Essential Steps To Divorce-Proof Your Business

It’s no secret that baby boomers looked at marriage through rose-colored glasses. We believed that walking down the aisle with our Prince or Princess would lead to living happily ever after. Despite the harsh statistics that estimate that 40% of marriages in the U.S. end in divorce and the emergence of marriage busters that didn’t even exist 25 years ago (think Ashley Madison and virtual affairs), it seems as though subsequent generations still want to believe in the fairy tale. Focused on planning the perfect proposal, engagement photos and wedding, how much energy do they put into planning how they will deal with a marriage that doesn’t live up to the fantasy?

Whether or not you believe in the happily-ever-after fairy tale, it’s critical that you and your partner enter marriage on the same emotional, practical and financial page. This is especially true for long-time business owners and first-time entrepreneurs who may be entering marriage with significant assets (or soon to be significant assets such as stock options in a start-up company) and need to develop a plan to protect the business in the event of a divorce.

The first, and most important thing on your prenuptial “to do” list even before saying “yes” to the dress or venue is to have a heart to heart with your soon-to-be spouse. You want to avoid future disagreements and arguments before it gets “messy.” If you have an interest in a business prior to the marriage, or even intend to start a business after marriage it can be addressed in a prenuptial agreement. Even if you started the business years before marriage, in some states like California the parties can acquire an interest in the business during marriage as a result of a spouse’s efforts.

Both parties should have their own attorneys and your attorney should specialize in preparing and negotiating prenuptial agreements. The agreement must be in writing and should be negotiated and signed sufficiently in advance of the wedding date. The agreement can deal with whether the business is joint, marital, community or separate property. The parties can also agree how to characterize the income received from the business. In addition, you can agree upon what happens to the business in the event of death or divorce.

It may be very difficult to broach the issue of a prenuptial agreement when you are picking out wedding invitations or planning your bachelor party, but in the long run the benefits outweigh any risks in terms of certainty and protecting your business assets. Another clear benefit of entering into a prenuptial agreement is to see how well you communicate with each other about difficult financial issues.

I have represented many men and women who own or expect to own a business in the drafting and negotiation of prenuptial agreements. How you want to treat the business asset and the income received therefrom during marriage, in death or divorce is up to you and your fiancé/fiancée. It is not black and white and you are free to think outside the box and be as creative as possible.

Conversely I have represented many clients who did not have a prenuptial agreement and they spent millions of dollars in legal fees defending the business and even being restrained by the courts from conducting business as they see fit.

If for whatever reason, you do not sign a prenuptial agreement (or a postnuptial which is done after the marriage and can become more complicated because in some states spouses have a fiduciary duty to one another similar to business partners), then you can still protect yourself if things go sideways. Here are steps that will help you safeguard your business.

• Get an objective valuation of the business at the date of the marriage.
• Maintain good financial records.
• Try to limit the personal expenses you pay through the business.
• Don’t mix personal and business finances.
• Do not borrow from your personal accounts or personal assets to fund the business.
• Pay yourself a competitive salary. This is important — by doing that, you help prevent your spouse from asserting there is more for him/her.
• Try to limit distributions from the business.
• Do not have your spouse work in the business – it they do they can argue that they were instrumental in growing the business.
• In the event of a divorce, sacrifice other assets — home, vehicles, property, etc. — to keep the business.

Beyond these tips, the best piece of advice I can offer business owners is to choose a divorce attorney that has extensive experience with high-asset and complex marital dissolutions. I recommend that you ask your potential attorney about other clients they have represented who are business owners with net-worth equal or above yours. It’s also good to know that your attorney has a team of forensic accountants and other financial experts that can help with business valuations and characterization of assets – crucial elements to coming up with a divorce strategy that ensures you will end up with your business intact.

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The New Landscape Declaration: Visions For The Next 50 Years

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India’s water crisis / National Geographic

Over the next 50 years, landscape architects must coordinate their actions globally to fight climate change, help communities adapt to a changing world, bring artful and sustainable parks and open spaces to every community rich or poor, preserve cultural landscape heritage, and sustain all forms of life on Earth. These were the central messages that came out the Landscape Architecture Foundation (LAF)‘s New Landscape Declaration: Summit on Landscape Architecture and the Future in Philadelphia, which was attended by over 700 landscape architects.

