Month

October 2010

35 posts

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Today, we are using our creative talents to make robot costumes for our adventures this weekend, which include:

30 October 2010
1. Robotically operating a PICT-O-TRON automated drawing machine and fund-raising booth at Pumpkin Chucking in Moab
2. Watching the machine that is #1 Auburn beat Ole Miss
3. Halloween-themed show by Jones Adams Duo and Heavy Drags at Quincy Bar in Grand Junction, still dressed like robots

31 October 2010
4. Adult soccer tournament in Green River
5. Halloween party at the Compound in Provo

1 November 2010
6. Sufjan Stevens in Concert in Salt Lake Robot City

2 November 2010
7. Meeting with the big-wigs at Common Studio about an upcoming project here in Green River that may or may not involve replacing us with robots

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4 days, 5 places, 628 miles, all as a robot

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(that’s robot for “Happy Halloween”)

Oct 29, 20102 notes
Epicenter Blog Survey → surveymonkey.com

Please take five minutes to fill out this survey about our blog. We’ll use the data to help make some decisions on our future website. Thanks!

Oct 28, 20103 notes
Oct 28, 20105 notes
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Oct 27, 20105 notes
Oct 26, 20104 notes
Oct 26, 20102 notes
Winter Assistance Programs for Green River residents

EPICENTER REPORT OF AVAILABLE PROGRAMS
H.E.A.T. and Weatherization grant (free) programs are available for Green River residents.

***H.E.A.T. applications are being taken tomorrow (26 October 2010) at City Hall and the Sheriff’s Office from 10am to 2pm.
***Weatherization applications are being taken now at the Epicenter.

Contact Jack at the Epicenter (435-564-3330) for more information and application assistance.

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H.E.A.T.

In brief: one-time annual cash assistance to low-income households who pay heating bills.
Where to apply: in person on 26 October 2010 at City Hall or Sheriff’s Office
Typical funding: $200-700 paid directly to utility company


The H.E.A.T. (Home Energy Assistance Target) program funds one-time utility assistance for private households. Applications are taken in Green River once per year, but they can also be taken anytime during the “heating season” (November through April); it is more likely to be funded the earlier you apply, as when funds run out the program is over for the year.

Anyone who meets the income limit receives some sort of assistance. Only one social security number per household is required. Applicants should bring the information shown below.

H.E.A.T. assistance is paid directly to the heat provider (for example, AmeriGas, Rocky Mountain Power). If households heat by wood, they can reserve a portion of the funding to come directly to the applicant.

H.E.A.T. applications are being taken this year on Tuesday 26 October 2010 at City Hall and the Sheriff’s Office from 10am until 2pm.

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WEATHERIZATION
In brief: grant to low-income households to implement energy-saving measures on the house they own.
Where to apply: Information and application assistance at the Epicenter. Mailed application to SEUAOG.
Typical funding: Varies by household, but is “limited per household”. No cash award. All money goes into house improvements.


The Weatherization Assistance Program is a federal program managed by the State of Utah, Dept. of Community and Economic Development. It is designed to help residents - who meet low-income guidelines - lower their utility bills and improve the comfort of their homes through home weatherization and client education.

Weatherization a home involves conducting an energy audit to identify cost-effective energy improvements that can be performed on the dwelling and then making those improvements at no cost to the household.

The three major improvements performed in the home weatherization are:
1. Reducing excessive air infiltration (for example, installing weatherstripping around doors and windows)
2. Reducing heat loss through the walls, ceilings, floors, doors, and windows (for example, adding insulation)
3. Tuning or otherwise making the heating system more efficient (for example, cleaning ductwork, replacing filters, sealing leaks)

WEATHERIZATION IS NOT:
The Weatherization program IS NOT a remodeling or rehabilitation program. That amount that can be spent on each dwelling is limited. Repairs ARE NOT MEANT to improve the value of the home. This program DOES NOT install storm doors, or typically install new windows (as they are not as cost-effective as other improvements). The cost-effective solutions overrule the low-priority measures. Weatherization DOES NOT replace storm doors or water heaters, roofs or siding, or paint.

