Safe fixes for ice damming — WSAW

WAUSAU, Wis. (WSAW)— With the warmer weather, neighborhoods are seeing more icicles hanging from roofs. While they may look pretty, if they are not taken care of they could cost you thousands of dollars in damage.

Large icicles hang from a Wausau house on Dec. 20, 2019. (WSAW Photo)

Big icicles are caused when excessive heat loss from the house, or warmer temperatures causes snow to melt during the day and freeze at night. This build up known as ice damming prevents melting snow from draining off the roof. Without drainage the ice can sometimes back up into the home, creating mold damage to walls, ceilings and insulation.

Bryan Londerville with A-Rite Construction said this year more people are being affected by ice dams because of the warmer weather.

«When you get 32 degrees, 33 degrees in the daytime, that snow is automatically going to melt no matter what it’s on. The sun is coming down and it’s going to melt. And it’s still melting as it gets colder and it freezes at night. So something like that, when we hit those temperatures, it doesn’t matter how well your house is insulated. You’re going to get it,” Londerville said.

Londerville said the best way to treat your home for ice dams is by calling a professional, who can steam the icicle’s off the roof. Londerville said the steaming process doesn’t damage the shingles as so many people do when trying to remove icicles forcefully.

«Never chip it. We’ve already got phone calls back to replace shingles in the spring time from somebody taking a hatchet or a shovel and their hammer, and breaking in the ice a part. The ice is actually going to grip the shingle granular and you are actually going to damage your shingles,” Londerville said.

Londerville said on top of looking for ice damming, it is important to be aware of how much weight your roof can hold. He said to use a roof rake for heavy snow, avoiding the shingles as best you can to keep your house safe. Londerville also advises staying away from iodine tablets and sidewalk salt for roofs as it can burn through your shingles.

If you notice ice damming on your home, call an insulation and roofing expert. Cost depends on the type of roof your home has, and how much insulation is inside.

source https://www.wsaw.com/content/news/Warmer-weather-creates-roofing-problems-566430911.html

Inspectors to visit closed Millcreek apartment building — News — GoErie.com

The building at The Reserve at Millcreek was evacuated after structural problems found following ceiling collapse Sunday.

Officials at a Millcreek Township apartment complex where a ceiling collapsed on Sunday are moving quickly to evaluate the building so its tenants can move back in, Millcreek Township’s emergency management coordinator said Monday.

The owners of the 705-unit The Reserve at Millcreek complex off Kuntz Road have hired a forensic engineer to visit the property and start evaluating the 33-unit building at 1813A Treetop Drive to see what what repairs are needed for people to reoccupy the building, said Caleb Dixon, who also serves as Millcreek’s chief inspector.

Complex owners want to have the engineer on site on Tuesday, Dixon said.

“They want to move on this as quickly as possible. The goal is to get the residents back in the building,” he said.

The building at 1813A Treetop Drive, which Dixon said has 33 people listed on the complex’s rent roll, was condemned following a building-wide inspection by township and fire officials after the Kearsarge Fire Department was initially called there on Sunday at 3:41 p.m. on a report of a ceiling collapse. A ceiling in a third-floor apartment came down but the occupant of the apartment was uninjured, Kearsarge Assistant Fire Chief Dan Hesch said Sunday.

Residents of the building were ordered out after officials said they found other structural issues while touring the property. The residents were allowed back in under escort for brief periods to retrieve personal items before Dixon locked up the building on Sunday night.

Dixon said township officials returned to the building on Monday morning and a number of residents were able to get back inside to recover items. Residents who have not yet gone back into their apartments should contact the management of The Reserve at Millcreek to arrange times for people to go in and collect their items, he said.

The American Red Cross Northwestern Pennsylvania sent three teams of volunteers to the property on Sunday night to offer lodging and food assistance to residents. The Red Cross had opened 12 cases covering 13 people from the apartment building as of Monday afternoon, said the agency’s director, Pam Masi.

The property manager of The Reserve at Millcreek could not be reached for comment on Monday.

Dixon said township officials have been working with the management of the complex for some time on addressing problems that arose at the site, formerly known as Granada Apartments, before the current owner, Granada Apartment Holdings LLC, bought the property at sheriff sale in July 2017.

A balcony collapse in June 2016 led to township-mandated complex-wide inspections. Officials said they found problems that included water damage, fire risk, collapsed ceilings and walls, foundation damage and mold. The findings led to the condemnation of seven buildings and the razing of one building, and the complex was cited for code violations on several other buildings.

Dixon said the new owners have been proactive in trying to correct problems. He said the township recently released two of the condemned buildings to the owners.

“This is a long process. It’s not something that is going to be fixed even within a couple of months, with the quantity of repairs and the quality of repairs they are attempting to make,” Dixon said. “The management of The Reserve at Millcreek is doing a great job at trying to fix things. They started in a hole and they’re slowly digging their way out.”

Dixon said the problems discovered at 1813A Treetop Drive on Sunday were unforeseen.

“None of us anticipated this particular structure having problems like this,” he said.

Tim Hahn can be reached at 870-1731 or by email. Follow him on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/ETNhahn.

source https://www.goerie.com/news/20191223/inspectors-to-visit-closed-millcreek-apartment-building

Frustrated parent calls for board to act on Spring Hill High School overcrowding — Columbia Daily Herald

The outspoken father of a student at Spring Hill High School called last week for the Maury County School Board to take action on overcrowding at the school.

