Saturday, May 21, 2016

Weekly Reflection #3

Weekly Reflection

     As senior project came to a close I had many different feelings running through my mind, mostly being worried about the work I was doing and a lot of relief when I managed to finish it. My senior project went a lot different then I initially expected it to go, I planned on being a typical intern where I would work with some different people within the company with whatever they needed, however it turned out I would be mostly independent with my work which greatly changed my goals. 
     The past week was perhaps my most difficult, the work I am doing is very vague and to determine whether or not I was very productive each day is sometimes challenging. Throughout the week I tried to develop an idea of what I wanted to come out of from this internship and it is going to very challenging to take and show anything tangible during this review period. My mind was set on creating a website for Franklin Falls Fitness Meetup but after designing a preliminary one through Wordpress I found out a lot of my work had to be altered due to a different direction that Todd wanted to go with the website. The website will now be through Meetup and my job for that is really minimal in the actually production but I will assist in the plan which is what I have been creating for the past week. 
     I have learned some about non-profit organizations and the struggles that they face through Todd but my other goals changed greatly. I would say my goals would have been altered to learning the foundation of what a transition town really is, which I would say I achieved through my readings and the Environmental Literature class I took this spring. The third goal changed to cooperatively working within a company, which I think I achieved in some aspects, but I also think that due to Todd's busy schedule I lost some opportunities to help.

Friday, May 20, 2016

May 20th

May 20th

     Today, the last day of senior project, I finalized all of my outlines and created a outline for the transformation of Franklin. There was definitely a lot of challenges creating this outline because applying everything I learned is a lot harder than I expected it to be. I plan on taking the rest of my weekend to touch up the outline for both the website and the city of Franklin. I know this was the last day but there will still be a little work to do this weekend.
Total Hours Worked Today: 8-2
Total Hours Worked: 94 1/2

Thursday, May 19, 2016

May 19th

May 19th

     The hardest part about everyday is deciding what I will start working on, due to that all my research is all correlated with each other it makes it difficult to decide what to do each day. I decided today that I would finalize all of my outlines and start putting together a plan/outline on how Franklin could become a transition town. This is a very difficult process because I have to take into account what the books are telling me to do but also the current situation of Franklin. Throughout the course of the day I struggled to put together and outline but I am hopeful I will be completed with a rough one tomorrow to present to Todd on Monday at our final meeting.
Total Hours Worked Today: 8-2
Total Hours Worked: 88 1/2

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

May 18th

May 18th

     Today was a very productive day, I woke up and began planning on creating a website but I quickly learned all the steps needed in order to create a website. I spent the morning hours conducting research on other fitness meetup websites and how to go about creating your own website. I found a lot of useful websites with strategies towards making a website and after looking into those websites I began making a plan for this website. I then spent the rest of the afternoon finishing Voluntary Simplicity by Duane Elgin and started to create an outline from the reading. Tomorrow I hope to finish the outline for both the book and the website for I can find a time to show Todd what I have done.
Total Hours Worked Today: 9-3
Total Hours: 82 1/2

Tuesday, May 17, 2016

May 17th

May 17th

     Today I began the process of outlining the Franklin Falls Fitness Meetup website. I began the day by looking at other fitness groups around the area and what their websites looked like, I began creating an overview of the sites and what it would entail. Todd made it clear that the initial use of the website will be for kayaking, bicycling, running, mountain biking, snow shoeing and cross country skiing. I then finished the day by looking at the list of trails he gave me on google maps, I am working on creating interactive maps that show each trail.
Here is a list of trails he gave me
Winnipesaukee River Trail
Franklin Falls Dam Site
Northern Rail Trail
VMRA 
Page Hill Trails
NH Heritage Trail
WOW Trail
Highland Mountain Bike Park
Spaulding Woods
Ahern Park (Laconia)
Ramblin Vewe

