sparr: (Default)

Here's an update on the state of various major situations affecting my life.


The Estate of Mind intentional community coliving project ended late last year. I tried to find a way for some subset of the community members to stick together in the dorm and pine house, operating on a smaller scale after the loss of the manor. Unfortunately all the ideas we pursued didn't pan out and almost everyone moved on to the next part of their life in the months after the fire.


There are two tenants still living in the dorm, Lisa Pepin and Matthew Carr. I am 9-11 months into the processes of evicting them, with 75% confidence I'll have them out 2-8 months from now. For context, the average length of an eviction in MA is 4-6 months without an appeal or delaying tactics. There are also up to half a dozen 2-6 week delays available, and an appeal automatically adds an additional 2+ months, both regardless of merit. They have declined offers including $5-30k in cash, moving expenses, and/or vehicles, from myself and from interested buyers of the property. They are collectively about $17k behind on what they owe me, about $8k of which they are already under court order to repay. I am currently legally required to provide utilities including heat to a 15 bedroom building for the two of them, as well as to continue maintaining the whole building including vacant bedrooms and private bathrooms. I am far behind on those costs, and they far exceed my income. Matthew's eviction has gotten to a judgment and past the reconsideration delays, and now we're going into the appeal process. With Lisa, I got a default judgment when she didn't show up for trial after giving the court short notice of a doctor's appointment, then she got another judge to undo that decision, and then when we finally got to trial a second time the judge noted that I didn't put her bedroom number (the one effectively destroyed by the fire) on the eviction notice so he was dismissing the case and I had to start all over. That second attempt is currently at the early stage where she gets ~45 days to prepare for a mandatory mediation session.


My attempts to sell the property have been stymied a few different ways. First by the manor fire and nature of the property. I was able to resolve that somewhat effectively by subdividing the property so the value proposition of each piece is much more straightforward, and this attracted multiple offers in a very short span once the new listings went up. Second, the presence of non-paying tenants who refuse to leave. I'm working on that in housing court as described above. Third…


A man named Lee Jundanian has brought a civil suit against me to force me to sell him the property and prevent me from selling it to anyone else. He's also demanding what might be hundreds of thousands of dollars in damages. We had a contract for him to buy the property, a sale that was due to close in August of 2024. He has refused to close ever since then, only responding with new attempts to renegotiate the contract. In the fall of 2024, his outstanding contract scared my agent away from accepting new offers or re-listing the property. Now his lawsuit means that no title insurance company will insure a sale, so no mortgage company will lend on it. While a pure cash buyer with a tolerance for legal risk could still buy part or all of the property, that is unlikely. I was a week from closing one sale and two months from closing another when he locked the property up, and those deals are now falling through. I am pursuing a few legal strategies that have some chance of unlocking the property in ~1 or ~9 months, but more likely I will need to endure 18+ months to the end of that trial before I can get a judge to terminate that contract. The faint bright spot at the end of that long tunnel is that I am counterclaiming against him for my own hundreds of thousands of dollars in damages, which increase every month the trial goes on. I may have to doubly break the corporate veil to effectively collect on a judgement of that size, which would take additional years.


The second time I found that one of the tenants (Lisa) had moved into someone else's bedroom without permission or even telling anyone, and with the local police declining to "get involved in a civil matter", I physically removed her from the room. This allowed her to get a restraining order against me. This has made it difficult for me to manage the property; now I'm having to hire people to do simple things in the dormitory, and next week I'm going to have to spend $400 to hire a cop to escort me in so I can meet a health inspector. I'm pretty sure the part of the domestic violence law that led to the order is a violation of the MA constitution; there's no way I have less right to defend my property from trespass just because I live there. I'm appealing that order, but the courts are letting her delay that process by months as well. There's a chance the order will expire before the whole appeal process finishes, but I'll still see it through regardless.


If you're local and want me out of town, the fastest way to make that happen would be to help resolve one of the problems described above so that I can leave sooner. If you just want excuses to keep complaining, feel free to sit back and enjoy the show.


I lost my job in September of last year. I was spending too much time dealing with problems at home, and when the sale failed to close in August I wasn't able to keep my commitments to put more time into work. It took about two months to get approved for unemployment benefits, during which time I also couldn't get approved for other public benefits, so that was a really tough time. I have about 10 weeks of unemployment benefits left now, so those tough times are on the horizon again. The effort and stress for everything going on has made it infeasible for me to take on new full time work, so I've mostly been pursuing gigs that haven't panned out. Fortunately I'm finally making some headway on interviews for a "real job", and there's a decent chance I'll find work in the next couple of months. It's going to take a very rapid transition to turn money from a new job into an ability to stop spending all my time on the problems here at home; fortunately just a couple of paychecks will be enough to retain an attorney for the civil lawsuit, and less than that would hire one for the evictions.


