Kayana Szymczak for the Boston Globe

Kayana Szymczak for the Boston Globe

Filed under: drug treatment centers in washington state

Meanwhile, the state's public health department has until May 1 to draft regulations covering the law's provisions, including who gets licensed to grow and sell the drug. Until then, caregivers and patients may, under the law's “hardship cultivation …
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When Paying It Forward Pays Us Back

Filed under: drug treatment centers in washington state

Multidimensional Treatment Foster Care for severely delinquent youth has been shown to cut criminality and teenage pregnancies. The Washington State Institute for Public Policy calculates expected savings (pdf) from many well-tested social programs.
Read more on New York Times (blog)

 

Sports digest: San Francisco Giants' Pablo Sandoval hospitalized with

Filed under: drug treatment centers in washington state

Former Washington State and NFL quarterback Ryan Leaf was moved from a drug treatment center to the Montana State Prison for threatening a staff member and violating his treatment plan. Leaf was charged last spring with breaking into two houses and …
Read more on San Jose Mercury News

 

Justice Department expands psychiatric hospital probe to 3 more Illinois

Filed under: drug treatment centers in washington state

A U.S. Department of Justice probe into patient care at a suburban psychiatric hospital is expanding to three other prominent Illinois facilities owned by Universal Health Services Inc., the nation's largest operator of behavioral health hospitals and …
Read more on Chicago Tribune

 


 

Hemp Medium Density Fiberboard – In the early 1990’s, C & S Specialty Builder’s Supply (namely Bill Conde, Dave Seber, Barry Davis, and Tim Pate) in Harrisburg, Oregon, imported regulated bales of hemp and began working on a medium density fiberboard (MDF). The evolution of hemp MDF as a viable building supply option began when Bill Conde of C & S took their hemp fiber research and ideas to Paul Maulberg, the head of Washington State University’s Wood Engineering Laboratory. Conde explains in a 2005 Mycotopia blog, “We asked if [Maulberg] would consider trying some hemp fiber to make some experimental hemp MDF, and his reply was, ‘You bet, hemp is the King Cong of fiber. I would love a chance to work with some.” Excitedly, Conde and team began the process working with Maulberg on creation and testing of the hemp MDF. It was soon discovered how strong the hemp fiber truly was, as the full-length hemp fibers jammed both of the processing machines and brought things to a standstill. The process for breaking down the fibers was redesigned and restarted with ultimate success. Explaining the process in his blog, Conde says, “The shortened fiber was worked through their two mills and was made ready to be pressed into MDF.” After being fluffed hemp fibers are dropped into a spinning drum where glue is sprayed to mix with the fibers. Glue and fiber are then placed into a hot press under high pressure. According to Conde, within two attempts they had exceeded all world standards for other types of MDF that used