Targeted federal governments cuts or the March 1st sequester

Posted By on February 14, 2013

The coming government cuts, either by choice or sequester and their economic impact is bound to be felt by all of us. The President for his part Tuesday night in the State of the Union address offered a warning, but little that addressed the ominous across the board cuts coming on March 1st if nothing is done. As an advocate for a smaller federal government , cuts are necessary, but I also recognize that unmanaged instant cuts are not the best way to shrink Washington DC.

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The pain will be felt most acutely by the military and those employed or planning to work for Uncle Sam directly. For the rest of us, I sense the immediate impact will be felt down the road as the economy will slow according to the CBO and as we begin to notice the missing or slowed government services. The Pentagon has already said that 800,000 civilian employees will see their hours cut by about 20% for the rest of the year and they will also lay off 46,000 temporary workers. Food safety inspectors will try to do their job with 600 fewer people. Weather forecast may become less accurate and the nation’s air traffic will most likely slow; there will be about 1200 fewer controllers to oversee U.S. airspace.  We’ll all feel the pain of long delays when it comes to passports, taxes and social security paperwork, not to mention the difficulty for visitors when it comes to visas and tourism. Those wanting to visit the U.S. may just go elsewhere if entry becomes too difficult … of course that won’t impact illegals crossing at our southern border. The border patrol estimates that they will need to reduce their staff by 25%!

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Research advocates have argued that cuts to the National Institutes of Health, which drive US medical research, will slash about $12.5 billion from research this year and reduce economic growth by up to $860 billion over nine years, hitting US competitiveness in science in the long run and triggering nearly half a million job losses between 2013 and 2016.

Despite political maneuvering by Republicans and the White House to find a solution to the so-called "sequester", there are no serious proposals to avoid the $1.2 trillion in automatic spending cuts that are expected to take effect on March 1. It might be a good time to put pressure on “all” of Washington DC … they need to come up with a better solution that the sequester.

Archive: 40 year old photos of our house and dog Skippy

Posted By on February 13, 2013

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I’m on a roll in posting a few old photos and still in the reminiscing mood, so figured I’d archive a couple more black and whites. These are from my home darkroom when I started photography as a hobby in junior high school.

We’re starting to pack things back in boxes again so the boring family “slideshow” will slow … maybe we’ll put them in plastic boxes this time? Duh! Above are a couple photos of our dog Skippy taken with my first camera … a Kodak Brownie camera and below a couple photos of the house I grew up in.

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Back in 2009 I used Google to look up the house I grew up in about 20 miles east of Toledo on Lake Erie. Our old house has since been torn down according to Google’s Sat images, but the Streetview photos are still showing the old house.

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Finding a few photos of an old friend, his canoe and VW Bug

Posted By on February 12, 2013

It’s not fun drying out our basement, but I am enjoying finding long lost photos. Here’s one of a canoe trip (one of many) taken during a 1977 spring trip to the Whitewater River in Indiana with Charlie “Kamakaze” Matthews. We spent our free time both canoeing and sailing when we were in high school and it is fun to reconnect on social networks (Facebook).

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He had an old Volkswagen and we’d strap his 17 foot canoe on top and had a great time. As I recall, we drove that “bug” pretty hard all over the place … including Florida. Great memories!

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Now that he’s a mature and respectable realtor in the Washington DC area, I’m not sure these photos are helpful?
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Click for larger images.

Come on in, the water is fine! Can you say “feeding frenzy?”

Posted By on February 11, 2013

swimmingwiththesharksIt’s nice sun filled and warm day in Cincinnati today … although I don’t think it is pool time just yet. temp130211

Would you like to go swimming with these “fishies?”

(Click for larger) Photo credit: Photographer unknown

Trying out the new Titebond III waterproof glue

Posted By on February 11, 2013

titebond3_waterproofglue_feAlong with our flooded basement and BlueMax water line repair mentioned the last few days, the boring equipment the excavator used took out some of my fence. Although we just stained it again this year, the boards are starting to show their age and have split. I figured this might be a good time to test a new Titebond 3 “waterproof” wood glue and see it it is up to the water-proof claims?

Titebond III Ultimate Wood Glue is the first one-part, water cleanup wood glue ever offered that is proven waterproof. The waterproof formula passes the ANSI/HPVA Type I water-resistance specification and offers superior bond strength, longer open assembly time and lower application temperature.

LINK

My daughter’s wedding approaches – where does the time go?

Posted By on February 10, 2013

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While drying hundreds if not thousands of photos after our basement flooding this past week, the memories have been both great … and have pulled my heartstrings. I’ve scanned a few photos this afternoon to share (they were pre-digital) and reminded me just how many years have past … and how fast those years have gone. This one with Katelyn (1987) for the first time made me melancholy about her wedding – yikes, its only 2 months away.
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My depressing and nonstop day going through wet boxes

Posted By on February 9, 2013

If you have ever experience a flooded basement, you know what I’m doing today … well this entire weekend and well into next week!

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It has been a busy, nonstop day hauling up soggy boxes and one of the few days that I’m sure Brenda is glad to be working! I’m kicking myself for the foolish way that over the years we have shuffled storage and left some of our treasures in cardboard boxes on the floor. Besides good lumber and a few computer gadgets,  I put our heavy classic vinyl record albums and a few banker boxes of work related files on the floor – foolish!  For Brenda’s part, she put a box of all our old negatives, loose photographs and some old irreplaceable scrapbook albums on the floor. I’m doing my best to dry the loose photos out, but the scrapbook albums are stuck together and deteriorating. Depressing.

