ReportWire

Tag: mechanics

  • Staying alive at sea: Those who work on water take safety training

    Staying alive at sea: Those who work on water take safety training

    Local commercial fishermen making a living in one of the deadliest occupations in the nation learned or honed fundamental safety skills Thursday at U.S. Coast Guard Station Gloucester, 17 Harbor Loop.

    The all-day session was the first of a free, two-day safety training offered by the Gloucester office of Fishing Partnership Support Services, a nonprofit dedicated to improving the health, safety and economic security of fishermen.

    On Thursday, fishermen and others who work on the water learned or honed fundamental skills through hands-on training on EPIRBs, signal flares, mayday calls, man overboard recovery, firefighting, flooding and damage control, dewatering pumps, immersion suits, personal floatation devices and life rafts.

    Among those taking part were members of the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries and the Beverly Harbormaster’s Office.

    The training included the organization’s innovative First Responder at Sea Overdose Education and Naloxone Distribution program for the fishing industry. This training, designed to position fishermen as first responders at sea, was recently recognized by the White House Challenge to Save Lives from Overdose.

    Friday’s session involves drill conductor certification, with fishers digging deeper into what they learned Thursday. This involves new information in cold-water survival, helicopter rescues, vessel stability, liability, and emergency procedures.

    Those who complete the two days of training are Alaska Marine Safety Education Association certified drill conductors, which meets Coast Guard requirements under 46 CFR 28.270.

    Requesting opioid education and naloxone distribution training for fishermen may be done by visiting www.fishingpartnership.org.

    By Times Staff

    Source link

  • Police accuse Essex driver in hit-run that left woman seriously hurt

    Police accuse Essex driver in hit-run that left woman seriously hurt

    BEVERLY — Police have arrested an Essex man who appears to have been the driver in a Sunday night a hit-and-run crash that left an Ipswich woman seriously injured.

    On Monday, police arrested Diego Mattos-Vazualdo, 47, of Essex, charging him with negligent operation of a motor vehicle and leaving the scene of a personal injury accident.

    Officers responded to 375 Rantoul St. about 10:15 p.m. on the report of a female pedestrian who had been struck by a vehicle. The victim was identified as a 27-year-old Ipswich resident.

    Upon locating the woman, police immediately began treating her and tried to make her comfortable. The woman, whose ID has not yet been released, was transported by ambulance to Beverly Hospital to stabilize her injuries — which were believed to be serious — before being Medflighted to Brigham & Women’s Hospital in Boston.

    At this time her condition has not been updated.

    A preliminary investigation revealed the victim had walked into the street and was first struck by a vehicle moving traveling southbound.

    The operator of that vehicle remained on the scene and is cooperating with police.

    The woman was then struck by the second vehicle, operated by Mattos-Vazualdo, who was traveling northbound. He stopped for a matter of seconds, then fled the scene.

    Based on witness statements, an accurate description of the fleeing vehicle was obtained and relayed to surrounding areas.

    Essex police were able to stop a vehicle matching that description, and the operator, identified as Mattos-Vazualdo, told Essex officers he thought he may have struck something.

    He was transported by Beverly Officers back to police headquarters where he was charged. He was expected to be arraigned in court later Monday.

    The investigation remains ongoing with Beverly police and the assistance of the State Police Crash Recon team.

    By Buck Anderson | Staff Writer

    Source link

  • City councilor calls library cost estimate ‘almost dishonest’

    City councilor calls library cost estimate ‘almost dishonest’

    BEVERLY — A city councilor accused Mayor Mike Cahill’s administration of being “almost dishonest” about the cost of a proposed library project that has ballooned to $18 million.

    In a public hearing at City Hall on Monday night, Ward 1 Councilor Todd Rotondo criticized city officials for telling city councilors two years ago that the project would cost $3.75 million. Cahill is now asking the council to approve the project at a cost of $18 million.

    “It wasn’t with malicious intent but it really was almost dishonest,” Rotondo said of the original $3.75 million estimate. “We weren’t presented a whole picture of the project originally.”

    The comment prompted a heated exchange with Mike Collins, the city’s director of public services and engineering.

    “I’m curious, were you insinuating that we were lying to you?” Collins asked Rotondo. “That’s the way I heard it.”