The speakers used declarations and short idea-packed talks, and attendees used cards, polls, and an interactive question and commenting app to provide input into a new declaration — a vision to guide the efforts of landscape architects to 2066.

As the 50th anniversary of the original declaration in 1966, many landscape architects looked back to see what has been achieved over the past 50 years. At the same time, through a series of bold statements, they created an ambitious global vision moving forward. As Barbara Deutsch, FASLA, president of LAF, believes: “We are now entering the age of landscape architecture.”

While not a comprehensive review of all the declarations, here are some highlights of the visions of what landscape architects must work to achieve over the next 50 years:

Landscape architects must address the “serious issues of air, water, food, and waste” in developing countries

Alpa Nawre, ASLA, assistant professor of landscape architecture, Kansas State University, called for landscape architects to focus their efforts on the developing world, where the bulk of the current population and most of the future population growth will occur. Today, of the 7.2 billion people on Earth, some 6 billion live in developing countries. There, some 100 million lack access to clean water. The global population is expected to reach 9.6 billion in coming decades, with 400 million added mostly to the cities of the global south. “To accommodate these billions, we must design better landscape systems for resource management.”

Gerdo Aquino, FASLA, CEO of the SWA Group, echoed that sentiment, arguing that “in the future, there will be much more stringent regulations on natural resources” as they become rarer and more valuable. Landscape architects will play a larger role in valuing and managing those resources.

Christophe Girot, chair of landscape architecture, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) Zurich, similarly saw the need for “new topical landscapes” for the 9.6 billion who will inhabit the Earth. We must “react, think creatively, and find solutions.”

Landscape architects must improve upon urbanization-as-usual

Instead of pursuing idealized visions of parks that may result in “tidy little ornaments of green that make liberals feel good,” Chris Marcinkowski, associate professor at the University of Pennsylvania and partner at PORT Urbanism, said landscape architects must “work with the underlying systems of urbanization and adapt them,” softening them in an era when 1 billion people live in cities.

James Corner, ASLA, founder of James Corner Field Operations, pushed for accelerating urbanization in order to protect surrounding nature. “If you love nature, live in the city.” He called for landscape architects to “embed beauty and pleasure in cities” in the forms of parks and gardens, because we need to make it “so that people should want to live in cities.” Landscape architects must envision a denser urban world as well, and “shape the form of the future city.” His vision of the future city is a “garden city” that takes advantage of the “landscape imagination.” And Charles Waldheim, Hon. ASLA, chair of landscape architecture at Harvard University Graduate School of Design, and Henri Bava, founding partner, Agence TER, similarly made the case for a new “landscape-led urbanism” rooted in ecological processes.

David Gouverneur, associate professor at the University of Pennsylvania, called for applying novel approaches to the informal communities in which he works in Venezuela, where the conventional planning and design process fails. He proposed retrofitting these places through his “informal armature approach,” which can create both pathways and communal nodes but also areas of flexible growth that allows “locals to invade and occupy.” He argued that new forms of planning and design can better meet the needs of the hundreds of millions living in informal communities in the world.

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Informal armature / David Gouverneur

And Kate Orff, ASLA, founder of SCAPE, explained how her community-centric approach “creates a scaffolding for meaningful participation that is an active generator of social life.” For her, it’s all about “linking the social to the ecological and scaling that up for communities.”

Carl Steinitz, Hon. ASLA, professor emeritus of landscape architecture and planning at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, also called for all landscape architects to get more active at the urban and regional scales. “That’s where society needs us the most.”

Landscape architects must create a future for wild nature

“The landscape has been broken into fragments. We need a more inclusive approach, a new philosophical relationship between humanity and nature,” said Feng Han, director, department of landscape studies, Tongji University in Shanghai. That new approach must be rooted in “just landscape planning and design.”

