Read more: http://www.blogdoctor.me/2008/02/fix-page-elements-layout-editor-no.html#ixzz0MHHE3S64

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Just getting ready for Monday

According to the procedure on the Town's website and data gleaned from the MSM Monday evening will be busy for those who wish to have their say in the process. The Concert Hall is being rolled out for the occasion and everybody will dressed to the nines to hear five companies talk for ten minutes about their respecrtive submissions.
The general public - us - will have an opportunity to be heard by submitting questions to the Mayor and he will ask those questions directly.
  • Problem #1 - the downloadable comment form instructs that submissions will be accepted by Thursday Dec, 3rd, a little late for a Monday question?
  • Problem #2 - What if the Mayor doesn't like your question, will he ask it?

Perusing the docs this morning elicited the following information:
  • Giffels - no mention of size
  • Peak - 121,000 sf
  • Bird - 116,000 sf
  • Bondfield - 125,000 sf
  • Ball - no mention
  • All documents boast about using the latest in recycled materials, diminishing construction waste that is to be landfilled and most propose to use the same ice-making apparatus that recycles water and chemicals, but none state the overall operating costs. It's about time we looked at building specs the way we do for cars - measure the energy consumption and costs

This is important when considering the overall construction costs. So the questions I will be submitting, and let's see if the Mayor asks them are:
  • How much per square foot to construct each concept
  • What is the proposed operating cost per square foot

Now for the floor plans, grabbed from each submission. I make no apologies for the quality. I really do think that as we get into the 21st Century electronic versions, other than pdf files should be mandated. For example an image that can be magnified is essential. Clicking on the image will get you a somewhat larger pic.


Ball Construction

















Bird Construction



















Bondfield Construction






















Giffels Construction

























Peak Construction























A description of the concepts can be found here

Friday, November 27, 2009

Following up

The CCC contestants will be making their cases on Monday in the public forum however as most of the entries will cost the same amount,, not much less than the maximum budget, cost will not be a factor. So what will? the largest amount of glass, who has the shiniest CVs or any other Wow factor? In a recent post one really intelligent suggestion has been made - who has the best suggestion to lower operating costs? Who is using the most environmetally friiendly systems? In other words which of these building will be cheapest to maintain. As operating costs will the key to public support in the years after contruction surely a really good assessment of operating costs per building should be the main consideration, for as the commenter said almost all the buildings look alike and if they cost the same, within a few thousands, there has to be one distinguishing factor. Let them all be measured on operating costs.

Some images of the future

One of the more interesting parts of public life is being able to see what few people care about. The imagination of the future. For every development plan presented there is a watercolour painting of the concept (you could fill a book with the developers prints of the harbour plans presented during the 80s). Here are the concepts of the Community Centre as presented to the public yesterday.

Peak Construction


















Giffels Construction














Bird Construction













Bondfield Construction








Ball Construction









Now you have until December 3rd to make up your mind and then mail or deliver your preferences to the Mayor. He will then tally them up and tell Council on Monday what the public choice was. Click here, print off the form, fill it out and your done.

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Sometimes we win one

Most elections progressives and alternate thinkers do not get their candidates elected. However those of us who do not support the status quo have a little bit to cheer about today and the neo-cons will be driven to distraction by the news that another bogeyman is in Town. The polarising figure in the picture is Sid Ryan, formerly President of the CUPE division of Ontario, now the President of the Ontario Federation of Labour. This fiery charismatic person, one who compels almost instant opinion is now in the twilight of his career as a labour leader and his final hurrah will be to steer the house of labour through turbulent waters. I wish him luck.

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

A very pertinent guest post

submitted by Martin Partridge

All good things must come to an end so I so suppose the demise of First Night Cobourg was inevitable. I'd like to briefly document the history of First Night Cobourg from my perspective as former chair. Others may wish to augment the record.

Former Councillor Pam Jackson fired up the original First Night Cobourg volunteer group in about 1994. The committee created a small-scale version of Toronto's successful New Year's Eve non-alcoholic street festival, which in turn was modeled on major events in Boston and elsewhere. Local entertainers, performance groups and face painters warmed up clusters of Cobourg families, both inside and outside Cobourg's historic downtown municipal properties (notably the Firehall, Market Building, and of course Victoria Hall). There were horse-drawn hay wagons to ride on, and barrels of burning firewood to keep volunteers warm. At midnight, mainly for the benefit of the remaining hardy volunteers, there was a small fireworks display right in front of Victoria Hall. The cost for the whole evening was $5, free for children.

