July 29, 2007

Ranch homes gaining appeal

Tired of climbing the stairs every time you want something from the bedroom? And making the long drive to and from an outlying commuter home neighborhood? Take a look at ranch home living. Stylish in the 50's and later, many are being torn down so builders or buyers can build a large McMansion on the lot. In many cases this comes with a loss of a good and affordable home that can be remodeled or expanded at a much lower cost than building a new one.

Many of these homes are the right size for a starter home and need little change to provide a cozy lifestyle. Most are on lots larger than builders offer now and often have backyard space that provides an excellent area for outside recreation, a home garden or expansion of living space. With a little remodeling of old pipe systems, addition of insulation, a modern HVAC system and occasional layout changes the homes are an excellent alternative to homes now offered with high price tags.
News and Observer
July 29, 2007
Sarah Lindenfeld Hall, Staff Writer

Ranches regain some respect
Dominant lifestyle of 50's and so comfy, so American

It's easy to ridicule the ranch.

They're modest, one-story houses with small closets and low ceilings, little insulation and old pipes.

And they're common. Ranches were the predominant style in Raleigh and across the country for a couple of decades starting in the 1950s.

Now, they're a regular victim of the trend of tearing down old houses and building larger ones.

But even as the once innocuous style disappears, there is new awakening to its subtle appeal. The affordable but bland ranch home is becoming hip to a new generation and an object of desire to an older one.

Younger people love them for their kitsch. Baby boomers seek them for their stairs-free living. Read more...


July 28, 2007



An Virginia pig has become a celebrity while having cancer treatment at NCSU. Fran Martin's 150 pound pig is a painter and has even appeared on the Regis and Kelly show...





News and Observer
July 28, 2007
Josh Shaffer, Staff Writer

Sick, artistic pig finds help at NCSU

RALEIGH - One look at Smithfield the pot-bellied pig reveals his special traits: the blue eyes, the star-shaped mark on his forehead, the paintbrush jutting from his porcine jaws.

The 150-pound swine paints abstract art with his mouth -- once selling a painting for $1,300 at a charity auction, once appearing on "Live With Regis and Kelly."

Then snout cancer silenced his muse. Now Smithfield is the most celebrated patient at N.C. State University's College of Veterinary Medicine, enduring a summer of 19 radiation treatments while stuck in a Raleigh campground.

"They X-rayed his lungs, they sampled his blood and his lymph nodes, so that gave us hope," said Fran Martin, the pig's owner and art teacher. "Then they took the tumor out in June. It was as big as my thumb."

Hope aside, Martin needs help.

She and Smithfield live outside Richmond, Va., and this is their second bout with pot-bellied pig cancer -- a rarity.

Four years ago, the bills at N.C. State -- the last word in large-animal treatment, a sort of Mayo Clinic for swine -- ran to $8,000, more than half of which came to her through generous admirers.

She fears the bills will rise that high again, and she hopes large-animal lovers will help with money and companionship. Martin gets lonely at the campground where she and Smithfield are spending the summer.

"I can't afford a hotel," she said, asking that their location stay a secret. "I'm a schoolteacher."

Martin, who said she "looks 45," bought Smithfield for her two young boys after a trip to the Chesterfield County Fair outside Richmond.

He was the lone pig in his litter, and before long, he had mastered all the doggie tricks Martin taught him. Bowing. Turning in a circle. Bouncing objects on his snout.

Hearing that pigs had roughly the intelligence of a 6-year-old child, Martin taught Smithfield to paint.

He took to it immediately, picking up a brush dipped in blue, dabbing at the canvas, then choosing another dipped in red or yellow.

"By golly, he did it," Martin said.

They may be abstract, Martin said, but Smithfield's paintings always leave an impression. His work has fetched more than $1,000 per painting, helping to build a children's cancer center in Richmond.

A robust pig lives to 18 years, and Smithfield is just 10. With the cancer in remission, Martin figured him good for at least another five -- until June, when the tumor reappeared.

