 [HD]

(Video) Muttiah Muralitharan 8/70 vs England, 3rd Test, Trent Bridge, 2006 [HD]

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

dream houses to the homeless

dream houses to the homeless

OAKLAND, Calif. — Greg Kloehn builds homes. The California-based artist's best work yet is a classic San Francisco Victorian, complete with a round turret, bay window, and ornate columns framing the small front door. The only catch? The house is 8 feet long, 5 feet wide, 6 feet tall, and constructed from refuse. The columns are carved from two bed posts, and its pitched roof is shingled with rainproof silver coffee bags.

But for new parents Dee and Brian, a young homeless couple dealing with a health crisis, the house is perfect.

Kloehn — pronounced like plane — has built about 30 miniature rolling houses from trash collected in Oakland, each one donated to homeless individuals. After an exhibit of his work at San Francisco art and cultures center SOMArts ended, he offered three of them to people living under the freeway outside the venue. A young man approached and said his sick girlfriend needed a better shelter. When Kloehn helped Brian, 28, roll the house over to Dee, 26, she burst into tears when Kloehn explained that the ornate home was a gift.

The Victorian’s safety and added comfort are critical for Dee. She was informed by doctors of a likely leukemia diagnosis when blood clotting complications arose during the birth of their daughter — who lives with Brian’s relatives — a week before she met Kloehn. She said if she and Brian relocate, they would give the Victorian to another person surviving on the streets of San Francisco. Their last names were omitted for privacy reasons.

“Everything happens for a reason, and we couldn’t have met Greg at a more necessary time,” Dee said with teary eyes. 

Kloehn’s homes commonly migrate from one person to another after he donates them, which is how 51-year-old DL — short for the street name “Don’t Lie" he gave to both Al Jazeera America and Kloehn — acquired his windowed home, just big enough for him to lie down and sit up in. Though smaller than the neighboring Victorian, DL said his home allows him to “get in touch with normalcy.”


“This is like a hug!” Berkeley resident Elenna Rubin Goodman said as she sat cross-legged inside a tiny house under construction at the Kloehn’s West Oakland studio. “It gives you containment, which you don’t have on the street. It’s an amazing feeling.”

Goodman was one of two people to stop by that morning inquiring if Kloehn was “the Tiny House Guy.” While Goodman was simply curious, Kloehn’s other visitor, general contractor Garner McAleer, offered Kloehn his unused construction materials.

Kloehn has been experimenting in miniature structures since 2009, including a studio apartment he built inside a dumpster, which he uses as his summer home in Brooklyn, New York. The idea to build houses from refuse, however, was inspired by the homeless themselves.

“I was just looking at all the structures that homeless people would make,” Kloehn explained. “It got me looking at their lives: How they’re treated, how they get by, what they live off of. I kind of became enamored by that.”

“It’s a study in life and ‘What’s a home?’ too,” he said. “That was a big question I was asking: What does it take to make a home? … You think of homelessness: Was that around 5,000 years ago? Would you be considered homeless, or could you just make a home? Private property has changed a lot.”

After completing his first tiny house, Kloehn was visited by Sheila Williams, a familiar face around his neighborhood who has been homeless for 35 years. Knowing Kloehn was always willing to help out, Sheila asked if he could spare a tarp so she and her husband, Oscar Williams, 70, could weather-proof their tent. Kloehn told her to return the next day for something better than a tarp. When they did, he handed them the keys to the tiny home as well as a bottle of champagne.

Sheila, 54, a Native American from Yakima, Washington, has assumed the role of den mother for about a dozen people now living in Kloehn houses along Oakland’s Wood Street near the Emeryville border. Nestled amid freeway overpasses, speeding cars, bustling railroads, and trash compacting centers, the tight-knit community has survived adversity — and even attacks.

Sheila’s first home had to be replaced shortly after Kloehn donated it. A passing transient burned the tiny structure down when Oscar refused to share his house — and wife of over 20 years — with the stranger. An arsonist also attacked another tiny home on Wood Street that belonged to perhaps the group’s most vulnerable member, Johnny Sastini, who is deaf.

Sastini, 59, can neither hear nor speak. He can read lips, and communicates through hand motions or by writing in a notebook. The tiny house Kloehn gave him originally came with a wall-mounted fish tank visible from both inside and outside the house. When an unknown attacker set Sastini's house ablaze, Sheila quickly saved it by smashing the tank.

After the fire, Sastini began repeatedly painting his house with different murals — the Bay Bridge spanning one side wall, shimmering butterflies fluttering up his front door — in the hope that people would think his home is too beautiful to destroy. He said that local police, who are aware of his auditory and vocal limitations, also help protect his home by checking on it while he works sorting metal at an alloy recycling center.

