Tiny homes tucked into Boise neighborhoods? This pilot project will test the idea
Angela Palermo – April 17, 2023
The city of Boise is working on a tiny home pilot project to study its potential impact on housing affordability.
The program aims to assist selected residents in placing six movable tiny homes on land across various neighborhoods within city limits for a temporary period of time. City code currently does not allow for movable tiny homes.
The pilot project will allow approved applicants to be the first to test the concept.
“The idea was that we need more housing that’s affordable to folks on a Boise budget,” Kyle Patterson, director of innovation and performance at the city, told the Idaho Statesman by phone. “Meanwhile, things like tiny homes and small-footprint living are in high demand these days, but not something that’s allowed within city limits.”
Developer Hannah Ball opens the back door of a tiny home she had on display in Garden City in 2021.
About a year and a half ago, the city participated in an innovation program through Bloomberg Philanthropies and Harvard University where staff members were tasked with identifying new solutions for housing relief. The group of about 10 city employees took what they learned and interviewed dozens of Boise residents, from developers to homeowners to people experiencing homelessness, to try to understand the issue of housing affordability from their perspectives.
The city also held sessions where residents were invited to brainstorm creative solutions to address the rising cost of housing in the area. Hundreds of ideas were shared.
The plan was to test out some of the most promising proposals.
“There were a few ideas that rose to the top from that work,” Patterson said. “One of them was around tiny homes. The thought was, could we try this on a small scale for a few tiny homes, and then evaluate that pilot to see if it’s something we might consider allowing permanently throughout the city?”
Housing advocates see tiny homes as among a variety of housing types that could help address affordability.
In Boise State University’s 2022 survey on growth, when asked which type of building Idaho needs to meet the demand for more housing, 17.9% of respondents said new, alternative types of housing like tiny homes were needed. Seventy percent of those surveyed said they favor their local government changing zoning laws to allow them.
The survey was conducted Nov. 13-21, 2021, of 1,000 adults living in Idaho.
In Boise State’s 2023 survey, 68.8% of respondents said if they had to move out of their home for whatever reason, it would be very unlikely they’d be able to purchase or rent a similar home for the same amount.
What is a tiny home?
Tiny homes are small houses on wheels, and are usually 200-400 square feet. They’re much smaller than a typical single-family American home, which is around 2,500 square feet on average, but have most of the essential amenities such as a bed, kitchen and bathroom — albeit on a much smaller scale.
“The hope is that because these are very small homes, they might be more affordable,” Patterson said. “Through the pilot, we’re hoping to test whether that’s actually true.”
Many people who choose to live in tiny homes are single, according to Patterson. Some are retired, some live only with a dog and oftentimes they don’t need a lot of space.
Developer Hannah Ball had this tiny home on display in Garden City in 2021.
Homeowners who are willing to place a tiny home in their backyard have to pay to install a gravel pad and to extend hookups to electricity, water and sewer services. Plus, there’s the cost of the tiny home itself. Tumbleweed Tiny House Co., one of the largest manufacturers of tiny homes in the U.S., sells the made-to-order homes for around $90,000.
Still, it’s considerably less than the median price of a newly built, single-family home in Ada County, which was $507,500 in March.
The city is working with LEAP Housing, a local nonprofit, to administer and manage the tiny home pilot program. Zeb Moers, director of development for LEAP Housing, told the Statesman by phone that the project has to get unanimous neighborhood approval from each homeowner who shares a property boundary with the tiny home applicants, at least for the pilot program.
That’s a requirement that could change if the pilot program is successful and the city decides to permanently change its zoning laws to allow them.
For now, it means that even if 10 neighbors say yes, but one says no, the application can’t go forward.
The city already had screened who it thought were the top candidates, but after finishing site plans and a few other processes, one neighbor voiced concerns about two tiny home projects planned nearby.
“We just had to move on to the next person on the application list,” Moers said. Right now, the city and LEAP Housing are working on filling all the slots.
The hope is to try out the tiny homes in a mix of contexts to see what works best. For example, Patterson said one site could have a community scenario with a few tiny homes in the same area, another could involve someone renting a tiny home from someone who already owns one on their property and a third scenario could include someone moving their tiny home onto another’s property.
But the city planners and organizers from LEAP Housing want to make sure the tiny homes for the pilot are generally spread out among a few different neighborhoods in Boise to see what works best.
The program is planned to last 12-18 months.
“The folks that we’re going to work with for the pilot, we’re going to make sure that they’re renting to folks for whom this won’t make them more unstable,” Patterson said. “I think there’s a lot of folks who are happy to have a place to stay for the next 12-18 months. You think of like a traveling medical worker or a child who just graduated from college but can’t afford the cost of living here.”
5 Ways Sleep Deprivation Affects Your Brain and Mood, According to Sleep Doctors
Lindsay Tigar – April 17, 2023
Your mind needs sleep just as much as your body does.