David Ryder, who has previously confronted the board at public meetings, criticized the elected officials for not moving forward with plans for an expansion to the campus.

“This is a broken record to me,” Ryder told the board. “We have drug our feet for so long that you can’t get textbooks and chairs into a school — a school that is now overpopulated. She has nowhere to sit during band class. We need chairs to sit in a classroom. This is highly unacceptable.”

In October, the board tabled a vote to spend nearly $300,000 on designs for a 115,000-square-foot expansion and renovation of Spring Hill High School.

Plans for the project include adding additional classrooms to increase the campuses’ capacity to a total of 1,800 students.

As of August 2019, Spring Hill High School had 1,123 students enrolled, about 20 students less than the previous year.

The school currently has a maximum capacity of 1,200 students.

Surveys of the 25-year-old building have shown mold growth, moisture stains and water damage from active roof leaks and damaged pipes.

Teachers, parents, students and a county commissioner have repeatedly called for the school board to take action.

Students shared stories of overcrowding in the school’s auditorium, leaving the space difficult to manage as it is used for both drama productions and band performances. They told the board members of hour-long lines in the cafeteria, and students sometimes never getting a chance to sit down and eat during their lunch break.

They added that a growing mold problem has increased students’ asthma and allergies.

During the October meting, board member David Moore said he thought the school district would be able to move forward with district owner-advocate Hewlett-Spencer LLC to obtain an adequate estimate of the project’s cost without having to continue to hire an outside firm to do so.

The board instructed newly named Superintendent of Facilities Eric Perryman to continue working with the owner advocate to deliver an estimate on a guaranteed maximum price for the project without the completed architectural plans.

“We need a plan for Spring Hill High School,” Ryder said. “We needed it two years ago. I was right two years ago. Chances are I am going to be right again. I will not see the benefit of what you do — my kids will graduate. I am here on behalf of the families that are coming.”

In March 2020, Maury County residents will vote on a proposed tax referendum that would increase the sales tax rate of 2.25 percent to 2.75 percent.

Proceeds from the proposed increase would be used to pay for county indebtedness associated with the public school system and the local government.

The tax increase would bring relief to the school district and provide funding for an expansion to the high school and a complete rebuild of McDowell Elementary School in Columbia.

source https://www.columbiadailyherald.com/news/20191222/frustrated-parent-calls-for-board-to-act—on-spring-hill-high-school-overcrowding

For Small, Rural, Crumbling — And Closing — Classrooms, A Possible Solution: New School Bond Rules — Capital Public Radio News

By Ricardo Cano, CalMatters

The foul odor had invaded almost every classroom. It was late March 2017, and Burnt Ranch Elementary was teetering on disrepair. The heating and ventilation systems were so unreliable that educators and staff in the small Trinity County school had been warming up frigid classrooms with portable heaters. Water leaked through the light fixtures, spilling onto the floor.

Kathleen Graham, the superintendent and principal, knew something had to be done, but raising the money through local bonds – California’s main driver of school facilities funding – was next to impossible for the single-campus, 100-kid district. The alternative wasn’t much better: Competing with larger, better financed and more amply staffed districts for a piece of a state bond passed in 2016, a process that involved navigating California’s byzantine School Facilities Program. 

But as winter became spring in rural Northern California, Graham recalled, the need only became more pressing. “Our buildings,” she said, “just went off the charts with mold.”

Health and safety cases like Burnt Ranch have become top-of-mind as California voters weigh a new statewide school bond that would generate $15 billion for schools, community colleges and universities. Proposition 13, slated for the March ballot, would not only raise much-needed funding for maintenance and construction, but also end the first-in, first-out application system for state bond money that disadvantages small, poorer and rural schools. 

The current system has been criticized by schools, advocates and financial experts as overly favorable to large, richer districts. Larger districts, they say, have the resources not only to put local bond measures on the ballot and pass them, but also to hire the staff needed to navigate and complete the cumbersome state paperwork required to compete for and leverage the state matching funds.

That setup, CalMatters found last year, exacerbates broader structural inequities: Public schools in California’s wealthier communities have long reaped far more local bond money than poorer districts, averaging more than twice as many local bond dollars per student since 1998 as the most impoverished districts. In turn, districts use those local bonds to qualify for a limited pot of state bond money. 

The state’s system is “not a fair playing field,” said Tim Taylor, executive director for the Small School Districts Association. “You’re asking a little district like Tulelake, which is by Modoc County, to compete with Long Beach or Elk Grove, who have full facilities departments with experts.”  

The bond proposal – the result of eleventh-hour negotiations between Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office, state legislators and advocates – would generate much needed money for campus construction and renovation, costing $740 million per year over the next 35 years to repay with interest, according to a legislative analysis. It also overhauls several regulations, aiming to make the state’s school bond program more equitable. 

Prop. 13 would introduce a new points-based system in which critical health and safety projects, such as mold and asbestos, gain top priority and a space at the front of the line for state facilities assistance. Next in line would be districts (such as Burnt Ranch) that qualify for financial hardship funding, followed by projects aimed at remediating lead in drinking water.

The state bond, which at last glance was polling under 50% approval, also would earmark $5.2 billion – the largest share of the $9 billion for K-12 schools – for school modernization projects. Schools affected by natural disasters, such as wildfire, would be eligible for immediate assistance under Prop. 13, and schools for the first time would be allowed to spend state bond dollars on preschool facilities.

