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    Mold Remediation & Mold Inspection Cape Cod and South Shore MA – Video

    - January 30, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Mold Remediation Mold Inspection Cape Cod and South Shore MA
    The Mold Doctors is a fully insured and certified Cape Cod mold removal company providing solutions for residential and commercial properties. We value the s...

    By: MoldDoctors

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    Mold Remediation & Mold Inspection Cape Cod and South Shore MA - Video

    New Jersey Mold Inspection | Mold Testing & Remediation …

    - January 30, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    We DETECT, CORRECT, and PROTECT!

    Hurricane Sandy Response Center Line 888-MOLD-LOSS Call us now for flood and dry out services in NJ and NY!

    Whether you already own a home or are considering purchasing a new property in New Jersey, New York, or Pennsylvania, our mold inspection experts can assure you that the indoor environment where you and your family spend most of your time is safe, clean, and free from the danger of toxic mold.

    Become thoroughly educated on the condition of your property and obtain solutions for any potential air quality problems you may face. Our well-trained, certified mold testing professionals will investigate your indoor environment using a variety of certified testing methodologies and forensic lab analyses. When you work with Mold Doctor, our professional mold inspection reports provide comprehensive results and detailed recommendations on how to eliminate hazardous mold growth in your home, and take preventive measures to keep mold problems from recurring.

    During the indoor air assessment, our mold inspection experts will conduct a comprehensive study of your home that meets the highest standards of the industrythe Standards of Practice established by the American Indoor Air Quality Council (AIAQC).

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    New Jersey Mold Inspection | Mold Testing & Remediation ...

    Mold Inhibits 600,000 University of Missouri Books, My Cleaning Products Advises Use of Two Mold Removal Products to …

    - January 30, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Columbia, MO (PRWEB) January 30, 2014

    Mold has reportedly damaged about 600,000 books of the University of Missouri Libraries. In response to it, My Cleaning Products recommended two mold removal sprays to assist the public in preventing a mold problem of the same extent.

    Based on a report from kansascity.com posted on January 29, 2014, the books were stored in an off-campus facility in north Columbia. And as it detailed, the problem about the fungus inhabiting them was discovered in October.

    However, Jim Cogswell, the Libraries Director, said in the report that probably only less than half of the damaged volumes will be restored. The reason it determined was the high cost of the mold cleanup.

    As the report detailed, the removal of mold from each book could cost around $3. It stated that if it is done to all the affected materials, the treatment could cost up to $1.8 million. But even though it was already said that just a small percentage of books would be saved, it added that the officials were still deciding what to do with the rest.

    Below is an excerpt from the post Mold Damages 600,000 Books by My Cleaning Products.

    An off-campus storage facility of the University of Missouri Libraries was hit by mold. And based on a report, the damage the fungus brought was no joke.

    Discovered in October, the mold problem in the said underground storage in north Columbia affected some 600,000 books. Good thing though that it did not endanger the public's health as stated by a safety officer last week.

    According to MCP, mold is preventable. It said that books, clothes, bags, furniture and other things could be saved from its damages in a lot of ways.

    However, it cited that circumstances as flood and unknown leaks could promote the fungus' growth without hindrances. Because of that, it advised the public to be always ready to kill mold. It said that detecting and clearing it early is the best anyone could do when caught in such situations.

    See the article here:
    Mold Inhibits 600,000 University of Missouri Books, My Cleaning Products Advises Use of Two Mold Removal Products to ...

    Wolf Creek moves forward with luxury sales tax with consultant

    - January 30, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    The town of Wolf Creek is moving ahead with plans to seek a sales tax for luxury goods and services within its newly created resort area.

    Mona Jamison, the consultant hired by the Lewis and Clark County commission to help guide the town through the process to obtain the designation, said she met with town residents on Monday night.

    Before a sales tax can be created, a petition must be circulated in town to gather support and ask the county commissioners to place it on the ballot, said Jamison who is preparing the petition.

    She said she anticipates it will be ready within a week to 10 days for town residents to use as they begin seeking support.

    The petition must be signed by 15 percent of those who live within the resort areas boundary, which is the same as the towns sewer district boundary.

    County officials have told Jamison there are 36 registered voters in the towns resort area boundary so six people would have to sign the petition to garner the required minimum level of support.

    Jamison, however, said she would like to have 15 people signing the petition just in case any of those who do sign it are disqualified during a county review of the signatures.

    Those who could vote on whether to have the 3 percent sales tax the maximum allowed by state law would be the registered voters who live within the resort areas boundary.

    The few people who attended the meeting with Jamison agreed they wanted a 3 percent sales tax, the same as the town of Craig enacted when its resort area ordinance was approved by the county commission in June 2010.

    They also agreed the tax should be in effect from April 1 through Nov. 15 of each year, Jamison said. This, too, is when Craig has its resort area sales tax in effect.

    Excerpt from:
    Wolf Creek moves forward with luxury sales tax with consultant

    Passing Out On Porches – Tragedy – Video

    - January 30, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Passing Out On Porches - Tragedy
    Tragedy by Passing Out On Porches Check us out on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/album/travis-ep/id805049827 Spotify: https://play.spotify.com/artist/3Puo1...