    “I don’t think I said that,” Rotondo responded. “What I said was, well, OK yes, I would say that then.”

    Rotondo said everyone he’s spoken with about the project assumed that the $3.75 million was a high price, but was the full scope of the project.

    “So it almost is a little distrustful, yes,” he said to Collins. “So I’m sorry if that’s the way you feel, but yes it’s not a full truth.”

    “It’s not how I feel, it’s how you feel, so I just wanted to clarify that,” Collins said.

    The City Council did not take a vote on the project Monday night, instead continuing the public hearing until its next meeting on March 18.

    The project calls for installing a new geothermal heating and cooling system at the Beverly Public Library on Essex Street as well as other improvements to the building. City officials say the HVAC system is failing and the building lacks humidity control, an important feature in the storage of historic records.

    The City Council approved an initial $2 million for the project in June 2022 based on an estimated cost of $3.75 million. But when the project came back before the council in January, councilors were told the cost was now $18 million.

    Rotondo asked Collins why the original estimate did not include such costs as accessibility upgrades and other “soft costs.” Collins said that estimate was “just a relative cost comparison of different options” and “wasn’t a fully developed project.”

    “What we were asking for was money to pursue developing the selected option out to its fullest extent so that we could then come back to the council with a fully developed project and request funding,” Collins said.

    Members of the project team hired by the city spent nearly two hours presenting details of the project. Bryant Ayles, the city’s finance director, said the city can afford to borrow money for the library as well as for two other upcoming renovation projects, to City Hall and the McPherson Youth Center.

    The library project is in line to receive about $7.8 million in grants, incentives and credits under various energy programs, significantly reducing the cost for the city, officials said. They said the proposed geothermal system, which involves installing a “geothermal well field” under the library parking lot, will reduce the city’s greenhouse gas footprint.

    “It will give us the best overall project and the lowest total operating costs and the lowest cost of ownership over the life of the project,” Collins said. “I still stand by that.”

    If the City Council approves the project, construction would start in August and the library would be closed for six to eight months during construction, according to the project team’s presentation.

    Beatrice Heinze, a Conant Street resident who spoke as part of the public hearing, said she thinks geothermal systems are “wonderful.” But she questioned the cost of the project, noting that as a taxpayer she is also paying for the credits and incentives that the city would receive.

    “I take $18 million out of this pocket to Beverly. Then I take $8 million out of this pocket to the feds to give back to Beverly. Then I pay a big added-on to my National Grid bill to give a carbon credit back to Beverly,” Heinze said.

    Ward 5 Councilor Kathleen Feldman said she believes the geothermal system “still makes the most sense long-term for our city.” “But the sticker shock was a lot for all of us to handle,” she said.

    Staff Writer Paul Leighton can be reached at 978-338-2535, by email at pleighton@salemnews.com, or on Twitter at @heardinbeverly.

    By Paul Leighton | Staff Writer

    Source link

  • A half century of hands-on learning at Whittier Tech

    A half century of hands-on learning at Whittier Tech

    HAVERHILL — It’s 7:45 a.m., a Tuesday in this the 50th anniversary of Whittier Regional Vocational Technical High School.

    Principal Chris Laganas’ booming voice reaches through the intercom to 1,275 students in their homerooms this morning two days before Thanksgiving; and two months before voters would defeat a plan to build a $446 million school.

    The students are from the 11 towns and cities in which 73% of special election voters would reject the new school proposal, deeming it too costly, and almost three months before the Whittier Tech School Committee voted recently to withdraw the proposal.

    The students are enrolled in any of 23 vocational-technical shops. From culinary arts to computer-aided design, HVAC to hospitality and marketing to masonry.

    The principal’s underlying message this morning in late November is the same as it will be in late May. The same as on a Monday or Friday.

    Since Whittier opened in the 1973-74 school year, its students have gone on to be machinists, mechanics, electricians, chefs, carpenters, plumbers, nurses, teachers, researchers and businesspeople and to work in all fields.

    In the coming weeks, freshmen will select the shop program they want to pursue and juniors will become eligible for the Whittier cooperative education program in which students alternate school work with paid employment in their chosen technical field.

    Invariably, Whittier grads become handy people.

    The message Laganas relays this morning, and the words from his predecessors, is this:

    Take the opportunity in hand and work it.