Westend61/Getty Images
Parents of newborns, students cramming for exams, overworked professionals pushed to their max, insomniacs, caffeine dependents, night-shift workers, and menstruating people—at some point, we all know how getting less than enough sleep feels (very bad). Though it’s normal to have trouble falling asleep and/or staying asleep occasionally, prolonged periods of sleepless nights and chronic sleep deprivation can harm not only our bodies, but our minds.
Sleep is essential for brain development, wellness, and functioning, explains Heidi Riney, MD, board-certified sleep medicine and neurology psychologist and the chief medical officer of Nox Health. “Sleep has long been thought to be a passive process, but it’s actually an active state, and the quality and duration of our sleep impacts crucial brain functions,” she says, including memory storage, attention maintenance and arousal, learning new material/tasks, mood stability, the ability to read social cues, problem-solving, executive functioning, and impulse control.
So what happens to your brain health and mental capacities if you consistently don’t get enough sleep? And how can you power through on days when you didn’t get enough shut-eye the night before? We asked sleep specialists and mental health experts to weigh in.
How Much Sleep Do You Need for Optimal Brain Health?
Though it seems like a straightforward question, it’s somewhat complicated to understand how much sleep your mind needs to perform well and stay well. The human brain is as different from one person to the next as fingerprints. Because of this, the specific amount of optimal sleep one brain needs isn’t the same for everyone, says licensed clinical psychologist Bethany Cook, PsyD.
Generally speaking, Cook says, scientists have found that most adults need around 8 or 9 hours of sleep to perform and feel their best. However, since this estimate is a bell curve, some people need more, and some need less to feel great.
Though without undergoing formal sleep analysis, it’s difficult to know exactly how much sleep you need, there are a few things that can help guide your body’s natural cues. Quality and quantity of hours sleep do matter, but so does how you feel in the morning.
“The only way of knowing if you’re getting ‘quality sleep’ is if you typically wake up feeling rested, refreshed, and revitalized,” Cook says. “Our brains need around four to six full sleep cycles a night to wake [feeling] rested. If you’re sleeping for 10 hours every night, but not waking up feeling refreshed, you’re getting poor sleep quality.” She adds that it can be helpful to visit a clinic for a sleep study to identify and fix the problems in your sleep cycle.
The Mental Health Effects of Sleep Deprivation
A Slower Response Time
Even if you didn’t have a single sip of wine last night, you might wake up feeling foggy and sluggish, unable to respond to questions or respond to things happening around you quickly, explains Nicole Avena, PhD, research neuroscientist, psychologist, and a wellness ambassador for Nature Made.
“Lack of sleep, short term, has been linked to poor response times and processing,” she says. “This not only can impair your awareness, but it can also harm others around you. Demanding cognitive functions, for example, driving, cannot be performed adequately when sleep is hindered.”
Short-Term Memory Disruption
When you miss your date with Mr. Sandman, the next day may likely bring a struggle to remember much of anything: your keys, your wallet, your phone, you name it. According to Taz Bhatia, MD, board-certified integrative medicine physician and OLLY ambassador, this is because there is a connection between sleep and its impact on memory retention. “Sleep is essential in consolidating memories and allowing us to retain and recall information,” she says. “However, this process can be disrupted without enough sleep, leading to difficulties forming, keeping, and calling back memories.”
After tossing and turning for hours, you finally leave your bed and head straight to the kitchen. What do you reach for? Probably simple carbohydrates and sugar, since one common effect of sleep deprivation is increased hunger by 24 percent, says Melissa Halas, MA, RDN, CDE, registered dietitian and brain health expert for Neauriva.
“Often, the carbohydrates consumed aren’t nutrient-dense foods like apples, or whole grains, but rather simple carbs like snack foods high in refined sugars or refined grains,” she says. So if you’re wondering why you can’t stop craving sugar, maybe you should take a look at your sleep patterns first.
Trouble Making Decisions (Large or Small)
Depending on what type of career path you’re on, the ability to make fast decisions is vital to your success. Think: operating heavy machinery, responding to an emergency, or managing a large team with many moving parts. (And let’s not even get started on all the decision-making that also needs to happen at home.) Even if you don’t have a high-stakes job, being able to make simple decisions, like what to wear for the day, is impacted by sleep. Avena explains that our brains process things differently when we don’t get enough sleep. “What’s called ‘naturalistic decision making,’ or being able to make everyday decisions, like what to have for lunch, can be altered,” she says. “This is due to the prefrontal cortex lacking adequate rest.”
Maybe you don’t usually have a short fuse with your partner and friends, but every interaction might feel tense and irritating when you’re running on only two hours of rest. This is because people who don’t sleep well or enough often feel snappy, depressed, and more likely to make risky choices, according to Avena. “There’s no need to break up with your boyfriend after days of not sleeping properly, but your brain may think otherwise,” she says. “Sleep plays a role in the brain to regulate and process emotions, which affects how we react and manage emotions every day.” If you’re mood seems like it’s on a chaotic roller coaster, part of the reason may be that you (and your brain) are under-slept, leading to quick tears, more flashes of frustration, negative reactions, and the like.