I've also been working on re-launching my CoDwell project, which was one of my efforts to acquire property for a large coliving intentional community before I succeeded with the est8. There's a lot more details on that on the project website at http://CoDwell.org. The short version is that I want to buy an old boarding school near Portland OR and have 5-10 intentional community groups with different focuses (permaculture, maker, coparent/homeschool, etc) all share the property and use its amenities. I'm going to be spending the next 6-12 months finding people and money to try that project idea again.


As soon as I can disentangle myself even partially from the property in MA, I'll be headed west. Maybe a short or long road trip. Maybe aiming for Portland or SF initially or for a while. Lots of variables there. Get in touch if you want updates on more personal matters like health, family, relationships, work, etc. Especially if have novel ideas related to anything above. Otherwise, I hope to have more time in the coming year to visit and catch up with friends and acquaintances.

sparr: (Default)

As I am winding down my time in Hawaii I want to put my intentions for the next year out into the world. Writing them down to share might help keep me on track, or inspire collaboration or advice, or …

Hawaii - July and August 2021

Barring some unlikely last resort options bearing fruit soon, my efforts to buy property in Hawaii are winding down. Over the next two months I’ll be trying to sell most of the extra stuff I brought or bought down here (solar panels, tractor, van, car, furniture, etc) and packing to ship a much smaller load back to the mainland. I expect to hand off the lease of the house in Kona to one of a few friends who have visited and are coming back and want to stay here long term. If that goes well, I’ll have a place to crash here should I visit again in the future, alone or with friends.

Los Angeles - Late August 2021

I recently purchased a large tour bus / coach near Los Angeles. When I return from Hawaii to California I’ll need to quickly deal with the initial logistics of that purchase and the future plans for it. I expect to fly into LA, spend a couple of days doing a rough sparse conversion on the bus (remove most seats, install kitchenette and bed), then register the vehicle as a housecar / motorhome and upgrade my license from a noncommercial C to a noncommercial B with 45ft housecar endorsement. What I really want is a commercial A, so I can carry passengers for money, but that has a mandatory 14 day waiting period and some other logistical requirements that I can’t squeeze into this step of the plan so it can wait a bit longer. With that taken care of, I’ll probably pick up a few friends who want to carpool north and set out for the bay area.

Bay Area - September to December 2021

Work wants me to be in Mountain View three days a week (Tue/Wed/Thu) starting September 1. I also want this, because remote onboarding hasn’t been going well, and I’d like to rack up some face time with my colleagues. Separately, I want to experience and take advantage of all the perks of tech-y office life while I have the chance.

I will be living in my bus somewhere near Mountain View during the week so I have a short walk or bike to the office, and spending weekends elsewhere, mostly in the bay area, with remote work in the daytime on Monday and Friday. In the new bus I’ll be a lot more graffiti-avoidant than in my previous buses, so overnight parking options will be more constrained, but I still plan to spend most weekends somewhere more interesting than the peninsula.

This will also be the time in which I pursue doing a “fancy” conversion on the new bus. All of my previous conversions were more function than form, with a lot of exposed plywood and 2x4s, square corners, and standard household or garage furniture bolted into place. This time I am aiming for something more like a commercial RV or party bus, the sort of result you’d expect if you hired professionals to do a mid-five-figures conversion job. Rounded corners, custom built and fit benches and cabinets, visually appealing upholstery and decoration, etc. A comet from the east coast has expressed interest in collaborating on the interior design. A well informed friend has recommended Maker Nexus in Sunnyvale as a good makerspace that I might use for my fabrication projects. I’ll be doing a lot of metal work, welding, carpentry, woodwork, upholstering, electrical wiring and electronic gadgets, etc.

Festivals/etc - September to December 2021

While I have a normal day job mid-week, remote work for long weekends, and a bus to live and play in taking shape, I plan to get back into the habit of going to big events regularly. This conveniently mostly coincides with a lot of big events returning from year-or-longer hiatus periods. I’ll also be trying to get out for smaller scale activities, but that requires less planning months in advance. I’ll be filling in my calendar as I learn about more events, more events announce their schedules, and I coordinate with friends, but here’s a tentative list of stuff I’m 50%+ likely to attend:

September 3-6 not-Burning-Man in the Black Rock Desert north of Reno (not in the bus!)

October 10-18 http://everywhenproject.org/ in the Mojave desert north of Los Angeles

Nov 12-15 http://darkodyssey.com/surrender/ (NSFW) in San Francisco

2022

Right now, things get fuzzier past the end of the year. However, by the start of the new year I hope to have a pretty good idea of how I plan to finish it.