After three modestly profitable years, the committee responsible for the event ratcheted up the entertainment, running carefully timed hour-long music events for three hours in six locations, for a total of 18 highly professional and diverse shows ending at 9:30 p.m. A people's parade was then led by the Town Crier down to the waterfront for a much larger fireworks display, which had been moved to earlier in the evening for the benefit of the children. The evening ended with a two-hour major show in the Concert Hall. The price was kept at $5 with children free, thanks to ever growing sponsor donations.

This new-style First Night Cobourg, with its tightly formatted entertainment program, culminated in a major millennium event on December 31, 1999. More than 7,000 people thronged the downtown buildings and the waterfront for double-decker bus rides, very high quality children's shows, notable entertainment from across Canada, and a huge fireworks display. There was a cultural exchange, which resulted in a musical group called Middle Tickle travelling from Fogo Island in Newfoundland to perform in Victoria Hall with Aengus Finnan simultaneously travelling to Fogo Island to entertain the residents there. A rudimentary internet camera was set up at each end to allow each side to see what the other was doing. Fireworks were set off here at precisely 10:30 p.m. to coincide with the first Canadian arrival of the year 2000 in Newfoundland. A conference call, initiated in Cobourg, was held among federal, provincial, municipal and European politicians and personages to exchange millennium greetings. Hovering over all this were the Y2K fears, which seem quaint now but were genuine at the time and resulted in a broad scramble for backup generators and had all emergency services on standby.

Cobourg citizens, in part through its automotive dealers, industrial plants, lawyers and other groups, came up with about $30,000 in donations and badge purchases to pay for the big Y2K entertainment, and Council contributed $15,000 for the grand fireworks. The event was such a great success, with tourists writing in to say keep up the good work, that the committee asked Council to endorse a similar approach the following year. Instead, major funding was denied and the event ended up being cancelled altogether. December 31, 2000 was the only "dark" New Year's Eve in downtown Cobourg in the last 15 years.

The event was resurrected a year later thanks to new committee chair Gerry Drage and many long-time devoted committee members including Bert McMillan, Sharron McMann and (eventual chair) Brian Edmiston. The event has been held successfully throughout this decade.

I thought the one saving grace of installing the controversial concrete frink in place of parkland in downtown Cobourg was that it would be used to inject new purpose and vigour into First Night Cobourg. Indeed, the new frink was well used at last year's First Night event.

I'm sad but not surprised that this Council could not see the logic, after blowing off about $1.5 million to install a concrete skating pad in the centre of First Night Cobourg operations, to invest a little more to shore up the one established and well loved winter event that could put it to good use. After all, increasing tourism during the winter months was cited by Council as a prime rationale for the frink decision. Perhaps a refreshed and revived future Council will see things differently.


Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Finally a politician who speaks his mind

Just when pols of all stripes are in the middle of being muzzled by apparatchiks in leaders' office we find one who is willing to let it all out. Unfortunately he will not be applauded for his efforts A story in the Nova Scotia News - TheChronicleHerald.ca details it all Gerald Keddy, the Conservative MP for South Shore-St. Margarets let out this quote when talking about the use of immigrant workers in Nova Scotia working on Christmas tree farms, "Nova Scotians won’t do it — all those no-good bastards sitting on the sidewalk in Halifax that can’t get work," Mr. Keddy said Monday.The Mayor of Halifax is outraged and newspaper editorials are excoriating the MP for his opinion, bet it goes down well at "Timmies"!

Monday, November 23, 2009

Why this woman is important

This is the face that may change Canadian politics. Who is she and what has she done? Why it's Janine Krieber. Who is she you ask, knowing that only political junkies will know this one? But if it was revealed that she is Stephane Dion's wife most people will roll their eyes and connect her to a loser. Don't do that she has just provoked what could be a game-changing moment in the world of mushy politics.
Mushy politics is the art of trying to be elected by promising not to be the other guy. In the case of present leaders the Libs and Cons have an identity crisis and mushy politics have clashed with identity politics and the result is confusion for the voters and an election would be based on gut reactions to either leader.
When a prominent person starts to speak out one of two things will happen. One is that whatever was said would be treated like the Sermon on the Mount or more dangerously the context of the statement would be written off as the dangerous ramblings of the speaker, who is already a figure of derision.
In the case of Mrs Dion posting a savage critique of the Liberal Party and Michael Ignattief on her facebook page (incidentally doesn't this magnify the power of alternate media?) look at it here, the wrath of the pundits and pols is to shoot the messenger rather looking at the substance of the message.
The substance of the message is really profound: Here we have an intellectual person detailing how in her opinion the Libs have lost it and offers an opinion on the future of the Party if it doesn't change direction. Indicating the example of the UK Libs who have failed to be a force Since Lloyd George and now has morphed into the real mushy middle of the Social Dems. And she suggests, oh the heresy of it, that another party may be willing to accept the progressive voters in the Liberal Party because the Libs have ignored their opinions. Shades of a debate we had here last week in the comment threads of the BurdReport.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

A fine day for a fine parade






Port Hope Pipe Band, dressed for Christmas












Traditional Brass Band

















Cutest pair in the parade














"They never told me funny hats were in the job description!"











