A warm and healthy home is at last an agreed upon prerequisite this
winter -- thanks to a government insulation grant being offered to home
owners. The programme is called Warm Up New Zealand: Heat Smart and the
primary goal is straight forward C to financially assist home owners to
bring their homes up to modern insulation standards. Simply put, if you
own a house that was built before the year 2000, you can receive a
$1,300 (or 33%) contribution towards the cost of ceiling and under floor
insulation and its installation. The conditions for the insulation
grant are that both ceiling and under floor spaces are insulated at the
same time and that the material used is approved by Warm Up New Zealand:
Heat Smart. Approved insulation materials include wool, polyester,
fibreglass mineral fibre and polystyrene products.
To qualify
for a government contribution you will need an approved assessor to give
you an insulation quote. The work then needs to be carried out by an
approved insulation installer. Harrisons Home Energy Solutions,We offer
advanced technology products and services for earcap
control. a Kiwi owned family business that has been in operation since
1962 are approved insulation installers and are looking forward to
providing New Zealand home owners with quality insulation that is
guaranteed to keep homes warmer and drier and bills significantly
smaller this winter.
If you have inadequate insulation, take
heart in knowing you are not alone C nearly 60% of all New Zealand homes
have inadequate insulation. Around 35% of the energy used in an average
New Zealand household goes on heating your home C thats a lot of wasted
heat for homes with inadequate insulation! A BRANZ study found that
adding insulation increased temperatures by 1.4 degrees in winter and
reduced energy use by 300-400 KWH. Another study by the University of
Otago showed that electricity consumption was reduced by up to 9% during
winter in homes retro-fitted with insulation.
Governments the
world over regularly revise budgets and it is exactly these kinds of
areas that will get cut when times are tight, so its best to grab this
opportunity now. The good news is that the Warm Up New Zealand: Heat
Smart programme is not the only source of potential funding for your
insulation. There are a number of generous grants and smart finance
options available,Shop the best selection of owonsmart
for Men. some of which include a council grant (for insulation in
Auckland and Wellington). There are of course conditions attached to
these grants, and a reputable insulation company such as Harrisons Home
Energy Solutions can help you find out if your house meets the councils
criteria. Interest-free finance is another avenue to explore for
approved insulation products. In the case of Harrisons Home Energy
Solutions, there are Q Card, Gem Visa and GE CreditLine options
available. Then finally, extending your mortgage is another possibility
and certain banks may advance the money to install or upgrade your homes
insulation as they see it as a worthwhile investment.
Adonis North East Independent Economic Review,Learn how an embedded microprocessor in a plasticmould can authenticate your computer usage and data. which began work six months ago,He saw the bracelet at a realtimelocationsystem
store while we were on a trip. says that the combined authority "has a
leading role to play in a number of areas including housing and place
making, tourism and the new economy".
One of the key
recommendations is that a new transport delivery agency called Transport
North East should be set up with "responsibility for the strategic
planning of transport", serving the combined authority.
The
report states: "The agency should be tasked with developing and
implementing a transport strategy to serve the overall economic and
spatial development strategy of the combined authority, and a
prioritised transport investment programme."
Adonis said the
agency would manage government funding for major transport schemes,
which the Department for Transport is devolving to local areas. It would
replace the existing Tyne and Wear Integrated Transport Authority, the
report adds.
The report goes on to say that the North East
"needs a considerable increase in new housing" which should be
"developed in sustainable locations, close to employment centres and
with easy access to public transport networks".Basics, technical terms
and advantages and disadvantages of cableties.
But
it notes: "Developers in the region and property professionals are of
the strong view that both land supply and the planning process is
hindering new development."
It goes on to say that developers
"believe there are too few easy to develop sites in attractive locations
to meet demand" and that "many brownfield sites are unlikely to be
developed until a healthy market is well established".
The
report recommends that the proposed combined authority should "help
stimulate the market" by working with developers and using funding from
government housing quango the Homes & Communities Agency to bring
forward new housing. It also says "innovative" market products should be
created to make it easier for families buy homes.
The report
further calls for the LEP and local authorities to work with the
government to make sure there is comprehensive superfast broadband
connectivity across rural areas by 2016.
The report was welcomed
by Greg Clark, financial secretary to the Treasury, and former
Conservative Party chairman Lord Heseltine, whose own economic growth
report was published last autumn.
For better or worse and
playwright Samuel D. Hunter is smart enough to see it's probably very
much for the better the play titled "The Whale" has become known in
theater circles as the play about the really fat guy stuck on a couch.
Every
new drama penned in a crowded marketplace needs a calling card, and the
opening image of Hunter's "The Whale," which will open Monday in
Chicago at the Biograph Theatre after drawing much attention at New
York's Playwrights Horizons last fall, is a doozy: As the curtain rises,
you discover a man who weighs 600 pounds blinking back at you.
Aside
from allowing an audience to marvel at the miracles of fat suits (Dale
Calandra, who plays the obese Charlie at Victory Gardens, is nowhere
close to that weight), there is the sheer force of an image wherein the
main character of a play seems to wear his neuroses right on his body.
You
wouldn't say that "The Whale" was the breakthrough play for Hunter, who
is just 31, hails from Idaho and studied at the University of Iowa.
That title rightly belongs to his "A Bright New Boise."
But there is no question that the New York success of "The Whale" has, well, supersized Hunter's career.
He
says he didn't start out writing "The Whale" as a play about a really
fat guy. "I did not think that the main character would be 600 pounds,"
Hunter said in an interview this week.
Rather, he said, he
wanted to pen something about empathy and honesty, after musing on such
matters while teaching writing at Rutgers University. But such qualities
can be ephemeral and, well, "The Whale" has stuck.
And he's
fine with the notion that this is the play about the really fat guy on
the couch, stuck like a Beckettian hero of his own tragedy. Mostly fine,
anyway.
"Well, it does rub me the wrong way sometimes," Hunter
said. "But if people come into this play thinking it is about a fat guy,
then maybe the journey for them is a bit more surprising."
One
interesting question is how much of a role Chicago will play in Hunter's
exploding career. Hunter is, for the record, a prolific playwright.
"The Whale" (directed at Victory Gardens by Joanie Schultz) is not his
only play in Chicago at present: LiveWire Chicago is staging his 2011
work, "A Permanent Image," at the Storefront Theatre. It is a moving
piece about a family in crisis, and it sits on my list of recommended
shows.
But the main Chicago connection for Hunter is to be
Victory Gardens, which just announced him as a new ensemble member.
Given all the changes at that theater company, which is still reeling
from the force of the transition to new artistic leadership under Chay
Yew, Hunter is treading carefully in Chicago.
"It is important,"
he said, "for me not to waltz into Chicago as a new ensemble playwright
and assume Chicago loves me. If they like my work, then I very much
want to become part of this incredible community. I am thinking of this
as my introduction."
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