NBN Online for the week of April 25, 2005

(Plain Text Version) for full graphical version, click here.

In This Issue:

Front Page
Builders Testify on Housing Finance System Reform
Will You Be the Next Winner of a Digital Camera?
Builders Make Annual Trek to Capitol Hill
Layouts for Living
Floor Plans: Concrete Custom Home Conquers Unworkable Lot
Coast to Coast
Studies: Gentrification a Boost for Everyone
Politics & Government
Storm Water Rules Contribute to High Housing Costs
Homeownership Tax Credit Bills Introduced
Pombo Pledges Meaningful Endangered Species Reform
Bill Halts Tenant Bankruptcy Abuse
House Acts to Permanently Repeal Estate Tax
Lawmakers Urge Bush to End Lumber Tariffs
Association Health Plan Efforts Move Forward
Economics & Finance
Home Starts Slow in March From 32-Year High
Builders Remain Upbeat in April
Eye on the Economy
VA Secretary Urges Builders to Hire Young Veterans
Tips
Builders’ Tip: Self-Centering Router Base
Business Management
Back Up Your Company Data — Before It's Too Late
Codes and Standards
Members Urged to Help Defeat Costly Code Changes
Builders Show
Builders’ Show Too Big for Atlanta in 2007, 2008
Multifamily
Sen. Corzine Wins Affordable Housing Award
Remodelers
May is National Home Remodeling Month
Construction Safety
Precautions Needed for Working in Hot Weather
Education
Concrete Technologies Tour: Turning Gray Matter Into Green
Education Calendar
Green Building
Employees Learn About Green Building on Earth Day
Environment
Builders Advocate ESA Reform at U.S. Interior Meeting
Women
Distinguish Yourself Through Advanced Technology
Building Systems
Tour to Visit Modular and Panelized Plants
Standard for Residential Concrete Walls Being Developed
Labor
Job Corps Students Participate in NAHB Family Build
Job Corps Grads Fill Labor Needs in Arizona
Building Products
Seminar Examines Cold-Formed Steel Design
Builder's Engineer
Basement Snorkeling
TV
Members Build a Basement on The History Channel
NAHB Production Group Calendar of Shows — This Week
Association news
Totem Pole a ‘Thank You’ for Roadless Rule Efforts
Tsunami Shelter Fund to Support Construction Center, 'Home Builders Care Village'
National Housing Endowment Names Roger Pastore to Board of Trustees, Founding Advocates
Get GM Discount on More Than 80 Vehicles
Calendar of Events

Related Articles

Tsunami Shelter Fund to Support Construction Center, 'Home Builders Care Village'

National Housing Endowment Names Roger Pastore to Board of Trustees, Founding Advocates

Get GM Discount on More Than 80 Vehicles

Calendar of Events

Totem Pole a ‘Thank You’ for Roadless Rule Efforts

As a “thank you” for efforts by NAHB on behalf of residents of the small towns and villages in the Tongass and Chugach National Forests, the Alaska State Home Building Association presented a totem pole to the association on April 12.

Standing in the National Housing Center in Washington, D.C., where it can be viewed by the public, the eight-foot totem pole was presented to NAHB by carver Dennis Mann.

Designed by master carver and Chilkoot Tlingit Nathan Jackson, the pole is a Crest Pole representing the powerful Killer Whale and Eagle Clan.

“I hope that this totem will be a symbol to every community and region in the United States that NAHB is there to help, and the dues we send are an investment that pays big returns to us all,” said Andy Rauwolf, the 2004 president of the Southern Southeast Alaska Building Industry Association in Ketchikan.

Rauwolf wrote a resolution in opposition to the Clinton Administration’s “Roadless Rule,” which banned any further road building in the national forests in the U.S. Rauwolf brought the resolution before the NAHB Board of Directors, which unanimously adopted it as policy. Following a meeting between NAHB and the assistant secretary of agriculture last fall, the secretary of agriculture announced that the Tongass and Chugach National Forests were exempt from the rule.

“The battle still rages on,” Rauwolf said, “but NAHB continues to protect our rights.”

Rauwolf said that Southeast Alaska was hit hardest by the rule “because our towns and villages are completely surrounded by national forest lands with very little state or privately owned land to fall back on. For this reason, the economies of these communities are dependent to a large extent on the revenues generated from natural resources harvested from private land.”

Although only 4% of the entire Tongass National Forest — which is larger than the state of West Virginia — was designated for timber harvesting and on a 100-year rotational cycle, Rauwolf said, almost every timber sale by the U.S. Forest Service was held up by lawsuits brought by environmental groups.

Among the hardships resulting from the curtailment of logging in just one year, schools in Ketchikan lost 400 students as families depending on jobs in timber-related industries pulled up stakes and moved elsewhere. As residents lost their health insurance and couldn’t afford to renew their policies, the small Ketchikan General Hospital saw its bad debts and charity care loads more than double — from $1.2 million to $2.5 million. And housing production in the area declined from 34 new starts to only three.

“I doubt that environmental groups ever consider these things,” said Rauwolf, “but from what I’ve seen they probably couldn't care less. I have no doubt that lives were lost as an indirect result of these irresponsible actions.”

On hand for the totem pole dedication ceremony in Washington were NAHB President Dave Wilson and Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska).

For more information on the Roadless Rule, e-mail Michael Mittelholzer, or call him at 800-368-5242 x8660.

Photo by Herman Farrer


 

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