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CHECKLISTS:

BRING THE FOLLOWING DOCUMENTS TO THE H.E.A.T. ASSISTANCE APPLICATION.
1. Identification of applicant (Driver’s License, Utah I.D. Card or Birth Certificate
2. Social Security cards for yourself and all persons in your household who are age 18 or over
3. A copy of your most recent utility bill from each of your utility suppliers, or a printout from your utility companies showing what your coldest months’ bills were at your present address
4. Proof of ALL income received by all members of your household during previous calendar month
5. Proof of medical bills paid during the previous month if you intend to use a medical deduction
6. Proof of disability
7. Proof of children under six (6) years of age
8. Proof of any child support an/or alimony you paid out in the month prior to the month of your appointment.
9. Additional documentation may also be required

WEATHERIZATION CHECKLIST:
1. Application completed, signed, dated (help available at the Epicenter)
2. Billing History Release Authorization, with heating source provider and account number
3. Income Verification for previous month before application for every member of household
4. Medical Expenses Verification for previous month.

Contact Jack at the Epicenter for application assistance and more information.

Oct 25, 20103 notes
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Oct 20, 20103 notes
Welcome to the Epicenter!

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We’re officially in our new building. Pardon the mess!

Oct 19, 20103 notes
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Oct 15, 20102 notes
Epicenter Grand Opening! → ecprogress.com

Click the title of this blog post to view the article in the Emery County Progress about our grand opening! We felt it was appropriate to post because we are feeling quite hopeful we’ll be getting our occupancy permit today.

Oct 15, 20104 notes
Oct 14, 20103 notes
And... fail.

In case you hadn’t heard: We didn’t get our final occupancy permit because of our inability to provide a permanent ADA accessible route into the building. See… the city is currently revamping the roads + curb + gutter and our sidewalk is very damaged… so, it’s hardly our fault! Luckily, our county Building Inspector is willing to accept our temporary fix (photo to come). He will come to Green River tomorrow afternoon to inspect a final time and give us our occupancy permit. We say the previous sentence as a fact because surely nothing else could go wrong. We’re packing-up the old office right now, and it’s going to feel so so nice to be working in the Baxter Building on Monday and for that work to not be construction on said building.

Oct 14, 20103 notes
Oct 30: Pumpkin Chuckin' 2010 in Moab

It’s that time of year again!!! Flying pumpkins launched by trebuchets, catapults, air cannons and slingshots! Plus live music, food and craft vendors, games and activities for all ages. Proceeds support the Youth Garden Project, a non-profit in Moab that grows food, kids and community. Not only will Maria and Gabriel be official score-keepers this year, but Epicenter is having a booth at the festival featuring an Illustration Machine. Insert a donation + a recipe/request for a drawing into the machine… and one hour later pick-up your completed drawing. Ta-da!

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Pumpkin Chuckin’ takes place on Saturday, October 30th from 10am-4pm. Tickets at the door are $10 Adults ($5 for Youth Under 16 and seniors over 65, free for children two and under. All youth tickets come with five free activity tickets). For more information call the Youth Garden Project at 435-259-2326 or visit their website.

RSVP to the event on Facebook and invite your friends!!!

Oct 14, 2010
Cross Your Fingers

Our building inspector will be here any minute to either grant us occupancy or deny it. We’re nervous to say the least.

Oct 13, 2010
Oct 12, 2010
Fields, Gradients, and Moiré Effects: The Binary Days of Yesterday and Today

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Oct 11, 2010
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Oct 8, 20101 note
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Oct 5, 2010
Oct 4: World Habitat Day → habitat.org

The United Nations has designated the first Monday in October as annual World Habitat Day. World Habitat Day 2010 will be held on October 4.

World Habitat Day’s purpose is to call attention to the current global state of the human habitat and push toward adequate housing for all. We hope that by raising awareness and advocating for universal decent housing we can dismantle and alter the systems that reinforce and entrench poverty housing. In doing so, we can make an affordable, decent place to live a reality for all. World Habitat Day is a day for grassroots action and a day for people to be united in their efforts to eradicate poverty housing.

Statistics

//In 2008, the number of households spending more than 50 percent of their income on housing rose by one third, or 16 percent, to 18.6 million households. That’s 44.2 million Americans. If the homeless and those living in severely substandard conditions are included, roughly one in six Americans are in need of a decent, affordable place to live. (JCHS 2010).

//One in three American homeowners spend more than 30 percent of income on housing (JCHS 2010).

//There is not a single county in the U.S. where a full-time minimum wage worker can afford even a one-bedroom apartment at what HUD determines to be the Fair Market Rent. (NLIHC: 2006).

//Studies show that 84% of U.S. homes have a bedroom with detectable levels of dust mite allergens. Many of these have levels that can contribute to allergies or asthma. (Arbes et al. 2003).

//Exposure to dampness and mold in homes is estimated to contribute to approximately 21% of current asthma cases in the United States. Annual cost: $3.5 billion. (Mudarri and Fisk 2007).

