Category Archives: Uncategorized

Earthquake in Maine – 3.0

The New England Seismic Network at the Weston Observatory at Boston College is reporting that there was a 3.0 magnitude earthquake a couple of hours ago south of Bangor.

Here are a couple of links to find out detailed information if you want it.

NESN recent earthquakes spreadsheet: http://quake.bc.edu:8000/cgi-bin/NESN/recent_events.pl

NESN map of the epicenter location: http://quake.bc.edu:8000/cgi-bin/NESN/google_map.pl OK, the link to the map of the epicenter location doesn’t seem to be working, but if you go to the previous link, there is a “Map” link to the right of the entry for the earthquake. Click on that and you’ll find a map showing where in the state the earthquake happened.

NESN general information and earthquake history in the region: http://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/states/?regionID=19&region=Maine

Maine Geological Survey: http://www.maine.gov/doc/nrimc/mgs/explore/hazards/quake/quake.htm

I live in California so earthquakes are a part of life, but the first earthquake I felt happened while I was living in Maine where I was born and raised. A fault runs under the St. Lawrence Seaway and one day it shifted, waking me from a fairly deep sleep. We lived pretty close to a busy road, so my first thought was that a logging rig had gone by a little too fast and shaken up the place. But the news coverage later showed that it had been a temblor.

I’m not superstitous … not really, anyway

OK, so the previous post was the 666th since starting this blog, so I wanted to add one more just to get away from that number. But I’m not superstitious … not really, anyway. 🙂 Anyway, this is the 667th post on this blog and I feel better already.

Coffeehouse observation No. 81

The coffeehouse I patronized the most – empresso – sure does hire beautiful young women.

Go to Coffeehouse Observer for more coffeehouse observations.

Coffeehouse observation No. 80

I’ve written this before, but good, sunny weather really cuts down attendance at the coffeehouse.

Go to Coffeehouse Observer for more coffeehouse observations.

Report: US Losing Clean Energy Manufacturing Jobs

Report: US Losing Clean Energy Manufacturing Jobs

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Researchers Find Arctic Methane Is Beginning to Vent

Researchers Find Arctic Methane Is Beginning to Vent

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Environmental Groups Join Push for Broadband Connectivity

Environmental Groups Join Push for Broadband Connectivity

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Learning a few things about being unemployed

First – and probably always – do as I say, not as I do.

My parents used that – “do as I say, not as I do” – on my sister and me while we were growing up in Maine. We didn’t always get the context, but we got the idea.

And I use it now because I’ve learned a few things in the past nearly year that I’ve been unemployed, some of the lessons have come from failures rather than successes.

I was laid off on March 5, 2009, from a job in the newspaper industry. I had been in the industry working as a staff writer, copyeditor, columnist, assistant news editor, opinion page editor, assistant metro editor, and as a staff writer for a newspaper website. I have some pretty varied skills and broad experiences.

Unfortunately, while I was working and achieving results for various small- to medium-sized newspapers in Northern California, I was centered on those tasks and results and not looking far enough ahead in updating skills for the future. I’m paying for that now, but I accept (nearly) full responsibility for that. The rest of the responsibility – and full and complete responsibility for the current crisis in the newspaper industry – falls squarely on the shoulders of publishers, media industry officials, and media stockholders.

I started off with the old “do as I say, not as I do,” simply because I’ve learned what I’ve learned more out of trial and error rather than trial and success. At least, not yet.

Here are a few of those things that I have learned after having been laid off:

1) Do not act rashly. It is demoralizing to be laid off, to be told that your services no longer will be required. There is a practice in human resources that says a firm should carry out firings and lay-off notices on Friday. That gives the person fired or laid off the weekend to cool off and it is supposed to cut the chances of violent retaliation. I think it may be more important for the person fired or laid off to consciously take advantage of that sort of cooling off period to consider what you want to do and what you can do. Take a couple of days to consider your options before moving toward finding a new job, shifting to a new career, or moving to gain the training and skills needed for that new career. But for goodness sake, don’t retaliate; layoffs are, unfortunately, a part of business.

2) Cut spending immediately, as in NOW, and assess your personal financial situation. Know what resources you have in savings. Know what severance you have. Know what other accounts you can access in a real pinch. That said, stay away from dipping into the 401(k) and other retirement accounts for as long as possible. Such withdrawals typically are subject to steep penalty and may not worth the short-term gain and long-term detriment.

3) Apply for unemployment insurance as soon as you are eligible. The eligibility differs slightly from state to state, but typically it is a week or two after being laid off. The application can be done online. It takes some time to fill out the application and you will need financial information, such as salary, severance, and other asset information.