Near the home of Sheila and South Africa-born Oscar is the tiny home of another couple, 47-year-old Terry Kelly and his girlfriend Teresa Morris, who was buzzing with excitement the weekend before her 50th birthday on March 25.

The members of the Wood Street community sometimes come together, especially on occasions such as birthdays, for barbecues using charcoal briquettes supplied by Sheila, who also oversees camp cleanliness to maintain good relations with the police. Because their houses are clearly semi-permanent structures, each resident’s bagged trash is now simply collected by trash haulers instead of their whole shelter being swept away as garbage.

Kelly has held jobs with two different Oakland homeless programs ended by Alameda County funding cuts. The first, Howie Harp Multi-Service Center, provided showers, laundry, meals and grocery distribution, and educational programs, but was shuttered in 2010. Terry’s next employer, Traveler’s Aid Society, lost its lease in 2011.

In 2013, the most recent data available, Alameda County estimated more than 4,200 people were homeless on any given night. East Oakland Community Project Executive Director Wendy Jackson estimates that the actual number is at least 2.5 to 3 times higher, however, because the county’s calculus doesn’t account for people in shelters, hospitals and jails.

 


Laverne, 59, has her own Kloehn house parked a few streets away, but occasionally stays on Wood Street at her boyfriend June Wilson’s house, 67. She became homeless three years ago when she left a husband who mistreated her.
Laverne is a graduate of a prestigious East Coast university who still dreamily recalls three months spent traveling through Europe just before she graduated. Her five grown children know where to find her, but have agreed to keep her location and circumstances a secret from their father for her own protection, which is also why she withheld her last name from Al Jazeera America.

Laverne expressed a sentiment echoed by many people living in Kloehn’s homes: Homelessness can happen to absolutely anyone, even people who least expect it.

“All this stuff out here can happen to anybody … no matter what your color is, where you live, or anything,” Laverne said.

dream houses to the homeless

dream houses to the homeless

OAKLAND, Calif. — Greg Kloehn builds homes. The California-based artist's best work yet is a classic San Francisco Victorian, complete with a round turret, bay window, and ornate columns framing the small front door. The only catch? The house is 8 feet long, 5 feet wide, 6 feet tall, and constructed from refuse. The columns are carved from two bed posts, and its pitched roof is shingled with rainproof silver coffee bags.

But for new parents Dee and Brian, a young homeless couple dealing with a health crisis, the house is perfect.

Kloehn — pronounced like plane — has built about 30 miniature rolling houses from trash collected in Oakland, each one donated to homeless individuals. After an exhibit of his work at San Francisco art and cultures center SOMArts ended, he offered three of them to people living under the freeway outside the venue. A young man approached and said his sick girlfriend needed a better shelter. When Kloehn helped Brian, 28, roll the house over to Dee, 26, she burst into tears when Kloehn explained that the ornate home was a gift.

The Victorian’s safety and added comfort are critical for Dee. She was informed by doctors of a likely leukemia diagnosis when blood clotting complications arose during the birth of their daughter — who lives with Brian’s relatives — a week before she met Kloehn. She said if she and Brian relocate, they would give the Victorian to another person surviving on the streets of San Francisco. Their last names were omitted for privacy reasons.

“Everything happens for a reason, and we couldn’t have met Greg at a more necessary time,” Dee said with teary eyes. 

Kloehn’s homes commonly migrate from one person to another after he donates them, which is how 51-year-old DL — short for the street name “Don’t Lie" he gave to both Al Jazeera America and Kloehn — acquired his windowed home, just big enough for him to lie down and sit up in. Though smaller than the neighboring Victorian, DL said his home allows him to “get in touch with normalcy.”


“This is like a hug!” Berkeley resident Elenna Rubin Goodman said as she sat cross-legged inside a tiny house under construction at the Kloehn’s West Oakland studio. “It gives you containment, which you don’t have on the street. It’s an amazing feeling.”

Goodman was one of two people to stop by that morning inquiring if Kloehn was “the Tiny House Guy.” While Goodman was simply curious, Kloehn’s other visitor, general contractor Garner McAleer, offered Kloehn his unused construction materials.

Kloehn has been experimenting in miniature structures since 2009, including a studio apartment he built inside a dumpster, which he uses as his summer home in Brooklyn, New York. The idea to build houses from refuse, however, was inspired by the homeless themselves.

“I was just looking at all the structures that homeless people would make,” Kloehn explained. “It got me looking at their lives: How they’re treated, how they get by, what they live off of. I kind of became enamored by that.”