//Children in bad housing have increased risk of viral or bacterial infections and a greater chance of suffering mental health and behavioral problems. (Harker: 2006)

//Owning a home leads to a higher quality home environment, improved test scores in children (9 percent in math and 7 percent in reading), and reduced behavioral problems (by 3 percent). (Haurin, Parcel, and Haurin: 2002)

//Children who live in bad housing have lower educational attainment and a greater likelihood of being impoverished and unemployed as adults. (Harker: 2006)

//Owning a home, especially for lower-income households, is an important means of wealth accumulation. For low-income minority families, median average annual housing wealth appreciation is $1,712 whereas there is no non-housing wealth accumulation. This wealth is achieved both through equity and forced savings resulting from mortgage repayment. (Boehm and Schlottmann: 2004)

//Homeownership increases intergenerational wealth accumulation through improved educational achievement in children, which leads to greater earnings when these children enter the workforce. (Boehm and Schlottmann: 2002

//Homeowners live in larger, higher quality units; they enjoy better housing services with costs that fall over time; and they stand to make considerable returns if they remain owners for a long time. (Rohe, Van Zandt, and McCarthy: 2001)

//Owner-occupied housing has a beneficial effect on the local economy by increasing consumer spending, providing tax revenues and fees, and growing businesses and jobs. Building additional homes requires additional employees, goods, and services from the general economy (JCHS 2006)

//Homeowners are more likely to be satisfied with their homes and neighborhoods, and are more likely to volunteer in civic and political activities. (Rohe, Van Zandt, and McCarthy: 2000)

//Homeowners are more likely to know their U.S. representative (by 10 percent) and school board head by name (by 9 percent), and are more likely to vote in local elections (by 15 percent) and work to solve local problems (by 6 percent). (DiPasquale and Glaeser: 1998)

Information taken from Habitat for Humanity Int’l Website

Click here to see how you can contribute to Habitat for Humanity of Castle Country which serves Emery + Carbon County in Utah.

Oct 4, 20101 note
Regarding Friday's post

Let’s be clear:

Friday’s “Periphery” post was THE OPPOSITE of how we intend to operate (on the half-anniversary of April 1st, A.K.A. “April Fools Day”).

It is a self-evaluation, used to learn more about ourselves; we have had a hard time defining who/what we are, so we turned it around and asked instead, “What are we not?”.

It seems we keep making the same statements, the same energetic push, about something we truly believe in and live and die for, only to feel small and unsustainable. We wanted to post this because it should seem radical and out of character. And it is, for us. It’s the opposite of us. And although it is not a critique directed at anyone except ourselves, it’s kind of funny how well it can call out the slickness of some actual groups that focus on developing a message and end up with a brilliant website that is frozen in time. If it can be a critique of others, I would hope they would take it and respond to it, learning from it, as we are attempting to do.

Sometimes you need to discuss who you aren’t to better realize who you are.

Honestly, we are frustrated here. And we thank everyone who commented and joined in, adding their own realities. Even in different contexts, across the country, what we (you and us) encounter in our “good deeds” is similar if not exactly the same. We’re all accused of being things we aren’t.

Why do we feel like we’re making a sales pitch? At what point are we not willing to prostrate ourselves, because it feels like begging? Why doesn’t merit matter anymore*? (*Of course, it does, but with this change towards focusing on networks and notoriety based on web-hits, the money doesn’t always seem to be going to the most valuable causes.)

It’s an issue of self-promotion versus recognition for good work that we’ve discussed before [link]. Where is the line?

Let’s take a breath.

Re-orient.

We are sure of some things:

1// We are entrenched in this community. Due to many factors including size, transparency, need, & natural beauty even, this is a great place to work from within the community. Our decisions are evaluated and tested by our neighbors and community members; we want positive change that people appreciate and see true value in. We are here.
2// We believe everyone deserves, as Samuel Mockbee said, a “warm, dry, and noble” home, a “shelter for the soul.” We can always remind ourselves that this cause, of developing noble and affordable housing, is worthy.
3// Green River needs successful businesses and career opportunities, where people can be fulfilled in their work; we want to help provide and nurture those opportunities.
4// We depend on face-to-face human interaction, while capitalizing on the networking effects of our informational/technological age (most of which is the connecting effect of this blog and its subsidiaries). This blog is meant to be a content-filled resource and inspiration for our followers and allies across the world. In the future, we will have a website filled with relevant information specific for our community, a resource for our neighbors, while maintaining the outreach that the blog-type setup provides. Through it all, we are real people, and we want to meet you.
5// We don’t pretend to know more than anyone. We value collaboration. Credit is not an issue; it’s about getting things done, making positive change, and supporting (instead of duplicating) programs and resources that work.
6// Money is needed, for everything. There is always a way, always someone that knows how, and somewhere out there there is funding to do it.