    By: PassingOutOnPorches

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    Passing Out On Porches - Tragedy - Video

    Passing Out On Porches – Head – Video

    - January 30, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Passing Out On Porches - Head
    Head by Passing Out On Porches Check us out on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/album/travis-ep/id805049827 Spotify: https://play.spotify.com/artist/3Puo1BkF...

    By: PassingOutOnPorches

    Originally posted here:
    Passing Out On Porches - Head - Video

    Five Porches Pastor Gary Coates 01 26 2014 – Video

    - January 30, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Five Porches Pastor Gary Coates 01 26 2014

    By: Frank Parks

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    Five Porches Pastor Gary Coates 01 26 2014 - Video

    ANONYMOUSSS EL CANTANTE DE ANONYMOUSSS MAR DEL PLATA LAVA SUS PORCHES – Video

    - January 30, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    ANONYMOUSSS EL CANTANTE DE ANONYMOUSSS MAR DEL PLATA LAVA SUS PORCHES

    By: DAVID AGUIRRE

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    ANONYMOUSSS EL CANTANTE DE ANONYMOUSSS MAR DEL PLATA LAVA SUS PORCHES - Video

    Police blotter: Parcel porch thief; mail bandit; meth-in-bra, and more

    - January 30, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Thief targets parcels on front porches: A woman on a stolen bike rifled through parcels outside of two homes before disappearing through the unlocked door of a strangers Fano Lane house. The caper culminated at about 2:45 p.m. on June 22 when a neighbor saw a woman in her early twenties (average build, dark hair) ride up on a beach cruiser. The suspect went onto a neighboring porch and began opening boxes, eventually stashing about $175 worth of books and clothing into her backpack. When the witness came outside to inquire as to the legitimacy of her visit, the suspect took off. Leaving behind the bike (it had been stolen from a nearby house), the thief ran into the open garage another house and disappeared. Police say she picked the home at random, then exited to the backyard and a fence-jumping escape. Still at large, the box bandit is implicated in two similar heists in the area.

    Rash of mail thefts

    The flag on your mailbox may be a red flag. Homes on Vineyard Circle and Fifth Street West are the latest to report their mail in disarray not only their own envelopes opened and emptied, but postal refuse from a different address. Seems the thief (and accomplice?) grabs random stacks of mail, rifles through it for outgoing checks, and then leaves the tattered remains in the next box.

    Its always the last place you look

    A burned-out license plate bulb, and the fact that the white Cadillac swerved into the bike lane three times, attracted the attention of a trailing police car near midnight on June 23. Deputies smelled pot, but the female driver, 37, from Petaluma, was more into meth: some found in a gum wrapper, more in a baggie under the floor mat. She was arrested for drug possession, which proved just the beginning; when booked into jail, meth and pills were discovered in her bra.

    Aisle be seeing you

    Attention Safeway shoppers: the gold and pearl ring you may find is not one of the daily specials. The heirloom was reported lost by a woman who said the vintage bling, worth $100 in 1961, slipped off her finger while shopping on January 23.

    Hit and run

    A red BMW unable to stop for red-light traffic at Highway 12 and West Napa ran into the side of a Toyota truck, then drove away. The driver of the truck, alone in the car, was uninjured in the early evening crash on June 22.

    Take a break

    Link:
    Police blotter: Parcel porch thief; mail bandit; meth-in-bra, and more

    Ice on the beach, but it could be worse

    - January 30, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Cars, decks, porches. Lanais, steps, bridges. All of it, covered with ice. Even perhaps most astonishing of all the beaches.

    Schools, banks and stores were closed. The mail was not delivered. ATMs were frozen over.

    Wednesday was definitely a day unlike any other in South Walton.

    "It's a chicken, greens and cornbread kind of day," said Point Washington resident Debbie Weant, who, like most locals, took the Sheriff's Office advice to take the day off and cook comfort food, watch movies, catch up on chores or get started on those taxes.

    Kathy Fly-Bridges opted for the chocolate-chip cookie route as others worked from home, cleaned closets and knitted.

    The bounty of ice was a first for some South Waltoners, but for natives and old timers, it was not.

    Seaside founder Robert Davis recalls the first Seaside Prize ceremony in April 1983, where all were amazed to see spring snow at the beach. He said Vincent Scully, one of the recipients, was Yale's Sterling Professor of Art and Architecture, so he was accustomed to snow in New Haven but a bit surprised by its appearance during his imagined escape from winter weather to sunny Florida.

    Adrianne Walline, who was born in DeFuniak Springs and lived in Grayton until she was 6, also has wintry memories. She lived on Choctawhatchee Bay until last year.

    "I remember as a kid the bay being frozen in the 1960s," she said. "It happened again in the 1970s, and in 1989 the temperature was below freezing for two days and three nights. The water was frozen 100 yards out the first night, and the second day, that doubled. The power was out for 10 hours and ice accumulated on the inside of my windows.

    We had gas space heaters and a gas stove we used for heat, and the old land line phone. And, yes, it snowed then too, and snow was on our car. It was just enough to dust everything. When the canals froze, people went out on it and picked mullet up from on top of the ice."

    Excerpt from:
    Ice on the beach, but it could be worse

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