    Make it and shape it in these classrooms and shops, and out in the field on coop placements working for employers, says Laganas, also the assistant superintendent, and a former professional hockey player who skated in hundreds of minor league games.

    The Whittier Way is active, a learning-by-doing approach that has driven the Whittier Tech engine for 50 years.

    Mixing things up

    In a kitchen the size of a basketball court, overhead lighting glints off stainless steel counters, mixers and dishwashing machines.

    Voices roll up against rattling dishes and chiming silverware. Pots tumble into a deep sink, thumping like a kick drum.

    Two dozen culinary arts students in aprons and instructors in chef coats and hats transition from breakfast to lunch.

    A chef calls out a reminder for students to stay on schedule with their tasks. This is crucial when shifting from one meal to the next.

    In the baking section, a youth pours chocolate chips into a mixer filled with cookie dough.

    Behind him, a student pulls a baking sheet of fresh cookies from the oven and slides it on a rack to cool.

    The smell of warm chocolate chip cookies registers bliss.

    The difference at Whittier is students get to make, bake, serve and — yes — eat the cookies.

    Culinary student Jeramiahes Vega, a junior who lives in Haverhill, pushes a cart to the baking station.

    Cooking gives him pleasure, satisfies.

    “I like the people’s reactions after they eat the food I make,” he said. “I like that. I like seeing how they change after having good food.”

    Nearby, Lillian Lefcourt, a Haverhill senior clad in kitchen whites, scrapes her grill clean. She pokes a brush into a small stainless container with melted butter. She works with purpose. No wasted movement.

    She and a classmate have been making grab-and-go breakfast sandwiches — egg and bacon or sausage and cheese — for the teachers.

    Lefcourt came to Whittier to learn a trade, to earn a living.

    “I really like baking cookies and brownies,” she says, brushing butter on the grill.

    Students cut, measure and clean.

    Chefs supervise, calling out orders as needed.

    “Guiding the students,” chef Tjitse Boringa says. “The students are doing all the work.”

    Boringa, originally from the Netherlands, has been teaching here for 23 years.

    He is one of six culinary arts instructors.

    The hallmark here and in the school’s 22 other programs is active learning.

    Beginning with the basics and building skills, not the least of which are being punctual, being attentive and finding the pleasure we humans get from learning.

    More students are continuing their education these days, Boringa says.

    A lot of them go to Johnson & Wales University or the Culinary Institute of America or Northern Essex Community College, he says.

    Mouths and manes

    In the dental shop, Skyy Skinner, a sophomore from Haverhill, practices passing instruments to her partner. Precision in simple tasks are important.

    Skinner holds an explorer, a thin stainless steel object for probing. She is poised above a set of teeth. No face or head. Just teeth on a thin post.

    She is also learning about disease control, making sure she is gloved and surfaces are clean, that the objects are sterilized and the space disinfected.

    Good dental hygiene promotes good health, she says.

    “It is important for a lot of things you wouldn’t expect,” Skinner says.

    She and the seven or eight other dental assistant students in the room all say they want to work in the dentistry field.

    This program was added in 2018. There is a demand for dental hygienists and assistants. The same is true for the budding carpenters, electricians and other tradespeople here.

    Some students arrive to Whittier with a program in mind; others find theirs through the freshmen exploratory. For three-quarters of their first year, they cycle through the different shops learning about the skills and technologies before selecting one to pursue in depth over their remaining time at the school.

    The cosmetology program has 19 students. Once they are licensed, they are placed in a salon outside the school for their co-op assignment, instructor Nancy Calverley says.

    Here in the cosmetology salon, students are coloring and styling hair and applying gel polish to nails.

    Shaylee Twombly, a senior from Amesbury, is first bleaching her client’s hair tips and front pieces so she can apply a red color and give it a halo look.

    “As you can see, it is kind of lifting down here,” she says of the color, as it shifts from a natural brown color to a lighter blond.

    “I was just bored with my hair,” says the client, a fellow student, Julianna Bucknill, of Newbury.

    The students are an energetic group and interested in beauty and fashion.

    “We are all bubbly with each other,” says Twombly, who plans to go to a two-year college and someday open her own salon.

    Shaping and selling

    A majority of Whittier graduates continue their education. Some will start their own businesses.