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Basement woes – we should just get a big dumpster

Posted By on February 8, 2013

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What a mess! As we continue the “dry out” process for the basement after the failed BlueMax water pipe, our piles of basement stored possessions is making me rethink the material lifestyle we live. From Barbie dolls to “antique” computer gear … why did we buy so much and why are we packing up and keeping so much? I think I need a dumpster … I’m in the mood to toss stuff.

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The excavator, Roger Henry, came today and proceeded to pull a new copper water line through our foundation wall. The backhoe and boring machine is tearing up our soggy yard and probably going to leave a mess for me in the spring. Hopefully the underground boring has not damage any of our previous drains, sewer or water lines … not to mention the gas supply line! I hope they know what they are doing.

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A failed BlueMax water pipe and a basement full of water

Posted By on February 7, 2013

Well I probably shouldn’t say "a basement FULL of water," but when coming home from a week vacation and finding water covering the floor makes it feel like chairinwaterthe basement was FULL of water!

We stumbled in last night after a day of travel pretty much ready for bed, only to find "water, water, everywhere" … and scrabbled to figure out what was going on. I knew the weather had been cold and immediately suspected that a pipe may have broken. A glance at the flashing microwave hinted that perhaps a power outage contributed to the problem? I waded down the stair into the "clear" pool of water in our basement and skeptically flipped my hand at the electrical switches so I could at least see what I was looking at. After grabbing a flashlight I headed to both sump pumps (we have two) and they were humming away, but didn’t seem to be making much ground on the water level so I headed outside and notice that both outlets were overflowing … there must have been too much water for the drain line?

sumpdrainmI rigged up a couple 4 inch pipes and stretch them away from the foundation and flooded the yard instead of the foundation … but at least the water didn’t head right back for the sump pit. I was obvious that the pumps were just recirculating most of the water that they were pumping, but I still couldn’t figure out what caused the flooding to begin with? There didn’t look to be much snow and I didn’t think we had that much rain? I put my ear to the water main in the basement and heard what I thought was water running. I had Brenda stick her head under each of our vanities and toilets … the washing machine, dishwater and icemaker … they were fine. Then I turned off the valve where the BlueMax plastic pipe came in from the outside and was able to quiet the pipes a bit. Hmm, our water pressure was low too???

Eventually our sump pumps caught up with the water, but "wow" those black perforated tiles under the basement floor were really streaming water into the sumps … at least one of the sumps … the one nearest the BlueMax pipe where water enters the house. Hmm … maybe I’m onto something?

An emergency call to the county water department had a truck out at dawn and we were able to shut off the main valve at the meter after noticing that the water meter was spinning "even though the house valve was off."  Ah ha … there is a leak between the meter and the house valve … most likely where the BlueMax pipe enters the house?

So here we are … a wet basement, ruined furniture, carpet, drywall, cabinets, my workshop tools (those that were low) and our house without water. Suffice to say, I’m not really "off" to work today; it would be so much nicer to be just complaining about going to work.

I did immediately call my insurance company and they arranged for a water extraction clean up crew and assigned me a claims adjuster … BUT I also found out what many probably already know, basement flooding are touchy issues. In fact, it looks as if most of my coverage (after my $1000 deductible) is going to pay only for clean up and dry out and will not be enough to cover drywall or carpet … let along the labor to install. I’m trying to contest … but am not sure how far I’m going to get?

In the meantime, I’m listening to the big vacuum truck in our driveway and helping guys hauling out the saturated carpet, wet drywall and soaked cardboard boxes. Thankfully the excavator came out and we’re scheduled to put in a new copper water line on Friday — being without water is already challenging!

I’m having too much fun … I just love coming home from a week of boat problems and helping with my in-laws medical issues while on a short vacation? [sarcasm]

Gas prices and an additional Encore motor mount issue

Posted By on February 5, 2013

gaspricess130205In the last few weeks gasoline prices have risen 20 – 30 cents per gallon and the extra few dollars were felt when we were in Florida this past week. The small, and cheap feeling, Nissan Versa rental car was at least a little thrifty at the pump – 32 mpg, but it should have been better.

As for our sailboat problem, we unfortunately were still unable to launch Encore after finding a faulty engine mount when replacing the cutlass bearing (although I’m glad it was spotted) as the replacement didn’t arrive in time. Of course one problem lead to another, as after replacing the broken rear engine mount on Tuesday, The forward “dogbone” engine mount had a stud that had broken loose. It needs to be removed and welded. It looks like we’re just not suppose to be back in the water?

Those issues aside, it was great to have more time to spend with Brenda’s mom and dad. They are dealing with medical issues and appreciated having us around to help with a few things. Brenda was able to get PT set up for her mom as well as simple home care issues (laundry, cleaning, shopping, etc). We were glad to be with them.

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Rear Volvo marine diesel engine mount

Desultory - des-uhl-tawr-ee, -tohr-ee

  1. lacking in consistency, constancy, or visible order, disconnected; fitful: desultory conversation.
  2. digressing from or unconnected with the main subject; random: a desultory remark.
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