Hours Worked Today: 8-2
Total Hours Worked: 76 1/2

May 16th

May 16th

     Today proved to be a very productive day, I began the day with finalizing all of my outlines for I could present them to Todd at our meeting today. Todd moved our meeting from 2 to 4 which gave me more time to prepare questions and get my work more organized. During the meeting we spoke about what the website would entail. The website would be through Meetup which is website that allows events to be made and seen by the public. The meeting gave me the insight I needed to finish the website and be able to leave a beneficial program for the city of Franklin.
Hours Worked Today: 9-2 then 330-430 (6)
Total Hours Worked: 70 1/2

Saturday, May 14, 2016

Weekly Reflection #2

Weekly Reflection #2

     Throughout the course of the week I spent the majority of my time diving into independent research. The past week and a half I have been learning about how a small close knit community is going to an inevitable outcome due to our current economical development. Through reading books like The Transition Handbook, Small is Beautiful and parts of The Creature from Jekyll Island and Voluntary Simplicity. The readings have all had very similar ideas which has made for a very repetitive week for myself, however I am learning concepts throughout each book that are applicable to the city of Franklin and the hopeful transition to become a transition town. As I am suppose to meet with Todd this Monday to discuss what I have worked on and how to develop a website for PermaCity Life. 
      The website I will designing will be called Franklin Falls Fitness Meet-up, however I am encountering problems with finding actual activities that occur within the city. Below is a list of possible acitivities that I found to participate in, however many of them do not have a formal group that meets.

Franklin Activities and Their Locations
Zumba @ Bessie Rowell Community Center - Tuesdays 5:15-6 Thursdays 4:15-5:00 and Saturday 8:30-9:15
Martial Arts @ Bessie Rowell Community Center - Tuesdays and Thursdays 
Kids (8-12) @ 6:15-7:00 
Adults (13+) @ 7:00-8:00
Open Gym and Game Room @ Bessie Rowell Community Center - 5th-12th grade Monday thru Friday 2:30-3:30 (Game room stays open until 3:45)

Recreation and Activities
Municipal Parks:  Odell Park

Golf Courses:  Mojolaki Country Club

Swimming: Webster Lake Beaches

Tennis Courts:  Odell Park

Ice Skating Rink:  Area Ponds

Performing Arts Facilities:  Franklin Opera House

Tourist Attractions:  Daniel Webster Birthplace;  Winnipesaukee River Trail

Youth Organizations:  Scouts;  Recreation Center

Youth Sports: Hockey;  Baseball;  Soccer;  Football;  Basketball

Outdoor Activities:  Camping; Boating; Canoeing; Hunting; Biking; Snowmobiling; Skiing

Ski Area:  Veteran's Memorial Ski Area


Through talking with Todd I hope to shed more light on what this website will entail. I spoke with Jennifer White at a meeting this week about possible website ideas, which we spoke of sites like Wordpress, Meetup and Square Space. This week has had challenges with creating a visible piece of work that I can take away from this project but at the same time I have learned a lot about the company and the operations needed to approach the revitalization of Franklin.

Friday, May 13, 2016

May 13th

May 13th
     Today I woke up with the intention to attend a meeting with Todd Workman at Toad Hall around 2 in the afternoon, however that was canceled due to the busy schedule that he has to fulfill. This resulted in the morning hours of my day being spent reading The Creature From Jekyll Island which is a very good book which dives into investigating the history of our economy and how the government produces money. This has been my favorite book so far because it reads more like a story rather than a manual. After the morning hours I met with Patrick Rulon-Miller and Keith Barrett to go out for lunch, which was for the Marion-Hatt Scholarship I received. After lunch I went back to reading for a few more hours to meet my daily requirements of working. 
Total Hours Worked Today: 6
Total Hours: 64 1/2