At N.C. State, Smithfield sees several surgeons, a radiation oncologist and a pot-bellied pig specialist: Dr. Kristie Mozzachio.

His treatments take about 30 minutes including anesthesia. Aside from a little mouth soreness, she said, he springs back from each session like a baby pig.

"He doesn't know he has cancer," his physician said. "He's doing great."

While she waits, Martin hopes for a little company on her morning walks, which start at 8:30 a.m. each day at Gate 5 of the N.C. State Fairgrounds.

She said exercise gives her a sense of purpose, a feeling of solidarity with the beloved pet while he heals. She invites anyone to join her. Original article...

"Maybe they've been putting off exercise, putting off losing a little weight," she said. "Smithfield isn't putting it off. He's being brave." Original article...

July 22, 2007

Road rage closes California road

Road rage can be more than just cursing and yelling at other travelers. A case in Wrightwood, California, takes road rage to a whole new level.

A shop owner at left worries about her business being affected by closing of Highway 138 in Wrightwood, California. (AP photo).

This amazing story tells about drivers shooting at workers, throwing food at them, driving into them - all in retaliation for the state limiting access to a busy road that needed major repairs...

New York Times
July 21, 3007
Associated Press article
Road closed after drivers behave badly

WRIGHTWOOD, Calif., July 21 (AP) — California highways have been shut down by wildfires, mudslides, earthquakes and police chases. And now road rage.

Drivers inconvenienced by a road-widening project subjected construction workers to so much abuse — death threats, BB gun shootings, a flying burrito — that the state shut down California Highway 138 altogether.

Now drivers must take a detour that costs them at least a half-hour, and businesses along the road are suffering.

“A few inconsiderate people have ruined it for the rest of us,” complained Julie Dutra, who owns a scrapbook and stationery store in this town in the Angeles National Forest about 50 miles northeast of Los Angeles.

Highway 138 connects two areas that have swollen with urban refugees in the past decade. Without it, roughly 20,000 drivers a day have to take a winding, two-lane road or other indirect routes that predate the population boom.

In the five years before construction started last summer, there were nearly 3,000 traffic accidents and 68 deaths, according to the California Highway Patrol. The highway had become so dangerous it was known as Blood Alley. The $44 million widening project was intended to alleviate the danger.

The first sign that things were going to turn ugly was after the California Department of Transportation allowed drivers to use the highway only during rush hour last summer, with traffic flowing in one direction at a time and creeping along behind escort vehicles. Read more...

July 19, 2007

Nurserys offering drought resistant plants

Worried about your prized plants drying up during the traditional NC summer dry spells? Try planting more drought resistant plants. This also helps cut down on water usage as dictated by new rules on watering.

Many local nurseries have begun offering more plants that require less water and do well in dry areas. This helps the nurseries gain back sagging sales and also helps consumers have gardens that do better in the intense summer heat with less demands for water.
News and Observer
July 19, 2007
Vicki Lee Parker, Staff Writer

Nurseries adapting to drought
Plants that sip water get more shelf space

When the Triangle suffered a drought in the early part of the decade, Fairview Nursery's sales withered, along with many lawns.

Now as the region teeters on the verge of the third drought in five years, the Raleigh nursery's sales are up 8 percent.

No, it's not Miracle-Gro.

The lack of rain and the area's new watering restrictions are leading gardeners to seek plants that require less water. Local nurseries are stocking more drought-tolerant plants to meet demand. They are also selling more rain barrels, special hoses and other products aimed at consumers who are conserving water.

The trend, coupled with the region's surging population of homeowners, is creating lush times for local nurseries and garden centers -- a welcome change after several tough years. Read more...

Naps help with work and life

Taking a nap or two during your busy day can go a long way to help with stress and busy schedules. A Lifestyle report suggests taking a nap can help you cope with work and life.

News and Observer
July 19, 2007
Joe Miller, Staff Writer

Snooze Control
Some grown-ups find taking a nap - wherever they can - makes them better able to cope with work and life

...

