Friday, December 14, 2012

Friday 12-14-12


I have some mixed feelings about this in one way i understand codes and the need for building codes, but on the other hand it is stupid, to put this man on his own land out of business because they are affraid of getting sued or losing their jobs.  It is the typical stupid government, well the book says we do this and they have no practical experience at all, just book knowledge.  Short sighted and narrow minded and safe.

Watauga County ‘mountain man’ fighting to keep his nature camp open


  BOONE A road that peels off the Blue Ridge Parkway curves around mountain slopes until, at a keep-out sign, it turns to gravel and plunges downhill through the forest into a world nothing like yours and mine.


The buildings scattered in a clearing at the road’s end look like they might have been raised by pioneers. Massive, dove-tailed logs cantilever under wood-shingled barns and workshops. A whimsical treehouse built like a boat floats 30 feet off the ground.

No structures at Turtle Island Preserve, a 1,000-acre outdoor education center, came from an architect’s drawing board and few of their parts from Lowe’s. That’s become a problem for its nationally known founder, Eustace Conway, who doggedly lives in the old ways and teaches thousands a year how they can, too.

The problem is that, like Conway, his buildings don’t square with modern times. Erected without permits from lumber cut and milled on site, they don’t meet construction codes. Health authorities have cited violations. Watauga County has ordered Turtle Island to stop accepting visitors.

“Basically, they shut us down,” Conway said this week.

Lawyers and engineers are working on his behalf, searching for a solution. Nearly 10,000 people have signed petitions asking the N.C. Building Code Council to change codes or exempt Turtle Island. Conway will appear before the council Monday in Raleigh.

Council members will meet a 52-year-old man in graying braids who took to the woods at 17 and has lived there since.

Conway grew up in Gastonia, the grandson of Walton “Chief” Johnson, who founded a mountain camp for boys in 1924.

In that tradition, Conway has crossed America on horseback, lived with the Navajo and, himself, in a teepee for 17 years. He has walked the streets of Manhattan in buckskins and toured the monuments of Washington, D.C., barefoot, disgusted by the wads of chewing gum other tourists left. Conway was also the subject of a 2002 best-seller, “The Last American Man.”

He bought the first 107 acres of Turtle Island cheaply in 1988. Conway now owns 500 acres and friends another 500. It’s a working farm and outdoors center where visitors come for off-the-grid learning about nature and traditional living.

Conway, who has a degree in anthropology, views building shelter as a 3-million-year-old tradition. Watauga County, he contends, is threatening the most basic of human rights.

“I think it has nothing to do with public health and safety,” he said. “I think it’s more likely the egos of small men with limited vision.”

Supporters question why, after the preserve has operated 26 years, the county is only now enforcing building codes there. A county official denies that Conway’s appearances on the History Channel’s “Mountain Men” focused its attention.

“We had no reason to go out there,” said Joe Furman, Watauga’s planning and inspection director. “People come in and get building permits and we go out and inspect them. He never came in and got a building permit.”

Conway says county inspectors visited a decade ago and labeled the preserve an agricultural use.

Last spring, a neighbor complained that Conway was building without permits. A detailed map followed by mail.

“It showed a lot more going on than we knew,” Furman said. “We know about it. We’re compelled to enforce the code.”

Solar panels, wood stoves

The visitors who stay overnight at Turtle Island, in addition to unpaid interns who live there 14 months at a time, make the primitive structures a public-safety issue, Furman said.

The visitor quarters have no plumbing, as codes require. Solar panels run a small office and a micro-hydroelectric power plant supplies a workshop. Food cooks on a wood stove or over coals in an open-walled kitchen.

After an initial visit by county inspectors in June, talks broke down. Building and health officials armed with a search warrant appeared Sept. 19 for a full-blown inspection.

The code consultant the county hired concluded the property “presents a hazard to the safety of anyone near any of the structures” and recommended that several be condemned.

He documented dozens of problems: foundations resting on stones; lumber that had not been inspected and graded; no guard rails; haphazard wiring; an unvented stove pipe.

In mid-October the county attorney gave Conway 30 days to apply for building permits. She told him to keep the public away from the structures.

The Appalachian District Health Department ordered the preserve to stop serving food, lodging or primitive camping to the public.

Conway said the preserve falls under state “primitive experience camp” sanitation guidelines and is inspected annually. The district’s environmental health supervisor did not return the Observer’s calls but told the Watauga Democrat newspaper the preserve has buildings he didn’t know about that need new permits.

Watauga County gave Conway three options: Bring the buildings up to code; tear them down; or have a licensed engineer certify that they meet codes. It threatened fines or condemnation if those conditions weren’t met.

Two structural engineers who have looked over the buildings at Conway’s request say they’re safe but would need modifications to meet codes.

“Think about the number of old houses that were built on rock foundations that are still standing,” said Boone engineer Patrick Beville, who specializes in nonconventional construction. “The cantilevering he builds is typical of construction methods used in Europe for hundreds of years.”

But Beville added, “There’s no code that addresses what he does.”

Chris Noles, an N.C. Department of Insurance official who serves as secretary of the N.C. Building Code Council, agrees that no codes that specify materials and design standards apply to Turtle Island. It could instead fall under performance-based commercial codes that ensure buildings are sound.

The state building code allows alternative designs or materials that meet the “equivalent level” of safety that is required. It also allows independent experts to do inspections.

‘A very hard decision’

The preserve is hushed this time of year. A blue-eyed mutt silently greets a visitor. A rooster crows somewhere. Work horses shuffle in their stalls. Yokes and bits hang in a barn, wagons and buggies parked in its broad overhang.