Thursday, May 12, 2016

May 12th

May 12th

     Today started with the organizing of the information that I gathered from yesterdays meeting, the meeting was a basic overview of how the group wanted to proceed with the maker space that would be created in Franklin. It was difficult for me to determine what to take away from that but if I found myself with nothing to do during the day I could dive into researching these four topics; local maker spaces and what they have for equipment and membership, businesses that will supply equipment for these areas, grants for the project and what kinds of people will be attracted to this location. The rest of the day was spent researching and reading more of the books that Todd assigned to me, the books are getting repetitive because they all share a similar idea. Tomorrow I hope to meet with Todd in the afternoon to get more guidance on where to go from here.
Total Hours Today: 9-3 (6)
Total Hours: 59 1/2

Wednesday, May 11, 2016

May 11th

May 11th

     Today I began around 9 in the morning working on potential website ideas for PermaCity Life and their Franklin Falls Fitness Meet-up Program. I spent the majority of the morning researching productive and easy ways to create a website that would become easy for anyone to manage once I depart. I worked through the morning and took a break at 1. Then I went into Proctor to meet with a group of people working with PermaCity Life in some fashion, the meeting went from 3-5 and we showed our maker spaces at Proctor and we discuss what the possible maker space in Franklin would entail. 





We spoke with members of PermaCity Life, manager of Watts Regulator in Franklin, a Franklin Tech teacher as well as Jen White from Colby-Sawyer who runs their Sustainability studies program. After this meeting I went home and tried to organize my notes and get ready for tomorrow, I hope to meet with Todd on Friday.
Total Hours Today: 6
Total Hours: 53 1/2





















Tuesday, May 10, 2016

May 10th

May 10th

     Today I started working on gathering information to develop a plan to introduce Franklin on becoming a Transition Town, as well as reading Small is Beautiful to reiterate why a closed economic system within communities is inevitable in the near future. This lasted for the majority of the morning hours and upon gathering some information I tried to contact Todd but I haven't heard from him for a day or two. I spent the afternoon reading and researching fiat money, which will all tie into my project at the end. Tomorrow I hope to contact Todd to meet up with him and gain more structure to the website I will be starting in the near future.
Hours Worked Today: 8-12 then 2-5
Total Hours Worked: 47 1/2

Monday, May 9, 2016

May 9th

May 9th

     Today I woke up unsure of what I wanted to tackle for the day, after contemplation during breakfast I decided that my time would be best spent researching activities that occur in Franklin which would serve as key information for my website and slowly being reading Small is Beautiful. Through researching for a couple of hours I found much less information of community based activities that I was hoping for, which makes it very hard to create a website on. After browsing the web for a few hours I turned to Small is Beautiful and read the first few chapters. Tomorrow I hope to get in touch with Todd on where to go from the website perspective as well as read more of my current book.
Total Hours Today: 9-3 (6 Hours)
Total Hours: 40 1/2 hours

Here are my notes regarding activities in Franklin.

Franklin Activities and Their Locations
Zumba @ Bessie Rowell Community Center - Tuesdays 5:15-6 Thursdays 4:15-5:00 and Saturday 8:30-9:15
Martial Arts @ Bessie Rowell Community Center - Tuesdays and Thursdays 
Kids (8-12) @ 6:15-7:00 
Adults (13+) @ 7:00-8:00
Open Gym and Game Room @ Bessie Rowell Community Center - 5th-12th grade Monday thru Friday 2:30-3:30 (Game room stays open until 3:45)


Recreation and Activities
Municipal Parks:  Odell Park

Golf Courses:  Mojolaki Country Club

Swimming: Webster Lake Beaches

Tennis Courts:  Odell Park

Ice Skating Rink:  Area Ponds

Performing Arts Facilities:  Franklin Opera House

Tourist Attractions:  Daniel Webster Birthplace;  Winnipesaukee River Trail

Youth Organizations:  Scouts;  Recreation Center

Youth Sports: Hockey;  Baseball;  Soccer;  Football;  Basketball

Outdoor Activities:  Camping; Boating; Canoeing; Hunting; Biking; Snowmobiling; Skiing