Prop. 13 would also raise local bonding capacity for California districts, meaning they would be able to place larger school bonds on local ballots. And 10% of the state bond’s $9 billion for K-12 schools would be reserved for small school districts – those with 2,500 students or less. The “smalls,” as rural educators refer themselves as, would receive extra technical assistance under the measure. 

Hope for the ‘smalls’

For all the bells and whistles included in a dense bond measure whose bill text is nearly 30,000 words, state leaders and advocates point to the bond’s renewed focus on equity as having the most potential impact on schools. Newsom, who said he will campaign for Prop. 13, called the changes to how the state would prioritize school districts’ applications an “incredibly important reform.”

At a recent signing ceremony for Assembly Bill 48, the legislation putting the state bond measure on the ballot, Newsom recalled traveling to the state’s remote corners as part of his years-long campaign for governor. There, he toured school facilities in substandard condition and heard from school officials who told the governor that “we’ll never see those school bond dollars because of the way the current rules are written.”

“You can’t look in the eyes of these kids and make an argument that the facilities that so many of them are being educated in are appropriate,” Newsom said.

“You go into some of these parking lots, these sheds without air conditioning and lead, they’ve got asbestos in those facilities – that’s not who we are. We’re capable of so much more.”

Eventually, the state awarded the Burnt Ranch district $14 million to rebuild its school, half of which came under the category of “financial hardship” funding. This bucket of money is reserved for California’s poorest districts with critical facilities issues that present “an imminent threat to the health and safety of pupils,” such as mold, asbestos, dilapidated water systems and internal flooding.

Though crises like Burnt Ranch’s are rare across California’s 1,000 public school districts, a historical database of emergency school closures published earlier this year by CalMatters shows they’ve grown far more common in recent years.

CalMatters found at least 38 incidents in 29 schools where mold or asbestos was cited by local school officials as the reason for temporarily closing down campuses. Of those 38 school closures, which affected more than 11,000 kids, all but five had occurred since 2014.

And disruptions due to crumbling facilities are also more likely to affect poor schools, that analysis found. At least 370 closures in CalMatters’ database involved breakdowns in school facilities – such as broken water pipes, inoperable septic tanks, harmful traces of mold or asbestos, or water quality issues such as broken wells or E. coli.  

Of the 176 districts reflected in this group of closures, 57 had not passed a local bond since 1998, according to a separate CalMatters database that detailed inequities in funding for local school facilities. 

One school’s ordeal

For Burnt Ranch, passing a local bond is a non-starter because the district’s tax base is so small that “we don’t have enough people here to support a bond,” Graham said. That, in turn, has meant little funding to adequately modernize a campus where the main structure was built in 1961.

“There is this reality that as you ignore [facilities] needs, problems compound. What is a small leak in a roof can become a mold infestation if not dealt with in a timely manner,” said Shin Green, an Oakland-based school infrastructure financing consultant. “And whether or not you have the resources to deal with it in a timely manner is really a function of your bonding capacity or ability to access hardship funding.”

After its mold crisis forced it to shut down school for three weeks, Burnt Ranch leaders had to search for temporary classrooms. Every school building had toxic mold and water damage, according to testing results.

Relocating to another school wasn’t an option. Tucked inside Trinity County’s dense forests, Burnt Ranch is more than 60 miles from the closest city. So Graham, the superintendent and principal, and the Burnt Ranch school board decided to spend the savings they planned to use to get matching state bond funds to pay for seven portable buildings and a restroom on the edge of one of the school fields.

In a letter sent to the State Allocation Board pleading for immediate assistance, Graham described how the district’s barebones set-up affected students’ education. No gym meant no space for physical education, sporting events or school assemblies.


 

“Lack of any conference rooms, a special education/speech room, a library, and a separate room for counseling and intervention services has also negatively impacted the district’s ability to provide needed programs,” Graham wrote.

Between April 2017 and the start of the 2019-20 school year, students and teachers at Burnt Ranch operated without a gymnasium or cafeteria, walked daily through the school’s construction site to get to class and ate lunches outside as staff prepped and hauled in meals from 15 miles away.

“That was our life for more than two years, and it was amazing that any of us survived it, just mentally, because it was really tough,” Graham said.

It took more than a year for Burnt Ranch to get the entirety of its state assistance. The process involved testing, paperwork, 4-hour trips to Sacramento and legislative intervention, Graham said. In the meantime, the mold crisis wiped out most of the district’s savings, and Graham struggled to maintain construction costs below what Burnt Ranch could afford with its state assistance. Many contractors, she said, either were unwilling to take up a project so remote or with such high hiring and personnel costs.  

Finally, on a recent autumn Friday, students at Burnt Ranch Elementary School walked into newly-built classrooms with smartboards. And in the rebuilt gymnasium, a technician from the Dell’Arte International School of Physical Theatre in nearby Blue Lake was setting up lights for a holiday play. After nearly three years, Burnt Ranch had its school back.

But facilities issues remain. The school’s small well system has grown older and less reliable. Burnt Ranch needs a generator — a rural must for power outages due to inclement weather. State records show that, since 2017, the school has lost 11 instructional days due to inclement weather and blackouts. This school year alone, Burnt Ranch closed for three days due to the widespread utility power outages aimed at preventing catastrophic wildfires.

“We’re going to have to get some assistance for that,” Graham said. “We don’t really have any money left now that we built this building.”

