Monthly Archives: January 2012

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Bed bug infestation closes Salvation Army shelter

Just as overnight temperatures are forecast to drop into the 30s,
the Salvation Army men's shelter in Orlando has
been forced to shutter its doors temporarily, the charity
announced Thursday.

The culprit? An infestation of bed bugs.

The closure, expected to last up to a week, left the agency
scrambling to find accommodations for about 75 homeless men.
Another 50 men, enrolled in the Salvation Army's long-term
transitional program, will be housed in a gymnasium on the
property until the shelter reopens.

The charity hopes that local residents will pitch in to help
cover the estimated $15,000 cost of tenting the building for
treatment.

"It's a lot of money," said public relations coordinator Vicki
Hastings. "We do have some funds available for an emergency, but
then that's money we can't spend on other needs."

The incident also comes as shelters in general are struggling
to keep pace with Central Florida's ballooning number of
homeless men, women and children.

"We know the strain our closure, even for these few days, puts
on the homeless population and its already overstretched
providers," said Major Andrew Kelly, the Salvation Army's
Orlando Area Commander. "So we are working quickly to be able
to … operate at full capacity."

The Coalition for the Homeless, just over a mile away, is
expected to take many of the men, though its emergency shelter
has no mattresses to sleep on, only floor space.

"We can accommodate all of them at this point," said
spokeswoman Muffet Robinson.

But those shelters with actual beds report none to spare.

"The majority of the emergency beds are full every night
anyway," said Cathy Jackson, executive director of the Homeless
Services Network of Central Florida. "And there's already no
room at the inn for the 150 to 200 folks who are sleeping
outside or in abandoned buildings or carefully concealed
tents."

At the Orlando Union Rescue Mission, which has 60
emergency-shelter beds, president and CEO Allen Harden said
there's typically competition for a spot.

"We've got guys that stand in line for hours trying to get a
bed," he said. "We keep talking to the powers that be, trying
to expand. We're sitting right there in the shadow of the new
gazillion-dollar arena and we're saying, 'Come on, throw us
some crumbs.' "

Bed bugs have become a scourge of the developed world over the
past 15 years, affecting everything from five-star hotels to
mom-and-pop motels to individual homes. They can be carried by
humans and pets, and hitchhike on clothing and luggage. Though
their bite itself is painless, it can lead to severe itching
and subsequent skin infections.

While other shelters in Orlando report periodic problems with
the pests, operators said this was the first time an entire
building would be closed. The Salvation Army's shelter for
women and shelter, housed in a different building, remains
open.

ksantich@tribune.com or
407-420-5503

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Bed bug infestation closes Salvation Army shelter

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Saratoga Springs seeks answers on housing head's salary

Posted at: 01/19/2012 5:16 PM | Updated at: 01/19/2012 5:45
PM
By: Mark Mulholland

SARATOGA SPRINGS - As Executive Director
of the Saratoga Springs Housing Authority, Ed
Spychalski oversees about 380 low to moderate income
apartments and draws a publicly funded salary of 152-thousand
dollars a year.

Spychalski's compensation has drawn criticism from residents
recently, after he told them the authority couldn't afford to
eradicate bed bugs in some of the apartments.

Spychalski was the authority's maintenance supervisor before
becoming executive director in 2006.  That year, his
salary was almost 75-thousand dollars. In the five years since,
his salary has more than doubled, to just under 152-thousand
dollars a year, plus benefits.

"I'd like to find out out about the compensation packages, the
vehicles, the potential nepotism. I think these are all fair
questions and I'm waiting for their answers,"
said city Accounts Commissioner John Franck has
asked for a public hearing with the Housing Authority for later
this month. He wants to hear from the authority why their
director makes more than New York's Lieutenant
Governor, and 14-thousand dollars a year more than the director
of the Albany Housing Authority who oversees more than four
times the number of units.

After a public meeting Thursday, Spychalski wouldn't comment
about his compensation. But Dennis Brunelle, the chairman
of the authority's board offered this. "We feel he's doing a
lot more than most people understand. The salary has created a
lot of stir and we're going to take a look at it. But there's
reasons why it is that high."

Some residents of the apartments stand squarely behind the
director, others say he should resign.

"His attitude is don't bother me, I don't have time for
you," said Lisa Vincent, a resident
of Stonequist Apartments since 2006.