Randolph Hester Jr., FASLA, director, Center for Ecological Democracy, and professor emeritus, University of California, Berkeley, made a similar and compelling argument, saying that “justice and beauty must be found together in the landscape.” The landscape itself is a “community, with the ecological and cultural being indivisible.”

A central part of achieving that just landscape planning and design approach is to better respect the other 2.5 million known species on the planet, argued Nina-Marie Lister, Hon. ASLA, professor at Ryerson University. “We must think of the quality of being for them, too.” To protect their homes, landscape architects must lead the charge in “re-establishing the role of the wild.” E.O. Wilson, in his most recent book, Half Earth, calls for preserving half of the planet for the other species. “That kind of goal is a blunt instrument. Now we need to design what that looks like. We need a planetary strategy that connects remnant fragments. We can create a global mosaic that will be the foundation of a next wave of conservation.”

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Projective Ecologies / ACTAR, Harvard University Graduate School of Design

A key part of those mosaics will be designed sustainable landscapes, said Cornelia Hahn Oberlander, FASLA, who argued that “sustainability needs to be addressed in every landscape” moving forward. “We must keep every scrap of nature” by certifying projects with systems like SITES.

And in case anyone forgot the essential message: Laurie Olin, FASLA, founder of OLIN, argued that “everything comes from nature and is inspired by nature.”

Landscape architects must dramatically increase in number

Given landscape architects relatively small numbers — there are estimated to be less than 75,000 worldwide — Martha Fajardo, International ASLA, CEO, Grupo Verde, said each must “become ambassadors for the landscape,” speaking loudly wherever they go.

But Mario Schjetnan, FASLA, Mexico’s leading landscape architect, said that may not be enough and more numbers are needed. For example, while there are more than 150,000 architects in Mexico, there are only 1,000 landscape architects.

He said: “There are not enough landscape architects in the developing world. And we need a global perspective. The U.S. and Euro-centric perspective must change. More landscape architects from the developing world studying in the U.S. and Europe need to return to their countries and help.”

Landscape architects must diversify themselves fast

“Minorities are woefully underrepresented” in the field of landscape architecture, argued Gina Ford, ASLA, a partner at Sasaki. “The black and Hispanic populations in the U.S. are growing.” How can we address this? Ford called for the highest levels of academic and firm leadership to bring in and hire minorities. “It’s not about getting warm, fuzzy feelings; it’s about innovation. Diversity begets innovation. Diverse staff resonate with diverse clients. We must diversify to create a shared vision for the future.”

Landscape architects must get even more political

Patricia O’Donnell, FASLA, founder of Heritage Landscapes, who is active in UNESCO, ICOMOS, and other international organizations, said the first step is for landscape architects to “show up” and engage in political debates. Then, they must “collaborate to be relevant.” Working within these complex international fora, O’Donnell herself pushes for “connecting biological diversity with cultural diversity” and encouraging these organizations to value cultural landscapes. To be more relevant, she said, landscape architects should further align their efforts with the UN Sustainable Development Goals.

Kongjian Yu, FASLA, founder of Turenscape, may be the epitome of the political landscape architect. His work spans planning and design across mainland China, but he spends a good amount of his time and energy on persuading thousands of local mayors and senior governmental leaders alike on the value of “planning for ecological security.” He called for landscape architects to “think big — at the local, regional, and national scales” — and to influence decision-makers.

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China ecological security plan / Turenscape

Martha Schwartz, FASLA, founder of Martha Schwartz Partners, who is an active advocate and commentator in the UK, where she now lives, threw down the gauntlet, calling for landscape architects to form a political wing that will urge policymakers to fund bold research into geo-engineering techniques that can stave off the planetary emergency caused by climate change. At the same time, “we need to start a political agenda for a Manhattan project to reduce carbon emissions.” Schwartz sees ASLA pushing for climate rescue over the next 50 years, helping us to “buy the time for a second chance to live in balance with the Earth.” For her and others, climate action is the platform for landscape architecture for the next five decades.

And Kelly Shannon, chair of landscape architecture at the University of Southern California, International ASLA, made the case for “changing the unsustainable status quo and inspiring new social movements.” Landscape architects must become “essential game changers.”

