the "Headline That Caught My Attention or the WTF" thread

I can think of worst places..............


James Herriot's books were always set in the Yorkshire Dales. Great material if you like animals or studies of human nature.
 
I'd like our "Honorary Mayor of Lower Manhattan, @CELLFISH to comment on this since he's the resident expert...

What Does It Mean to Save a Neighborhood?

Nine years after Hurricane Sandy, residents of Lower Manhattan are still vulnerable to rising seas. The fight over a plan to protect them reveals why progress on our most critical challenges is so hard.


What Does It Mean to Save a Neighborhood?
 
And it's even starting in Maine, the newest tactic in the war on single family homes and the push for high-density housing...

Eliminating single-family zoning among ways to increase housing opportunity, state commission says​

pressherald.com/2021/12/02/eliminating-single-family-zoning-among-ways-to-increase-housing-opportunity-state-commission-says/

By Randy Billings December 3, 2021

A commission formed to examine barriers to building housing in Maine is recommending eliminating single-family zoning, allowing homeowners to build in-law apartments as a matter of right and removing local caps on new housing production, among other things.

The Commission to Increase Housing Opportunities in Maine by Studying Zoning and Land Use Restrictions met for the seventh and final time Thursday, finalizing its recommendations to state lawmakers in a nearly six-hour meeting.

The recommendations, which also include providing technical and financial assistance to municipalities as they work to comply with any new state mandates, will go before the Labor and Housing Committee next month. State lawmakers will consider whether to offer any bills to implement any of the recommendations.

Commissioner co-chairs, House Speaker Ryan Fecteau and Sen. Craig Hickman, both Democrats, each has a placeholder bill to enact all or portions of the report.

“The next step will require a great deal of advocacy and work to convince (our) colleagues to ultimately throw their support behind what we ultimately put forward as a bill or bills,” Fecteau told commissioners. “I hope you will all be a part of that process.”

Two of the recommendations appear to be aimed at preventing affordable housing projects from being blocked based on neighborhood opposition, like the recent affordable housing development that was thwarted in Cape Elizabeth. It was the first affordable housing proposal in the affluent coastal town in a half a century.

The 46-unit rental project proposed by The Szanton Co. would have reserved 37 units for low-income households, or those earning 60 percent or less of the area median income.

The project required zoning changes by the town, which granted Szanton a height increase; lowered the amount of land needed per housing unit, doubling the allowable footprint of the building; and no longer required the building to have commercial tenants on the first floor.

However, opponents launched a referendum drive to undo those approvals. It qualified for the ballot and Szanton announced this week that it was dropping the plan.

In November 2020, L.L. Bean withdrew its support for a developer looking to build a mix of hundreds of housing units, including 60 apartments and 70 duplexes, on 250 acres the company owns near Interstate 295 in Freeport that includes a golf course. The project would have required a zone change and was fiercely opposed by area residents, who worried it would change the town’s character.

One recommendation aimed to strengthen the Fair Housing Act by eliminating the ability to deny a project based on concerns about neighborhood “character,” “overcrowding of land” and “undue concentration of population in one area.”

“These are terms used to keep certain kinds of people out of communities,” Fecteau said.
Another recommendation would create a state appeals board, which could override a municipality’s denial of an affordable housing project before turning to the courts.

The 15-member commission was formed by a bill sponsored Fecteau. It came after an analysis commissioned by the Greater Portland Council of Governments showed that only 5 percent of the land in Portland, Falmouth, Westbrook, Gorham, Scarborough, South Portland and Cape Elizabeth is designated for multiunit apartments and condominiums. The report concluded that restrictions meant to preserve community character and combat sprawl often have the opposite effect.

Apartments in Maine are becoming increasingly expensive, with one in five tenants paying more than half of their income for rent, according to the Maine Affordable Housing Coalition. A Mainer earning the minimum wage of $12.15 an hour can’t afford a typical two-bedroom apartment in any of the state’s 16 counties, the group says.

The commission’s report features nine recommendations, including a list of mandates and incentives aimed at reducing barriers for affordable housing and multiunit buildings. It is also expected to include a minority report, explaining the reasons why some commissioners opposed certain recommendations.
The commission tried to balance Maine’s tradition of strong local control with state mandates, recommending that the state offer financial and technical assistance to municipalities that seek to review their land use laws and ordinances to make it easier to develop housing.