CalMatters.org is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics.


CapRadio provides a trusted source of news because of you.  As a nonprofit organization, donations from people like you sustain the journalism that allows us to discover stories that are important to our audience. If you believe in what we do and support our mission, please donate today.

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source http://www.capradio.org/articles/2019/12/22/for-small-rural-crumbling-and-closing-classrooms-a-possible-solution-new-school-bond-rules/

7 Expensive Home Repairs You Need to Be Aware of — Motley Fool

Whether you live in a home you own or rent it out for income, you’re no doubt aware that your out-of-pocket costs can well surpass the amount you pay in a monthly mortgage and property taxes. Maintenance is a huge expense for property owners, and when things go wrong and you cross into «repairs» territory, the costs can be downright astronomical. Here are a few painfully expensive repairs — along with their estimated costs, as per HomeAdvisor — that could wreak havoc on your finances if you’re not careful.

1. Foundation damage

The average cost for foundation repairs is $1,841 to $6,599. That’s a pretty wide gap, so the amount you might pay will depend on the extent of the damage at hand. Unfortunately, a cracked foundation could compromise the structure of your entire home, so it’s not a repair you can put off.

2. Roof replacement

The amount it costs to replace a roof will depend on its size and the materials used. Replacing a roof constructed of asphalt shingles costs between $2,000 and $10,000, with an average of $7,114. The upside? Those shingles tend to last 15 to 30 years, so ideally, it’s not the sort of repair you’ll have to deal with too often.

3. Mold remediation

Mold damage doesn’t happen overnight, but if left unaddressed, it can result in huge health problems for the inhabitants of your home. And as a landlord, it’s your obligation to remediate mold that could be impacting your tenants’ health. Mold remediation costs an average of $2,229, but in reality, the extent of your damage and the size of your home will play a large role in determining what it costs you.

4. Central air replacement

Central air conditioning is a much-desired home feature. The problem, however, is that when your system goes, the entire property suffers. The price to install a new central air system typically falls between $3,758 and $7,263, but the capacity and efficiency of your system will dictate how much you spend, as will the complexity of the ductwork in your home.

5. Grading and ponding issues

If large amounts of water tend to pool in your yard or driveway every time it rains, it could be that you have a grading issue on your hands that needs to be resolved. The average cost of resloping or regrading a lawn costs between $974 and $2,950, but if you’re dealing with a larger property and a more extensive slope, your costs could easily be five times that amount. And if retaining walls become necessary, your costs could be 10 times that estimate.

6. Septic system replacement

If your property doesn’t run on a public sewer line, you’ll be reliant on a septic system — a system with the potential to break down over time. Replacing a septic system costs between $3,100 and $9,392, on average, but again, much of that will depend on the capacity of the system at play.

7. Water line replacement

If you’re on a public water system, tree roots and wear and tear can result in breaks in your water line or backups that leave you with one unsanitary mess on your hands. Replacing a water line that runs from the street into your home could cost as much as $2,468, but that number doesn’t include the cost of dealing with the damage to your home that often results when a water line fails.

Be prepared for home repairs

Major home repairs can be hard to predict, especially if it’s been years since you bought your property and had it inspected by a professional for lurking problems. And generally, your homeowners insurance policy won’t pay for repairs resulting from wear and tear, which many of the above circumstances entail.

That’s why it’s crucial to have emergency savings on hand. You may have heard that a solid emergency fund is one with enough money to cover three to six months of essential bills, but those figures better align with a scenario where you’ve been laid off from a job and need money to pay your living expenses while you look for work. As a homeowner, it’s a smart idea to have a dedicated savings account earmarked for unforeseen home repairs — and a healthy one at that. And if you own multiple properties, you’ll want even more money in savings.

As a general rule, you can expect to spend the equivalent of 1% to 4% of your home’s value on annual maintenance. For a $300,000 property, you’re therefore looking at $3,000 to $12,000 per year. A newer home will usually lean toward the lower end of that range while an older home will skew toward the top. If your home is between 10 and 20 years old, you’ll probably fall somewhere in the middle.

If you don’t have emergency savings and are hit with a sudden home repair, your next best option could be to borrow against the equity you have in your property to cover your costs, whether via a home equity loan or a home equity line of credit. A personal loan is also an option, though you’ll generally pay more in interest than you will on a home equity loan. And you really don’t want to fall back on credit cards, since they tend to charge loads of interest.

One final thing: While some home repairs are unavoidable, sometimes, you can get ahead of them with proper maintenance and vigilance. Maintaining your air conditioning system and septic tank, for example, could help you avoid a scenario where you’re suddenly dealing with a full-fledged replacement. And if you own income properties, encourage your tenants to report problems right away so they don’t escalate into larger, costlier ones.

source https://www.fool.com/millionacres/real-estate-investing/articles/7-expensive-home-repairs-you-need-be-aware/

Cockroaches, mold, unsafe food temps: Restaurant closures, inspections in San Bernardino County, Dec. 3-19 — San Bernardino County Sun

Here are the closures of restaurants and other food facilities announced by the San Bernardino County Division of Environmental Health Services between Dec. 13 and 19, 2019. If no reopening date is mentioned, the department had not listed that facility as reopened as of this publication.