Landscape architects must better leverage green infrastructure to achieve broader goals

Using their knowledge of systems, nature, and people, landscape architects must find new opportunities to regenerate poor communities that have been left out. Tim Duggan, ASLA, Phronesis, called for using green infrastructure as a wedge for creating opportunities. “In consent decree communities, green infrastructure can be leveraged to create wider urban regenerative processes.” Green infrastructure, as Duggan has shown, can become the catalyst for community development.

But to make this happen in New Orleans and Kansas City, he had to “lobby change at the decision-maker level and string together innovative financing mechanisms.” In other words, he had to wade into the broader economic and governmental systems to make change happen.

Landscape architects must keep design central to the human experience

Charles Birnbaum, FASLA, founder of The Cultural Landscape Foundation (TCLF), said a “holistic view” was needed, and that landscape architects can’t foresake the important role of art and design in the experience of landscape architecture by focusing exclusively on ecological values. “We need to put the value of landscape architect on the level of the artist.” Harriet Pattison, FASLA, helped him make the point in this segment of her TCLF oral history project:

https://youtu.be/iGdpe2tPukA

Blaine Merker, ASLA, Gehl Studio, argued for “making humanism physical and celebrating the human condition” through well-designed space for people. “Plazas and parks increase social connection. This leads to deep sustainability and happiness that reinforce each other.”

Landscape architects must generate new fields of research and design to stay relevant

A fascinating idea: what is on the margins today may be at the center tomorrow. Dirk Sijmons, co-founder, H+N+S Landscape Architects, argued for landscape architects to get more deeply involved in what may be a marginal area for them now: the transition to clean energy. He showed his work animating the energy flows of off-shore wind farms in the North Sea. “We must develop new centers for the discipline.”

Landscape architects educators must “revolutionize the landscape architecture education system” and become more pragmatic

Kongjian Yu also called for the educational system to teach the aesthetic value of ecology and sustainability. “We need deep forms rooted in ecology, not shallow forms. Nature is the bedrock.” Yu calls landscape architecture an “art of survival” that will become increasingly relevant as the world’s problems only multiply. “We need to teach how landscapes can fight flooding, fire, drought, and produce food. We need to generate pragmatic knowledge and basic survival skills to open up new horizons.”

Marc Treib, professor of architecture emeritus, University of California, Berkeley, added that “the sustainable is not antithetical to the beautiful. We can elevate the pragmatic to the level of poetry.”

While these bold ideas do push the landscape architecture agenda forward, what was missing from the LAF event was some critical discussions on how to better collaborate with scientists, ecologists, developers, architects, urban planners, and engineers on forging a common vision that can increase their collective impact in the halls of power; the coming explosion of aging populations; the health benefits of nature — and how the desire for better health could become a central driver of demand for landscape architecture; and sustainable transportation and the future of mobility. Hopefully, we’ll see more on these as LAF continues to hone its vision.

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Phantom Child: Mourning Motherhood

My uncle urged me to write a novel. His suggestion was an attempt to help me conquer a recent, brief episode of depression. He meant well, but as I explained to him, I have a narrow literary skill set that does not include creating fiction. I rarely feel depressed, so we were both at a loss as to how I should deal with my current emotions. The last time I’d been this blue had been after my father’s placement in an assisted living facility for worsening Alzheimer’s disease.

The most recent depression came on suddenly after completing a year of whirlwind activity centered around publicizing my first book, followed immediately by six months of revising my second one. I took only a few days off from these ventures. With the second book edited, suddenly my literary life didn’t require as much focus. Old issues came bubbling to the surface– primarily, the dwindling down of my family, with no children of my own to fill the void.

I decided not to have children twenty years ago after becoming acutely ill with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, now called Systemic Exertional Intolerance Disease. I’d longed to be a mother since my teens. After two years of dating my future husband, I broke up with him for nine months because he didn’t want a child. We resumed our romance only after he changed his mind. I’d been sick since I was nineteen. Until my mid-thirties, I managed my health problems without major disruption to my life. But by the end of the first year of marriage, my health had taken a serious downturn, and I wasn’t improving. I missed weeks of work and could barely function at home.