The midday nap is as old as man. But it received renewed attention late last year with "Take a Nap! Change Your Life," a short examination by Sara C. Mednick of why naps are good (see "Why nap?"). A research scientist at the Salk Institute in La Jolla, Calif., Mednick's premise is that a short nap in the early afternoon can lead to a more productive day.

"The 'big picture' message is that napping is a necessary and effective tool that can be used by anyone in pursuit of optimum health, happiness and productivity," Mednick writes in her introduction. "I want to make you a napper."

That, she acknowledges, is a daunting task in a go-go American society where not only is napping frowned upon, but so is sleep in general. Read more...

July 15, 2007

Wii is great for rehabilitation

Not only is the Wii game system a great source for entertainment but it is becoming a therapeutic aid helping with patient rehabilitation. WakeMed hospitals in North Carolina has begun to use the Wii to help with patient therapy. "Patients become vested in it, and when they're vested it has a lot more meaning," says Karen Ambrose, a physical therapist at the hospital. "If you can get them to want to do it," she says of the often grueling process of physical rehabilitation, "they'll do it."

One of the problems in getting rehab patients to become more involved in recovery is getting them to buy in to physical therapy. After that they can move forward in their recovery process.

According to the recent News and Observer report, the first hospital thought to have used the Wii for rehab is the Glenrose Rehabilitation Hospital in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. But WakeMed's Recreational Therapy Department heard about it from their person that delivers wheelchairs - he mentioned that "he had a Wii and thought the movement aspect might translate well to rehab".

News and Observer
July 12, 2007
Joe Miller, Staff Writer

The therapeutic Wii
Nintendo game system helps patients rehabilitate after injury or illness

It took a car accident and the onset of Parkinson's disease, but 68-year-old Nathan Woodlief may finally have a chance at beating his grandson at video games.
"He laughs at me," Woodlief says of the response his woeful performance elicits.

Junior may not be laughing, though, when Gramps returns from the hospital empowered by the device that nursed him back to health: the Nintendo Wii.

Wii? Oui.

The video game that couldn't stay on store shelves at Christmas is fast earning a second life as a useful tool in helping victims of debilitating diseases and accidents get back on their feet. Read more...

July 12, 2007

Wake County Schools - Handling the Growth

While much of the debate this year has been on whether to move to year-round schools and require compliance by all parents and students, the Wake County School Board doesn't seem to be considering all the options. Perhaps this reflects the likelihood that most, if not all, of the school board members are from private or business environments where solutions are brought about by throwing more money at problems without being creative to find alternative solutions.

Here are a couple of possibilities the county might consider that could make a big difference in using existing schools and resources that haven't seen the light of day in public discussions.

In the world of manufacturing, factory sites have long been operated in multiple shift arrangements in order to get more out of fixed assets and resources. Many operate on two or three shift arrangements to use the existing facilities and investment without building more brick and mortar structures. This has always been an alternative when production demands grow and simply adding more manpower and using good management allows companies to be much more productive and spread costs over more product. It may not suit all families for schools to operate on two shifts but such an arrangement would certainly allow the physical resources to be more effectively used by adding more teachers and staff and scheduling sessions to allow students be accommodated when parents might work on corresponding shifts in businesses, etc. Many businesses operate with two shifts and surely the second shift parents would consider having heir children attend school on the same shift when they work.

Another area where costs could be addressed would be to eliminate busing students all over the county simply to achieve racial and socio-economic balance. The cost to provide cross county busing to provide "better education for all" is a worn out idea and costs the county and state a fortune in additional fuel and driver costs and there is also a possibility that the number of buses needed might even be reduced if this wasteful process were eliminated. Students might even be able to get up at reasonable times and have more time with their families. Cross county busing gets much more costly each time the cost of fuel increases and this problem will not go away in our lifetime.