Meat department of El Gran Chaparral Market, 9686 S. Central Ave., Montclair

  • Closure date: Dec. 19
  • Grade: 76/C in the meat department, 99/A in the prepackaged food department (which was not shut down)
  • Reason for closure: Cockroach infestation. The inspector saw several live roaches under the meat display case and dead roaches on the floor. There was one other critical violation, for an employee not washing hands, and 11 lesser violations, including for a handwashing sink not having soap, toxic chemicals being stored next to clean dishes and the walk-in refrigerator having water damage and excess mold on the ceiling. Prior to this, the meat market had received a B grade on five of its last eight inspections.

Bar area of American Legion Post 112, 310 W. Emporia St., Ontario

  • Closure date: Dec. 18
  • Grade: 93/A
  • Reason for closure: Cockroach infestation. The inspector saw several live roaches on the bar floor and on sticky traps.

Non-closure inspections of note

Here are selected inspections at facilities that weren’t closed but had other significant issues.

Kalahi Bakery & Deli, at 16023 Baseline Suite 10 in Fontana, was inspected Dec. 18 and received a grade of 74/C with three critical violations. Numerous food items were at unsafe temperatures inside a warmer not turned up enough and a refrigerator not keeping cold enough. Other large containers of food weren’t being cooled down rapidly enough to be safe. And there was some moldy food and expired cheese in another refrigerator. More than 100 pounds of food had to be discarded.

Tropical Market, at 9583 E. Foothill Blvd. in Rancho Cucamonga, was inspected Dec. 18 and received grades of 77/C in the deli and 93/A in the market and meat department. The deli had three critical violations: Numerous bags of raw chicken and fish, as well as eggs, were sitting out at room temperature; the person in charge told the inspector “they only open the door to the walk in (refrigerator) a few times a day to save on energy costs.” A raw skinned fish was lying directly on the floor. And food-contact surfaces weren’t being sanitized properly. The market/meat department had one critical violation, for having a severely bulging can of sardines in the customer service area.

The hospital kitchen at Hi-Desert Medical Center, at 6601 White Feather Road in Joshua Tree, was inspected Dec. 18 and received a grade of 88/B with two critical violations. The salad bar wasn’t keeping cold enough (the facility was told to stop using it until it’s repaired) and an employee didn’t wash hands.

The Alberto’s Mexican Food at 1090 Ontario Mills Drive in Ontario was inspected Dec. 17 and received a grade of 81/B with one critical violation. Large containers of food in the cooler since the day before hadn’t cooled down to a safe temperature; more than 40 pounds of chili and pork were thrown away. Among the 10 lesser violations, there was pink mold in the ice machine (but not touching ice).

Wanda Super Buffet, at 5440 Philadelphia St. in Chino, was inspected Dec. 16 and received a grade of 73/C with three critical violations. Sushi in a refrigerator and multiple items in a hot holding unit weren’t at safe temperatures. The restaurant wasn’t keeping track of how long it was leaving the sushi rice out at room temperature. And some food-contact surfaces weren’t clean, including mold inside an ice machine dripping onto the ice, and dirty pans that were dipped in sanitizer but not washed and then refilled with food. Prior to this, the restaurant had received B grades on three of its last five inspections, and it was closed in October for a cockroach infestation.

La Palapa Mexican Restaurant, at 57173 Sunnyslope Drive in Yucca Valley, was inspected Dec. 16 in response to a complaint that 10 people became ill after eating there Dec. 3. It received a grade of 80/B with one critical violation, for food being at unsafe temperatures — a reach-in cooler wasn’t keeping cold enough, and there was a bowl of flour used to batter raw fish that the cook said is switched out only twice a day. Among the 13 lesser violations, a handwashing sink didn’t have hot or cold water, raw meat wasn’t being stored or thawed properly and some containers and utensils were being stored in dirty conditions.

Fontana Ranch Market, at 15324 Merrill Ave. Suite A in Fontana, was inspected Dec. 13 and received grades of 86/B in the restaurant, 96/A in the meat department and 90/A in the prepackaged food market. The restaurant had two critical violations, for multiple containers of food not cooling down properly (30 pounds of beans in the refrigerator since the day before were discarded) and some cooked carnitas and jalapenos not being kept warm enough. The inspector also found food debris and black slime on a food display case, and black slime and mold on and around an ice machine used to supply bagged ice that’s sold in the market.

Updates from past weeks

Sail Inn, at 325 Havasu Lake Road in Havasu Lake, which was closed Dec. 9 because of a rodent infestation, remained closed after the inspector returned Dec. 16 and found old and new rodent droppings throughout the facility.

Star Buffet, at 1141 S. Mount Vernon Ave. in Colton, which was closed Dec. 12 because of fire damage and a cockroach infestation, also has not been listed as reopened.

About this list

All food facilities in the county are routinely inspected to ensure they meet health codes. A facility loses four points for each critical violation and one to three points for minor violations. An A grade (90 to 100 points) is considered “generally superior,” a B grade (80 to 89) is “generally acceptable” and a C grade (70 to 79) is “generally unacceptable” and requires a follow-up inspection. A facility will be temporarily closed if it scores below 70 or has a critical violation that can’t be corrected immediately.

This list is published online on Fridays. Any updates as restaurants are reopened will be included in next week’s list. For more information on inspections of these or any restaurants in San Bernardino County, visit www.sbcounty.gov/dph/ehsportal/FacilityList/food. To file a health complaint, go to www.sbcounty.gov/dph/ehsportal/StaticComplaint or call 800-442-2283.