BALANCING LOCAL CONTROL
Kate Dufour, a legislative advocate for the Maine Municipal Association, said she initially felt like other commissioners were teaming up and placing too much blame on municipalities for the housing shortage, when state and federal policies also are to blame. By the end, Dufour felt that the commission took the concerns of municipalities seriously, even if the report includes recommendations that could limit local control.

“I don’t want municipalities be set up for failure,” Dufour said while arguing for robust support, rather than penalties, for municipalities. “We need to look at why communities make the decisions they make. It’s not one size fits all.”

Dufour said the MMA opposed proposals to eliminate growth caps and to establish a state appeals board.

The commission also issued some informal recommendations, including a suggestion that the state study how short-term rentals are impacting long-term housing supply and costs.

“Commissioners noted that the rapid growth of short-term rentals in Maine has taken existing housing stock out of the year-round rental pool, putting pressure on rental rates throughout the state,” the draft report states. “Although long-term impacts may not yet be known, there is evidence that short-term rentals are impacting the housing market.”

The recommendations include eliminating single-family zoning by allowing up to four residential units to be built on all lots, provided that other health and safety requirements, such as minimum sewer and lot sizes, are met. The group also recommended allowing people to build in-law apartments, or accessory dwelling units, as a matter of right.

Those two recommendations alone could make a big difference, said Hannah Pingree, director of the Governor’s Office of Policy Innovation and the Future.

“I think the addition of (accessory dwelling units) and this four-unit opportunity will make a big difference in towns,” Pingree said. “I think this is actually a very big step.”

ANNUAL GROWTH CAPS TARGETED
The group also recommends eliminating so-called local growth caps, which limit the amount of housing that can be developed in a given year.

Falmouth is one community that currently has such a cap, and reached its 65-permit limit for 2021 in June.

The group also recommends:
• Providing funding and technical assistance on zoning matters to municipalities looking to increase affordable housing, including reducing minimum lot sizes and relaxing parking requirements to increase diversity of housing sizes and types;
• Creating density bonuses throughout the state for low- and middle-income housing projects, provided the units remain affordable for a period of time;
• Establishing a three-year incentive plan for towns willing to review zoning and land use policies to encourage more housing opportunities; and
• Asking each town to designate a priority growth area that is located near community services.

Affordable housing developer Erin Cooperider said she was excited to see the recommendations come together and urged lawmakers to act.

“What a terrific job this commission has done and I hope the Legislature will take the next step and make it happen,” she said.

The commission also included: Dana Totman, president and CEO of Avesta Housing; Jeff Levine, a former Portland planning director who now teaches urban studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Sen. Matthew Pouliot, R-Kennebec County; Rep. Amy Arata, R-New Gloucester; Dan Brennan of the Maine State Housing Authority; Heather Spalding of the Maine Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association; construction industry representative John Napolitano; real estate broker Madeline Hill; Cheryl Golak, an advocate for low- and middle-income Mainers; and Anthony Jackson, an advocate for civil rights and racial justice.
 
Talk about stuffing your money under a mattress!!!

A plumber was working on a toilet at Joel Osteen’s church. Then a trove of money fell out of the wall.​

pressherald.com/2021/12/03/a-plumber-was-working-on-a-toilet-at-joel-osteens-church-then-a-trove-of-money-fell-out-of-the-wall/

By Timothy Bella December 3, 2021

A plumber doing maintenance work at pastor Joel Osteen’s Lakewood Church stumbled across checks and cash hidden in a wall – a discovery that may yield clues to an unsolved burglary reported by the congregation seven years ago.

The caller – who has only been identified as “Justin” – said he was on a job at the megachurch Nov. 10 when he made the stunning discovery.

“There was a loose toilet in the wall, and we removed the tile,” he told George Lindsey on 100.3 the Bull’s morning show. “We went to go remove the toilet, and I moved some insulation away and about 500 envelopes fell out of the wall.”

The plumber couldn’t believe what he saw spill out of the wall: The envelopes were filled with thousands of dollars in cash and checks.
“I was like, ‘Oh wow,'” he said.