How to Cope if You’re Running on Little Sleep
We all have our reasons for sleepless nights once in a while, and in these cases, while making sure to catch up on sleep A.S.A.P. is the best solution, it’s not always an immediate possibility. Here are some of the healthiest and most effective ways to power through and compensate for any mental glitches that come with occasional sleep deprivation. But don’t rely on these tips as an excuse to skimp on sleep! They’re temporary bandages, not the final fix for sleepiness.
Get outside.
You might want to crawl under the covers and hide from the world after a restless night, but you should do the opposite, as sunlight and fresh air are both great for triggering endorphins and serotonin, Avena says. “Serotonin, in particular, is a melatonin precursor and can help fight insomnia together,” she says. “It can be as easy as sitting on your porch for your morning coffee.”
Listen to music to wake up your brain.
Taylor Swift can get you through a breakup, and she might also help your brain power through a tough day. When you need an energy boost on sleepy mornings, turn up the volume on your favorite, upbeat playlist while driving or taking a shower. Believe it or not, when you listen to music, your entire brain lights up with neuronal activity, getting the entire brain ‘online,’ Cook says: “While all the parts are awake and working, music’s vibrational energy will inevitably sync your own body’s internal energy to match the faster, higher and happy vibrations.”
Caffeinate (responsibly).
Although turning to too much caffeine habitually to make up for poor sleep isn’t wise, there’s little downside to using it as a wakefulness tool every now and then, says Valerie Ulene, MD, MPH, cofounder of Boom Home Medical. “A caffeinated beverage early in the day will almost certainly help keep you more alert for a few hours,” she says. “Just remember to avoid caffeine after about mid-day as consuming it too close to bedtime will likely cause more problems than it solves.”
Try to find the root issue.
Though you may need to power through the day after a poor night of sleep, it’s crucial to try to identify the reason you’re not sleeping the night before and address it before it becomes a chronic issue.
“It can take days to catch up from even losing one hour of sleep the night before, so it’s best to try and maintain a consistent sleep and wake schedule and allow yourself to get at least seven hours of sleep each night,” Dr. Riney says. “If you feel you’re experiencing poor quality sleep or have daytime dysfunction that may be attributed to poor sleep, it’s important to seek out a sleep specialist for further evaluation.”
Ukrainian troops say Western military officers have been FaceTiming with them to teach them how to use weapons coming without instructions
Jake Epstein – April 17, 2023
A Ukrainian serviceman fires a rocket-propelled grenade (RPG) from a launcher during a training exercise in the Donetsk region on April 7, 2023.Photo by GENYA SAVILOV/AFP via Getty Images
Ukrainian soldiers have received billions of dollars in Western security assistance to fight Russia.
Sometimes, the weapons they’ve been given don’t come with instructions, or have other issues
Kyiv’s troops say they’ve FaceTimes with Western military officers for help, a new War on the Rocks report says.
Ukrainian soldiers fighting off invading Russian forces have enjoyed the delivery of loads of security assistance from NATO partners, but when this weaponry arrives in Ukraine, things aren’t always the way troops need them to be.
In some cases, the military aid comes in without instructions, so Western military officers have been hopping on FaceTime with Ukrainian troops to teach them how to use the weapons, according to a new report published Monday in War on the Rocks, a platform that covers national security.
Front-line units facing these issues have also been able to communicate with Western forces and NATO personnel through channels like secure messaging apps, the report’s authors said.
The authors wrote that Ukrainian soldiers told them that in one case, Western military officers used FaceTime to teach Kyiv’s troops how to use operate a rocket-propelled grenade that was delivered without instructions, and in another situation, soldiers had problems with aiming sights on guns.
“Most Ukrainian troops appreciate these informal solutions, but the United States and Europe could do a better job of ensuring future war materiel deliveries actually make sense for the Ukrainian military,” the authors said in the report.
It was not clear when these interactions took place, but Ukrainian troops finding issues in their weapons and needing a bit of customer service and tech support from partners is nothing new — they have previously been forced to reach out to Western partners over the phone and through video chats, sometimes even during active combat with the Russians.
A Ukrainian serviceman prepares to fire a rocket-propelled grenade (RPG) from a launcher during a training exercise in the Donetsk region on April 7, 2023Photo by GENYA SAVILOV/AFP via Getty Images
Since NATO doesn’t have troops fighting alongside the Ukrainians, a maintenance team has worked remotely to provide telephone support to Kyiv’s troops as they deal with damaged artillery pieces, among the many other problems that have emerged in the intense fighting in eastern Ukraine.
The US has sent over $35.1 billion in security assistance to Ukraine since the beginning of Russia’s full-scale invasion of its neighbor in February 2022. According to a Defense Department fact sheet from this month, the long list of weaponry includes rockets, missiles, artillery pieces, infantry fighting vehicles, tanks, small arms, ammunition, and so much more.
