Wen't ahead and ran the numbers on a 8' utility trailer build. Not included is the lumber for the flooring, the diagram included wood on the side walls of the trailer but that is rediculous. I'm all about woodgrain, but wood panel siding on a trailer just looks like trash. If we are going to make a killing selling trailers to immigrants on Offerup, they at least have to look like they are legit enough to use for their landscaping company. Plus, would #youguys allow wood panel trailers in your neighborhoods to blow the leaves off of your driveways?
Knowing #youguys I already know the answer.
Historically Inflation Safe Business
If we study history we learn that in times of inflation and hyperinflation, we learn that the name of the game is sourcing. Businesses that rely less on imported materials do better than ones that do. Also re selling is another winner in times of hyperinflation if we look at Russia in the 90's.
Oh how the tables have turned.
Either way, we are going to make it.
restructered text is trash, I'll be the first one to say it.
why that is the new thing is beyond me, markdown was just fine.
Image Format
Usage Recommendations - Abuse them, Heavily...
JPEG/JPG Web images, email attachments, and situations where file size is more important than maximum image quality.
GIF Simple animations, small icons, and images with limited color on the web.
PNG Images that require transparency or high-quality graphics on the web, such as logos.
WebP Web images where file size and image quality are important.
HEIF/HEIC High-quality photos on iOS devices.
TIFF Use for professional photography, printing, and publishing where high-quality images are necessary.
BMP Used in some specific cases where no compression is desired but more uncommon.
PSD Images edited in Adobe Photoshop.
PDF Images or text that needs to be easily shared, printed, and viewed in a document format.
RAW Professional photography to retain maximum image data for post-processing.
EPS High-quality graphics, logos, and illustrations that need to be resized without losing quality.
AI Creating or editing graphics in Adobe Illustrator.
INDD Creating or editing complex layouts in Adobe InDesign.
DWG A DWG file is a type of digital document. “DWG” stands for “DraWinG.”
A nonprofit board of directors is a group who are elected to govern and oversee the organizations operations. The board is responsible for setting the organizations:
Mission
Strategy
Goals
and ensuring that the organization operates in compliance with legal and ethical standards ensuring the organizations financial stability and sustainability.
Virtually all nonprofit organizations have a governing board of directors. Some, but not all , nonprofits will also have a governing membership in place as well. But even in member-led organizations, the board is the primary governing group.
The Role of a Nonprofit Board
The boarf of directors plays a critical role in the success of a nonprofit. The board is responsible for setting the org's strategic direction and ensuring the org, has the necessary resources to achieve it's goals. The board is also responsible for ensuring that the org operates within legal and ethical guidlines.
Fidiciary Duty
One of the key things the board has to do is provide financial oversight. The board is responsible for approving the orgs budget, making sure that the org is operating within it's means, and ensuring that the org is in compliance (theres that word again) with financial regulations. The board is also responsible for ensuring that the org has yada yada repeat repeat
But it’s not just oversight. Fiduciary duty means you have to treat the organization’s assets like they’re your own. You, the nonprofit board member, are fully responsible for the management, or mismanagement, of those resources.
Overseeing Management
The board of directors is also responsible for hiring and overseeing the organization’s executive director or CEO. The board sets the CEO’s compensation, evaluates their performance, and provides guidance and support to ensure that the organization is operating effectively. More on that below.
Legal Concerns
Another important role of the board is to ensure that the organization operates in compliance with legal and ethical standards. The board is responsible for ensuring that the organization is complying with all laws and regulations, and for ensuring that the organization is operating ethically and with integrity.
Mission!
Finally, the board of directors is responsible for ensuring that the organization is fulfilling its mission and achieving its goals. The board is responsible for setting the organization’s mission, vision, and values, and for ensuring that the organization is making progress towards achieving its goals.
Don't Confuse Governance for Management
A key principle to highlight here is that most boards function best when they limit themselves to governance.
Governance is high level:
strategy
oversight
accountability
By contrast, management is the day-to-day operations of a nonprofit.
Ideally, a nonprofit’s governance team is different from its management team, which is made up of paid or volunteer staff members. While many small nonprofits…especially those in the startup phase…have board members serving in management positions, the ultimate goal is to have board members separate from paid staff members as much as possible. The board of directors, as a governing body, should focus on the organization’s mission, strategy, and goals. Staff members are responsible for the implementation of the mission.