Work has committed to making it possible for us to work from different offices, and my department has a presence in Atlanta and Boston, so I have some vague ideas of finishing the round-the-country road trip that I put on indefinite hold when I landed in San Francisco. Along the way I’d be spending some months or longer in one of those places, where I’ve lived before and have contacts and community to reconnect with.

There’s also the possibility of transitioning to full time remote work and going on the road for a while, in a new town or park every few days or weeks like I did back in 2015.

Either way, I plan to be taking what I’ve recently learned about shopping for real estate and coordinating people and money, then turning that into something big. I have an idea to pick the CoDwell name and concept back up, or to do something more commercial and profitable (like a b&b or campground or retreat center) and top-down with more specific goals and plans (rather than leaving it up to the participants to plan around their passions).

Beyond that… who knows?

sparr: (cellular automata)
After parting ways with our Burning Man campmates we did some touristing and ran some errands in Reno. As we were deciding which way to go from there, a friend invited us to join her at Lake Tahoe, so we headed that way. A late night of cleaning playa dust out of the ambulance led to us arriving in Tahoe after midnight, so we crashed in the ambulance and met my friend and her campmate the next morning.

We spent a couple of days around Lake Tahoe. There was hiking, time on the beach, and gazing at the sunset. We had some good food, some comfortable decompression time, and the novel experience of a timeshare presentation (for free breakfast and $100 gift card!). One fun hiking moment had us choosing between paths to "Cascade Falls <--" or "--> Desolation", giving me a strong Choose Your Own Adventure / RPG feeling. We opted to avoid Desolation :)

Leaving Lake Tahoe involved driving back through Reno, where we spent another night. I played some poker again. In the morning we proceeded up through northeast California. We stopped when crossing the Pacific Crest Trail for Emma to do some hiking, with an eye towards a much longer PCT hike in the future. At Cave Campground we walked through a lava tube which was really cool. For our overnight we made it up to Eagle's Nest RV Park, a place that had advertised free post-burn camping for burners and whose website said they had metered electrical hookups, but upon arrival they cajoled us out of twenty bucks for a flat rate hookup. I was too tired to argue, but probably won't stop there again.

Around this point in the trip Emma started to do some serious planning of the stops she wanted to make in Oregon and Washington. Unfortunately, we figured out that most of the places she wanted to see had schedules that didn't match up with our travels at all. Many of the places were only open one or two days a week!

On the way from CA to OR we stopped at the Tulelake County fair, which was fun and silly. There were prize winning baked goods that we weren't allowed to eat, prize winning livestock that Emma turned into a five year old in the presence of, and the most appalling religious anti-sex propaganda booth I've ever encountered in person. I took one of each of their flyers, which Emma couldn't even stand to read, and plan to post about that separately. We continued north up to Crater Lake National Park and made it just in time for the last guided hike of the season. Fun fact: the non-snow season at Crater Lake lasts about three months; they have often-impassably-deep snow cover from October through June. We hiked up to a great lookout, learned some things about trees and birds, took some photos, and then headed north out of the park.

Or, at least, we tried to head out of the park. Switching from all-8%-up-grades to all-8%-down-grades quickly illustrated that my fuel gauge was misbehaving at steep angles, and we ran out of gas on the way out of the park. Luckily for us, I carry an extra gallon of fuel for emergencies. Unluckily, the nearest gas station was 16 miles away, and the nearest we were sure would be open was 25 miles away, since it was pretty late at night. Both of those numbers are significantly higher than my average MPG. So, in goes the fuel. We get up to speed, and I see the most beautiful sight of the trip... two signs, "Altitude 4000ft" and "4% down grade next 8 miles". Terminal coasting velocity for the ambulance on a 4% grade is about 45MPH. Plenty fast enough that I wasn't afraid of being rear ended by an inattentive motorist. Now, the scariest part of the trip... Driving the ambulance at 45MPH without power steering. The brake cylinders hold plenty of fluid for a complete stop, so I wasn't afraid of failure to stop, but having direct mechanical control of the steering was nerve wracking. On the bright side, the dead zone in the middle of the wheel was gone. We made it to the 16 mile station with the idea that we would just overnight there if we needed to. It turned out to be unnecessary as it was a ski resort in the off season with a phone at the station for calling a maintenance person down to sell us gas. He seemed cheerful and happy for the break in the monotony. We set out for western Oregon (having decided nothing in eastern OR or WA excited either of us enough for a 6+ hour detour) and spent the night somewhere along the way.

The next day we drove up to Portland, where we both had touristy plans and a friend had invited us to use their driveway. Next journal entry will cover Portland and Seattle.

PS: This entry covers September 9-14, 2015.

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Clarence "Sparr" Risher

February 2025

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