Ski Area:  Veteran's Memorial Ski Area

Sunday, May 8, 2016

Weekly Reflection #1

Weekly Reflection #1

     The first week of my senior project offered a lot of time to reflect on what goes into running a non-profit company. Throughout reading The Transition Handbook by Rob Hopkins I was able to take notes on the challenges and techniques of starting a transition town. The first week consisted of a meeting with Todd where we dove into the history of Franklin and the problems with our current economic system. I enjoyed reading books that were applicable to the work I was doing, which made the reading go by much faster and I learned a lot from that. On Friday I was able to finish my 11 page outline of The Transition Handbook and send the final product to Todd. The internship has definitely gone in a different direction than expected, I was planning on spending more time in the office but with the project I was given I was expected to do a lot of the work at my house. This consisted of me transforming my bedroom into more of an office-like area to spend my days reading and browsing the internet to learn more about the history of money and the different economies around the world that have failed.
     Todd suspected that I would spend about half of my time doing research and the other half working on the website that I will be making for Franklin. The website will be a Franklin Falls Fitness Meet-up organization where we will develop and locate all fitness and activity groups that occur in Franklin. Prior to starting the creation of the website I must learn what program they used to create PermaCity Life because when I will no longer be able to maintain it, it will serve to be easier if each are on the same program. This website will be a very challenging aspect due to research of local social groups that engage in activities. I spoke with Gregor about the subject and he said that the social part is the most intriguing but also the most challenging. The social aspect of the project will be hard to initially develop but once the ball gets rolling it will only become easier. Throughout the weekend I began reading Small is Beautiful by EF Schumacher and hope to finish it within a few days. I am unsure when my next meeting with Tom is going to be but I will keep the blog nice and updated.
Thanks
Ri

Here are some of my notes from the week.
Chapter 4: Why Small is Inevitable 
  • Re-localization is needed in our society today, and it is inevitable. Currently we are depending on alternative energy to solve the problems in the near future. 
        • Re-localization is the process of creating/producing as much as possible at a local level, while closing economic connections that are no longer needed within the community. 
              • “create local economies capable of supporting us in a post-peak world.”
  • Re-localization is inevitable due to the peak oil problem that we will be facing, alternative energy or oil will become so expensive that many will no be able to afford the commodity of transportation. Franklin is set up in a way where downtown can easily walk to get what they need. 
  • Aim for zero-carbon
  • “The current economy is rapidly dismantling what resilience remains, under the guise of economic globalization and growth.” A reversal of globalization will help re-localization efforts in the developing world.

Part Two: The Heart - Why having a Positive Vision is crucial
  • Similar to the introduction, we need to talk about the possibilities rather than the probabilities because if we look towards the negatives, they often appear 
  • "a future of increased resilience, more localized economies and greatly reduced energy consumption", "painting a picture so enticing that people instinctively feel drawn towards it.”

Chapter 5: How peak oil and climate change affect us: "Post-petroleum stress disorder”
  • In this chapter Rob summarizes the results that may occur when we are in the post-petroleum age.
1.  Clammy palms or nausea and mild palpitations
2.  A sense of bewilderment and unreality
3.  An irrational grasping at unfeasible solutions (especially technological)
4.  Fear
5. Outbreaks of nihilism and/or survivalism
6.  Denial
7. Exuberant optimism
8. The "I always told you so" syndrome
  • Nihilism - The rejection of all religious and moral principles, often in the belief that life is meaningless. (Google)

Chapter 6:  Understanding the psychology of change
  • Throughout this chapter he is referencing the Stages of Change model
1. Pre-Contemplation: Having the awareness that we have to change, we currently depend on cheap oil to fuel our civilization.
2. Contemplation: The increasing of pros for change and the decreasing of cons.
3. Preparation: Commitment and Planning.
4. Action: Implementing and revising the plan.
5. Maintenance: Integrating chance into lifestyle.
6. Relapse and Recycling: The point where you return to contemplation stage.