“The United States will continue to work with its Allies and partners to provide Ukraine with capabilities to meet its immediate battlefield needs and longer-term security assistance requirements,” the Pentagon said in an April statement announcing a recent round of military hardware worth around $2.6 billion for Ukraine.
As Russia’s full-scale assault on Ukraine nears the 14-month-mark and the two countries continue to fight a grinding and brutal war of attrition along a relatively static front line, there are growing concerns about if Western countries will continue to maintain their military support for Ukraine, especially as continuous deliveries strain some partner arsenals and defense production.
Russia’s devastating war in Ukraine has so far taken a heavy toll, and both sides may have suffered upwards of 350,000 casualties, recently leaked Pentagon documents revealed, with the Russian death toll more than double the Ukrainian figures.
Moldova tells Moscow not to meddle after barring Russian governor from entry
April 17, 2023
St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF)
CHISINAU (Reuters) – Moldova told Russian politicians not to meddle in its internal affairs on Monday after barring a Russian delegation from entering the country ahead of a regional election.
The delegation led by Rustam Minnikhanov, governor of Russia’s Tatarstan region, had been due to attend a forum in semi-autonomous Gagauzia region, which holds elections on April 30 to name the head of its government.
Moldova, which applied to join the European Union last year alongside its neighbour Ukraine, has repeatedly accused Russia of trying to destabilise the country, something Moscow denies.
Minnikhanov arrived in an official Tatarstan government plane but was not allowed off the aircraft. Police said in a statement his trip aimed to bolster support for a pro-Russian candidate standing at the elections.
“Supporting a candidate at local elections in Moldova is not a valid reason and the authorities ask Russian bureaucrats to refrain from interfering in the internal affairs of our country,” the border guard service said.
Minnikhanov posted a video on social media in which he said he and his delegation had been labelled undesirable, a move he described as regrettable. He said the people of Tatarstan and Gagauzia, both home to Turkic peoples, were “brothers”.
Gagauzia is an autonomous region home to a Turkic population that is pro-Russian and Orthodox Christian.
(Reporting by Alexander Tanas; writing by Tom Balmforth; editing by Angus MacSwan)
Russian oil products are heading to the crude-rich Persian Gulf as the UAE and Saudi Arabia take advantage of cheap barrels
Phil Rosen – April 17, 2023
Russian President Vladimir Putin with Saudi Arabia’s Ambassador to Russia Abdulrahman Al-Rassi.Reuters/Sergei Karpukhin
Gulf nations are snapping up cheap Russian oil products while exporting their own crude at market rates.
Saudia Arabia and the UAE have emerged as key storage and trading hubs for Russian products, the Wall Street Journal reported.
Russia is sending 100,000 barrels a day to Saudi Arabia, up from effectively zero pre-Ukraine war, Kpler data shows.
Petro-rich nations in the Persian Gulf are buying discounted Russian oil products as Moscow continues to seek willing buyers while the West shuns the warring nation.
The United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia are using those Russian barrels within their own borders for consumption and refining purposes, while exporting their own products at market rates, the Wall Street Journal reported.
Russian naphtha and diesel sell at discounts of $60 and $25 a ton, respectively, according to the report.
In addition, the two countries, particularly the UAE, have emerged as key trade and storage hubs for Russian oil and fuel. Trading firms import Russia energy to the UAE and re-export it to Pakistan, Sri Lanka or East Africa, the report said.
Kpler data shows Russian oil exports to the UAE more than tripled to 60 million barrels last year. Separate Argus Media data cited by the Journal show Russia now accounts for more than 10% of gas oil stored in Fujairah, the UAE’s main oil-storage center.
Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia is importing 100,000 barrels a day from Russia after seeing effectively zero before Russia war on Ukraine, translating to an annual pace of about 36 million barrels.
US officials have objected to the burgeoning relations between Russia and the Gulf nations. But with Russia’s Urals crude trading at more than a 30% discount to Brent crude, the international benchmark, the arbitrage is particularly attractive.
Moscow has proven capable of navigating Western sanctions and price caps well enough to push oil exports above levels reached before it invaded Ukraine. In the first quarter, Russia’s seaborne crude exports hit 3.5 million barrels a day, compared to the 3.35 million barrels reached in the year-ago quarter.
Meanwhile, Kpler data shows that China and India now account for roughly 90% of Russia’s oil, with each country taking in 1.5 million barrels a day — more than enough to absorb the volumes no longer heading to European nations.
Watch: Harp Seal Cub Clings to Diver for Life As Ice Melts Around It
Liz O’Connell – April 17, 2023
Watch: Harp Seal Cub Clings to Diver for Life As Ice Melts Around It
It’s a miracle that she came along when she did.
Marine Biologist and Photojournalist Jennifer Hayes shared a recent experience she had with a Harp Seal Cub that is truly heartbreaking. The story, which was shared on the TikTok account @c4news, is just a small glimpse into what is happening around the world due to climate change.
Temperatures rising is affecting every living creature and on Quebec’s Magdalen Islands, the Harp Seals that migrate there to give birth are experiencing difficulties as the ice is melting rapidly. And Hayes’ interaction with a baby Harp Seal is a sad reality. Take a look.
