NBN Online for the week of March 9, 2009

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

In This Issue:

Front Page
Energy Tax Credit to Generate $6 Billion in Remodeling Jobs
Learn to Market Housing Tax Credit at Free Teleconference March 16
NAHB Provides One-Stop Stimulus and Tax Credit Information
Coast to Coast
Cranes Are Ready, Financing Isn’t
Politics & Government
House Bill Allows Bankruptcy Judges to Modify Home Loans
Administration Releases Details of Foreclosure Relief Plan
New Pew Report Shows How States Can Stabilize Economy
HBAs Receive Funds to Support State and Local Efforts
Attend Crucial Legislative Conference on March 24
Economics & Finance
Builders See Little Doom and Gloom in Cedar Rapids, Iowa
Useful Links to Monitor Economic and Housing Trends
Downturn
Free Business Survival Tips Online Till March 13
Tips
Builders’ Tip: A Cloud-Free Way to Collect and Dispose of Dust
Sales
Build Trust, Protect Value With Online Branding
50Plus Housing
Award-Winning Community Nestled on Former Vineyard
CAASH in on Active Adult Market at 50+ Housing Symposium
Multifamily
HUD Frees Up FHA Insurance for Multifamily Refinancing
Remodelers
Who Says You Can’t Trim ‘Fixed’ Overhead Costs?
Building Systems
ICF Wall Systems Can Achieve a Tight Thermal Envelope
Log Homes a Custom Home Niche Worth Exploring
Education
Earn Professional Designations at NAHB Spring Conferences
Education Calendar
Green Building
Arizona Builders Use Wind Power to Print Magazine
NAHB, 25 Top Cities Recognized for Energy Star Buildings
T. Boone Pickens to Address Green Building Conference
iLevel by Weyerhaeuser Products First to Be ‘Green Approved’
Consumers Look for Energy-Efficient Appliances, Survey Finds
Learn to Green Your Business at Green Building Conference
environment
Obama Memo Restores Costly, Lengthy ESA Consultations
Dust Busting Not Just the Burden of Builders, Court Says
hbi
Job Corps Students Participate in ‘Extreme Makeover’
Building Products
A 10th Energy Star Award Goes to Whirlpool Corporation
TV
NAHB-Produced Programs on DIY, Fine Living and HGTV
Endowment
‘Strategies for Success’ Applications Due March 14
Applications for Centex ‘Build Your Future’ Scholarships Due April 6
Challenge/Build/Grow Initiative Proposals Due April 7
Free Webcast Explains ANSI Green Building Standard
Association News
Avoid Credit Card Processing Increases With Solveras
Register Online for Spring Spokesperson Training
Pitney Bowes Postage Meters Offer Convenience, Savings
Members Can Save 10% on Vacation Rentals Worldwide
Drive Away With a Shiny New $500 GM Offer
Calendar of Events
NAHB Career Center

Builders’ Tip: A Cloud-Free Way to Collect and Dispose of Dust

 

 

 

 

Click for larger image.

 

 

Strap clamp detail

I had been using a standard dust collector with two bags — the kind with one bag on the top and the other on the bottom — on all my jobs, but every time I emptied the bags, I generated clouds of dust.

Rather than continue spreading dust during clean-up, I fabricated a solution that virtually eliminates the dust-disposal problem.

As shown in the accompanying illustration, I created a system that empties the dust in a 33-gallon, heavy-duty plastic bag and doesn’t generate unwelcome clouds of dust.

Here’s what I did:

  • First, I built a 17-inch-tall base platform to lift the collector/motor assembly off the floor.

  • Then I added extensions to the support legs that carry the weight of the separator.

  • Next, I shortened a 50-gallon plastic drum to a height of 28 inches by cutting off its bottom.

  • I also narrowed the drum to a 19-inch diameter — the same diameter as the separator — by slitting the drum down the side and then pop-riveting it back together at the proper diameter.

  • For the next step, I removed the lower bag of the dust collector and cut off its bottom. I then turned the bag upside down and reconnected it to the separator with a strap clamp.


Now the bottom of the bag has the built-in strap that came with the bag. It slips over the plastic drum and its bag liner and is cinched tight below the drum’s rim. (See detail.)

With this setup, the lower dust bag acts as a chute that sends its dusty contents into the plastic bag.

When the drum is full, I loosen the strap, cinch the bag and replace the full bag with an empty one.

By the way, I don’t lift the bag out of the drum. It’s a lot easier and cleaner simply to lift the bottomless drum off the bag.

— Corry M. Dodson, Careywood, Idaho

Tips & Techniques provided by Fine Homebuilding.
©2008 The Taunton Press

To contact Fine Homebuilding, e-mail Christina Glennon.



Tax Credit Web Site Looks at Opportunity of a Lifetime

Builders and other industry professionals can help spur home sales by referring prospective first-time home buyers to www.federalhousingtaxcredit.com. The NAHB Web site provides detailed information on the $8,000 federal tax credit for first-time home buyers included in the economic stimulus legislation signed into law by President Obama.

Consumers can use the Web site to find information on the tax credit – including a detailed question and answer section. It also includes information about other housing-related and small business measures in the legislation and a number of home-buying resources for consumers.

“The new tax credit provides a great opportunity for first-time home buyers,” said NAHB Chairman Joe Robson. “Combined with today’s near record low interest rates, the large selection of homes on the market and very competitive pricing, the tax credit should provide the extra incentive needed to get prospective buyers who have been sitting on the fence into the market.”

Industry professionals are encouraged to highlight the tax credit Web site when marketing to their potential first-time home buyer market.



Set Yourself Apart With CGB Designation

Join the ranks of the nation’s top building industry professionals with the Certified Graduate Builder (CGB) designation. The “Builder Assessment Review” (BAR) is your first step towards obtaining the CGB.

This comprehensive assessment measures your expertise in the four key areas of the building industry: building technology, business and finance, project management and sales and marketing.

Your results will show the areas where your knowledge is strongest and weakest and will help determine the courses required for you to obtain your CGB.

To learn where the next BAR will be held, visit NAHB’s education listings, or call the Professional Designation Help Line at 800-368-5242 x8154.



BuilderBooks.com Offers More Than 250 Books That Help You Build Your Business

BuilderBooks.com is your source for training and education products for the building industry. The official bookstore for NAHB, BuilderBooks.com offers award-winning publications, software, brochures and more available in both English and Spanish.

To view these publications online, click here, or call 800-223-2665.


 

Sponsored by
NAHB

 
 
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