“It’s a study in life and ‘What’s a home?’ too,” he said. “That was a big question I was asking: What does it take to make a home? … You think of homelessness: Was that around 5,000 years ago? Would you be considered homeless, or could you just make a home? Private property has changed a lot.”

After completing his first tiny house, Kloehn was visited by Sheila Williams, a familiar face around his neighborhood who has been homeless for 35 years. Knowing Kloehn was always willing to help out, Sheila asked if he could spare a tarp so she and her husband, Oscar Williams, 70, could weather-proof their tent. Kloehn told her to return the next day for something better than a tarp. When they did, he handed them the keys to the tiny home as well as a bottle of champagne.

Sheila, 54, a Native American from Yakima, Washington, has assumed the role of den mother for about a dozen people now living in Kloehn houses along Oakland’s Wood Street near the Emeryville border. Nestled amid freeway overpasses, speeding cars, bustling railroads, and trash compacting centers, the tight-knit community has survived adversity — and even attacks.

Sheila’s first home had to be replaced shortly after Kloehn donated it. A passing transient burned the tiny structure down when Oscar refused to share his house — and wife of over 20 years — with the stranger. An arsonist also attacked another tiny home on Wood Street that belonged to perhaps the group’s most vulnerable member, Johnny Sastini, who is deaf.

Sastini, 59, can neither hear nor speak. He can read lips, and communicates through hand motions or by writing in a notebook. The tiny house Kloehn gave him originally came with a wall-mounted fish tank visible from both inside and outside the house. When an unknown attacker set Sastini's house ablaze, Sheila quickly saved it by smashing the tank.

After the fire, Sastini began repeatedly painting his house with different murals — the Bay Bridge spanning one side wall, shimmering butterflies fluttering up his front door — in the hope that people would think his home is too beautiful to destroy. He said that local police, who are aware of his auditory and vocal limitations, also help protect his home by checking on it while he works sorting metal at an alloy recycling center.

Near the home of Sheila and South Africa-born Oscar is the tiny home of another couple, 47-year-old Terry Kelly and his girlfriend Teresa Morris, who was buzzing with excitement the weekend before her 50th birthday on March 25.

The members of the Wood Street community sometimes come together, especially on occasions such as birthdays, for barbecues using charcoal briquettes supplied by Sheila, who also oversees camp cleanliness to maintain good relations with the police. Because their houses are clearly semi-permanent structures, each resident’s bagged trash is now simply collected by trash haulers instead of their whole shelter being swept away as garbage.

Kelly has held jobs with two different Oakland homeless programs ended by Alameda County funding cuts. The first, Howie Harp Multi-Service Center, provided showers, laundry, meals and grocery distribution, and educational programs, but was shuttered in 2010. Terry’s next employer, Traveler’s Aid Society, lost its lease in 2011.

In 2013, the most recent data available, Alameda County estimated more than 4,200 people were homeless on any given night. East Oakland Community Project Executive Director Wendy Jackson estimates that the actual number is at least 2.5 to 3 times higher, however, because the county’s calculus doesn’t account for people in shelters, hospitals and jails.

 


Laverne, 59, has her own Kloehn house parked a few streets away, but occasionally stays on Wood Street at her boyfriend June Wilson’s house, 67. She became homeless three years ago when she left a husband who mistreated her.
Laverne is a graduate of a prestigious East Coast university who still dreamily recalls three months spent traveling through Europe just before she graduated. Her five grown children know where to find her, but have agreed to keep her location and circumstances a secret from their father for her own protection, which is also why she withheld her last name from Al Jazeera America.

Laverne expressed a sentiment echoed by many people living in Kloehn’s homes: Homelessness can happen to absolutely anyone, even people who least expect it.

“All this stuff out here can happen to anybody … no matter what your color is, where you live, or anything,” Laverne said.

Flash estimate of Q1 2015 resale price index dips 1%



Flash estimate of Q1 2015 resale price index dips 1%

SINGAPORE — The Housing and Development Board’s (HDB) flash estimate for the resale price index (RPI) of the first quarter of this year stands at 135.6, falling 1 per cent from the last quarter.

RPI is an indicator on the general price movements in the market of resale public housing.

The RPI and more detailed public housing data will be released this April 24. The transacted prices of individual flats (by block and type) can be found on HDB’sInfoWEB.

Flash estimate of Q1 2015 resale price index dips 1%



Flash estimate of Q1 2015 resale price index dips 1%

SINGAPORE — The Housing and Development Board’s (HDB) flash estimate for the resale price index (RPI) of the first quarter of this year stands at 135.6, falling 1 per cent from the last quarter.

RPI is an indicator on the general price movements in the market of resale public housing.