Again, Spychalski chose not to comment Thursday.The Housing
Authority says they'll have more to say regarding his
compensation in the next week to ten days, which would coincide
with the public hearing Commissioner Franck has scheduled for
January 31st.

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Saratoga Springs seeks answers on housing head's salary

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La Niña and Flu Outbreaks; Men Overspend When Women Are Scarce

Discovered: La Niña weather patterns could cause pandemics,
when men outnumber women they tend to spend more, and the
Heisenberg
Uncertainty Principle gets an update. 

RELATED: The HIV Discovery of the Year; Women Aren't
Better Politicians

La Niña brings pandemics New research
suggests that La Niña, weather-pattern cousin of El Niño,
makes global pandemics more likely. La Niña periodically
brings cool water to the surface of the Pacific Ocean making
for warmer, dryer winters. More importantly, the U.S.
researchers posit, it alters the migratory patterns of
flu-carrying birds, which might explain why the four most
recent outbreaks -- in 1918, 1957 and 1958, and most recently
in 2009 with the swine flu -- were preceeded by periods
of La Niña. This is less than awesome news as we're in the
middle of a La Niña episode right now. Researchers note,
though, that there are many incidents when La Niña doesn't
precede a flu outbreak, so more research should
be done to explain why certain periods result in the spread of
disease. Luckily, the fear inspired by swine flu, bird flu, and
Gwyneth Paltrow mean we've stepped up
efforts to monitor pigs, people and flu genes, so research
into its spread should only move more quickly. [BBC, Houston Chronicle]

RELATED: A Dreary Allergy Season; What Golf Does to the
Brain

When women are scarce, men will spend more.
New research posits that when men think they outnumber women,
they'll often increase the amount they spend. Researchers at
the University of Minnesota fed men articles saying they
outnumbered the women in the area, then asked them questions
about how much of their next paycheck they wanted to save and
how much they wanted to borrow. The lady drought made them 42
percent less willing to save and 84 percent more willing to
borrow money. The researchers draw some reasonable theories for
why: "How do humans compete for access to mates? What you find
across cultures is that men often do it through money, through
status and through products," lead author Vladas
Griskevicius said. The Wall Street Journal finds this
pretty natural when examined through an economic lens. "When
something is in short supply, common sense suggests that it
should become more valuable." So there you have it ladies. Move
to China! [USA Today, Wall Street Journal]

RELATED: 'Skim' Is a Generous Word for How People Read
Nutrition Labels

The Heisenberg uncertainty principle gets
more complicated. Just when we were wrapping our heads
around the Heisenberg uncertainty principle (just kidding),
research published in the journal Nature
Physics suggests our understanding of it is
incomplete. As you might recall, the principle is a
foundational one for quantum physics and it says that it's hard
to measure multiple properties of a particle at the same time
because the act of measuring them alters the properties. But
Vienna University of Technology researchers found
experimentally what Japanese researchers had already posited
theoretically that different sources of uncertainty can, in
fact, be distinguished. Heisenberg's principle isn't disproven,
it's just often oversimplified (uncertain, dare we say?), they
say. It's all a bit confusing, but a good reminder that even
foundational theories can be updated. [Science Daily] 

RELATED: Lab Rats Finally Get Their Due; How Cavemen
Fought Bed Bugs

Babies can learn language by lip reading.
Previous research held that babies learned language primarily
through hearing it, but a new study says babies learn langauge
partly by watching the mouth move, and the new finding could
help us diagnose autism earlier. Researchers at Florida
Atlantic University tracked the eyeballs of infants less than
12 months old and found that their eyes moved to the speaker's
mouth more often than older babies or adults. Other research
has shown that older autistic children keep paying close
attention to a speaker's mouth even after most infants stop the
habit after about one year, potentially allowing earlier
diagnoses of the condition. [ABC News]

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La Niña and Flu Outbreaks; Men Overspend When Women Are Scarce

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Palm Club Apartments, Lake Worth, Florida, The WORST! Unhealthy and Unsafe! – Video