  • “addictions refer to stuck patterns of behavior that can be difficult to change even when we know they're causing harm." "in dependent use, someone may either block out information that suggests their favored substance is harmful, or they may continue using it”
  • There are three main principles
1. Pay attention to stages of change. Address issues of motivation, resistance, and ambivalence in Heart and Soul groups.
2. Create spaces for people to feel heard in making their own arguments for change. 
- Motivational Interviewing “providing a listening space where someone can voice both their concerns and their resistances, ambivalence is brought into view where it can be dealt with.”
3. If a change seems too difficult, have a preparation stage for training ourselves.
- Having a preparation stage allows for a better response when faced with stress/challenges. 
- Psychological training: cultivate positive visions and find ways of dealing with inner ‘dreamblockers’, deal with fear, cynicism, disbelief.
  • FRAMES Model (These are not in any chronological order)
    • Feedback: An assessment of the problem, raise possible consequences but not to a point where it discourages change.
    • Responsibility: Personal responsibility for change rather, opposed to telling people what to do.
    • Advice: Tips on how to change your lifestyle as well as involving community-scale strategies for energy descent.
    • Menu of Options: Explore the different options of energy descent.
    • Empathy: A type of counseling that is supportive, friendly, empathetic etc of the changes that are occurring within your household and the community. 
    • Self-efficacy: Optimism in a community that as a whole they can do it.









Friday, May 6, 2016

May 6th

May 6th

     Today was a rather productive day, I woke up nice and early at 7:30am and got to work around 8. I spent the majority of the day finalizing the outline for The Transition Handbook and was finally able to email the work that I have done to Todd. It felt nice to be able to have something to show Todd after a week of reading, I hope that the next books will be as enjoyable as the last. 
     The next week I hope to finish some more reading as well as get to work on my website that I will eventually have to make.
Hours Worked Today: 8-2 (6 Hours)
Total Hours: 34 1/2 Hours

Thursday, May 5, 2016

May 5th

May 5th

     Today I woke up around 8 o'clock and decided to get a later start and began working at 9. Today turned out to be a fairly productive day, I finished The Transition Handbook by Rob Hopkins and began to organize my notes from the reading. I currently am working/ thinking of how the book will translate into the town of Franklin and that is what I plan on spending the majority of tomorrow doing. Tomorrow I will also start Small is Beautiful by Diane Schumacher and give Todd an update of where I currently am.
Total Hours Worked Today: 9-3 (6 Hours)
Total Hours: 28 1/2 hours

Contact me at andersonri@proctoracademy.org if you would like to see more of my notes or learn more about the project.

Wednesday, May 4, 2016

May 4th

May 4th 

     9:40 PM
     Today proved to be a good day to sit inside and spend the majority of it reading The Transition Handbook by Rob Hopkins. Through the better part of the morning I was slowly working my way through each chapter, the difficult part about reading this is applying how I can see Franklin taking on some of these roles. The other difficult part is determining which information is really important to me as a reader, I spend a lot of my time taking notes and at the end of each day I organize them into what I find useful for the task I have ahead. Today after reading for the majority of my day I took a much needed break to go watch the home games at Proctor. 
     Tomorrow I hope to finish up the last few chapters of The Transition Handbook and start developing a more clear plan/design to present to Todd on how we can positively change Franklin to become a transition town. I am sorry for the lack of photos but reading for the majority of my days does not particularly present the best opportunity for them. I will leave a little bit of my notes each blog, but if you would like to see more of them feel free to email me andersonri@proctoracademy.org.
Hours Today: 8-2
Total Hours 22 1/2