Ugh, watching this video hurts our hearts. We can’t believe 2020 was the last time this area captured seals nursing on it. Changes need to be made so we can save not only these precious animals but all the other animals that are affected by the climate crisis.
“This needs to be shared. We must keep fighting for our home,” wrote @brazilwolf2000. If seeing these precious animals won’t light a fire under people’s butts to help protect the earth, we don’t know what will. @clementinesamples suggested, “These films need to be shown in Congress. Make them watch.” Anything to get the ball rolling on slowing or stopping climate change.
Another TikToker, @btsforlifexyz, commented, “They are so so cute we need cuteness in our world.” YES! Say it louder for the people in the back! @andrenava43 added, “Awwwww it’s so cute we need to do something about this. We don’t want them to die.” None of us want these beautiful animals to go extinct. Time to take action!
I’m a former Microsoft VP of HR. Here are the real reasons why layoffs are happening and how much longer they’ll last.
Chris Williams – April 17, 2023
Chris Williams is a former VP of HR at Microsoft and podcaster, consultant, and TikTok creator.
He explains that COVID made way for unprecedented opportunities for tech companies and many over-hired.
Williams also says many of today’s layoffs are cuts companies wished they could have done years ago.
I was Vice President of HR at Microsoft at the peak of the dot com bubble. I lived — like most of us — through the collapse of 2008. I’ve seen this movie before.
Here are three reasons why the tech industry is laying people off and why it’s not a sign that tech is collapsing.
1. COVID exuberance
Some industries like travel and entertainment were devastated when everyone was stuck at home. Tech was just the opposite. Everyone stuck at home on their computers was a gold mine. Companies saw unprecedented demand and opportunity. Some saw it as a sea change.
The biggest was Amazon who saw a huge shift to ecommerce as not just a blip but a change in buying habits. They hired breathlessly, doubling from 800,000 employees in 2019 to over 1.6 million in 2021. Alas, when things opened back up, we also returned to the brick and mortar stores. Amazon had over-hired and has needed to retreat.
The same was true for other companies in tech. Microsoft, Google, Meta, even Peloton all saw the pandemic as a sea change. Though it changed many things, the rebound has shown the changes to be less dramatic. They too have found themselves to have over-hired.
Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan called the dot com bubble “irrational exuberance.” COVID has been a bit like that too.
2. Shedding excess
The wakeup call that came with the rebound from COVID also caused many tech companies to examine their businesses for excess. Tech has been famous for harboring people and projects beyond their usefulness.
To their credit, many of these companies have shown loyalty to those who helped lead them in the creation of some amazing products. And they have chosen to stick with experimental projects long past the time when more traditional companies would have pulled the plug.
But when the COVID rebound happened, they used the opportunity to examine more critically some of these things well past their “sell by” date. Some of the layoffs we’ve seen have included long-time employees years from their most meaningful contributions. And projects years past their prime.
When choosing who to layoff, these companies deserve some credit for applying business results as a metric. Rather than simply saying “last in, first out.” But it has been painful to watch.
3. The optics
Some of the layoffs we’ve seen in tech are ones that the companies have probably wished they could do for years. Some of the above, for example.
But they didn’t want to be seen by Wall Street as companies at risk. They didn’t want to be the only one laying people off while other companies were still hiring or at least staying stable. The optics would have sent their stocks into a nosedive.
With the cover of many companies doing layoffs, there was safety in numbers. Companies who otherwise would have avoided layoffs have done them. Even notoriously cautious and stable Apple has used this to realign their retail organization and lay off a small number.
The cover offered by a broad retreat has made the layoffs more widespread than the pure economic metrics might justify.
The future is bright
We are in a season of layoffs, and it’s not clear we’ve seen the last or worst of it. I expect to see more coming through summer and into the fall.
That said, there is no reason to see the layoffs as a harbinger of doom and gloom for the tech world. There are almost too many rays of hope to count.
There is the revolution AI will bring. Microsoft is betting the company that every aspect of knowledge work will be impacted, and even that may be conservative. Machine learning and tools like ChatGPT will have profound impact across tech and beyond.
There is the amazing world of quantum computing that will completely reset our yardstick for measurement of computer performance. It will overhaul the worlds of cryptography, finance, modeling, genomics, and on and on.
Then there is the virtual world. Perhaps Meta is overselling the metaverse, but there is plenty of reason to be optimistic for augmented reality. The applications in industrial and other real-world mixed scenarios are endless. Even Apple is rumored to be putting serious effort here.
None of these even touch on the dramatic shifts in social media that lie ahead. The drama and changes around TikTok, Twitter, Facebook, and others provide plenty of room for growth.
And there is the huge backlog of digital transformation that is pending. So many old-line businesses have yet to convert to electronic workflows there is opportunity there for decades.
There are so many lights ahead in the future of tech you would be wise to wear shades.