A long way from the North Pole





















And here he is the Old Man himself

Housekeeping for the Community Centre Contract

Monday evening will take us further into the CCC project. The Project Managers - mhpm - have submitted a couple of subcontracts for Council's approval. One for a Compliance Consultant, that's the guy that will check to see if what we get ,is what has been promised. Whether they check just the specifications or the costs is not known but it is comforting to know that somebody is going to watchdog the project. But was the choosing of the consultant transparent as the PMs made up a list of firms that should be invited to tender. When only two of the seven invitees responded the PMs reviewed the applications and then made a recommendation. So the guy doing the job gets to pick the guy who is going to watchdog? This is standard management practise after all why would the PM want a company that would be hard to get along with?
The other point that jumped out at me is seen in this extract from the letter to Council from the PM.
If you click on the pic you will read that because the budget for all four phases of the compliance contract was $125K and the successful invitee's bid was $255 - $140K overbudget, the PM recommended that the invitee only be awarded the first two phases for a cost of $107K. So are we overbudget already, and this is only the first subcontract from mhpm?

A second contract is going to be awarded, one for an Accessibility Consultant, presumably to check out the drawings for accessability problems, the BurdReport has been told that this building will be the most accessible building to be built in Ontario when it is finished. According to the report submitted to the Council the Chair of the Accessibility Committee did an exhaustive search and then discovered that very few firms or individuals are capable of all aspects of peer review. Obviously this time consuming process (tracking down a qualified firm and then negotiating a contract) is a difficult job for a committee so it has punted it off to the PM. He has the authority to conduct a search, and sole source the contract. What is not made clear in the paperwork is the fact that although the contract may be sole-sourced from a list of names given to the PM by the committee, the awarding of the contract is still subject to scrutiny by the committee. A good process adopted by the Committee.

Sunday #1 - A fog of confusion

This week's CRTC hearings cap a month's cacophony of attack ads from both sides in the dispute. Cable Companies snatch TV transmissions from the airwaves, package them into incongruous bundles and then peddle them to TV owners who don't have TV towers, or want more TV channels than offered on the airwaves. The TV companies spend great gobs of money on US shows that are supposed to attract plenty of eyeballs, then those eyeball stats are sold to ad buyers who think that huge numbers of people are watching their ads. That was the model up to a few years ago.
Then came the diversity of interests produced by alternate media, and timeshifting with PVRs. Ad revenue started to slip for the TV companies. The TV companies also made boneheaded decisions to get bigger, financed the aquisitions with debt that the operating costs funded by ad revenue had to support and suddenly the once wealthy TV companies were struggling to get by on a couple of hundred million a year. The Cable companies, also ravaged by aquisition fever now found it uneconomical to support both their capital costs of getting bigger by building transmissioin networks and cannibalising themselves and also found themselves in a fight with the TV companies who want to charge the Cable companies for the transmissions that are free.
As a consumer how can you not be confused by the conflicting claims. There is a whole bunch of bad in this issue. Cable companies assembling their retransmissions into "bundles". These bundles are a mess and don't have an affinity of interest and also force the consumer to purchase many bundles just to get the few channels they want, thereby increasing consumer costs. TV companies claiming that unless they get more money local TV stations will be shut down. Oh what a mess.
Then in the middle of this is the regulator - the CRTC. This august body is at its wits end and the Chair has expressed his frustration with both sides often. He doesn't want to make the hard decision of making the consumer pay just because the two sides are intransigent.They have a mandate to protect the consumer and make sure that the players get along. So what's the answer? If I was the regulator this is what I would do.
  • Establish that both parties are at fault, because of bad business decisions and tell them their is still enough money in their bottom lines to support themselves.
  • Tell the Cable companies to stop bundling and establish a price per channel and allow consumers to purchase individual channels.
  • Acknowledge that there is an obligation for the Cable companies to pay for their channels from the sky and not to pass the fees they will have to pay to consumers.
  • Mandate a higher level of Canadian content in the TV companies programming so that they would have less airtime to fill with their expensive American shows.
Now this list comes from a not so ignorant consumer, but one who is still confused by the issue, so please comment on this and perhaps we can prepare a consumers' response to the issue.