The Transition Handbook by Rob Hopkins
Introduction - Tantalizing Glimpses of Resilience 
  • Resilience: The ability of a system, from individuals to whole economies, to hold together and maintain their ability to function in the face of change and shocks from the outside. 
  • Resilience within a culture: A culture based on its ability to function indefinitely and to live within its limits, and able to thrive for having done so.
        • Building local resilience will be key in the future, due to the inevitable fact that our oil supply will be decreasing and become more expensive. An example of this is the Hunza Valley People, they lived within their limits and could function indefinitely.
        • “Hunza is quite simply the most beautiful, tranquil, happy and abundant place I have ever visited, before or since.”
  • The achilles heel of our civilization is the degree to which we are dependent on oil.
        • “The only notion of economic globalization was only made possible due to cheap liquid fossil fuels. The movement towards more localized energy-efficient and productive living arrangements is not a choice; it is an inevitable direction for humanity.”
  • Maybe we are approaching everything the wrong way, we always talk about probabilities rather than possibilities. When Rob spoke about the Totnes Pounds people were happy, but when approached with the issue of peak oil and climate change they would become horrified, but that is basically what they are staring at. 
        • "sense of elation, rather than the guilt, anger and horror that most campaigning involves.”

Chapter 1 Peak Oil and Climate Change - The two great oversights of our time
  • The era of cheap liquid oil is rapidly coming to an end. Peak oil is not about when we use the last drop of oil but rather when from each year on there will be less and less oil. As more countries past their peak oil the closer we get to this point. 
    • Peak Oil - The hypothetical point in time when the global production of oil reaches its maximum rate, after which production will gradually decline.
  • One gallon of oil contains the equivalent of about 98 tons of the original surface-forming, alga matter, distilled over millennia, and which had itself collected enormous amounts of solar energy on the waves of the prehistoric ocean.
  • Greenhouse gases (CO2) must have a drastic cut to reduce climate change.
  • Rob then talks about how climate change and peak oil are so closely related to each other.
    • Due to the rising demands of oil the result is the increase price of oil which will eventually pull the economy into recession, which makes the likelihood of funding climate change mitigation to therefore decrease as well. This also increases the likelihood of using other greenhouse gases such as coal, tar sands, biodiesel etc. However the positive aspect of this will be that any change that happens to one, will also happen to the other in some fashion. 

Tuesday, May 3, 2016

May 3rd

May 3rd

     8:30 PM
     Yesterdays meeting with Todd Workman resulted in my schedule to be slightly changed, I would work from home the majority of days on the project that he gave me. The first step to creating an outline for Franklin to be considered a "Transition Town" was to dive into research first thing in the morning. I woke up at 8:30 and had a light breakfast and quickly jumped into research. I spent the better part of the morning reading The Transition Town by Rob Hopkins and took notes on the reading. The goal after finishing the book will be to develop a model and plan for Franklin to become a transition town, the main points I gathered from the reading was the importance in a sense of community and resilience. 



     The image above is taken in Franklin, New Hampshire where a potential community garden, running trail, kayaking spot and picnic area for the community. This image was taken on Earth day but the terraced garden idea came up today during my reading. 
     After a brief lunch I spent the rest of my afternoon looking into articles that talked about fiat money and watched a TED Talk by Rob Hopkins on the Transition to a World without Oil. The day finished with myself organizing my notes into a probable ideas and important information that was gathered throughout the day. Tomorrow I hope to push further into The Transition Town start to develop an idea on how Franklin could become a transition town.
Today I worked from 9-5.
Total Hours: 16 1/2 hours

Below are some of the notes I took today.

The Transition Handbook by Rob Hopkins

Introduction
1. Concept of resilience, the ability of a system, from individuals to whole economies, to hold together and maintain their ability to function in the face of change and shocks from the outside. 
2. The book argues that while during our efforts to drastically cut carbon emissions we must be equal effort into becoming resilient. 
3. When he visited the Hunza Valley in Northern Pakistan which had been completely cut off from the outside world prior to the highway in 1978 “If on Earth there is a garden of bliss, it is this, it is this.”
4. Quote from Rob “Hunza is quite simply the most beautiful, tranquil, happy and abundant place I have ever visited, before or since.” 