I will always be grateful to my former husband for keeping his word about having a child and allowing me to make the decision to give up this dream. Quietly and repeatedly, he asked how I could raise a child when I struggled to take care of myself. Eventually I realized he was right.

Once I made the decision, I knew immediately it was the correct thing to do–not just for us, but also for our phantom offspring, the one I’d imagined for two decades. Many disabled and chronically ill people choose to raise children and do it well. But I would not have been one of those people. I was too ill. I knew my husband wouldn’t be able to make up for my deficits, nor did I have local family who could assist or adequate financial resources to pay for help with housework or emergency childcare. I’d fantasized about a child for twenty years and was attached to my imaginary offspring. I didn’t want to bring a baby into the world knowing I couldn’t give her or him what they needed. So my phantom child remained just that–a phantom, a wish, and an unborn spirit.

At twenty-four I thought my birth control had failed me. Although pro-choice, I never considered having an abortion. In 1984 you couldn’t pee on a stick to find out if you were pregnant. It took two weeks to learn I’d had a false alarm. I felt neither relief nor happiness at the news. That was the closest I ever came to having a child. I often imagine how old that person would be now had the results been different, and I wonder what kind of life he or she might have led.

As my friend’s children leave for college or start their post-college lives, I miss having a child more than I thought I would. I naively believed that the decision I made twenty years ago would be less painful with time. Instead the loss has its own life, just as a child might have. I feel the absence more and more as my father slowly declines, and whenever I am not kept busy with my literary life. I realize now this feeling will probably wax and wane for the rest of my life. And as I grow older, I’ll have to continue to learn how to be at peace with it. I feel the approbation of my phantom child, thanking me for making such a sad, hard choice.

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Women, Diversity, and the #BowRevolution

When women stand together, we are strong. It is beautiful to me to see initiatives like this springing up everywhere in response to inequality.

Read how the Bow Revolution is taking place in Hollywood and how you can join it too!

The Bow Revolution, by Bhavani Rao

An ugly spotlight was thrown on Tinsel Town when it comes to playing nice with others. From Patricia Arquette’s acceptance speech at the Oscars in 2015 to this year’s #OscarsSoWhite situation, the entertainment industry has gotten a bad reputation when it comes to how they treat women and people of diversity.

Quietly, a revolution began in the Indie film world–hiring the best person for every position; they are doing it with an eye to female and diverse hiring. A revolution… with a Bow on top. Attachments (2017), a film by Richard Krevolin, was where the Bow Revolution began. Jessa Zarubica, 1st AD, had given out bows on one of her past productions to all the women as a sign of solidarity. When Jessa handed a bow to Producer Carrie Lynn Certa on the set of Attachments, Carrie saw so much more. To Carrie, it was more than a symbol of female solitary; it was about tying all of us together.

“The bow symbolizes two sides to this problem–women and diversity. Trying to just fix one without fixing the other makes us incomplete. Being raised in Chicago, I was surrounded by amazingly diverse cultures–all of which were beautiful and educational. We in entertainment can mirror the beauty of what America stands for through film and TV–both on screen and in our work place. By bringing us all together in one symbol, we bring awareness to the change we need to see in Hollywood,” says Carrie, who is also co-chair of the Producer’s Guild Women’s Impact Network, as she proudly looks out over the sea of bows on set that she feels reflects America as a country.

This is just the beginning for Carrie’s Bow Revolution and she hopes everyone in Hollywood will join the #bowrevolution. Show your support for diversity and women in front and behind the camera in TV, Film, and New Media. Follow the Bow Revolution on Twitter @Bow_Revolution. Join the revolution by posting and tweeting your photos from the sets of your diverse cast or crew.

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A DIVERSIFY Moment In Chattanooga

For the third year, the Chattanooga area Chamber of Commerce hosted its Diversify marketplace, showcasing the area’s growing number of diverse vendors and connecting businesses of all sizes. The luncheon and its speaker are highlights of the event, coordinated by the Chamber’s Director of Diversity and Inclusion, Maria Noel. This year’s speaker was Valoria Armstrong, the first African American and female president of Tennessee American Water. Hundreds of civic leaders packed the banquet hall, enjoying the food and some networking time as they waited for the speaker.