Join with us. We can all become frustrated. And when that happens, it’s really helpful to see how others have approached the same issues, or that is may just be a part of the human condition in which we are criticized in the same, often exaggerated and/or incorrect, ways.

We’re re-focused. We’re re-energized. We have made fun of ourselves. We’ll address the concerns veiled by these sometimes erroneous statements. But most of all, we’ll keep moving forward. “We just want to change the world.”

Oct 2, 2010
We have changed our name to "The Periphery"

We are the Periphery.

We demolish homes, put stores out of business, and believe in homogenization and insist on insularity.

We work from top-down; we tell you, based on our experiences, what is right to do; we work on the Periphery.

From out here, we can see all of you, and inject our ideas, and watch them develop. You are our experiment. Out here, we are unaffected by our own actions. If we mess up, we don’t have to deal with the mess. We treat it as the commodity of doing “good” work.

On the Periphery, we can blame the users (you) for poor execution, instead of the facilitators (us). We can bust in, cause a storm, and then helicopter out and watch it unfold from afar… or not even watch it at all. We don’t even have to see what happens, or measure any impact, or deal with the consequences. We can go against the grain in our pursuit, without needing your say-so or go-ahead.

We are a website built in a day, with “hello@theperiphery.com” for our e-mail. We have no office, no telephone, no personal contact information. We’ll operate via e-mail.

We depend on hits, followers, re-blogs, and viral videos. We are flash-in-the-pan. We are magic. Instead of valuation based on merit, our extended network votes our projects to the tops of the grant opportunities. We are trendy.

We’re boring.
We make a lot of money.
There is actually no reason for us to be here.
We don’t believe in educating or providing opportunities for anyone.
We are educated idiots.
We love Papyrus and Kokopelli.
Our dog’s name is Steve Buscemi.
If we had an event or celebration (which we wouldn’t) we certainly would not invite you.
We do everything on the computer, nothing with our hands.
We do not work well with others so we don’t work with others.
We hate collaborating within ourselves, too.
We gave Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta her (much shorter) nickname.
We hate bicycles.
We’re contractors.
We’re socialists.
We’re communists.
We’re tyrants, imperialists, colonialists.
We hate freedom.
We all voted for Obama and, if/when he asked us, we are his robots.
We actually don’t do anything. Ever.
We never volunteer to help out.
We’re the reason Bigfoot walks the way he does.
We help people who could/should help themselves.
We’re leeching off the government just like the poor in the community.
We don’t care what anyone else is doing.
We hate the movie The Bodyguard and don’t know the words to any of the songs in it.
We come from nowhere; we have no past. (But we’re all from Alabama.)
We smoke in red trucks and drink too much.
We bring in experts who know how things should be done here. Exactly.
We’re holier than thou because we have a University degree.
We hunted the Jackalope to extinction and have approximately 9,692 bucks and 5,025 does mounted in our Colorado hunting lodge.
We’re building more slums.
We have no interest in making Green River a place.
We really just want to live in Moab.
We invented sliced bread.
Tacos is our least favorite food.
We are extremely unattractive.
We photograph people in their houses and sell the prints to the Russians.
We have been here forever and are staying here forever.
We want everyone to love us or hate us.
We never want conflict or change to occur.

We know better than you.

Oct 1, 2010
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  • November
  • December
1976 1977 1978
  • January
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May
  • June
  • July
  • August
  • September
  • October
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  • December
1975 1976 1977
  • January
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  • May
  • June
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  • August
  • September
  • October
  • November
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1974 1975 1976
  • January
  • February
  • March
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  • May
  • June
  • July
  • August
  • September
  • October
  • November
  • December
1973 1974 1975
  • January
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May
  • June
  • July
  • August
  • September
  • October
  • November
  • December
1972 1973 1974
  • January
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May
  • June
  • July
  • August
  • September
  • October
  • November
  • December
1971 1972 1973
  • January
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May
  • June
  • July
  • August
  • September
  • October
  • November
  • December
1970 1971 1972
  • January
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May
  • June
  • July
  • August
  • September
  • October
  • November
  • December
1969 1970 1971
  • January 1
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May
  • June
  • July
  • August
  • September
  • October
  • November
  • December
1969 1970
  • January
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May
  • June
  • July
  • August
  • September
  • October
  • November
  • December 1