The idea of the Hunza Valley People
They were surrounded by a society that is enveloped in technology but they have a system where everything is being reused. All the waste, including human waste, was carefully composted and returned to the land. Terraces were irrigated through a network of channels that brought water from the glacier to them. (Relates to what we were doing during the Earth Day activity)

If they were to somehow be cut off from the world and the global economy’s highways with trucks packed with goods they would have been fine. The people were resilient, happy, healthy, and with a strong sense of community. 

How he defines resilience: a culture based on its ability to function indefinitely and to live within its limits, and able to thrive for having done so.

Our achilles heels is basically our oil dependency, the only notion of economic globalization was only made possible due to cheap liquid fossil fuels. The movement towards more localized energy-efficient and productive living arrangements is not a choice; it is an inevitable direction for humanity. 

We are surrounded by an economy that thinks everlasting economic growth is possible, that the next generation will always be wealthier than the last. How does this even make remote sense?
We need to become a new more nourishing world, rather than taking whatever we can get while we are here. 

Totnes pound example - They are testing the idea of currency that is based purely in one town, which will allow the circulation of money to stay in the town. 

Maybe we are approaching everything the wrong way, we always talk about probabilities rather than possibilities. When Rob spoke about the Totnes Pounds people were happy, but when approached with the issue of peak oil and climate change they would become horrified, but that is basically what they are staring at. 

The end of cheap oil is rapidly coming upon us.

Chapter 1 Peak Oil and Climate Change - The two great oversights of our time
Everything around you, or most everything relies on cheap oil to produce and/or transport it

One gallon of oil contains the equivalent of about 98 tons of the original surface-forming, alga matter, distilled over millennia, and which had itself collected enormous amounts of solar energy on the waves of the prehistoric ocean.

Oil makes us stronger and faster

The main idea to take away from this chapter - The most important moment for us will not be when we use the last drop of oil but when we past our peak, knowing that each year there will be less and less oil to use. We can see the possibility of life without this oil looming before us.








Monday, May 2, 2016

May 2nd 2016

May 2nd

7:30 PM
     Today offered a different plan than what was expected, after talking with Todd Workman on Saturday, discussing our plans, we decided to have a meeting at 10 o'clock at Toad Hall today. The meeting consisted of a formal explanation on the history of Franklin and the money system throughout all the governments, which Todd then tied into the project that he was assigning me. The project would consist of diving into the history of communities and how a sense of community is formed, during this conversation I was taking notes and this is what I managed to grasp from the conversation.

Franklin Falls

What I need to do…
Read these Books
  1. Transition Handbook by Rob Hopkins
  2. Small is Beautiful by EF Schumacher (1973)
  3. Voluntary Simplicity by Dwayne Elgin
  4. The Creature of Jekyll Island 
Create an individual outline for all of these books and then create one on how they all tie together and can benefit the community of Franklin.

Creating a…
Short research paper on how Franklin could become a transition town via The Transition Handbook
Construct a website for Franklin Falls Fitness Meet Up 
Why?
To develop a sense of community 
How do people in this modern age move into a town and meet people? This age is on a foundation of technology that connects us but we have never been more individualized as a species. In the 17 and 1800s towns all over the world were self-sufficient and now if Franklin were to loose supply of one thing all of a sudden they would face major problems. How could technology advance so much but force towns away from being self-sufficient? That this the goal we are striving for.
How?
Research other fitness clubs in Franklin and create a map for the website

Things to look at…
The Gold Standard and how Nixon removed that from our government system
Federal Home Loan Bank of Boston
Fraction Reserve Banking System
Learn about the history of money and collapses (Currency Failing)
Such as the Confederate Bill
Germany after WWII
Berkshires - Uses a community based monetary value - an alternative currency, money stays in the community and creates a sense of community.

Goal
Learn how to become a better community, one simple little way on how to foster a sense of community. 

Without people you will not accomplish anything.

The books that I will be reading and the website that I will be making can be done at my house and Todd estimated I would spend about half of my time doing research and the other half using that to make a model for the city of Franklin. Today I worked from 10-630, which consisted of visiting libraries searching for the books I need to read and rearranging my room into a more office-like space.

Ri