My table mates talked about today’s urban challenges with pockets of poverty, violent neighborhoods, and education inequities as well as their impact on minorities, females, veterans, and those with disabilities. Given Chattanooga’s popularity as location for industry, they also discussed plans for new housing developments, community renovations, urban revitalization, and sophisticated worker training. Seated at the head table with Armstrong, Hamilton County Mayor Jim Coppinger shared his thoughts on what the Diversify event represented. “What makes Hamilton County & Chattanooga a great place for business is that we’re an inclusive community, taking advantage of the large number of diverse businesses and entrepreneurs. We’re grateful to the Chamber for creating the Diversify event that showcases the diverse talents in our area.”

The room quieted down as introductions got underway and a smiling, energetic Armstrong took the stage. Years ago, I interviewed Armstrong in her second term as the youngest, and first female, president of the Chattanooga-Hamilton branch of the NAACP. Being a ground breaker is not a new role for Armstrong, it is an integral part of her determination to “Embrace the Race” of life and career to the max. A proud runner in six half marathons, Armstrong shared how Olympic Gold Medalist Wilma Rudolf was her inspiration. Rudolf, who suffered from polio as a child, became the fastest woman runner in the world.

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Jean-Marie Lawrence with Valoria Armstrong
(Photo: Adrian J. Edwards/Chattanooga News Chronicle)

Armstrong spoke about the determination of her own family members to overcome their health challenges. Most of us are confronted by major hurdles as we “Run the Race,” and she is no exception. Telling the story of how TN American Water was losing water and didn’t know where it went, she made the challenge personal for herself and her team. The problem was a small underground leak in the system that dumped twelve million gallons of water into the Tennessee river. The creative solution, a first in American water history, was the product of the diverse skills of the team including engineering, operations, and quality control.

Armstrong urged the audience to build the diverse teams that can develop creative solutions. Embracing Diversity and Inclusion by recruiting, supporting, and mentoring people who don’t look or think like you. The only thing standing between minorities, females, veterans and those with disabilities is opportunity. She also had advice for those, like herself, who are determined to succeed. Step back and evaluate what your setting out to do. Research and analyze the process. Then put your plan into action. Start with small, incremental success. When you do have a success, celebrate it, before returning to the research mode. Don’t get discouraged by set backs.

After Armstrong’s presentation, Chattanooga Councilman Yusef Hakim responded, ” I think that Valoria typifies breaking the glass ceiling for women and others. A good role model not only for young ladies, but others who might feel that the world is against them. They can see an example of what can be by not giving up.” Words of wisdom for all of us in the room as we celebrated and “Embraced the Race.”

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Building Your Own Home From Open Source Blocks

What if your next house were to cost 1/10th of the average home while sporting a long list of high-tech hyper-ecological features? With the help of the Open Building Institute (OBI), which is designing affordable, ecological housing accessible to everyone – you may be able to do just that.

In the good old days people built their own homes. My grandfather built his and lived in it with his family for decades. However, as homes and their sub-systems have become more complex along with ever more stringent building codes, few can claim to be able to replicate such a feat. OBI hopes to change that.

OBI is a new initiative that is creating a library of engineered modules and a series of rapid-build procedures to quite literally help anyone build an affordable home. The basic idea is if you can follow an instructable you should be able to follow a few of them – and if the modules are well organized and complete you could finish off a whole house with a few friends.

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OBI is following the same open source methodology that has made the Internet so successful — sharing the source code with a free license. Google and Facebook and many other Internet companies use open source software on the backend because large scale collaboration generally leads to superior technology. Open source hardware follows the same approach from electronics to 3-D printers.

There is a rapidly growing list of open source hardware projects, which are bringing millions of dollars of value to the world. Now OBI is adding ‘house’ to the list.