Saturday, November 21, 2009

Municipal Campaign Reform

Campaign Reform is usually spoken about in America where huge money is raised, extorted, solicited and cajoled to and from candidates and donors to political campaigns. A move in Toronto might spark reform all over Ontario but don't bet on it happening here. A major part of the reforms that Toronto is discussing is the banning of donations from Corporations and Unions. Provincial reform now limits donations from those sources to a maximum of $750 to an individual and a total of $5,000 during a campaign to all candidates, from the same donor. If banning corporate/union donations ever took place here no candidate could afford to run. In every municipal election that I have ever seen, every financial report filed six months after the election has been shown that donations from individuals have been as scarce as hen's teeth. Almost all of the candidates declaring donations revealed that the sources were local developers. In fact it was so bad, a few years back, that one particular development company donated substantial sums to incumbents and none to newcomers. It was probably just a coincidence that this particular developer had a planning application before the incumbents which needed to be voted on just before the election took place. The public only found out about it six months later when the incumbents were re-elected and the developer got his planning permission. When asked about the linkage, one incumbent muttered, "It's not illegal to take donations so I did!"
This Cobourg Council, just like every other small town entity will be dragged kicking and screaming into campaig reform, because the status quo is mighty fine for them. Nobody has ever spent the maximum amount allowed and nobody ever queries where the money has come from. After all the donations do not have to be declared until six months after the election.
In fact them only piece of meaningful election reform will never happen here because the move would be too transparent. I refer to the notion of declaring donations within 30 days of receiving them. Imagine going to the election booth knowing just who was bankrolling a candidate, an amazing piece of knowledge. Never happen!



Friday, November 20, 2009

The chickens have come to roost

Port Hope Council really has a problem that has to settled very shortly. The issue of the facilities that house the Port Hope Police will not go away this time nor can it be put off any longer. The PHP need a new building and in the light of potential inadequacy reports from the province need a new home right away. A newly released report quotes a consultant as saying a total cost of $6.21 million, and that doesn't include the cost of any land is needed to build a facility to Provincial standards. Two reports were presented to the PSB: in addition to the facilities report thare was a report that outlined the expenditures for a new communications system - $1.6 million.
So if the PH PSB votes to go ahead with an independent police service renewal program the taxpayers of Port Hope will pay for it when Port Hope Council votes to approve the Police budget. A total of $7.81 million over the next ten years with the majority of that upfront for a building program. Just how long the province will allow the PSB to operate under inadequate standards is another question.

Crunchtime is here. What will Port Hopers do? Especially when the Ward 2 residents have no love for the urban Ward 1 force, they prefer the OPP.

A lively three way debate. The OPP boosters in the former Township (Ward 2) haven't forgotten the loss of the proposed shift to the County OPP, the Port Hope Chauvinists who will not consider anything other than a home-grown solution and the pragmatists who will look at anything that will save money and makes sense (even a collaboration with Cobourg).

Guest Post

Deb O'Connor


LAWYERS: FORCE FOR GOOD OR EVIL?
First off, let's be clear that I am not a lawyer, but I worked in a legal environment long enough to have an informed, but informal opinion, of the genre. Second, the lawyers I came to know and respect worked for Legal Aid in the clinic system, so they have made a choice to work exclusively for the disadvantaged. While I don't know it for a fact, I suspect these are a different breed than the Bay Street shark variety.

But one thing most lawyers have in common is their adherence to the Law, and to their Rules of Professional Conduct. Make no mistake, lawyers are a distinct sub-set of the human species, and their peculiarities set them apart from the rest of us. When they rattle on about Conflict of Interest and other legalities that make little sense to mere humans, they really mean it! Nothing matters more, in fact, and the only thing they fear is the Law Society of Upper Canada, which wields a big stick.

They understand there can be a huge difference between Justice and Law, the former being what society aspires to, and the latter what we actually have. No amount of teeth grinding or wishful thinking can make the two the same, although as laws change, the line is always blurred. Those lawyers unwilling to accept that, or simply wanting to change it, often enter politics where our laws originate.

Lawyers don't generally see their clients as people; they just represent whatever legal issue they are pursuing. Lawyer wear blinders in that regard; they are only interested in the facts of the issue and how to prevail, not in the client's personal life problems. What can sometimes seem like coldness and disinterest is simply a focused lawyer doing their job, which they clearly see as solving the legal problem in front of them.

What lawyers often have, in my experience, is a wicked sense of humour. Not generally shared among outsiders, it's their own personal safety valve to stave off the effects of work stress. Believe it or not, lawyers can be a veritable barrel of fun given the right occasion and enough good scotch.

But would you want a lawyer in your own family? They can also be royal pains in the butt, especially when they insist on pointing out the Law and its ramifications. And, they stubbornly refuse to give legal advice in areas of the law they don't practise, so your real estate lawyer cousin will not provide advice on your divorce no matter how many times you ask.