Having dual-capacity board members can sometimes lead to problems between a nonprofit’s mission and how it operates. However, we have to quickly acknowledge that is not always possible in very small organizations. I served for many years on a neighborhood homeowners association board of directors, and my fellow directors and I did pretty much everything. Is that ideal? No, not at all. But sometimes it is reality in micro-sized nonprofits.
YouGuys have enough Problems
The Role Of Officers
Organizations should also have Officers, typically chosen from among the board members, who are given a higher level of responsibility compared to other board members. Initial officers are elected by the board; this vote usually takes place during the organization’s first meeting. Much like board members, officers usually serve terms.
Typically, a nonprofit has three officers serving the role of President, Secretary, and Treasurer. Officer roles and their terms should be specifically defined in the organization’s bylaws.
The President - Me - The President heads up the board and supervices all of youguys and the business and affairs of the board. While the president can also serve as the CEO, or Executive Director of the organization, keep in mind that these two roles are seperate. Returning to an earlier point, the role of the president is a matter of governance, while the role of CEO/ED (Executive Director) No dysfunction here. is management.
The Secretary - Has to be at least an 8 - The Secretary records and archives the minutes, or record of discussion and votes, of each meeting of the Board of Directors. Additionally, the Secretary is responsible for keeping track of the organization’s activities to make sure the actions of the organization are in accordance to the organization’s Bylaws. The Secretary is usually the officer who keeps board members’ contact information in order to inform them about upcoming meetings of the board. - 8 minimum. There always has to be mad tension.
The Treasurer - Handles all of the Organizations Treasure - The Treasurer is the officer accountable for keeping accurate accounting records of the receipts and disbursements of the organization. This person is usually a signatory on all bank accounts, though he or she shouldn’t be the only signatory. Additionally the Treasurer is responsible for keeping track of the organization’s financial condition. This is an important role because it keeps the other officers and board members informed about the financials.
Meeting The Term Lengths
Board Meetings
Board members should meet periodically to discuss and vote on the affairs of the organization. A question we are often asked is, “How often should we meet?” Well, a common answer to every question around here is, “It depends!” Same with the question of board meetings.
At a minimum, an annual meeting must occur with all board members present. That’s probably not often enough, however, to adequately plan and oversee everything that the board is responsible for. Additional meetings should take place throughout the year so board members can discuss and make other necessary decisions.
Term Length
Board memberships are not set up to be permanent positions; most organizations have terms set up for board members, which typically fall between two and five years. That said, most states allow nonprofit board members to serve indefinitely, and the IRS doesn’t say anything about that subject at all.
But even if your nonprofit wants board members to serve for a long time, we recommend setting up reasonable term lengths, say 2 or 3 years, and reelect those members whose terms are expiring, but there is mutual interest in their continued service.
Don’t be fearful of bringing new members, however. Sometimes fresh ideas are exactly what a nonprofit needs in order to thrive.
How to Be an Effective Nonprofit Board of Directors
Being an effective nonprofit board of directors requires a deep commitment to the organization’s mission and a willingness to devote time and energy to the organization’s success. Here are some tips for being an effective nonprofit board member:
Understand your role: It’s critical to understand the responsibilities of being a board member and to be prepared to fulfill those responsibilities. Board members should be knowledgeable about the organization’s mission, goals, and strategy, and should be fully aware of the organization’s finances and operations.
Attend meetings: Boards typically have to meet at least annually, but effective boards will meet much more often than that. Board members should attend all board meetings and come prepared to actively participate in discussions and decision-making.
Support fundraising efforts: Board members should be willing to support fundraising efforts, whether through personal donations or by helping to identify and cultivate donors.
Provide transparency and accountability: Board members should promote transparency and accountability by ensuring that the organization is operating in compliance with legal and ethical standards, and by being open and transparent about the organization’s operations and finances.
Engage with stakeholders: Board members should engage with the organization’s stakeholders, including staff, volunteers, donors, and community members. This includes listening to their concerns and feedback, and working to build relationships and partnerships that support the organization’s mission.
Who Makes a Great Board Member?
There are no IRS guidelines in place to determine who is certified to be on a board; most any individual can become a board member. It is best practice to find individuals within the community who have the passion and experience that aligns with the nonprofit’s mission. In addition, you probably want to choose board members who have experience in overseeing business affairs at some level. These persons will be better prepared to advise your nonprofit, compared to those with no management experience.