4) Exercise the body. Being laid off is demoralizing. It is depressing. Physical exercise does several beneficial things, including fending off depression. It reduces stress. It makes you feel better because you are healthier. Unless you have health issues that prevent you from physical exercise, get out and walk, hike, ride a bike, take the stairs instead of an elevator. Do something.

5) Exercise the mind. Trust me, the mental stimulation resulting from working everyday and interacting with co-workers and others does a world of good to keep the brain working the way it should. Read, take tutorials for things you think you might need for the future, do puzzles. Do something. I already know that despite doing what I can to stimulate my mind every waking hour, I do not feel as sharp as I did when I was working and regularly interacting with co-workers and others. The situation would be much worse if I did not read and write everyday.

6) Eat right. This is vital to keeping your energy level high enough to do the things you need to do to get your life back on track. Empty calories should be avoided. Eat fruit and veggies. Whole grains. Take the time immediately after being laid off to get your eating habits back in line to help jumpstart your career.

7) Cut the booze. Do not crawl into a bottle. It will reduce quality sleep. It will jeopardize physical and mental wellbeing. It will make you mentally sluggish.

8 ) Remain as positive and optimistic as possible when possible. This is difficult. Hope always should be at a person’s core, but being laid off can be extremely demoralizing and stressful. And the feeling of hopelessness can be overwhelming. But remembering a mantra such as “everyday a step forward” or “something good will happen soon” can help keep you moving toward recovery after being laid off.

9) Be grateful and thankful. Be gracious and supportive. What do you have to be grateful for? Thankful? Gracious, why? And supportive? You may think that there is nothing for which to be grateful, thankful, gracious? And support, you probably feel you are the one who needs the support. But there is plenty for which to be grateful, thankful and gracious. You are alive and living in a great – albeit flawed – nation with a system in place to help people like you and the others among the 15.3 million unemployed in this nation. People understand that times are tough and there seems to be less “well, he’d have a job if he tried hard enough” or “she’d be back at work if she wasn’t sucking up the unemployment insurance.” Very few people want to be unemployed. It just doesn’t make sense to willingly be unemployed. So be grateful and thankful for that system and the support system you have in place, family and friends. Be gracious to those who were laid off at the same time as you, but who are back to work before you. They deserve to be back at work. Not more than you deserve it, but sometimes that is just the luck of the draw. Understand that. Be supportive of those who have been laid off and supportive of those who are in more dire situations than you. Volunteer at a homeless shelter or kitchen. Volunteer to help disabled veterans or the elderly. Do something with the skills you have to better someone else’s life while you have a little more free time. Do something.

10) Negative feelings are not always completely negative. There will be times when you will not be able to bring yourself to be positive or optimistic. That is OK. No one has the strength to be positive and optimistic 100 percent of the time. It is OK to take a break from being positive and optimistic. As long as you learn from the down time and the down time does not last too long. You can use what you’ve learned from the negative feelings to make the positive and optimistic times last longer. While it can be healthy to vent from time to time about your own situation, remember that there is a limit to how much your family and friends should be subjected to negative statements. Sometimes you are going to have to live with your own negative feelings and ride them out until you can feel more positive and optimistic. The negative feelings will pass. And then use them to motivate you for positive action.

11) Reconnect and stay connected. You are not alone. There are 15.3 million Americans out of work. That is a lot. And most people who are laid off are not at fault. It was not my fault I was laid off from my job. It was the result of an industry in convulsions. So it is important that people who are laid off to remember that they are not alone and that it is not our fault. It is very important that a laid off person does not cut themselves off from family and friends. Stay connected. I joined the social networks Facebook and LinkedIn and started blogging, all to reconnect and stay connected with family, friends and former co-workers. I have even reconnected with high school and college classmates. Staying connected does wonders for maintaining mental wellbeing.

OK, those are 11 things that I have learned in the past year or so. I started off saying “do what I say, not what I do.” I won’t reveal exactly which of these I learned through my own personal failure, just accept that some of these were learned through painful experience rather than painless epiphany.

Coffeehouse observation No. 50

A lovely young woman in a green sweater and jeans was at the coffeehouse yesterday before I arrived and was still there when I left about six hours later. And she was reading … a book. Not an ebook, not a website, not a blog, not the back of a ceral box. A book. Granted, I believe it was a romance novel, but it was a book. A book! Go figure! She’s back today. And as she did yesterday, she shed her shoes and put her bare feet up on a vacant chair.

Go to Coffeehouse Observer for more coffeehouse observations.