Good or evil? Depends on who you ask, and who the lawyer is! But even if you hate the breed, most of us can agree anarchy is not a reasonable alternative, and that's what we would have without the Law and lawyers to navigate them.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Welcome to the new readers

Welcome to the BurdReport, I am repeating this as a story, in the NNews, mentioned the BurdReport and published a link.

For those who haven't been here before please click on all the links, especially the archives on the left. I have been at this a long while and there's plenty of content. I write about anything that strikes my fancy, especially local news. You will get both sides of an issue and probably an analytical opinion to boot and the chance to make an instant comment.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

And so it goes on

To my astonishment the Norlock story and his crown for being the Champion leafleteer is marching on., and the election approaches. To this end Party PR is flooding in.This press release has come in, and before the Ruddites get shirty about not having the same privilege I will print all that comes in. The Ruddites do not have the BurdReport on their media list so we don't their pearls of wisdom - send 'em in it gets printed.

The HST is an issue that crosses Provincial boundaries, the Feds have to approve the HST bribe money, consequently Mr Norlock is on the hot seat as he takes orders from Harper that conflicts with "Little Mike" Hudak's campaign against the HST.

click on the image to enlarge

A question for the Cramahe watchers

Bylaw Officer Jim Harris appears to be taking it on the chin, producing reports that Council doesn't either like or take much notice of. His latest, a treatise on the legality of a patio fence at the Queen's hotel, appears to have produced an interesting Council meeting, to say the least. Bob Owen, of Cramahe Now reports that Mr Harris introduced his report about the option and legality of a year round fence around the patio at a Council meeting. The owner of the fence, Councillor Tim Gilligan Jr (he of baseball bat fame) promptly declared a conflict of interest and then moved to the delegation table and debated the issue with Council. A most innovative use of the C of I regulations.
The upshot was that once again Cramahe Council put the boots to a report produced by Mr Harris, a previous one being the Farmers' Market bylaw controversy, now what? Will Marc "quick draw. I can fire you" Coombs get rid of this officious man, just as he has removed all of the people who displease him. Remember Lee Dekeyser, Ken Wood and other minions of the Township?

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

The HST - what do we know about it?

OK this is from a non-economist so don't get wound up about the numbers just critique the reasoning. We are going to get a new tax and people will get tax rebates and business will get a lower corporate tax rate. This where it gets sticky. Consumers pay more actual cash but will get tax rebates (up to $1,000 cheque in the mail) and the promise of more jobs from a more efficient business sector. The business advantages are becoming quite clear, they will get a lower tax rate and relief from paying tax on items purchased for the business. The HST is widely seen as a contributor to making businesses more competitive because it does not tax businesses' purchases, including many capital items, that were subject to the old retail sales tax. If this is true then that help for business is good. What isn't good is the lowered corporate tax. Corporate taxes are paid on net income, just like personal tax. You reach the net by deducting expenses from the gross income. The more allowable expenses there are will determine the amount of net income. The rest is profit. Profit can be used in many ways but is usually taken out of the business by the owners. So, in my reckoning if a business owner has profit and don't forget that there is a high amount of net income that is not taxable before hitting the threshold, it's all gravy. Why are we making it easier for a business owner to cut his costs (and increase productivity) - good and allowing the owner to keep more profit - bad?

Monday, November 16, 2009

People with hurt feelings, please line up

Are there any more groups out there that need apologies? If so get in line because there will always be craven, grovelling and vote-seeking ploiticians willing to utter any apology necessary. Today it was the Australians apologising for accepting thousands of kids, who would have starved, and the British PM will follow suit next month (Extracting the most political mileage from the situation Gordon Brown announced he will apologise next month!). As readers may deduce from the words today I have little truck or trade with political apologies. They are a political device that works for Pols but not people. If Pols want to apologise for their transgressions why don't they apologise for not fixing Society's ills. The 30 odd billion spent on the war in Afghanistan could have paid for an expanded heath care sytem an unemployment relief system that maintains families and a host of other remedies to lift us from this man-made recession.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Why I love the CBC and hate it too!

The CBC is a charm, a wonderful experience. If you don't think so go to the website and download the Remembrance Day podcast for the Vinyl Cafe, as an example. Stewart McLean's readings of submitted recollections were dreadfully funny, on topic and very moving and not a tale of battles either. But the network drives me nuts. As with every other radio station in the Country it is really only working half the time, the other half of the day is a repeat of the daily stuff. The other bane is that when events happen every program in the network has to have a story . Consequently, as an example, the Berlin Wall commemoration was pounded to death by every producer in Front St. this week . Driving down the 401, in the middle of the night is a very boring occupation. Miles of miles of white line watching is only relieved by what you hear on the radio. There are five different wavelengths between Toronto and Montreal. After punching the frequencies into the presets you can get seamless broadcasts. But if you listen during the day you have nothing to listen to at night. So love the content hate the repeats.