There are two directives to include images: image and figure.
Attention!
Images are not supported by the manpage writer.
It is up to the author to ensure compatibility of the image data format with the output format or user agent (LaTeX engine, HTML browser). The following, non exhaustive table provides an overview.
The html5 writer uses the <video> tag if the image URI ends with an extension matching one of the listed video formats (since Docutils 0.17).
[2]
The html4 writer uses an <object> tag for SVG images and videos for compatibility with older browsers and for XHTML1.1 conformance respectively.
[3]
When compiling with pdflatex, xelatex, or lualatex. The original latex engine supports only the EPS image format. Some build systems, e.g. rubber support additional formats via on-the-fly image conversion.
Image
Directive Type:
"image"
Doctree Elements:
<image>, <reference> (only with option "target")
Directive Arguments:
one, required (image URI)
Directive Options:
see below
Directive Content:
none
Configuration Setting:
image_loading (only HTML5 writer)
An "image" is a simple picture:
The URI for the image source file is specified in the directive argument. As with hyperlink targets, the image URI may begin on the same line as the explicit markup start and target name, or it may begin in an indented text block immediately following, with no intervening blank lines. If there are multiple lines in the link block, they are stripped of leading and trailing whitespace and joined together.
Optionally, the image link block may contain a flat field list, the image options. For example:
Inline images can be defined with an "image" directive in a substitution definition, e.g.
means stop, means go.
The "image" directive recognizes the common options class and name as well as
align"top", "middle", "bottom", "left", "center", or "right"
The alignment of the image, equivalent to the HTML <img> tag's deprecated "align" attribute or the corresponding "vertical-align" and "text-align" CSS properties. The values "top", "middle", and "bottom" control an image's vertical alignment (relative to the text baseline); they are only useful for inline images (substitutions). The values "left", "center", and "right" control an image's horizontal alignment, allowing the image to float and have the text flow around it. The specific behaviour depends upon the browser or rendering software used.
alttext
Alternate text: a short description of the image, displayed by applications that cannot display images, or spoken by applications for visually impaired users.
heightlength
The desired height of the image. Used to reserve space or scale the image vertically. When the scale option is also specified, they are combined. For example, a height of 200px and a scale of 50 is equivalent to a height of 100px with no scale.
loading"embed", "link", or "lazy"
Set the loading attribute to indicate the preferred handling by the Docutils Writer. [4]
embed:
Embed the image into the output document. [5]
link:
Refer to the image via its URI.
lazy:
Refer to the image. The HTML5 writer additionally specifies the "lazy loading attribute".
(New in Docutils 0.21.)
scaleinteger percentage (the "%" symbol is optional)
The uniform scaling factor of the image. The default is "100 %", i.e. no scaling. Docutils tries to determine dimensions from the image file if no height or width options are specified (requires the Python Imaging Library).
targetURI or reference name
Nest the image in a hyperlink reference element (make it "clickable"). The option argument may be a URI or a reference name with underscore suffix (e.g. `a name`_).
widthlength or percentage of the current line width
The width of the image. Used to reserve space or scale the image horizontally. As with height above, when the scale option is also specified, they are combined.
[4]
Currently only recognized by the HTML5 writer (overriding the image_loading configuration setting). The ODF/ODT writer always embeds images in the *.odt document, XML and LaTeX writers link to the image. The behaviour may change for the ODT and XML writers but images cannot be embedded in a LaTeX source.
[5]
SVG images are directly included, other images are base64 encoded and included as a data URI.
Hey Jason, I have your new reporting instructions. Report to APO Jesus Munguia-Macias on 8/14 between 9am and 3pm via video call. His number is 602-399-0010. Did you get new phone yet? Can you respond letting me know you received this email please.
Thank you,
Bernice Corona
Adult Probation Officer
Phone: (602) 619-2494 Fax: (602) 372-8220
Email: bernice.corona@jbazmc.maricopa.gov
10420 W Van Buren St, Avondale, AZ 85323
From The outset, let me sayb that using the lowercase re is definitely the move and I should get on that tip as quickly as possible.
The most basic pattern recognized is a paragraph. That's a chunk of text that is separated by blank lines (one is enough). Paragraphs must have the same indentation -- that is, line up at their left edge. Paragraphs that start indexted in It's like what is the point of using VIm. NVM
Inside paragraphs and other bodies of test, you may additionally mark text for italics with italics