Maine eyes federal jobs bill

Maine summit seeks

ideas from businesses

 AUGUSTA, Maine — Legislative leaders called on Congress Tuesday to pass another stimulus package featuring tax breaks for small businesses that add employees, investment in infrastructure improvements and additional financial relief for states.

Gov. John Baldacci, meanwhile, held a jobs summit with business leaders from around the state on Tuesday to solicit ideas on steps government can take to help companies and the state grow their way out of the recession.

 “That’s why every one of you gets up every day and it’s certainly before me every single day,” Baldacci told representatives from 80 businesses across the state.

At a midday press conference, Democratic leaders from the House and Senate urged Congress to move forward with a jobs stimulus bill reinvesting money from the federal bailout of financial institutions, known as the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP.

Click on the link for the rest of today’s story by Kevin Miller of the Bangor Daily News.

 

Coffeehouse observation No. 34

A day without coffee is like a day without … well, without coffee. You might as well stay in bed.

 Go to Coffeehouse Observer for more coffeehouse observations.

Coffeehouse observation No. 27

I just saw a guy in a burgundy Zoot suit outside the coffeehouse smoking loose tobacco from what appeared to be a straight marijuana pipe. Ah, Stockton, you never fail to disappoint in your vast collection of characters.

Go to Coffeehouse Observer for more coffeehouse observations.

US Wind Industry Breaks Record for Installations in 2009

US Wind Industry Breaks Record for Installations in 2009

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Free survey can help Mainers get healthier

Storm knocks out power to 10,000 in Maine

Storm knocks out power to 10,000 in Maine

Things I hate, hate, hate

Here are 10 things I hate. Not in a particular order.

  1. Water up my nose.
  2. Extremists – conservative, liberal or religious.
  3. Mint
  4. See No. 2 – I really, really hate that sort of thing.
  5. Arrogance – especially when it’s mixed with ignorance.
  6. Indifference – it’s nearly worse than arrogance mixed with ignorance.
  7. Unnecessary rudeness – but then again, rudeness may be always unnecessary. Well, almost always unnecessary.
  8. Liars
  9. Cheats
  10. That I can hate.

47 (more) things to know about me

The other day I posted “47 things to know about me” – it was just a collection of 47 or so things someone might or might not know about me.

And I’m pretty sure there were plenty of things on the list that some people might not want to know about me or wouldn’t care to know about anyone.

But that sort of thing doesn’t deter me!

I had some time on my hands – read: the job search is not going quite as well as I might have hoped – and figured I could come up with another 47 things.

Why 47? That’s how old I am – so one item for each year.

Well, now two items for each year.

And as a matter of full disclosure, I recognize this is not an original idea. I had seen lists such as this on various blogs, but wasn’t 100 percent motivated to do one until I read a blog entry by a former co-worker. So, if there are any complaints, please direct them to the domestic rockstar. She started this and I’m sure she’ll be happy to deal with them. (And she lives far enough away that I’m not likely to be physically harmed in the making of this blog.)

So, here it goes, “47 (more) things to know about me.” And please forgive me if I inadvertently repeat something on this list from the first list; after all, I am my own editor.