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source http://www.sbsun.com/cockroaches-mold-unsafe-food-temps-restaurant-closures-inspections-in-san-bernardino-county-dec-3-19

Burst pipe causes damage to some historic documents — Jacksonville Journal Courier

Published

Every available surface in the Jacksonville Area Genealogical and Historical Society was covered Friday with newspapers and magazines, laid out to dry after a water pipe froze and burst last week.

As temperatures dropped between 3 p.m. Dec. 12 and noon Dec. 13, when Elizabeth Hardy arrived to open the office, a pipe between the society’s office and two vacant apartments upstairs froze and cracked, allowing for a free flow of water into the South Main Street office below.

Hundreds of papers were covered with water.

Elizabeth Hardy, president of the society, said she came in Dec. 13 to find the floor covered in water and several bookshelves were wet, leaving several newspapers — several from the early 1900s — soaked, along with other books and magazines.

The society rents the building and will not have to cover the cost to repair the pipe.

“Our landlord was great and got fans in here and we got it dried out,” Hardy said.

She said it isn’t clear how long the water had been running. The pipe was located directly above bookshelves holding documents.

In the week since, Hardy said she and volunteers have been spreading out any wet documents, hoping to dry and save them.

“We’ve had extra people in here, fluttering pages, trying to dry out books, going through papers, separating out stuff,” Hardy said. “Just (Thursday), we found a notebook that was wet and covered in mold. We threw that out.”

So far, the organization hasn’t lost many documents and, thankfully none of their equipment was damaged. Some books and magazines show signs of water damage and a couple of bookshelves become warped.

“We are trying to keep them, as long as there isn’t any mold,” Hardy said. “I think most of it will be all right.”

Many of the documents in the office have been donated to the society and though some have duplicates, there are several items that wouldn’t be replaceable.

“Many of these things are items people have given to us for use by the public and we don’t want to have to get rid of anything,” Hardy said. “Some of the most important things to us are our cemetery records and county histories, none of which were damaged.”

Hardy said she is looking on the bright side.

“It’s an opportunity to really see what we have,” Hardy said.

source https://www.myjournalcourier.com/news/article/Burst-pipe-causes-damage-to-some-historic-14923616.php

Cockroaches, mold, unsafe food temps: Restaurant closures, inspections in San Bernardino County, Dec. 3-19 — Press-Enterprise

Here are the restaurants and other food facilities closed by health inspectors in San Bernardino County between Dec. 13 and 19, 2019, according to the county’s Department of Public Health. If no reopening date is mentioned, the department had not listed that facility as reopened as of this publication.

Meat department of El Gran Chaparral Market, 9686 S. Central Ave., Montclair

  • Closure date: Dec. 19
  • Grade: 76/C in the meat department, 99/A in the prepackaged food department (which was not shut down)
  • Reason for closure: Cockroach infestation. The inspector saw several live roaches under the meat display case and dead roaches on the floor. There was one other critical violation, for an employee not washing hands, and 11 lesser violations, including for a handwashing sink not having soap, toxic chemicals being stored next to clean dishes and the walk-in refrigerator having water damage and excess mold on the ceiling. Prior to this, the meat market had received a B grade on five of its last eight inspections.

Bar area of American Legion Post 112, 310 W. Emporia St., Ontario

  • Closure date: Dec. 18
  • Grade: 93/A
  • Reason for closure: Cockroach infestation. The inspector saw several live roaches on the bar floor and on sticky traps.

Non-closure inspections of note

Here are facilities that weren’t closed but had other significant issues in their inspections.

Kalahi Bakery & Deli, at 16023 Baseline Suite 10 in Fontana, was inspected Dec. 18 and received a grade of 74/C with three critical violations. Numerous food items were at unsafe temperatures inside a warmer not turned up enough and a refrigerator not keeping cold enough. Other large containers of food weren’t being cooled down rapidly enough to be safe. And there was some moldy food and expired cheese in another refrigerator. More than 100 pounds of food had to be discarded.

Tropical Market, at 9583 E. Foothill Blvd. in Rancho Cucamonga, was inspected Dec. 18 and received grades of 77/C in the deli and 93/A in the market and meat department. The deli had three critical violations: Numerous bags of raw chicken and fish were sitting out at room temperature; the person in charge told the inspector “they only open the door to the walk in (refrigerator) a few times a day to save on energy costs.” A raw skinned fish was lying directly on the floor. And food-contact surfaces weren’t being sanitized properly. The market/meat department had one critical violation, for having a severely bulging can of sardines in the customer service area.

The hospital kitchen at Hi-Desert Medical Center, at 6601 White Feather Road in Joshua Tree, was inspected Dec. 18 and received a grade of 88/B with two critical violations. The salad bar wasn’t keeping cold enough (the facility was told to stop using it until it’s repaired) and an employee didn’t wash hands.

The Alberto’s Mexican Food at 1090 Ontario Mills Drive in Ontario was inspected Dec. 17 and received a grade of 81/B with one critical violation. Large containers of food in the cooler since the day before hadn’t cooled down to a safe temperature; more than 40 pounds of chili and pork were thrown away. Among the 10 lesser violations, there was pink mold in the ice machine (but not touching ice).