‘He didn’t deserve to get shot’: Good Samaritan who helped Ralph Yarl found him bloody and motionless
Deon J. Hampton and Doha Madani – April 17, 2023
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Ralph Paul Yarl, the Black teenager who was shot by a homeowner after having rung the wrong doorbell, was motionless and covered in blood when James Lynch found him unconscious.
“I thought he was dead,” Lynch said Monday.
“No one deserves to lay there like that,” Lynch said. “He hasn’t even begun to live his life yet. He didn’t deserve to get shot.”
Lynch, 42, had just gotten out of the shower Thursday night and was getting ready for bed when he heard shouting outside. He went over to his kitchen window and saw a boy banging on the door of a nearby home.
“I heard somebody screaming, ‘Help, help, I’ve been shot!'” Lynch said, adding the shouting was out of place for the normally quiet neighborhood.
Lynch, a father of three, said he ran outside, jumped his fence and sprinted through a neighbor’s yard and across the street to another neighbor’s driveway to get to Yarl.
James Lynch, 42, who helped Ralph Yarl after he was shot. (Deon J. Hampton / NBC News)
His face and arms were covered in blood, and it looked as if Yarl had been shot in his head near an eye socket.
Lynch’s old Eagle Scout training kicked in when Yarl suddenly came to. Lynch told him, “I’m going to grab your hand really tight.” He checked Yarl’s wrist for a pulse before he asked him his name and age and where he went to school.
Yarl struggled to respond before he spelled his name. Another neighbor came over with towels to help stem the bleeding, and she and Lynch waited with Yarl until paramedics arrived.
Yarl, 16, had been trying to pick up his 11-year-old twin brothers from a friend’s home but had gone to the wrong street and house. His family’s attorneys, Lee Merritt and Ben Crump, said he was shot twice after he rang the doorbell.
Ralph Yarl. (via Ben Crump Law)
A warrant was issued for Andrew Lester, an 85-year-old white man, on charges of first-degree assault and armed criminal action, Clay County Prosecuting Attorney Zachary Thompson said Monday.
Merritt said the shot to Yarl’s head left him with a critical, traumatic brain injury. He was also shot in the upper arm, the attorneys said.
Faith Spoonmore, his aunt, said on a fundraising page that Yarl had gone to at least three homes before he received help.
Yarl, a student at Staley High School, loves science, takes mostly college-level courses and plays in the school band, according to North Kansas City Schools Superintendent Dan Clemens.
Protests erupted over the weekend in Kansas City, with some people saying Yarl’s race played a role in the situation.
Reflecting on Thursday night, Lynch said he doesn’t consider himself a hero.
“I didn’t do anything but hold a kid’s hand so he wouldn’t feel alone. He had just gotten shot twice; he had a hole in the side of his head,” Lynch said. “That kid is tougher than I am.”
Deon J. Hampton reported from Kansas City, Missouri. Doha Madani reported from New York City.
Japan Has Millions of Empty Houses. Want to Buy One for $25,000?
Tim Hornyak – April 17, 2023
The interior of Jaya Thursfield’s remodeled home in Ibaraki, Japan, March 12, 2023. (Andrew Faulk/The New York Times)
When Jaya Thursfield found a house he wanted to buy in Japan a few years ago, friends and family told him to forget it. The place wasn’t worth the trouble, they said. After all, it stood in a forest of shoulder-high weeds after being abandoned about seven years earlier — one of the millions of vacant houses known as akiya, Japanese for “empty house” — throughout the country.
But Thursfield, 46, an Australian software developer, wasn’t deterred. Through the overgrown garden, he could see it was special: The black roof tiles cascaded down to slightly curving eaves that were much higher off the ground than those of most houses. The entrance hall had its own gable tile roof. If the 2,700-square-foot house looked more like a Buddhist temple than a farmhouse, it’s because it was built by a temple architect in 1989.
Thursfield and his Japanese-born wife, Chihiro, had moved to Japan from London in 2017 with their two young sons and a dream of buying a home with a big yard. The plan was to purchase a vacant lot and build a house on it, but land is expensive in Japan and their budget wouldn’t allow it. So they turned to the growing supply of abandoned houses, which are cheaper and often come with more land.
They’re far from the only ones.
“We would never have been able to afford a house of this quality and size if it wasn’t an akiya,” Chihiro Thursfield, 49, said. “And while many Japanese don’t like used homes, foreigners see a house that is cheap and are more willing to reuse and renovate to their tastes and budget.”
As Japan’s population shrinks and more properties go unclaimed, an emerging segment of buyers, feeling less tethered to overcrowded cities, is seeking out rural architecture in need of some love. The most recent government data, from the 2018 Housing and Land survey, reported about 8.5 million akiya across the country — roughly 14% of the country’s housing stock — but observers say there are many more today. The Nomura Research Institute puts the number at more than 11 million, and predicts that akiya could exceed 30% of all houses in Japan by 2033.