    A number of the teachers here are former Whittier students.

    In the wood shop is instructor Mike Sandlin, who grew up in Haverhill. He graduated from Whittier in 1997, studying carpentry, and graduated from Westfield State University with a degree in regional planning.

    He then joined the carpenters union and worked in the carpentry field for 18 years before returning to teach at his old school.

    Sometimes it takes students a few years to figure what they want to do, but many of them “are crushing it,” Sandlin says.

    A former student came in the other day and told him how she had started out with a company on the bottom rung.

    She was pushing a broom around a shop.

    “And now has worked her way up and is drawing her own kitchens and coming up with her own cabinet plans,” Sandlin says.

    The wood shop is filled with lumber and tools and machines, including shapers, routers, sanders, planers, joiners, saws and lathes.

    Meanwhile, elsewhere in the building, students decorate the school store, called J. Greenleaf, draping garlands behind the checkout counter.

    Sophomore Lia Landan, a marketing student from Haverhill, adjusts a garland according to directions from fellow marketing student Michael Wells, a junior from Haverhill, who eyes the placement from the entrance.

    Next, they string lights around the greenery and play Christmas music.

    “We have a little tree over there,” Landan says.

    “We have a star up there,” another student says, pointing to a yellow star topping the garland.

    The right fit

    Across the hall from the store is the Poet’s Inn, a cozy eatery open to the public.

    Seated at a table are senior class president Owen Brannelly, from Amesbury, and hospitality program teacher Nikolas Kedian, who graduated from Whittier Tech in 2016.

    “I realized the second I stepped into the culinary shop, it was the place where I best fit in,” Kedian says. “You start eating the food, meeting the people.”

    It felt like home. His family has worked in restaurants, he says.

    Footsteps, lots of them, approach in the hallway.

    More than 250 JG Whittier Middle School students are visiting Whittier Tech this day.

    Every Tuesday in November and a little of December, middle school students from the 11 sending communities visit the vocational school.

    Brannelly says it feels like it was only last year that he was an Amesbury Middle School student visiting Whittier. He was excited and nervous, and imagines that is what these middle schoolers are feeling.

    He had not planned on going the vocational route but decided that he wanted to try something new and different.

    He has been the class president for three years.

    He and classmates have organized school dances, including the first homecoming dance in the last 20 years.

    The dances have drawn lots of students, almost 800 of them to the last dance.

    He is interning at ARCH Medical Solutions, a manufacturing company in Seabrook, New Hampshire.

    Last year, he worked for an accounting firm as a receptionist.

    He is also earning college credits, taking classes, including English composition, at Whittier through Northern Essex Community College.

    He wants to study marketing in college and has been accepted by Big Ten schools: the University of Minnesota, Michigan State University and Ohio State University.

    He is bound for a much larger world, and ready for his next new and different adventure, well prepared for it by the Whittier Way.

    Whittier by the numbers

    Opened: 1973

    Address: 115 Amesbury Line Road, Haverhill

    Enrollment: 1,277 students

    Student-teacher ratio: 10-1

    Mascot: Wildcat

    Colors: Maroon and gold

    Sending cities and towns: Haverhill, Amesbury, Newburyport, Georgetown, Groveland, Ipswich, Merrimac, Newbury, Rowley, Salisbury and West Newbury.

    Programs: 23 in six core areas, arts and communication, construction, manufacturing, service, technology, and transportation

    Sports: 10 boys teams and nine girls teams

    2023 grads to college: 56%

    2023 grads to work: 37%

    By Terry Date | Staff Writer

    Source link

  • A half century of hands-on learning at Whittier

    A half century of hands-on learning at Whittier

    HAVERHILL — It’s 7:45 a.m. A Tuesday in this the 50th anniversary of Whittier Regional Vocational Technical High School.

    Principal Chris Laganas’ booming voice reaches through the intercom to 1,275 students in their homerooms this morning two days before Thanksgiving; and two months before voters would defeat a plan to build a new $446 million school.

    The students are from the 11 towns and cities in which 73% of special election voters would reject the new school proposal, deeming it too costly, and almost three months before the Whittier Tech School Committee voted this week to withdraw the proposal.

    The students are enrolled in any of 23 vocational-technical shops. From culinary arts to computer-aided design, HVAC to hospitality and marketing to masonry.