Wanda Super Buffet, at 5440 Philadelphia St. in Chino, was inspected Dec. 16 and received a grade of 73/C with three critical violations. Sushi in a refrigerator and multiple items in a hot holding unit weren’t at safe temperatures. The restaurant wasn’t keeping track of how long it was leaving the sushi rice out at room temperature. And some food-contact surfaces weren’t clean, including mold inside an ice machine dripping onto the ice, and dirty pans that were dipped in sanitizer but not washed and then refilled with food. Prior to this, the restaurant had received B grades on three of its last five inspections, and it was closed in October for a cockroach infestation.

La Palapa Mexican Restaurant, at 57173 Sunnyslope Drive in Yucca Valley, was inspected Dec. 16 in response to a complaint that 10 people became ill after eating there Dec. 3. It received a grade of 80/B with one critical violation, for food being at unsafe temperatures — a reach-in cooler wasn’t keeping cold enough, and there was a bowl of flour used to batter raw fish that the cook said is switched out only twice a day. Among the 13 lesser violations, a handwashing sink didn’t have hot or cold water, raw meat wasn’t being stored or thawed properly and some containers and utensils were being stored in dirty conditions.

Fontana Ranch Market, at 15324 Merrill Ave. Suite A in Fontana, was inspected Dec. 13 and received grades of 86/B in the restaurant, 96/A in the meat department and 90/A in the prepackaged food market. The restaurant had two critical violations, for multiple containers of food not cooling down properly (30 pounds of beans in the refrigerator since the day before were discarded) and some cooked carnitas and jalapenos not being kept warm enough. The inspector also found food debris and black slime on a food display case, and black slime and mold on and around an ice machine used to supply bagged ice that’s sold in the market.

Updates from past weeks

Sail Inn, at 325 Havasu Lake Road in Havasu Lake, which was closed Dec. 9 because of a rodent infestation, remained closed after the inspector returned Dec. 16 and found old and new rodent droppings throughout the facility.

Star Buffet, at 1141 S. Mount Vernon Ave. in Colton, which was closed Dec. 12 because of fire damage and a cockroach infestation, also has not been listed as reopened.

About this list

All food facilities in the county are routinely inspected to ensure they meet health codes. A facility loses four points for each critical violation and one to three points for minor violations. An A grade (90 to 100 points) is considered “generally superior,” a B grade (80 to 89) is “generally acceptable” and a C grade (70 to 79) is “generally unacceptable” and requires a follow-up inspection. A facility will be temporarily closed if it scores below 70 or has a critical violation that can’t be corrected immediately.

This list is published online on Fridays. Any updates as restaurants are reopened will be included in next week’s list. For more information on inspections of these or any restaurants in San Bernardino County, visit www.sbcounty.gov/dph/ehsportal/FacilityList/food. To file a health complaint, go to www.sbcounty.gov/dph/ehsportal/StaticComplaint or call 800-442-2283.

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source https://www.pe.com/2019/12/20/cockroaches-mold-unsafe-food-temps-restaurant-closures-inspections-in-san-bernardino-county-dec-3-19/

NC schools awarded nearly $3.4M for help with Hurricane Dorian damage — WRAL.com

— North Carolina has been awarded nearly $3.4 million from the federal government to help local school districts that suffered damage during Hurricane Dorian in September.

The state Department of Public Instruction applied for the grant in October and announced the award Thursday. School systems that are eligible to receive the funds are:

  • Dare County Schools
  • Edgecombe County Schools
  • Hyde County Schools
  • Lenoir County Schools

The school systems cited needs including instructional materials, technology equipment, furniture, cleaning services, mold mitigation and roof damage.

“NCDPI will be working to get these funds to the school districts as soon as possible,” North Carolina Superintendent Mark Johnson said in a statement.

Funds from the grant award can be used for activities such as mental health and safety programs for students and staff, replacing instructional materials lost during storms, additional transportation costs for students, faculty and staff salaries, and debris removal and mold mitigation from schools.

Hurricane Dorian skirted along the North Carolina coast with winds of up to 105 mph before making landfall Sept. 6, 2019, around 9:30 a.m. at Cape Hatteras. Ahead of the storm, 12 North Carolina counties ordered evacuations and all residents and visitors were urged to leave the Outer Banks.

The storm brought hours of rain and whipping winds as far inland as Interstate 95, and spurred suspected tornadoes from Myrtle Beach, SC, to the Crystal Coast and in Wayne County near Mar-Mac.

source https://www.wral.com/nc-schools-awarded-nearly-3-4m-for-help-with-hurricane-dorian-damage/18843982/

Historical society faces artifact damage, considers church demo — hays Post

The Ellis County Historical Society is considering tearing down the brick former First Presbyterian Church on the left due to mold problems.
The Ellis County Historical Society is considering tearing down the brick former First Presbyterian Church on the left due to mold problems.

«As stewards of our community’s history, it would be ironic if the historical society tore down a church» — Mayor Henry Schwaller

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

The Ellis County Historical Society is fighting time and water. However, a solution to saving important community artifacts could mean tearing down a beloved community landmark.

The historical society had to move out of its home at the historic First Presbyterian Church because of a mold issue. The humidity in the building and seeping walls in the former church have not only damaged artifacts, but was also making historical society staff and volunteers sick.

The historical society also has items in storage at the Hays Daily News building at 507 Main. That area of the building is experiencing significant roof leakage. 

 The historical society has asked Gannett, the owners of the property, to fix the problem, but they have not done so, Lee Dobratz, historical society director, said during a report to the Hays City Commission on Dec. 12.

The Hays Post attempted to reach the regional manager for Gannett, but a phone call was not returned.