Conway has deep misgivings about updating the place to meet modern standards, fearing the work would ruin the authenticity of what he’s created. “It’s absolutely the antithesis of what we’re about,” he said.

“I live in a different world. The world you live in, that the building code lives in, is a sad world.… Not the home of the brave, the home of the scared. Not the home of the free, the home of the controlled.”

The preserve already has capitulated on health issues, he said, agreeing not to feed visitors some of the food it produces or let them sip from its springs.

After the county orders, the preserve temporarily took down its website and canceled upcoming horse-working and blacksmithing classes and visits by two Boy Scout troops.

Watauga County says it’s ready to talk further with Conway.

“Our goal is not to close down Turtle Island or harm him in any way, but rather to have the buildings compliant with the code,” Furman said. “I’m not going to say it’s not possible. It might be costly.”

Conway frets over chores not done while he deals with regulators he doesn’t trust. It’s time to plant lettuce, and the horses’ feet need tending.

“I’d be willing to compromise if it doesn’t compromise my reason for being,” he said. “It’s a very hard decision.”

http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2012/12/07/3713079/watauga-county-mountain-man-fighting.html#storylink=cpy     526,421 family farms threatened by new death tax

New legislation that jumps the death tax to 55 percent of estates exceeding $1 million threatens 526,421 family farms, of about 25 percent of all farms in America, according to a Senate analysis.

According to the analysis from the Senate Republican Policy Committee, chaired by Wyoming's John Barrasso:
If President Obama and Senate Democrats do not act, the federal government will begin taking more than half the value of family farm estates exceeding $1 million beginning next year. This summer, Majority Leader Harry Reid and Senate Democrats passed legislation (S.3412) on a party-line vote that allows Washington to take up to 55 percent, a huge increase over today's top rate of 35 percent, and drop the tax's exemption from $5.1 million to $1 million. The lower exemption -- combined with soaring farm real estate values -- could put more than 420,000 additional farm estates at risk from the death tax.
Farm values are largely tied up in non-liquid assets like land, buildings, and livestock. Many farm and ranch families would be forced to sell their assets to satisfy Washington Democrats' insatiable appetite for tax money. Up to 24 percent of America's farm and ranch families could be forced to hand over a large chunk of their heritage to the Internal Revenue Service when a family member dies. This would economically devastate rural communities. The President and Senate Democrats should join Republicans in rejecting this irresponsible policy.

http://washingtonexaminer.com/632281-family-farms-threatened-by-new-death-tax/article/2515658#.UMeRqKViZjY 

It is a shame the people that right laws don't even know the what the 2nd admendment is for.

What happens when the TSA takes your weapons away

It ends up in state-run stores, where thrifty customers can rummage through bins of objects from the TSA's no-fly list. In warehouses around the country, bargain-seekers browse through crates of knives, tools and even box cutters, the weapon used in the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. Everything is sold at a steep discount, sometimes for $1 apiece, and sometimes by the pound.
"These places actually collect what's discarded at our checkpoints," said TSA spokesman David Castelveter. "We are required to give those leftover items to the state governments, and then they decide what to do with it."
The "leftover stuff" includes not just items that can be used as weapons, like meat cleavers, ice picks, sabers, bows and arrows, nunchucks, hammers, power saws and cattle prods, but also forgotten items like books and jewelry. Some of the items are sold at state-run stores and some are auctioned off in bulk on the website Govdeals.com.
Pennsylvania press secretary Troy Thompson said that his state has made $800,000 in revenue from the online auctions since they began in 2004. The state's Harrisburg store, which sells things surrendered at airports in New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Maryland and Washington, D.C., has logged $15,000 in sales since it opened last year.

Thompson's office receives crates from the TSA filled with potentially dangerous items, including cricket bats, Medieval-looking daggers, key chain clubs called kubatons, fake but realistic-looking Nazi submachine guns and even those trendy dumbbells known as Shake Weights.
"We can't sell anything that would be classified as a weapon," said Thompson.
But the state's definition of "weapon" is not nearly as broad as the TSA's. Instead, it applies to anything designed specifically to harm human beings, like guns, martial arts knives, samurai swords and Zulu-style spears, which are discarded rather than sold.
The Harrisburg store does sell an abundance of miniature souvenir baseball bats and even lightweight hollow plastic Wiffle bats. The TSA's Castelveter saidthe TSA prohibits "any blunt object that could present a threat, and Wiffle bats fall into that category."
Along with its assortment of power tools, and bowling balls, the Harrisburg store has a section dedicated to snow globes. Many of them are verboten on planes because of the TSA's ban on containers with more than 3.4 ounces of liquid.
The store also sells Play-Doh, which is not permitted on planes despite its harmless, colorful appearance.
"Two words: plastic explosives," replied Thompson, when asked why Play-Doh is on the no-fly list.

Entrepreneurs visit the store to buy and resell the discounted goods. Jim Thorpe, owner of the Some New, Some Used, Thrift Store in Lebanon, Pa., recently paid $6 for a statuette of the elephant-headed Hindu god Ganesha. Thorpe said that exotic statuettes are among the hottest products in his store and he could get at least $20 for Ganesha, which could be used as a blunt object.
"[Passengers] don't comprehend that these things can be used as weapons," said John Supry, manager of surplus property for the state of New Hampshire. "The average person isn't thinking that way, I guess."
Even harmless items that look like weapons, like belt buckles shaped like handguns, are a common sight at the state-run stores. What can't be found in these shops are the more exotic -- for lack of a better term -- items confiscated by the authorities.
"We've had our share of furry handcuffs," said Thompson, who added that items of this nature are not sold in his store. "We might reuse those for law enforcement, minus the fur."

http://money.cnn.com/2012/12/11/smallbusiness/tsa-weapons/index.html  

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