Perhaps if more citizens were participating in producing creative solutions for schools and growth there would be more cost effective ways to provide more capacity and handle some of the growth. As this issue grows to affect more areas in the state no doubt there will be more ideas generated and solutions found.

JP

July 9, 2007

Are we becoming addicted to the internet and gadgets?

An interesting debate topic is brewing as to whether the internet and gadgets have become addictive. Certainly at times it seems some folks may be of this persuasion but there is no real proof this is a problem - at least for now...

An interesting article posted July 3, 2007, on CNN discusses this question.

The article suggests gadget and internet addiction "could be said to be part of a serious current debate -- the debate over whether technology addiction, and especially Internet addiction, is a real mental disorder". The article further states "At its annual conference last month, members of the American Medical Association considered a proposal to label excessive video and online game playing as an addiction, but decided to table it until further study".
CNN Online
July 3, 2007
Jonathan Mandell

Are gadgets, and the internet, actually addictive?

CNN - When the users of BlackBerries could not send or receive e-mails for 11 hours in April because of a glitch in the system, hospital administrator Paul Levy pronounced it a "national disaster" because of all the BlackBerry "addicts" forced into withdrawal.

Writing in his blog, Levy -- the president of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, Massachusetts -- proclaimed himself proud of the swift actions of his hospital.

"We set up our crisis center ... staffed by our Psychiatry Department," Levy wrote. "Cases of withdrawal were handled ... with a minimal use of antidepressant drugs." The one downside, he wrote, were the "damaged walls and broken windows" because of the "many devices ... vigorously thrown."

Levy was joking. There was no activity in his hospital as a result of the BlackBerry blackout, other than some whining from BlackBerry-obsessed colleagues.

But his satire could be said to be part of a serious current debate -- Read more...

July 8, 2007

NC Wake County Deed Website

North Carolina's Wake County has moved to the front in online deed information storage at the Register of Deeds website. Deed information dating back to 1900 can be searched from anywhere by realtors, lawyers and citizens.
News and Observer
May 28, 2007
Jack Hagel, Staff Writer

Deed info online
Documents relating to deeds from 1900 can be searched more easily

Wake County recently became one of the state's first to store all documents filed with its register of deeds dating to 1900 in a searchable online database. You can search them at http://web.co.wake.nc.us/rdeeds/.

In most other counties, online records don't go back that far. Mecklenburg, the state's most-populous county, has online documents dating only to 1990. Read more...

July 5, 2007

Smoke Free At Last


At last - a North Carolina public facility takes charge and goes smoke free!

After years of public debate and tolerance of smoke clouding the entrances of most public places, NC hospitals have taken a step to be a leader in community health and has banned "use of tobacco products anywhere on hospital property for employees, patients and visitors".

Granted this may be difficult to enforce but it is a major step to help all of us have clean air to breath and avoid constant exposure to second hand smoke when we go in public places.

Now if only state Legislators would be responsible and have the courage to take the same step for all state facilities instead of giving in to pressure from tobacco lobbyists and big business, the trend could move forward to help everyone have clean air to breath.
July 4, 2007
NBC-17 - Health and Fitness

Area hospitals go smoke free

RALEIGH, N.C. -- This July Fourth, Duke University Health System, UNC Healthcare and WakeMed Health and Hospitals are celebrating their independence from tobacco.

In Raleigh, WakeMed is clearing the air by declaring a 100 percent tobacco-free campus.

While hospitals have banned the use of tobacco products inside their buildings for years, this new policy prohibits the use of tobacco products anywhere on hospital property for employees, patients and visitors.

"Hundreds of people die per year as a result of tobacco use and the effects that it's had on their health, and so for us, with leaders in health, we just felt it very important that we take a step forward and make our campuses all tobacco-free," WakeMed RN Barbara Bisset said.

WakeMed officials said they'll approach violators courteously and will offer them sugar-free chewing gum instead.

The hospitals have also asked for help from employees to help enforce the new policy.