    The principal’s underlying message this morning in late November is the same as it will be in late May. The same as on a Monday or Friday.

    Since Whittier opened in the 1973-74 school year, its students have gone on to be machinists, mechanics, electricians, chefs, carpenters, plumbers, nurses, and teachers and researchers and business people and to work in all fields.

    In the coming weeks, freshmen will select the shop program they want to pursue and juniors will become eligible for the Whittier cooperative education program in which students alternate school work with paid employment in their chosen technical field.

    Invariably, Whittier grads become handy people.

    The message Principal Laganas relays this morning, and the words from his predecessors, is this:

    Take the opportunity in hand and work it.

    Make it and shape it in these classrooms and shops, and out in the field on coop placements working for employers, says Laganas, also the assistant superintendent, and a former professional hockey player who skated in hundreds of minor league games.

    The Whittier Way is active, a learning-by-doing approach that has driven the Whittier Tech engine for 50 years.

    Mixing things up

    In a kitchen the size of a basketball court, overhead lighting glints off stainless steel counters, mixers and dishwashing machines.

    Voices roll up against rattling dishes and chiming silverware. Pots tumble into a deep sink, thumping like a kick drum.

    Two dozen culinary arts students in aprons and instructors in chef coats and hats transition from breakfast to lunch.

    A chef calls out a reminder for students to stay on schedule with their tasks. This is crucial when shifting from one meal to the next.

    In the baking section, a youth pours chocolate chips into a mixer filled with cookie dough.

    Behind him, a student pulls a baking sheet of fresh cookies from the oven and slides it on a rack to cool.

    The smell of warm chocolate chip cookies registers bliss.

    The difference at Whittier is students get to make, bake, serve and — yes — eat the cookies.

    Culinary student Jeramiahes Vega, a junior who lives in Haverhill, pushes a cart to the baking station.

    Cooking gives him pleasure, satisfies.

    “I like the people’s reactions after they eat the food I make,” he says. “I like that. I like seeing how they change after having good food.”

    Nearby, Lillian Lefcourt, a Haverhill senior clad in kitchen whites, scrapes her grill clean. She pokes a brush into a small stainless container with melted butter. She works with purpose. No wasted movement.

    She and a classmate have been making grab-and-go breakfast sandwiches — egg and bacon or sausage and cheese — for the teachers.

    Lefcourt came to Whittier to learn a trade, to earn a living.

    “I really like baking cookies and brownies,” she says, brushing butter on the grill.

    Students cut, measure and clean.

    Chefs supervise, calling out orders as needed.

    “Guiding the students,” chef Tjitse Boringa says. “The students are doing all the work.”

    Boringa, originally from the Netherlands, has been teaching here for 23 years.

    He is one of six culinary arts instructors.

    The hallmark here and in the school’s 22 other programs is active learning.

    Beginning with the basics and building skills, not the least of which are being punctual, being attentive and finding the pleasure we humans get from learning.

    More students are continuing their education these days, Boringa says.

    A lot of them go to Johnson & Wales University or the Culinary Institute of America or Northern Essex Community College, he says.

    Mouths and manes

    In the dental shop, Skyy Skinner, a sophomore from Haverhill, practices passing instruments to her partner. Precision in simple tasks are important.

    Skinner holds an explorer, a thin stainless steel object for probing. She is poised above a set of teeth. No face or head. Just teeth on a thin post.

    She is also learning about disease control, making sure she is gloved and surfaces are clean, that the objects are sterilized and the space disinfected.

    Good dental hygiene promotes good health, she says.

    “It is important for a lot of things you wouldn’t expect,” Skinner says.

    She and the seven or eight other dental assistant students in the room all say they want to work in the dentistry field.

    This program was added in 2018. There is a demand for dental hygienists and assistants. The same is true for the budding carpenters, electricians and other tradespeople here.

    Some students arrive to Whittier with a program in mind; others find theirs through the freshmen exploratory. For three-quarters of their first year, they cycle through the different shops learning about the skills and technologies before selecting one to pursue in depth over their remaining time at the school.

    The cosmetology program has 19 students. Once they are licensed, they are placed in a salon outside the school for their co-op assignment, instructor Nancy Calverley says.

