Saturday, June 21, 2008

Storing Safe Drinking Water

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Provident Principles and Practices
© David Edwards, 2008


PRINCIPLE: LDS leaders have encouraged us not only to store healthful food but also safe, potable water. They have promised us that as we strive to do this fully, we will be richly blessed (See, for example, Bishop Keith B. McMullin, General Conference, April 2007).

PRACTICES: The Church has described some basic practices for storing water to prepare for the eventuality that water supplies become contaminated or shut down. These instructions can be found at www.providentliving.org/content/list/0,11664,7446-1,00.html

Today, we discuss three ways to store water. Later, we’ll cover emergency sources and purification.


Bottled Water. You can store water in food-grade PET (recycling symbol 1) bottles in shrink-wrapped cases of 24 to 35 bottles per case. No pretreatment is required. This can be a simple way to store potable water. A two-week’s supply in the Lower Sonoran Desert is about 7 cases of 35 half-liter bottles per person. For a family of six, this totals about 42 cases, weighing ~1,600 lbs. Cases can be stored on heavy-duty metal shelving units (rated >400 lbs per shelf); units must be securely placed on a concrete floor or a floor resting on a concrete foundation. Alternatively, cases can be placed one case high along bottoms of closets (with shoes placed on top of the cases), underneath stairwells (this may require modification for access; see future article on this), or under beds in each bedroom (if space permits). Some families incorporate storage in home-built furniture. Be creative!


Used Containers. You can store clean tap water in leak-proof, breakage-resistant, food-grade PET bottles previously used for juices or soft drinks if you (i) wash each bottle thoroughly with soap and water first, (ii) rinse each bottle thoroughly, and (iii) add two drops of unscented, 5.25% sodium hypochlorite bleach per quart, and (iv) cap tightly. The amount of bleach used for safely storing potable water is half that used for treating suspect water. Store bottles upright. Do not use plastic milk containers. They develop leaks after a while, and bacteria grow on absorbed milk residue.


New Drums. You can store clean tap water in new blue, 55-gal food-grade HDPE (symbol 2) drums resting on non-permeable pads on a concrete garage or basement floor. Add 1/8 teaspoon of unscented, 5.25% sodium hypochlorite bleach per gallon, or 6 teaspoons/55 gallons. Although the drums are colored blue, they let some light in. To prevent or inhibit algae growth, store drums in the dark (e.g., using an opaque covering). You will also need to buy a bung wrench and one or two (the second for a backup) hand-operated pumps to pump out the water from the barrels. Avoid used drums. These often contain hard-to-remove absorbed food residue, which leads to microbial growth.

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Saturday, June 14, 2008

Resources for Upgrading Employment

Provident Principles and Practices
by David Edwards and Sophia Bischof
Part II

Do you need better-paying, more-challenging, or more-enjoyable employment?

Do you know how to interview and how to write a job-winning resume in the latest style?

Would you like to start your own business but don’t know exactly how?


PRINCIPLE: LDS leaders have enouraged us to develop self-reliance in the area of providing for our wants and needs. They have said that employment is an essential part of self-reliance. (See, for example, The First Presidency, Conference Report, Oct. 1936, p. 3).

PRACTICES: ~20% of our local church members are currently unemployed/underemployed. A speaker at a presentation at the Mesa LDS Cannery a few weeks ago told about a great series of LDS employment workshops. Comparable workshops cost thousands. For members, these are free!

The Employment Resource Services (ERS) Center is at 235 El Dorado Circle, Mesa, AZ. Hours are Monday through Friday from 9am to 4pm; also on Tuesday from 4pm to 8pm. Please call or email first to reserve workshop seats. Contact them at (480) 829-8999 or at wel-ec-mesa@ldschurch.org.

Career Workshops at the ERS Center on 2nd & 3rd Wednesdays of each month, from 6pm to 10pm, or at the Mesa AZ Alta Mesa Stake Center, 5350 E. McLellan Rd., Mesa, 1st and last Wednesdays of each month, from 6pm to 10pm. For everyone. Goals, resources, interactions and continuity.

Professional Workshops at the ERS Center on 1st and 2nd Saturdays of each month, from 9am to 4pm. For professionals, managers and executives. Proven job search skills, networking.

Self-Employment Workshops at the ERS Center on 1st and 2nd Tuesdays of each month from 6:00pm to 9:30pm. Business success cycle, starting a business, business plans, financing, taxes, etc.

Resume Writing Class on Tuesdays 9am to 11am; also on 4th Tuesday monthly from 6pm to 8pm.

Family Financial Workshop every 4th Thursday, 7pm to 9:30pm, sponsored by Gilbert Val Vista Stake, at Gilbert Jr. High Seminary, 1001 N. Burk Street, Gilbert. Credit cards, financial forecasting, financial management. To reserve a seat, contact Wallace Jacobs at (480) 715-8437 or wallace.h.jacobs@intel.com.

LDS Provident Living Web site for additional information about employment and job-seeking: http://providentliving.org/content/display/0,11666,5944-1-3037-1,00.html (see also http://providentliving.org/ for many other good ideas on provident living)
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Sunday, June 8, 2008

Debt and Budgeting

Provident Principles and Practices
by David Edwards and Sophia Bischof
Part 1

This is the first of a series of short informational sessions called Provident Principles and Practices. Here are this week’s principles and practices.
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PRINCIPLES: LDS leaders have counseled us to get out of debt, if we are in it, and to stay out. Although they have asked us to obtain a supply of needed food and non-food items, they have advised us against going into debt to obtain that supply (See J. Reuben Clark, Jr., General Conference, April 1937, and The First Presidency, in All Is Safely Gathered In: Family Home Storage, Feb. 2007, p. 1).

PRACTICES: A number of good practices related to debt, savings, and food and water storage are discussed in a talk given by Elder Marvin J. Ashton in the April 1975 General Conference. This talk is published by the LDS Church as an online booklet. A link to it is
http://providentliving.org/pfw/multimedia/files/pfw/pdf/6998_OneForTheMoney33293_pdf.pdf
(Once you open this online booklet, you can click the “X” on the table of contents window on the left to remove that window, then blow up the text on the right to 75% or 100% for easier reading.)

You’ll most likely enjoy reading the linked version online. Sections include information on

1. Tithing

2. Money Management

3. Financial Discipline

4. Budgeting

5. Work Ethic

6. Teaching Children about Money

7. Training Children to Contribute to the Family

8. Education

9. Owning a Home

10. Insurance

11. Economics

12. Emergency Preparedness