July 4, 2007

Rolling sneakers breaking bones

Been to the store and had the thrill of seeing a child bearing down on you rolling on "heelys"? If not, go to your nearest mall or big box store and stand in one of the main aisles for a few minutes. Some care-free young boy will soon come down the aisle straight at you. If all goes well he will turn or stop at the last second and spare you from a collision.

One of the hottest trendy items in shoe wear for young people over the past year has been "Heely" shoes , a sporty tennis shoe with a wheel embedded in the bottom. When the wearer decided to take off down the aisle all they need to do is take off running, tilt back on the rear of the shoe and roll right on down the aisle.

According to a Health & Science news report, doctors from Ireland to Singapore have reported treating broken wrists, arms and ankles, dislocated elbows and even cracked skulls in children injured while wearing roller shoes. Doctors in Singapore reported that 37 children had been treated for similar injuries at a hospital there during seven months in 2004. None wore protective gear.

Injuries have become so common that The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, based in Rosemont, Ill., is "issuing new safety advice that recommends helmets, wrist protectors and knee and elbow pads for kids who wear wheeled shoes" according to the report.

"As these shoes are sold in department stores, parents buying them may develop a false sense of security -- that they are like any other shoe," said Dr. James Beaty, academy president and a pediatric orthopedic surgeon in Memphis.

When store security staff members are asked what they are doing to stop wreckless skating in stores, many simply they shrug and say parents become hostile when asked to stop children from skating in stores and they can't do anything. It's a difficult issue to address because store managers are faced with making customers mad if they ask them to control children or if they post signs banning the activity.

Original article...
News and Observer
June 4, 2007
Lindsey Tanner, The Associated Press

Rolling sneakers cited in injuries
"Heeling" leads to fractures, doctors say

CHICAGO - Trendy wheeled sneakers that let kids zip down sidewalks, across playgrounds and through mall crowds also could send them rolling into emergency rooms on a stretcher, doctors say. They blame a rash of injuries on the international craze.

It's called "heeling," named after Heelys, the most popular brand. They're sold in 70 countries and are so hot that their Carrollton, Texas, maker, Heelys Inc., recently landed atop BusinessWeek's annual list of fastest growing companies.

But doctors from Ireland to Singapore have reported treating broken wrists, arms and ankles, dislocated elbows and even cracked skulls in children injured while wearing roller shoes.

Over a 10-week period last summer, 67 children were treated for injuries from Heelys or strap-on wheels called Street Gliders at Temple Street Children's University Hospital in Dublin, Ireland, according to a report in the June edition of Pediatrics.

From September 2005 through December 2006, one death and at least 64 roller-shoe injuries were reported to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, a spokesman said.

And doctors in Singapore reported last year that 37 children had been treated for similar injuries at a hospital there during seven months in 2004. None wore protective gear.

The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, based in Rosemont, Ill., is issuing new safety advice this week that recommends helmets, wrist protectors and knee and elbow pads for kids who wear wheeled shoes.

"As these shoes are sold in department stores, parents buying them may develop a false sense of security -- that they are like any other shoe," said Dr. James Beaty, academy president and a pediatric orthopedic surgeon in Memphis.

Heelys and their knockoffs look like gym shoes, but they have a wheel socket in each heel. They can be used for walking, but the wheels pop out when users shift their weight to their heels.

Balancing on the wheels can be tricky, especially for novices. In the Irish study, most injuries affected new users and occurred when kids fell backward while trying to transfer their body weight.

Nine-year-old Noah Woelfel of Davidsonville, Md., wasn't a novice but still tripped and fell, breaking several fingers and wrist bones in his right hand last year.

"All it took was a tiny piece of gravel in the driveway that went up in the wheel and stopped him cold," said his mother, Nancy. "He required surgery and pins, and he was six weeks without using his hand, right at the beginning of school."

Heelys said in April that a study it commissioned shows the shoes have a lower injury rate than skateboarding, inline skating or even swimming. Original article...