    Here in the cosmetology salon, students are coloring and styling hair and applying gel polish to nails.

    Shaylee Twombly, a senior from Amesbury, is first bleaching her client’s hair tips and front pieces so she can apply a red color and give it a halo look.

    “As you can see, it is kind of lifting down here,” she says of the color, as it shifts from a natural brown color to a lighter blond.

    “I was just bored with my hair,” says the client, a fellow student, Julianna Bucknill, of Newbury.

    The students are an energetic group and interested in beauty and fashion.

    “We are all bubbly with each other,” says Twombly, who plans to go to a two-year college and someday open her own salon.

    Shaping and selling

    A majority of Whittier graduates continue their education. Some will start their own businesses.

    A number of the teachers here are former Whittier students.

    In the wood shop is instructor Mike Sandlin, who grew up in Haverhill. He graduated from Whittier in 1997, studying carpentry, and graduated from Westfield State University with a degree in regional planning.

    He then joined the carpenters union and worked in the carpentry field for 18 years before returning to teach at his old school.

    Sometimes it takes students a few years to figure what they want to do, but many of them “are crushing it,” Sandlin says.

    A former student came in the other day and told him how she had started out with a company on the bottom rung.

    She was pushing a broom around a shop.

    “And now has worked her way up and is drawing her own kitchens and coming up with her own cabinet plans,” Sandlin says.

    The wood shop is filled with lumber and tools and machines, including shapers, routers, sanders, planers, joiners, saws and lathes.

    Meanwhile, elsewhere in the building, students decorate the school store, called J. Greenleaf, draping garlands behind the checkout counter.

    Sophomore Lia Landan, a marketing student from Haverhill, adjusts a garland according to directions from fellow marketing student Michael Wells, a junior from Haverhill, who eyes the placement from the entrance.

    Next, they string lights around the greenery and play Christmas music.

    “We have a little tree over there,” Landan says.

    “We have a star up there,” another student says, pointing to a yellow star topping the garland.

    The right fit

    Across the hall from the store is the Poet’s Inn, a cozy eatery open to the public.

    Seated at a table are senior class president Owen Brannelly, from Amesbury, and hospitality program teacher Nikolas Kedian, who graduated from Whittier Tech in 2016.

    “I realized the second I stepped into the culinary shop, it was the place where I best fit in,” Kedian says. “You start eating the food, meeting the people.”

    It felt like home. His family has worked in restaurants, he says.

    Footsteps, lots of them, approach in the hallway.

    More than 250 JG Whittier Middle School students are visiting Whittier Tech this day.

    Every Tuesday in November and a little of December, middle school students from the 11 sending communities visit the vocational school.

    Brannelly says it feels like it was only last year that he was an Amesbury Middle School student visiting Whittier. He was excited and nervous, and imagines that is what these middle schoolers are feeling.

    He had not planned on going the vocational route but decided that he wanted to try something new and different.

    He has been the class president for three years.

    He and classmates have organized school dances, including the first homecoming dance in the last 20 years.

    The dances have drawn lots of students, almost 800 of them to the last dance.

    He is interning at ARCH Medical Solutions, a manufacturing company in Seabrook, New Hampshire.

    Last year, he worked for an accounting firm as a receptionist.

    He is also earning college credits, taking classes, including English composition, at Whittier through Northern Essex Community College.

    He wants to study marketing in college and has been accepted by Big Ten schools: the University of Minnesota, Michigan State University and Ohio State University.

    He is bound for a much larger world, and ready for his next new and different adventure, well prepared for it by the Whittier Way.

    Whittier by the numbers

    Opened: 1973

    Address: 115 Amesbury Line Road, Haverhill

    Enrollment: 1,277 students

    Student-teacher ratio: 10-1

    Mascot: Wildcat

    Colors: Maroon and gold

    Sending cities and towns: Haverhill, Amesbury, Newburyport, Georgetown, Groveland, Ipswich, Merrimac, Newbury, Rowley, Salisbury and West Newbury.

    Programs: 23 in six core areas, arts and communication, construction, manufacturing, service, technology, and transportation

    Sports: 10 boys teams and nine girls teams

    2023 grads to college: 56%

    2023 grads to work: 37%

    By Terry Date | tdate@eagletribune.com

    Source link

  • Parenting 101: Quick alternatives to screen time

    Parenting 101: Quick alternatives to screen time

    It can be hard to keep the kids away from screens, especially in summer when they have so much free time on their hands. Kids are constantly reaching for remotes and devices… and parents are constantly chiming, “No more!”