A view of inside the Hays Daily News building where historical society artifacts are being stored. The roof is leaking and damaging artifacts that are bing stored inside. Courtesy photo
A view of inside the Hays Daily News building where historical society artifacts are being stored. The roof is leaking and damaging artifacts that are bing stored inside. Courtesy photo

The historical society started renting the space at the Daily News when it inherited items from the Sternberg Museum when it changed its mission. 

This has left the historical society in a search of a new storage location to move the artifacts to as soon as possible before the items stored at the newspaper office are damaged any further.

«It already smells bad, because the water is coming in and soaking the wooden objects. Until we can move it out, there is nothing we can do,» Dobratz said. «Our hands are tied.» 

Dobratz told the commission she thinks the historical society has secured an alternative location to move the items from the Sternberg collection that are now housed at the Hays Daily News offices.

«Once all of the details are in place, we will move as quickly as we can to try to save what we can,» she said.

The long-term solution to the historical society’s woes is to build a new museum complex. 

Design plans from Nabholz Construction that were distributed to the city commission Dec. 12 show a new entry, gallery, events plaza, archives, library and storage building.

One plan for a new historical society complex includes demolition of the historic brick First Presbyterian Church.
One plan for a new historical society complex includes demolition of the historic brick First Presbyterian Church.
A view of the proposed new historical society complex from Seventh Street.
A view of the proposed new historical society complex from Seventh Street.

The Volga German house and the stone chapel would remain, but the plans call for tearing down the historic First Presbyterian Church.

Dobratz said renovating the brick church would cost $10 million to $11 million, which the historical society does not have. Even if the building was renovated, it would still not have the storage space that the society needs.

The historic Presbyterian Church was purchased by the historical society in 1974. 

«When it was bought, the forefathers and mothers who got the organization going never intended that location to actually be the museum,» Dobratz said. «They knew it didn’t fit, but it was something they could afford at the time to start gathering collections and materials.»

When Dobratz first took her position four years ago at the historical society, she was told the building needed a whole new roof, but the historical society did not have money to fix it.

Earlier this year, the church lost a 4-foot-square chunk of plaster from an upstairs wall because of leakage from the roof.

However, during a recent insurance inspection, the problem that was causing the leak was discovered and it was quickly fixed.

The historical society has known for years there was mold in the subbasements of the historic Presbyterian Church. This has been caused by water seeping inside the subbasement walls.

An artifact that has been infected with mold. Historical Society Director Lee Dobratz estimates the society has at least 10,000 items that have been affected by mold and need to be cleaned .
An artifact that has been infected with mold. Historical Society Director Lee Dobratz estimates the society has at least 10,000 items that have been affected by mold and need to be cleaned .

The historical society was running dehumidifiers, but that was not keeping up with the moisture.

Although the the historical society has moved its staff and some of its most frequently used archives to an office at 1111 East 30th, the Presbyterian Church with its mold problem is still being used for storage. The historical society is trying to box items with lids to try to stop the progression of the mold.

Dobratz said all of the collection items and archives that are being kept at the brick church are going to have to be emptied out of the building. 

The society has about 10,000 items in the subbasements of the brick church. Each item will have to be looked at and cleaned separately. Items that have been exposed to mold can’t be stored next to clean items, because the mold can spread.

Mayor Henry Schwaller said he opposes any attempt to tear down the church, noting it was the first organized church in Hays. 

There is a portion of the community that is interested in saving the church, and there is a concern the church is not being maintained, he said.

Dobrtaz said utilities are being maintained to the building. 

Commissioner Sandy Jacobs asked Dobratz if the historical society is fundraising. 

The historical society is raising about $10,000 to $15,000 per year, and has brought in about $25,000 in grants over four years, Dobratz said.

«I am surprised at that low number,» Jacobs said. «I would expect a lot more. I think the community would be willing to help.»

Leading up to Dobratz’s tenure, which started in 2016, when the society needed to complete major repairs, a specific benefactor was asked to donate the money necessary to complete the project.

«We don’t have a history of regular contributions. They are just project-specific contributions,» she said. «I have a great fundraising committee right now that is starting new programming.»

The historical society also plans to start an endowment campaign. The museum currently has an endowment of about $220,000, but it doesn’t cover maintenance.

Jacobs said she also did not want to see the Presbyterian Church torn down.

«I stood in front of the post office and watched them tear down the opera house,» she said. «I promised myself that night that we weren’t going to tear down any more buildings in this town. …

«The thought of losing that disturbs me.»

Schwaller said because of the Chestnut Street Historic District that covers downtown Hays, both the brick and stone churches are protected.

«The brick building is historical,» he said. «It is historically protected, and when the historical society applied for designation in 1976, we were told the church was too young, that is why the stone church was only initially covered.»

He added, «The church is important to me, because I was baptized there, my father, my grandfather. My great-grandfather’s funeral was there.»

Schwaller also noted he hated to see the opera house torn down and suggested the building could have been saved had the roof and the foundation been repaired.

He suggested if the historical society does not want to use the church then the society should sell the building. 

«I would do anything I can personally to raise money,» Schwaller said. 

Dobratz said the society is not considering taking down the brick church because they don’t like it. It is because of cost, a business decision and a history decision, she said.

Schwaller said, «As stewards of our community’s history, it would be ironic if the historical society tore down a church.»

source https://hayspost.com/posts/5df916f657544d3fe90e7c9c