The shoes are sold with safety information including a recommendation to wear protective gear. The company says it has shipped more than 10 million pairs since their 2000 introduction.

All rights reserved. This copyrighted material may not be published, broadcast or redistributed in any manner.

July 3, 2007

NC traffic among worst in nation


More bad news about trends in NC during Governor Easley's administration. A new study places traffic in North Carolina among the worst in the nation.

On top of frequent news about problems and delays in major road projects and insufficient funds to build new roads and repair existing ones, NC can't seem to keep up with growth in traffic anywhere in the state. This may be just a sign of the times but it is likely the DOT organization simply doesn't have the knowledge and leadership to properly plan for growth or find ways to produce funding for what is needed. It is most likely a top down issue and is consistent throughout the state. News articles frequently place blame for problems and construction delays on lower level staffers and never suggest that leadership is at fault.

Poor roads, sloppy maintenance and heavy traffic are visible all around the state. The quality of roads in neighboring states generally seems to be better than in NC and it seems that this trend continues to worsen.

The following AP article from the Winston-Salem Journal compares the best and worst state locations and indicates traffic in NC continues to worsen.
June 28, 2007
Associated Press

Study ranks NC traffic among worst in nation

WASHINGTON - Motorists in California, Minnesota, New Jersey and North Carolina have been stuck in some of the worst traffic in the United States, according to a study released today.

North Dakota and South Carolina roads rated highest in the study's overall rankings, while New Jersey roads ranked the lowest. The study ranked Montana highways as the deadliest in the nation.

The study, based on data from 1984 through 2005, found that while road conditions have improved in recent years, traffic congestion and highway fatalities have increased slightly.

The state-by-state evaluation of highways was conducted by UNC Charlotte and financed by the Reason Foundation, a libertarian think tank based in Los Angeles.

With the federal highway fund running short of money for major highway projects, state governments are faced with having to pick up a greater share of the cost of building and maintaining highways.

Dr. David T. Hartgen, the highway study's lead author, says the results show that states need to prioritize, directing their transportation money to projects specifically designed to reduce congestion.

"Gridlock isn't going away," Hartgen said.

The study ranked highway systems in each state according to their cost-effectiveness, which was determined with several factors including traffic fatalities, congestion, pavement condition, bridge condition, highway maintenance and administrative costs. Evaluations were done on highways and all state-owned roads.

The five states with the most cost-effective roads, according to the study, are North Dakota, South Carolina, Kansas, New Mexico and Montana. The bottom five states are New Jersey, Alaska, New York, Rhode Island and Hawaii.

The study found that traffic fatalities rose by less than 1 percent between 2004 and 2005. Montana had the deadliest roads, with 2.3 fatalities per 100 million vehicle miles traveled. Massachusetts roads were the safest, with 0.8 deaths per 100 million vehicle miles.

Congestion rose by a similar amount. According the study, almost 52 percent of the nation's urban interstate highways were regularly congested in 2005, the last year included in the evaluation.

In a statement, Transportation Secretary Mary Peters said that congestion has nearly tripled in metropolitan areas during the past 25 years despite increases in spending over that period. Resolving the issue has been a priority for the department, which last year announced a plan to combat gridlock through long-terms investments in key corridors.

"It's so important to get our transportation policies headed in the right direction - away from the federal government and back to the states and localities where innovation in America has always originated," she said.

Congress will have to find new sources of revenue if it wants to tackle the problems, said Matt Jeanneret, spokesman for American Road and Transportation Builders Association. His group estimates that Americans spend 47 hours a year stuck in traffic.

"This illustrates the capacity crisis that is facing this country, which is only going to get worse if trends stay the same," Jeanneret said. "We are bursting at the seams with motor vehicles and we're not adding capacity to that."

Janet Kavinoky, who works on transportation issues at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, says the nation's traffic woes are at crisis levels. "There's more bad news coming," she said. "You hate holiday traffic? Pretty soon it's going to be business as usual."