02-10-2011 21:56 The worst place in Palm Beach County to live! Probably the worst place in the State of Florida! Photos at local.yahoo.com The worst place in Palm Beach County to live! Probably the worst place in the State of Florida! If you live there, you probably shouldn't be. If you are thinking of moving there... DON'T! Black mold so bad it will get your whole family sick, wood rot upstairs and down, major disrepair of all appliances and stairways, horrible bed bug infestation, along with rats, feral cats, rabid raccoons, ants of all kinds IN THE APARTMENTS, not to mention the drug dealing all around and anything else you don't want your kids around!!! It's all there in its ugly and horrible reality. The management doesn't do crap. The service/maintenance people can't do anything to help because management won't let them and there is no budget! Our sympathies go to to the wonderful families that are not able to get out of this DUMP! Best thing to do... REPORT THEM! Palm Club Apartments... UNINHABITABLE PLACE TO LIVE... at 2425 2nd Ave N, Lake Worth, FL 33461 AVOID IT ALWAYS! Check out more testimonials of just how bad this poor excuse of rental apartments is at: local.yahoo.com http://www.yellowpages.com and http://www.apartmentreviews.net Keep your family and you safe. DO NOT RENT AT THIS DUMP. The place should be condemned! Bed bugs GALORE! Even more rates. If you live there, you probably shouldn't be. If you are thinking of moving there... DON'T! Black mold so bad it will get your whole family ...

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Palm Club Apartments, Lake Worth, Florida, The WORST! Unhealthy and Unsafe! - Video

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GOP leads the way in apoplexy

A funny thing happened on the way to the 2012 election.

At the risk of being accused of partisan politics, I have never
seen Republicans so afraid of themselves.

A lot of them are not comfortable with Mitt Romney, partly
because he is Mormon, partly because he was governor of,
?gasp,? Massachusetts, the state that not only bleeds blue but
is proud of it, but also because of another issue, which I have
to agree with. He is too darn pretty. He has perfect hair,
perfect teeth, he is just the right height. It is scary.

So they may be concerned that he is an alien.

But as much as Mitt may worry some, traditional Republicans are
scared out of their minds by Newt Gingrich.

Newt Gingrich was once the leader or the new order, but through
a series of, let us say, peccadilloes, he became the match in
the hand of the gasoline attendant. No one knows when it will
be struck and blow the shebang to pieces.

To be fair, Newt Gingrich is a quick mind and a tenacious
campaigner. If he becomes the Republican nominee, by Nov. 6,
President Obama will feel like he went about 100 rounds with
Mike Tyson (back when Mike was a boxer worth watching). He will
hurl every insinuation he can think of at the president,
amplify every minor issue into an international crisis and be
able to take the same when it is tossed back at him.

Newt is tough. He is sharp. He knows the game. But he is Newt
and the top Republicans know and fear that fact.

In Romney, they have a few issues that need sorting out,
especially his history of completely changing his views
whenever it is politically expedient. He proved that in
Massachusetts where people thought they were voting for a
moderate Republican, not liberal like some past Massachusetts
Republicans, but close to the heartbeat of the Bay State. As he
got close to leaving office to step onto a national stage, he
began to appear more and more conservative. In the last
presidential election he was a true moderate-conservative, a
position that got him a ticket home, rather than bearing the
standard of the party.

This time around Mitt is a significant conservative, and that?s
what the Republican leadership is liking about him.

The problem is, Mitt should have won South Carolina. He should
have but Newt stole it from him and now we are in Florida, a
state Mitt should be winning with buckets of votes. Instead, it
is a toss-up going into the Florida primary Tuesday.

Which gets back to my point: Republicans are terrified at what
they have working for them in this campaign. They seemed quite
hopeful a year ago. Partly with the help of the tea party they
were gaining power and feeling like they could kick the
president out of office and insert one of their people. But one
of the problems with the tea party is the candidates who
embraced it either lack the depth needed for a presidential
campaign or are crazier than bed bugs on meth. Unfortunately,
while the tea party may not hold all the hearts of Republicans,
they are at least in the minds of too many potential candidates
who decided they could not reconfigure their standards enough
to win the presidential nomination in the new Republican Party.

I doubt Bob Dole would win the nomination the way things are,
and Bob is a legitimate conservative.

So what we have heading into next week is Mitt Romney trying to
maintain his dignity and keep his distance from Newt, who is
doing his best to pick him up off the ground and body-slam him
to the mat before applying the sleeper hold.

And, of course, the Republican leadership is wondering if they
could dig up Ronald Reagan, extract some DNA, and create a
clone to insert in the rest of the primaries before things get
too out of hand.

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GOP leads the way in apoplexy

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