Back in 2014, Lakewood Church in Texas, led by Osteen and wife Victoria, reported to police the loss of more than $600,000 in a burglary. The maintenance man’s discovery was confirmed by Lakewood Church to Houston’s KPRC-TV, the first to report the story, though police have yet to confirm whether the money found is the same as that stolen years ago.

“Recently, while repair work was being done at Lakewood Church, an undisclosed amount of cash and checks were found,” the spokesperson said. “Lakewood immediately notified the Houston Police Department and is assisting them with their investigation.”

The church did not say how much money was recovered from the toilet wall last month.

A spokesperson with Lakewood Church did not immediately respond to a Washington Post request for comment Friday. A Houston Police Department official confirmed that police held a meeting Friday morning to discuss the case. No further details were immediately available.

Lakewood – a 606,000-square-foot church that attracts tens of thousands of worshipers to Osteen’s weekly services – was rocked in March 2014 when the pastor announced that hundreds of thousands of dollars had been stolen from the church’s safe. The burglary was discovered on a Monday morning after weekend services. A police spokesman said at the time that $200,000 in cash and $400,000 in checks were reported stolen after a Lakewood employee noticed it was missing, according to the Houston Chronicle.

The funds were fully insured, according to a Lakewood statement at the time, and the church was working with its insurance company “to restore the stolen funds to the church.”

“We were heartbroken to learn today that funds were stolen from the church over the weekend,” the megachurch said, according to KHOU.

Osteen appeared to tweet about Lakewood’s misfortunes after the burglary.

“Trust is saying, ‘God I’m not going to let this upset me. I can’t make it work out my way, but I know you’re in control,'” he wrote.

Although Crime Stoppers offered a $25,000 reward for any information on the missing money, the funds were never recovered.

But the case took an unlikely turn Thursday on “The Morning Bull Show.”

The plumber told Lindsey that after making the discovery, he notified a maintenance person at the church and “turned it all in.”

“He has to be one of the most honest people in the world,” Lindsey told The Post. “We’re talking about a bathroom with no security cameras. He could have pocketed some money, but this guy reported it immediately.”

The news had some in Houston and on social media calling for Justin to receive some sort of reward for finding the envelopes, especially if it’s confirmed to be the same money from the 2014 burglary. Crime Stoppers of Houston told local media that the statute of limitations on the $25,000 reward had expired, meaning the plumber would not get a reward if the envelopes are indeed connected to the burglary.

Though questions still remain in the case – including why and how the money might have ended up behind a wall – Lindsey said that at the very least the plumber has sparked newfound interest in what had seemingly become a cold case.

“I don’t believe this is was a coincidence,” Lindsey said. “He was meant to find this.”
 
how the hell did this happen?


School officials became concerned about the younger Crumbley on Monday, a day before the shooting, when a teacher saw him searching for ammunition on his phone, McDonald said.

Jennifer Crumbley was contacted and subsequently told her son in a text message: “Lol. I’m not mad at you. You have to learn not to get caught,” according to the prosecutor.

On Tuesday, a teacher found a note on Ethan’s desk and took a photo. It was a drawing of a gun pointing at the words, “The thoughts won’t stop. Help me,” McDonald said.

There also was a drawing of a bullet, she said, with words above it: “Blood everywhere.”

Between the gun and the bullet was a person who appeared to have been shot twice and is bleeding. He also wrote, “My life is useless” and “The world is dead,” according to the prosecutor.

The school quickly had a meeting with Ethan and his parents, who were told to get him into counseling within 48 hours, McDonald said.

The Crumbleys failed to ask their son about the gun or check his backpack and “resisted the idea of their son leaving the school at that time,” McDonald said.

Instead, the teen returned to class and the shooting subsequently occurred.

“The notion that a parent could read those words and also know that their son had access to a deadly weapon that they gave him is unconscionable — it’s criminal,” the prosecutor said.

Jennifer Crumbley texted her son after the shooting, saying, “Ethan, don’t do it,” McDonald said.
 

:oops:

25 years ago I was dating an RN who worked in an Emergency Room. She said that you would be amazed at how many guys show up with things shoved up their butts that they accidently "slipped and fell on"!
 
Super bees...