I …

  1. Was once booed by about 3,000 people. (I was the editor of The Mendocino Beacon and it was during the presidential campaign in which the Rev. Jessie Jackson was a candidate. Local Democratic Party leaders were able to schedule a whistle stop, as it were, on the Mendocino Headlands. I put the story on the front page on the third and second weeks before the event, but on Page 3 – also known in the newspaper business as the “second front” – the week before the event. The local Democratic Party leader led the crowd in booing the newspaper and, therefore, me for having put the story on Page 3. Funny Thing No. 1: The party leader didn’t mention to the mostly out-of-town crowd the front-page placement the previous two weeks. That’s a little unfair. Funny Thing No. 2: Jackson’s jet couldn’t land at the airport because of fog and he didn’t make the event at all. They had to reschedule for about a month later.)
  2. Stood less than 50 feet from Jackson. (Heavily armed men wearing dark suits, dark sunglasses and earpieces stood between me and Jessie.)
  3. Was paid $75 in my one and only freelance gig covering the rally when Jessie finally made it to the Headlands.
  4. Once dictated a story over the phone from Mombasa, Kenya, to Vacaville, Calif. (Thank you, Stacey Wells, for taking the call.)
  5. Once submitted a mileage reimbursement request for a Vacaville-Fairfield-Goma-Mombasa-Frankfurt-Paris-San Francisco trip. It was denied. (I really didn’t expect them to reimburse me for mileage, but it would have been nice. After all, I was traveling most of the distance in the belly of a C5.)
  6. Am not particularly superstitious. (Unless there’s a black cat in my path or I walk under a ladder or I break a mirror. And don’t even get me started about Friday the 13th.)
  7. Worked selling magazines door-to-door … for less than 24 hours. (It was the very worst experience.)
  8. Can roll my tongue. (Lengthwise, forward and back. I can flip it to the left and to the right, too.)
  9. Used to impress people by using that tongue to tie two knots – yes, two knots – in a cherry stem.
  10. Can double-snap my fingers on both hands. (I doubt it will come up in a job interview, but I thought I’d mention it here.)
  11. Usually put on my left sock before my right, my left pant leg before my right, my left shoe before my right. (I’m not sure why, I just do.)
  12. Met Queen Latifah once in the mid-1990s, but didn’t realize just how big of a star she was then and would be now. (No, there is no photographic evidence, as far as I know. Just my word.)
  13. Always double tie my shoes.
  14. Still have movies on VHS. (In fact, I watched “It’s a Wonderful Life” on VHS over the holidays.)
  15. Have written in a personal journal since I was in high school. (I suppose I should burn them to protect the innocent … except there’s nothing in them that would cause a scandal or throw Earth off its axis. I really ought to get on that.)
  16. Am sometimes too patient. (Things tend to slip from my grasp, while I’m waiting for just the right moment to claim those things. It’s a bad habit, I know. …)
  17. Am losing patience with impatient people. (Especially parents who should be showing their children the meaning of patience or people who wield rudeness simply for no other reason that arrogance and a lack of patience.)
  18. Wish I was kinder. (We all should wish to be kinder.)
  19. Wish I was wiser. (We all should wish to be wiser.)
  20. Wish I was bolder, someone who lives with gusto. (I suppose this is much like No. 16. Ah, well. …)
  21. Still remember that my parents woke me to watch the aurora borealis from my bedroom window when I was a child. (The Northern Lights are incredible! I have a photo of the aurora borealis as a screensaver on the laptop computer I’m using to write this blog.)
  22. Have been golfing since I was 8. Not continuously, of course, but I first started playing when I was 8. (I wish I was better at it, but equipment, green fees, etc., are fairly expensive and I can’t afford to play, take lessons or even hit the driving range just now. I intend to fix that in 2010.)
  23. Wish my level of hope didn’t fluctuate so much during the course of a week. (Being unemployed plays a part in that. I’ll get over it once I’m employed again, I’m sure.)
  24. Haven’t danced in perhaps five years. (And I like dancing.)
  25. Drink too much coffee. (Have had three 16-oz. coffees today, so there! It hasn’t made me jittery a bit.)
  26. Have too many regrets. (There are things I have said or done I would love to take back. And there are things that I have left unsaid and undone that I hope I can fix in time. I suppose that just makes me human.)
  27. I smoke the occasional cigar. (Expensive and a bad habit, but there is nothing quite like a good cigar while golfing or fishing or camping or on a long drive or barbecuing or lounging or … you get the point.)
  28. Wanted to be a jet pilot when I was a kid. (My eyesight is too horrible to let that happen.)
  29. Watch too much television. (That probably makes my eyesight even worse.)
  30. Miss the smell, sound and taste of the ocean. (Working at The Mendocino Beacon was wonderful in that I could stand at my desk and see the ocean. I took walks every lunchtime on the headlands or on the beach.)
  31. Will take Star Trek over Star Wars anytime. (Who wouldn’t?!)
  32. Will take Letterman over Leno anytime.
  33. Will take “NCIS” over “NCIS Los Angeles” most anytime.
  34. Think there isn’t anything quite as cool as lying on a ground cloth with friends in a field in the Sierra Nevada looking up at a meteor shower.
  35. Love garlic.
  36. Doesn’t get facial tattoos. (I have no problem with tattoos, but on the face?! Really?!)
  37. Am worried that I’m running out of steam on this list thing.
  38. Usually turn my cellular phone to vibrate when I’m in public so not to bother anyone.
  39. Have never tried a mojito, because I do not like mint that much.
  40. Once forgot that I had a canister of pepper spray in a bag I brought with me on the trip to Africa and had to dispose of it before getting onto a commercial airline. (Don’t ask me how I did it. Just accept that I did it the wrong way. Pepper spray stings.)
  41. Am incredibly pissed off at the country’s banking industry and I may start my own bank. (OK, so I can’t start a bank. But am I the only one who thinks Wall Street bankers are arrogant SOBs for taking taxpayer money for a bailout and then screwing the consumer by messing with credit card rates and continuing to hand out lavish bonuses at a time when the problem they at least partially caused continues to result in businesses closing and people being out of work? … It was a rhetorical question and I do not expect an answer that will make sense.)
  42. Sometimes wish I could play the banjo. (You simply cannot be sad when there’s banjo music playing. It’s impossible! It’s a universal law or something.)
  43. Like lime in Mexican beer.
  44. Do not hear as well as I likely would. (Misspent youth. As a youngsters, friends and I made tennis ball cannons by taping together cans that has been opened at either end, except for the last can taped to the tube. We punched a hole in the last can, poured lighter fluid in the can, swung it around, put ball in the other end, and lighted the fluid. Boom! And then once in my early 20s I went target shooting without ear protection. Big, big mistake!)
  45. Once had a shotgun pointed at me by a drunken bully. (Always, always, always take care when walking away from drunken bullies.)
  46. Hope people do not think I’m arrogant simply because I wrote “47 things to know about me” and “47 (more) things to know about me.” (I’m just trying to have a little fun here. Sheesh!)
  47. Make too many lists.