Sunday #3

Driving down King St, this morning I noticed a plethora of shiny stainless steel waste bins. There are 15, in my count, placed on both sides of King St between McGill and Spring St. I also noticed that there is no advertising on any of the bins. This is a wonderful chance for the owners of the bins to accrue some public acceptance of these shiny montrosities. They could ask local artists to display their work. The bins are not producing one penny of ad revenue now, they should get us on their side by offering the space to local artists.


Well that was quick, wasn't it?

The Canadian Champion of leafleteering - Rick Norlock, the Squire of Warworth, appears to have won this one. Despite the news of our very own MP owning the highest bill for leafleteering and casually dismissing his opponents, as people who do little except oppose communication efforts ;he has obviously won the battle of public opinion. I say this because his opponents, the putative nominated candidates for his job, will have to wait for an election All Candidates Meeting, where they can debate this huge waste of public money because the public are not interested. There is no groundswell of angry people banging on Rick's door to tell him what they think. A story without legs!


Sunday #2

I am not a great fan of Conrad Black because of his attitudes towards unions - he hates and and will smash them at every opportunity, I do admire his writing. In this column to the National Post he describes the delight of being a prison tutor. Just the way it is written in an understated British wry way; he talks about his experience as a, albeit reluctant, tutor of soon-to-be High School graduates, is impressive to me.

Sunday #1

The controversy about the Community Centre Fundraising, will probably die down after Monday night. At the next Council meeting a motion will be adopted that apporoves the hiring of "The Fundraising Network" for $75.000 plus disbursements. In a conversation with the BurdReport the coordinator of special events, for the Town of Cobourg, Lara Scott, revealed that this Company has been in business since 1999 and are Toronto based. The partner that has been assigned to Cobourg is from Kingston. His name was not given as it will not be public until Monday evening. So the question of the value of the disbursements may become an issue if he insists on commuting to Cobourg to complete his duties. But the bigger issue of not getting substantial support because some segments of the community believe that this money is a waste of time, has been ameliorated as the original estimate for the work to be done was $150,000. But some heavy hitters and donors think that the money being spent here, from donations, is a total waste of money., it should be completed using local "champions". In addition although the Staff has signed off on this RFP and declared to to be consistent with Town Policy, some local fundraisers, who might have submitted to the Committee claim that the scope of the RFP was too extensive to be responded to in the time allowed for a turnaround. They think that despite what the CAO says about the process the fix was in, before it even started.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

I don't normally do this but it is priceless


We all get jokes in our email, and we all usually delete them as soon as we see it. But this one is a keeper"

Curtis & Leroy saw an ad in the Kentville Advertiser Newspaper in Kentville, N.S. and bought a mule for $100. The farmer agreed to deliver the mule the next day.
The next morning the farmer drove up and said, "Sorry, fellers, I have some bad news, the mule died last night."
Curtis &Leroy replied, "Well , then just give us our money back."
The farmer said, "Can't do that. I went and spent it already."
They said, "OK then, just bring us the dead mule."
The farmer asked, "What in the world ya' ll gonna do with a dead mule?"
Curtis said, "We gonna raffle him off."
The farmer said, "You can't raffle off a dead mule!"
Leroy said, "We shore can! Heck, we don't hafta tell nobody he's dead".
A couple of weeks later, the farmer ran into Curtis & Leroy at the Co-Op grocery store and asked:
"What'd you fellers ever do with that dead mule?"
They said,"We raffled him off like we said we wuz gonna do."
Leroy said,"Shucks, we sold 500 tickets fer two dollars a piece and made a
profit of $898."
The farmer said,"My Lord, didn't anyone complain?"
Curtis said, "Well , the feller who won got upset. So we gave him his
two dollars back."

Curtis and Leroy now work for the government. They're overseeing the Harper's Economic Stimulus package.


A political reality check

One of my favourite political sites is called ThreeHundredEight.com it is a site devoted to opinion polls and the examination of all poll results at the macro level. A reality check on the websites that claim that one party or the other is either over the cliff or rising to the moon!
As the EKOS poll is examined in the light of the others the 10% lead, as of yesterday, is put into perspective by the last paragraph of the latest post, "The biggest thing to take from this poll is that we're back to square one, back to October 2008. Which means no one has a reason to go to an election. "

So all of you partisans out there please comment, is this site worth the paper it is printed on or do you detect political bias) after all all sites have them!)

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Two guest posts

#1 Deb O'Connor
GOODBYE CITY TV

We started watching CITY TV news when the kids were old enough to follow news, but needed a show that was a bit flashy to hold their attention. It was a habit I kept over the years because they did a fairly good job of reporting on issues that affected the disadvantaged, and they weren't afraid to broadcast opinions and alternatives from outside the mainstream. Certainly that nasty right wing bias prominent with CTV and Global, now worse as Canwest, was not in evidence. The CBC was just stodgy.