Honeybees Survived for Weeks Under Volcano Ash After Canary Islands Eruption​

For roughly 50 days, thousands of honeybees sealed themselves in their hives, away from deadly gas, and feasted on honey. “It is a very empowering story,” one entomologist said.

About 50 days after the Cumbre Vieja volcano in the Canary Islands erupted in September, unleashing lava flows and destroying homes, churches and stores, a beekeeper returned to one of the devastated villages to see what the volcano had done to his hives.

What he found shocked beekeepers and delighted scientists: Inside five hives that had been covered in volcanic ash were tens of thousands of bees, still alive and buzzing away.

Not only had the bees managed to survive the heat and noxious gases of the volcano, but they also had avoided starvation by feeding off stores of honey inside the hive, said Antonio Quesada, a beekeeper in the Canary Islands and a spokesman for the Gran Canaria Beekeepers Association.

Their survival provided a glimmer of good news for La Palma — a resort island in the Canary archipelago of Spain — which was devastated by the eruption, which continues to spew lava. The island of about 80,000 people employs more than 100 beekeepers who manage hives that hold millions of honeybees, and who are vital workers in the local ecosystem and key economic players for those who sell honey throughout the region.

The bees’ ability to stay alive in such dire conditions was also a reminder of their toughness, a characteristic that is often overlooked amid news stories about the very real threats they face from pesticides, parasites and the loss of habitat.

“It’s incredible how such a tiny animal that has been around for hundreds of thousands of years can maintain that resilience, that ability to survive,” Mr. Quesada said in an interview on Wednesday.

The bees, known in the region as the Canary black bee, used propolis, a resin-like mixture sometimes known as bee glue, to seal themselves inside the hive, he said.

“They protected themselves from the gases” of the volcano, Mr. Quesada said. The bees also made sure to leave open a tiny pathway to the outside that they could later use to get out, he said.

That behavior is typical of honeybees, who use propolis, which they produce from substances they collect from plants and buds, to plug tiny gaps in the hive to protect it from rainwater and drafts, said Nathalie Steinhauer, a researcher in the department of entomology at the University of Maryland.

Still, the fact that the bees on the island managed to spend weeks inside the hive insulating themselves from such oppressive conditions was surprising — and even inspirational, Dr. Steinhauer said.

“It is a very empowering story,” she said. “It tells a lot about the resilience of honeybees.”

For over a decade, beekeepers and researchers have raised alarms about bees — which play a critical role in agriculturedying at high rates, even during the summer when bees are producing food and caring for their young.

Honeybees are not endangered, and beekeepers are able to replace lost colonies throughout the year, said Dr. Steinhauer, who is also a science coordinator for the Bee Informed Partnership, a consortium of universities and research laboratories.

But the high mortality rate is concerning and especially stressful for beekeepers, who must spend considerable time and money replacing dying colonies.

In the United States, the mortality rate has been particularly high, even though the total number of honeybee colonies has remained fairly stable over the last 20 years, according to the Bee Informed Partnership.

Still, honeybees remain adaptable and resourceful, said Keith S. Delaplane, the director of the Honey Bee Program at the University of Georgia and a professor of entomology.

Bees will build hives in tree hollows or abandoned tires, he said.

Stories abound of honeybees that survived forest fires after the worker bees, fanning their wings, managed to lower the temperatures of the hives. When a fire destroyed the Cathedral of Notre-Dame, a beekeeper who kept several hives on the roof was thrilled to find that the bees had stayed alive by gorging on honey.

Dr. Delaplane said entomologists often traded stories of colonies that survived after their hives were swept away by floods.

In the case of the hives in La Palma, the bees were also lucky. The volcanic ash that fell on the hives was porous and light, which allowed for oxygen to enter, Elías González, president of the ADS Beekeepers of La Palma, told EFE, a Spanish news agency.

Hundreds of other hives were also saved and have been taken to other parts of La Palma. Those bees cannot return to the villages where they once were because so much of the vegetation they rely on is covered in volcanic ash or hardened lava, Mr. Quesada said.

The story of the bees that lived through a volcano is likely to become famous among entomologists, Dr. Delaplane said.

“You can’t get much more dramatic than volcanic ash burying bee hives and the bees surviving,” he said. “It’s a little piece of happy news and heaven knows we need it.”
 
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