The RPI and more detailed public housing data will be released this April 24. The transacted prices of individual flats (by block and type) can be found on HDB’sInfoWEB.

Dhanwin

Dhanwin

Injured Starc to miss start of the IPL

Injured Starc to miss start of the IPL


Mitchell Starc took 14 wickets last season for Royal Challengers Bangalore


A knee niggle will keep left-arm fast bowler Mitchell Starc out of the start of the IPL 2015. He will remain in Australia for "two-three weeks" of recuperation before joining Royal Challengers Bangalore, with whom he had debuted last season.


"Mitchell had some knee soreness during the latter stages of the World Cup," Australia's physio Alex Kountouris said, "He will have a short period off to rest and recover, before being reassessed by CA medical staff. We estimate his recovery time will be between two-three weeks."

Starc picked up 14 wickets from as many matches and conceded 7.49 per over for Royal Challengers in 2014. His fitness will be tracked along with fellow fast bowler and new recruit Adam Milne's, who had to pull out of the World Cup with a heel problem. The team does have fast-bowling backup, though, in the form of India's Varun Aaron and Ashok Dinda, and Australia seamer and winner of the Bradman Young Cricketer of the Year Sean Abbott.

Over the last 12 months, Starc has played 27 of the 37 international matches for Australia, including all of the last 14 ODIs. His standout performance at the World Cup - 22 wickets at 10.18 and an economy of 3.5 per over - earned him the Player-of-the-Tournament award and the No. 1 ranking in ODIs. He was backed to continue in the same vein in Tests as well, as Australia turn their attention to overseas success - a tour of West Indies in June and the Ashes in July being their first assignments.

Injured Starc to miss start of the IPL

Injured Starc to miss start of the IPL


Mitchell Starc took 14 wickets last season for Royal Challengers Bangalore


A knee niggle will keep left-arm fast bowler Mitchell Starc out of the start of the IPL 2015. He will remain in Australia for "two-three weeks" of recuperation before joining Royal Challengers Bangalore, with whom he had debuted last season.


"Mitchell had some knee soreness during the latter stages of the World Cup," Australia's physio Alex Kountouris said, "He will have a short period off to rest and recover, before being reassessed by CA medical staff. We estimate his recovery time will be between two-three weeks."

Starc picked up 14 wickets from as many matches and conceded 7.49 per over for Royal Challengers in 2014. His fitness will be tracked along with fellow fast bowler and new recruit Adam Milne's, who had to pull out of the World Cup with a heel problem. The team does have fast-bowling backup, though, in the form of India's Varun Aaron and Ashok Dinda, and Australia seamer and winner of the Bradman Young Cricketer of the Year Sean Abbott.

Over the last 12 months, Starc has played 27 of the 37 international matches for Australia, including all of the last 14 ODIs. His standout performance at the World Cup - 22 wickets at 10.18 and an economy of 3.5 per over - earned him the Player-of-the-Tournament award and the No. 1 ranking in ODIs. He was backed to continue in the same vein in Tests as well, as Australia turn their attention to overseas success - a tour of West Indies in June and the Ashes in July being their first assignments.

Chairman of Jintian Pharmaceutical Purchased Approximately HK$113 Million Worth of Shares Citing Confidence in Company’s Development in Online and Offline MacroHealth Business

Chairman of Jintian Pharmaceutical Purchased Approximately HK$113 Million Worth of Shares Citing Confidence in Company’s Development in Online and Offline MacroHealth Business

Chairman of Jintian Pharmaceutical Purchased Approximately HK$113 Million Worth of Shares Citing Confidence in Company’s Development in Online and Offline MacroHealth Business

Chairman of Jintian Pharmaceutical Purchased Approximately HK$113 Million Worth of Shares Citing Confidence in Company’s Development in Online and Offline MacroHealth Business

Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Home farm Land





I guess it’s too late
to live on a farm.

As if I could buy a house!
Let alone land.

A place of my own– 
is what my friend sighed,

our someday dream,
our loftiest goal.


Today again I paid
to learn, watching

refugees sit and wait
for their bus, and asked


the doctor what the term
really means–


she couldn’t state
exact qualifications, 


just that for some
recognized reason,

a person had to leave
their homeland.


But, had a home,
and have a new home, here.


Or housing, at least.
More stable than those

that exist in doorways,
or under the bridge


in tents that spring up
like mushrooms when it rains.



And how they also pay,
if not in money. Life




is costly. At some point
we all get priced out–

a roof, a room, a house,
a home. When you’ve got nothing

to trade, to leverage, to sell–
it’s too late to live on a farm.

All that’s left is to work
in the fields that someone else owns.




SELFAA is ready to come in 2026