Traveling? As snow looms, choose wisely

http://updates.pressherald.mainetoday.com/updates/traveling-as-snow-looms-choose-wisely

It is not easy being a Patriots fan ‘from away’

Trust me on this one, it is not easy being a New England Patriots fan “from away,” especially in Raider Nation. No one in Raider Nation is ever going to give up the fight when it comes to the tuck rule from the January 2002 playoff game. And Stockton, Calif., is Raider Nation territory.

Of course, the Patriots went on to win the Super Bowl that year and two other Super Bowls in the past decade.

I cannot seem to find an electronic version of the column I wrote about that victory, but here is one from a couple years later when the team won again.

Sweet taste of victory

Editor’s Note: The author was the opinion page editor of The Reporter in Vacaville, Calif., when this column was first published on Feb. 4, 2004.

By Keith Michaud

So let’s talk sports. Specifically, let’s talk football. Let’s talk Super Bowl XXXVIII.

For a game that was supposed to be a boring, low-scoring matchup between two defensively-minded teams, wow! I mean, WOW!

I’ve been a New England Patriots fan since I was knee high to Pats owner Bob Kraft, who isn’t that tall. So when Adam Vinatieri kicked the winning field goal two years ago to cap off the Patriots’ first-ever Super Bowl win, I was ecstatic.

No one can imagine what it was like for me on Sunday when Vinatieri, after a season in which he struggled terribly, kicked another Super Bowl-winning field goal with just seconds on the game clock. I was flying so high that I had to file a flight plan. The FAA is thinking of issuing me a tail number if the Patriots return a championship game any time soon.

It was a glorious season for the Patriots, a team that won 15 games in a row, the 15th being on Sunday. Coached by men who rarely showed all their cards, this team was made up of castoffs from other teams and players thought too slow or lacking in necessary skills to play the game of professional football. Perish the thought.

I truly feel sorry for those poor souls who decided to skip the game based on the notion it was going to be a snorer or decided after watching the first quarter to catch a movie or dinner out. They missed a great game.

And forget all the hype. Forget the pregame that seemed to go on for 40 days and 40 nights. Forget the scoreless first 27 minutes of the game. Forget the glitz, the glamour, the streaker and, please, oh, please, forget Janet Jackson’s exposed breast.

And please forget talk – shhh – of a “dynasty.” We New England-born folks are more practical than that, more show-me than Missourians ever thought of being. If the Patriots return to the Super Bowl in the next year or two with the same core of no-name players and win a third title, then maybe – perhaps – on long, cold winter’s nights we New England-born fans of the Patriots will discuss the “D” word, but only in hushed tones. Only then, because you don’t want to mess with a good thing.

And while you are at it, forget about weapons of mass destruction. Forget about ricin. Forget about the Democratic candidates for the presidency. Forget the state budget. And forget anything to do with the Atkins Diet. Sunday’s was a great Super Bowl, whether you are a die-hard football fan or not, whether you were a fan of either team involved. For a few hours this American game allowed us all to forget many of the woes burdening us today. In doing that, it served its purpose.

The Patriots beat the Jacksonville Jaquars 35-7 today to clinch yet another playoff berth. Things are looking good moving into the playoffs, I think.

Rotary delivering Meals on Wheels for 31 years

Another link to a Portland Press Herald story, this one about the local Rotary Club being involved the Meals on Wheels program for the past 31 years.

I was a member of a Rotary Club for a very short, but enjoyable time.