The Thursfields’ house, which sits among the paddies in southern Ibaraki Prefecture, about 45 minutes from central Tokyo, had been deserted after the previous owner’s family refused to inherit it upon the owner’s death. The local municipality took over the property and put it up for auction with a 5 million yen ($38,000) minimum bid, but it failed to sell.
When it landed on the block again, Jaya Thursfield decided to try his luck. After giving it a quick inspection with an architect friend and finding no major issues despite the years of neglect, he nabbed the house for 3 million yen, about $23,000.
Houses in Japan typically decrease in value over time until they are worthless — the cultural legacy of post-World War II construction and shifting building codes — with only the land retaining value. Owners feel little incentive to maintain an aging house, and buyers often seek to demolish them and start fresh. But that can be expensive.
Others aim to preserve what’s there.
“There was no way we wanted to knock it down and build something new. It was too beautiful. So we decided to renovate instead,” Thursfield said. “I’ve always been someone who likes to jump in the deep end, take a few risks and learn new things, so I was confident that we would manage somehow.”
Since buying the farmhouse in 2019, the couple has spent about $150,000 on renovations, and there’s more to do. Thursfield has documented the project on YouTube, drawing more than 200,000 subscribers.
While the Thursfields’ house had been abandoned by the previous owner’s heirs, some homeowners die without ever naming an inheritor. Others leave their properties to relatives who refuse to sell family land out of respect for their elders, leaving the house to wither.
“In rural areas, there is a long history of ancestral owners of akiya living in the houses and on the land,” said Kazunobu Tsutsui, a professor of rural geography and economics at Tottori University who lives in a renovated akiya built more than a century ago. “Therefore, even after moving to the city, families will not give up their akiya easily.”
Now officials on both local and national levels are taking steps to give them a push.
“Poorly maintained akiya can mar the scenery as well as endanger residents’ lives and property if they collapse,” said Kazuhiro Nagao, a city official in Sakata, along the west coast, where heavy snowfall can damage unattended structures. “We’re partly subsidizing demolitions, collecting neighborhood association reports on akiya, and trying to make owners aware of the problem by holding briefings.”
Although the akiya problem has not had a direct impact on sales in urban markets, where high-rises continue to go up, the potential hazards to communities posed by empty houses are growing along with their numbers, according to Akira Daido, chief consultant at the Nomura Research Institute’s Consulting Division.
Daido pointed to a recent legal revision that allows local authorities to effectively raise the property taxes on neglected houses if the owners ignore municipal requests to maintain or demolish them. In another sign of rising concern, the government has approved a plan by the city of Kyoto, where inventory is tight yet some 15,000 houses sit empty, to tax the owners of those empty homes — a first in Japan.
Akiya are increasingly seen not just as a threat to suburban and rural markets but to the emotional health of the country, sparking family disputes over inherited properties. That, in turn, has led to a cottage industry of akiya consultants like Takamitsu Wada, CEO of Akiya Katsuyo, who acts as a counselor for squabbling relatives, often urging them to act before their properties become a lost cause.
“In many cases, the parents die without making clear their wishes regarding the family home, or they develop dementia and find it difficult to discuss these things,” Wada said. “In such cases, the children may feel guilty about getting rid of the family home, and may often choose to leave it unoccupied.”
Municipalities across Japan are also compiling listings of vacant houses for sale or rent. Known as “akiya banks,” they are often bare-bones web pages with a few underwhelming photos. Some have partnered with private-sector companies like At Home, which currently lists akiya in 658 of Japan’s 1,741 municipalities.
“Akiya banks are run by municipal office workers, the majority of which often do not have any experience in real estate,” said Matthew Ketchum, a Pittsburgh native and co-founder of Akiya & Inaka, a Tokyo-based real estate consultancy. “The existing solutions do not align with the needs of modern buyers and sellers.”
Ketchum’s firm is one of several that have sprung up to capitalize on the akiya glut, matching vacant homes with curious buyers. Akiya & Inaka’s listings include a 2,195-square-foot home built in 1983 in the suburb of Hachioji, Tokyo, with a small garden and a reception room featuring a raised tatami floor, tokonoma alcove and a rare wickerwork ceiling of woven cedar. The property is listed at 36 million yen, about $272,000.
“Every Japanese agent we talked to advised us to demolish this place,” said the house’s owner, Takahiro Okada, 85, a retired journalist. He and his wife, Reiko, 86, had been renting out the house but decided to sell after their tenant left last year. Their children weren’t interested in it, so the property lingered. Different owners might have torn it down and sold the land.
“If we all do that, we’re losing Japanese culture,” Reiko Okada said. “When seen from an international perspective and through the eyes of foreigners, Japanese things can have inherent uniqueness and value.”
Ketchum and his partner, Parker J. Allen, said they’re now fielding about five times the number of inquiries as when they began in 2020.
“At first, we were getting most of our inquiries from Japan residents, Australians and Singaporeans,” Ketchum said. “That has changed now, with the vast majority of our international clients being based in the U.S.”