When CTV bought CITY TV some time ago, I knew it was going to be the end of any semblence of progressive TV news coverage from Toronto media, and more and more that seems to be the case.

Example: last week their public affairs show, CITY Line, discussed whether having the PanAm Games was good or bad for Toronto, and while they had a cheerleader on set for the yes side, there was nobody in place to explain the contrary position. It didn't take long for the show host to join in the cheerleading too, making it clear to callers opposed that they were all wrong. It was sad, and never would have happened in the old days, when the station was diligent about presenting all sides of any issue.

While we're at it, all their news shows seem to lead off with a sports story now, and their weathercaster kept talking about golf the other night. Did downtown Toronto hipsters suddenly take up golf and I missed that? I get the feeling they are trying to land a whole new demographic with these tactics, and it's not a demographic I have much in common with. Let sister station CTV keep them, and please, let CITY continue to BE CITY, just like it always was. In fact, if they would only bring back the baby blue late night movies life would be just peachy again!

#2 One from the lighter side
Wally Keeler

This is my video of the Canadian Cowgirls who are performing in the Coliseum at the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair. I record their performance over two two days from two different locations.

I apologize for the amateurism. It’s a low quality camera, and the zoom is difficult to manipulate. The video editing was done using a freeware program, the lowest form of software.

I hope that in spite of my shortcomings, the sprit and talent of the Canadian Cowgirls will shine through. Here is a YouTube video of the Canadian Cowgirls performing in light last year at the Royal. Watch this Cowgirl do the stand up for 9 seconds


I also hope that it will generate interest in attending the Royal Fair where Canada’s farmers bring the best of the country to the city.

Enjoy.


BTW Wally has asked that we all visit this link in honour of Remembrance Day

Monday, November 9, 2009

Another guest Post - keep 'em coming!

William Hayes
Another Good Tax

Stephen Harper has said "There's no such thing as a good tax." As a stunning counter-example, I offer the notion of the Tobin tax, which has been newly proposed by British PM Gordon Brown, as reported both on this blog here and in this story from the Guardian.For more on the progressive notion that there are good taxes, see the editorial Can we have an adult conversation about taxes prepared by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives.


Revisiting the "Canadian Champion of leafleteers"

I bet when Rick Norlock leaves his position as MP, the legacy item will be his propensity for partisan politics and the obscene amout of our money he has spent on useless pieces of paper, spread from one end of the Country to the other.

Now the reaction. In a press release issued today the local NDP nominee takes him to task. To see it full size click on the image.

Funnily enough although a prominent local Lib has commented on the original post, nobody from the Rudd campaign has said anything. I suppose the "Wright" machine only wins nominations and doesn't do riding politics.

We have a candidate

George Smitherman, he of great promise but little results, has decided to run for the vacant position of mayor of Toronto. Personally I hope he doesn't succeed. His legislative record is one of blown opportunities and bloated budgets. Not a team player, he now announces and expects to be crowned. My money is on John Tory, a much more pleasant person and one with a record of results.

Saturday, November 7, 2009

Why would they do this?

Council normally releases all agendas prior to the weekend of the Monday night meeting. In that agenda are the details of the items to be discussed, complete with background reports. The intent of early releases is to give the Councillors time to study the items over the weekend and then make informed decsions on the Monday night.

So why do we have an item that will need background information in a report that is not in the package but will be released at the meeting. Are the contents of that item confidential, does the information need to be worked on over the weekend or are the contents of the report explosive if released two days before the meeting? Oh you ask what is the subject of this speculation? Why a report on "Victoria Park and Beach operations". Why hasn't this report been released to the public before the meeting and that would allow members of the public input into the meeting if they wanted it. Does the CAO think that by scheduling a public meeting, in the resolution, that that action obviates the need for public scrutiny prior to the meeting? What is in the report that neccessitates such a late release, and does this late release contravene the spirit and intent of the rules and procedures of Council concerning public information?

In another related matter, if you intend to go to Council on Monday don't go anywhere near the Old Bailey courtroom, the great experiment in "new democracy has fizzled out. The Mayor has decided despite spending $42,000 on the move that it doesn't work. Perhaps a public accounting of all the staff time and the cost of the facilities left behind as well as the cost of the transfer back to the old chambers might be in order! BTW thanks to a sharp citizen who put me on to this.