    So here are some quick alternatives to screen time. 

    Set up a craft table. Just as you have a homework station during the school year, it can be really handy to have an area stocked with paper, markers, scissors, glue, stickers, old magazines, etc. 

    Get outdoors. Start up a pick-up game of soccer or Frisbee, go on a family bike ride, plan a picnic, set up the sprinkler, throw some building toys (even simple spoons and bowls) into the yard or garden and get digging – fresh air always trumps being indoors.

    Go to the library. A quick trip to your local library can spark all kinds of interest in magazines, books, and more. Check out a kid’s cookbook and plan a family meal, or get a cool science experiment book for lots of exploration fun.

    Put the kids in change of an activity. Forget dictating to them what they should do in lieu of playing with electronics and instead out them in the driver’s seat and ask them to choose a family activity. You might be surprised by what they come up with.

    Create something from “trash.” Go through your recycling bin in search of items you can use to build a small playhouse, pirate ship or mechanic’s garage. Grab that bin of spare nuts and bolts from the garage and make your own robots. See which family member can get the most creative with their creations.

    Do something for others. Maybe you could make it a family project to roll those spare coins that have accumulating in that plastic bank in the closet, which could be given to a charity. Or you could start a canned food drive around your neighborhood. Build a little “take a book, leave a book” library outside your home for neighbours. Figure out a family project that will benefit others, and work on it together.

    Source link

  • Local law enforcement, business leaders talk marijuana legalization | News – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Local law enforcement, business leaders talk marijuana legalization | News – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    All of the effects of the complex 320-page law legalizing marijuana in Minnesota will likely take years to be felt.


    This page requires Javascript.

    Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.

    kAm(9:=6 C6E2:= D2=6D 2C6?’E =:<6=J E@ 368:? F?E:= a_ad[ |:??6D@E2?D 42? A@DD6DD 2?5 8C@H E96:C @H? >2C:;F2?2 DE2CE:?8 pF8] `] k^Am






    Marijuana plants grow at LifeLine Labs in Cottage Grove. (AP Photo/Jim Mone, File)

    kAm|:??6D@E2?D H:== 36 A6C>:EE65 E@ A@DD6DD a A@F?5D @7 42??23:D[ 2?5 E@ EC2?DA@CE 2E =62DE a @F?46D @7 42??23:D 7=@H6C] w@H6G6C[ E96J’== @?=J 36 23=6 E@ 4@?DF>6 E9@D6 AC@5F4ED 2E 2…

    MMP News Author

    Source link

  • Lake George water study could delay commercial construction

    Lake George water study could delay commercial construction

    LAKE GEORGE — The Village Board is expected to announce a moratorium on any new commercial property water hookups in the town outside of the village in order to conduct a 10- to 12-week water study.

    The board will vote on the resolution at its December meeting. The moratorium is proposed for six months.

    According to a news release from the village, the board hired C.T. Male Engineering to conduct a study of the village’s water system to evaluate options for the growing needs of the area.

    Lake George Town Supervisor Dennis Dickinson said Richard Schermerhorn’s plans to develop housing at the former site of Water Slide World was a driving force in deciding to conduct the study.

    “We’ve had some interest from developers for large water usage projects and the village has enough water, but they want to make sure they can get to the volume needed for these projects, so that prompted us to have the water study done,” Dickinson said.

    People are also reading…






    The village of Lake George water filtration system currently serves over 1,800 residents and businesses in the town and village of the Lake George. The town and village boards have agreed to conduct a study looking at options to continue to provide water services to the growing development in the area.




    While the town and village both operate water filtration plants, the town-operated facility in Diamond Point serves fewer than 100 residents with a well water system, while the village plant serves over 1,800 residents in the village and town with more than 1,400 water service connections.

    Currently, the village water is pumped directly from Lake George by a pump station on Beach Road to a modern water filtration station on Ottawa Street and distributed throughout the system.

    The village supplies users north to Hearthstone Park on Route 9N and south to Route 9L, as well as on the east side of the lake.