Many clients have been spurred by the pandemic, which “definitely changed the mindset of people living in Japan regarding the idea of rural living,” Allen said. “The fact that property in the Japanese countryside is by and large undervalued and there are viable properties that are almost turnkey has finally dawned on these people.”
One person it did not dawn on recently is Alex Kerr, an author and Japanologist originally from Maryland, who became an akiya owner in 1973 when he acquired an abandoned country house (known as a minka) in the mountains of Shikoku, the smallest of Japan’s four main islands, for $1,800.
Named Chiiori, or House of the Flute, the thatched-roof aerie is about 300 years old. Inside, it’s a shadowy space of polished wood floorboards, a large sunken irori hearth and giant overhead rafters wreathed in smoke. Outside, mist rises from the Kumatani River in the gorge below.
Kerr, 70, is the first to admit that akiya can be money pits. He has spent decades and roughly $700,000 (“about half” of which came from a government grant, he said) maintaining it, and now rents it out as a guesthouse. It’s one of about 40 derelict Japanese properties he has restored over the years, all the while preaching the importance of conservation and rural revitalization to municipalities, companies and homeowners who may not know what makes their properties special.
“Many cultures have wooden architecture, but when it comes to the techniques of carpentry, Japan overwhelmingly leads the world in joinery and use of materials, as well as use of space and choreography,” said Kerr, whose books include the memoir “Lost Japan.” “When it comes to old minka houses, you have all that, set in a natural environment, and within the context of being cheap. In the Cotswolds, wooden houses cost a fortune, but in Japan they’re being thrown away.”
But he has taken note as real estate companies have begun to snap up habitable antique houses and market them to non-Japanese luxury buyers. He also pointed to young international buyers opening Airbnb rentals in erstwhile akiya and attending events like minka conferences.
Last year, British videographer Sam King and his wife, Nanami Sakurai, fled Tokyo with the help of an architect who introduced them to an unlisted akiya in the mountains of Otsuki, 50 miles west of Tokyo.
The couple wanted to be “closer to nature on our days off,” King, 35, said. “We also could not afford to buy so much as a shoebox in the city, so the thought of being able to get somewhere with a lot more space was very appealing so we can start a family and also own pets without any trouble.”
The house, in a depopulated community of mostly older residents, had been abandoned for roughly two years after the death of its owner. The price was 12 million yen, or about $88,000.
Set in a garden among plum and kiwi trees, the cottage has traditional tatami mats, shoji-paper and fusuma sliding doors, chunky wooden cabinets and tokonoma alcoves. The previous owner left behind a trove of personal possessions — paintings of Mount Fuji, rolls of Japanese calligraphy, old tape players, kites, guitars, skis, crockery. The house is about 50 years old and needs to be updated to modern standards. King estimated that the initial renovations, such as redoing the kitchen and bathroom, will cost $20,000 to $30,000. It’s well worth it to escape the city.
“We’d like to improve upon it quite a bit as it’s going to be our home, so we’ll probably end up spending over $100,000 in total on the project,” he said. “But we’ll hopefully end up with our dream home.”
Over the past two decades, Thomas has been reporting on required financial disclosures rental income from a family real estate company – but the company ceased operations in 2006.
By itself, the disclosure could be chalked up as an inadvertent error. The original company, named Ginger, Ltd., Partnership, was taken over by a similarly named company, Ginger Holdings, LLC.
Here’s what you need to know.
Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas has been under scrutiny for accepting lavish trips and other gifts from a Republican megadonor.
Clarence Thomas reported $270,000 to $750,000 from now-defunct company
The original company, a Nebraska real estate firm named Ginger, Ltd., Partnership, was created in the 1980s and shut down in 2006. In its place, a new company, Ginger Holdings, LLC, was created and assumed control of the previous company, according to The Post.
On Thomas’ recent annual disclosure forms, the Supreme Court justice reported income of between $50,000 and $100,000 from Ginger, Ltd., Partnership, the older, now-defunct company, The Post reported. The forms make no mention of the newer company, Ginger Holdings, LLC.
Since 2006, according to The Post, Thomas reported receiving $270,000 to $750,000 from the older company, where it was described on his forms as “rent.”
Associate Justice Clarence Thomas has been reporting rental income from a family real estate company that ceased operations more than 15 years ago, The Washington Post reported.
Thomas under scrutiny over relationship with GOP megadonor
Along with his wife, Virginia “Ginni” Thomas, the two went on multiple vacations funded by Crow over the past two decades, including trips on his superyacht and stays at his private resort. Thomas did not mention the travel on his disclosure forms.
In a statement this month, Thomas acknowledged that he and his wife joined Crow on a number of “family trips” during the more than a quarter century they have known them. He described the couple as “among our dearest friends.”
“Early in my tenure at the court, I sought guidance from my colleagues and others in the judiciary, and was advised that this sort of personal hospitality from close personal friends, who did not have business before the court, was not reportable,” Thomas said.
He has not responded to requests about the subsequent revelations.
Contributing: John Fritze
Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas and his wife, Ginni, leave funeral services for the late Justice Antonin Scalia in Washington in 2016.