In this case, rather than sharing computer code, OBI is sharing a toolkit that is open source and available free of charge–forever. The toolkit includes a library of modular designs (think of them like building blocks), detailed instructions, software, and even the open source machines (for construction and production of building materials following the Open Source Ecology model). Users can design their own house using open source software, and can also contribute designs to the project.

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Rapid Builds, Affordable Housing
The preliminary designs are stacked with high-tech ecological features including a building integrated solar photovoltaic roof, in floor hydronic heating, and a biodigester. They aim to achieve Living Building Challenge certification in 2017, which is the highest standard for eco-construction. The standard OBI house model is off-grid (a recent study indicates this may be economic for many people in the U.S.) and will have an Aquaponic Greenhouse option, which produces all the fish and vegetables that a family can eat.

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OBI follows a rapid bulid approach where they can train non-specialists to put up the house in 5 days. If you have ever heard about an Amish barn raising you have the idea.

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They have already built a demonstration home – the plans of which anyone is free to copy.

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However, not everyone literally wants to build their own house. So the initiative plans to offer a turnkey build service to prospective homeowners in 2017 using an immersion training program for builders–to expand OBI build services to other locations (they are located in Missouri). They are using the now somewhat standardized Open Source Ecology Extreme Manufacturing workflow, which the organization developed over 12 previous builds at its Missouri headquarters.

Are you interested in building your own green home?

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Plagiarized Lessons and Deceptive Tactics: A Look Inside the Trump Institute

In 2005, as he was making a transition from developing real estate to capitalizing on his fame through ventures like a reality show and product-licensing deals, Donald J. Trump hit upon a two-pronged strategy for entering the field of for-profit education.

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Bill Cosby Becomes First Person Ever To Have UConn Honorary Degree Revoked

Fewer and fewer universities want to have their names attached to Bill Cosby.

The board of trustees at the University of Connecticut unanimously voted on Wednesday to revoke the honorary Fine Arts doctorate the school awarded to Cosby in 1996. 

“Since the conferring of this honorary degree, Mr. Cosby had admitted, in sworn depositions that he engaged in conduct that in incongruent with the values of the University of Connecticut,” UConn Provost Mun Y. Choi said in a statement to the board. 

This is the first time UConn has ever revoked an honorary degree, The Hartford Courant notes.

A representative for Cosby could not immediately be reached for comment.

More than 50 women have accused Cosby, 78, of sexual misconduct over the past four decades — including drugging and raping or molesting them. Some of the women were newcomers to the entertainment world when Cosby was a superstar, while others were protegés who considered him a trusted friend. 

Choi stated in his memo that the university “respects the principles of due process and Mr. Cosby’s right to a fair trial on the criminal charges against him,” but acknowledged that conduct Cosby has already admitted to in sworn testimony was reason enough to consider revoking his degree. 

Choi added it was the responsibility of UConn and all universities to “support and care for victims of sexual assault.”

Cosby has received nearly 60 honorary degrees from colleges and universities, including esteemed schools like Carnegie Mellon, the University of Pennsylvania, Yale University and the Berklee College of Music. 

Brown University, George Washington University and Fordham University are among those that have rescinded their honorary degrees to Cosby. Boston University was the most recent school to award him an honorary degree, in 2014, but has since revoked it. 

Cosby is set to stand trial in Pennsylvania for allegedly drugging and molesting a woman in his home in 2004. He goes to arraignment in July. 

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Terrifying Laser Bazooka Is Like a Handheld Death Star

In the right hands, broken electronics can be turned into something useful again. But useful isn’t the best way to describe Drake Anthony’s 200-watt laser bazooka made from a bunch of old DLP projectors he bought off eBay. Words like incredibly dangerous, do-not-try-this-at-home, or “are you crazy?” seem more appropriate.

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The Best Cheap Window Fans

We spent 12 hours of researching and testing to find the best window fans for bringing in cool air at night or extracting hot air out of a kitchen window. For most people, the Pelonis 9″ Twin Window Fan is a great value. But the pricier Bionaire Twin Reversible Airflow Window Fan is worth an upgrade if you need more power or less noise.

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