    The village news release not only cited the plans for the old Water Slide World site, but also the recent conversion of the old Ramada Inn into residences and multiple other condo developments on Route 9L and Bloody Pond Road, as reasons to conduct the water study and explore options for services.







    photo 2

    Demolition was ongoing this fall at the former home of Water Slide World, after real estate developer Richard Schermerhorn purchased the property with plans to build housing on the site. The plans, while not yet submitted to the town of Lake George, are a driving force behind the decision for a townwide water study.



    Jana DeCamilla



    “Village officials are concerned that the current filtration plant will not be able to service the expected higher volume and have joined with the Town Board to finance the $43,000 study. The study is expected to take 12-14 weeks,” Tuesday’s release states.

    The study is meant to examine the present capacity of the system, point out areas of concern or possible limitations and provide conceptual designs of improvement to continue to accept additional customers in the planned areas of development.

    “We do not want to hinder growth in the town of Lake George,” village Mayor Bob Blais said. “We want to be able to service all customers that wish village water in the town-outside-village and at the same time maintain an adequate reserve for the village.”

    Jana DeCamilla is a staff writer who covers Moreau, Queensbury, Warren County and Lake George. She can be reached at 518-903-9937 or jdecamilla@poststar.com.

    Source link

  • The Most Serviced Vehicles of 2017

    The Most Serviced Vehicles of 2017

    Autodata reveals the most serviced vehicles last year.

    Press Release



    updated: Jan 4, 2018

    For the last few years Autodata, a global leader in automotive technical information for professionals, has annually published the most serviced cars of the year. This year, Autodata has published an industry report that shares the top 10 most serviced cars, light commercial vehicles (LCVs) and motorcycles, as well as the most serviced hybrids, electric, petrol and diesel vehicles of 2017.

    Automotive aftermarket professionals (independent mechanics, workshops, roadside assistance businesses, etc.) in over 100 countries have access to Autodata’s precise technical information, which is required to effectively service, maintain and repair (SMR) vehicles from more than 155 manufacturers.

    “Our technical information has provided the aftermarket with accurate and in-depth automotive technical information for over 40 years. Today, our data and extensive user-database are also able to provide valuable insights into servicing, maintenance and repair trends that can help businesses to plan effectively,” said Max Lienard, Chief Strategy & Innovation Officer at Autodata.

    The Top 10 Most Serviced Vehicle lists are based on the number of service schedules accessed by Autodata’s subscribers. With over 77,000 professional automotive workshops/repair shops currently subscribed to Autodata’s applications, the report provides insights into SMR trends and servicing variations across 21 countries in 2017.

    The 21 countries covered in the Most Serviced Vehicles of 2017 report include: Australia, Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United States (motorcycles only).

    The UK’s Top 10 Most Serviced Cars of 2017 

    1.         Ford Focus (04-08)

    2.         Vauxhall Corsa-D

    3.         Vauxhall Astra-H

    4.         Ford Fiesta (’02)

    5.         Ford Fiesta (’08)

    6.         Vauxhall Astra-J

    7.         Volkswagen Golf V (1K1) (03-08)

    8.         Vauxhall Insignia-A

    9.         BMW 3 Series (E90/91/92/93) (05-14)

    10.       Audi A3/A3 Sportback (8PA/8P1) (03-13)

    Autodata for Motorcycles, the world’s first online multi-manufacturer application for professional motorcycle maintenance and repair; provides technical information for more than 8,000 bike models, including road bikes, off-road bikes, scooters, quad bikes, and side-by-sides from 62 motorcycle manufacturers. 

    USA’s Top 10 Most Serviced Motorcycles of 2017

    1.         Honda CRF 450R

    2.         Yamaha YZF YZF-R6

    3.         Honda GL Gold Wing 1800

    4.         Suzuki GSX-R 600

    5.         Yamaha YZF YZF-R1

    6.         Honda CBR 600RR

    7.         Honda VTX 1300 S

    8.         Honda VT Shadow 750C/CD/CD2

    9.         Yamaha YZ 250F

    10.       Yamaha YFZ 450S

    For access to Autodata’s full Most Serviced Vehicles of 2017 report, visit www.autodata-group.com.

    For more information and images, contact media@autodata-group.com.

    Source: Autodata

    Source link