Llike a Chinese water torture

I am sure that many of you are like me, in one respect, that after a while of civic engagement you turn off for many reasons. Mostly because of the feeling of utter usefullness. How many times do your friends say to you "Why do you bother?" I am referring to the mess we have on Parliament Hill with the ruling party acting like Mussolini and the Opposition acting like the Keystone Kops and poor old Joe Q Public just wishing that common sense would prevail the odd time.
However, the Natural Ruling Party, the Libs do have a point when they say - "Never mind a burning issue let's just get rid of Harper because of.....insert a litany here....." But the stories this week do tend to justify an examination of the Governmemt's record.
  • More money put into Con ridings than oppo ridings another story here this topic is a number crunchers dream but the evidence does support the contention that Blue ridings got more money than the rest.
  • The killing of the Gun Registry while "Sluggo" Van Loan sits on a report that proves the efficiency of the list and how many times the police have used it in the last year. Statistics that would have swayed the debate. For a disgusting example of a Pol not answering questions in a press scrum click here
  • The antics of a Con candidate in BC, obviously under orders from Head Office, who refuses to meet with the Press and does not attend All Candidates meetings. For a reference click here and here
  • The evidence here of many millions wasted on MP's mailouts
The interesting part of the last link and story is that tucked away in the middle is the startling news that our very own NQW MP Rick Norlock spent the most of all, amongst MP's. He is the Canadian Champion of mailouts. Our esteemed MP "Rick Norlock, Conservative MP for the Ontario riding of Northumberland-Quinte West, topped the list with $87,749 in printing costs -- 103% more than he spent in 2006/07. ".....Ottawa SUN.

Good Graphic here by SunMedia



Thursday, November 5, 2009

Found in my email this morning

An unsolicited email hit my inbox and at first it seems just like another Company offering web services: content management and Search engine optimization., etc. The usual stuff. Intrigued I read down to see who is offering the service -- Yep you guessed it, someone from India.

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Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Now I cancel my TO Star subscription

In this story we have a report that the Toronto Star is going to outsource 100 jobs to India - goodbye TO Star, and I can save money.

Monday, November 2, 2009

Another guest's opinion - Are the Times A Changing?

from Deb O'Connor

"Sitting here listening to Bob Dylan singing his timeless old classic, performed by the master fairly recently, my handsome spouse decided that Bob was injecting a note of cynicism into his vocals, suggesting that maybe the times weren't changing, or at least not quickly enough or in the right direction.

From my vantage point of three score years, I got to thinking about the song and how passionately I believed in its truth back in my youth, confident that Dylan was right, and waves of new thinking and understanding were about to sweep away the old ideas and prejudices. A new tolerant world would emerge, where humans looked after each other and together solved the problems facing us.

So what happened? Change has certainly overwhelmed us since then, but much of it has only hurt our common humanity more. To make it worse, the dire predictions of ecological ruin are coming true in our own lifetimes.

But the Powers that Be thought we had all the time in the world to make things right: technology would fix our mistakes and after all, poverty would always be with us, so why bother trying to cure that.

There's an old saying that might apply here: Too soon old, too late smart. Yep, that's us alright. We know the price of everything and the value of nothing.

I suspect my spouse is right and old Bob is as discouraged as I am about now.

Wacky Monday stuff

Item # 1. This is the story of a frightened lover who had been surprised by a returning husband, He ran out of the window, stayed on a ledge and revealed all to the public. I just love one of his explanations for his appearance, "People are even laughing at how I look naked - but I have to point out it was a very cold day," he added.




Item # 2. This story is from the National Post and is about a woman in Langley BC who is going around and assaulting men at random by kicking them in the groin. Ouch! She has done it more than once and has earned the label of "serial groin kicker". So watch yourself and all lone women who you may see on the streets of Langley, especially if they are approaching closely.

Sunday, November 1, 2009

The great Solar game

We know that the use of traditional hydro is not good for the environment, consequently Pols are under great presure to move into renewables - Solar and Wind. In both areas the move is not without growing pains. Wind has been coming under attack by residents who are going to have to live with the behemoths of generation. Some windmills are going to be over 200 metres high. Residents who are going to have to live with these things are using any argument they can to stop the installation. The greatest objection is one that may hold some water; until somebody can prove they are healthy to live beside perhaps they should not be installed.

Solar power, on the other hand is very economical to run, but expensive to install. Solar banks that can be installed on household roofs are extremely expensive for what they are and have a long payback period. But George Smitherman, chasing a legacy item, has worked out a deal with the hydro companies and Samsung to blanket the province with both jobs and turbines. Well that was until the last provincial Cabinet meeting, where according to "informed sources" the plan was trashed by the majority. So back to the drawing board. But one of the key elements is the basis for the formation of a local buying group for solar installations. join the group set up by "Go Green Together" and you will be able to join in discounts produced by bulk buying.

But the rationale for going green on your rooftop is the decision made by Smitherman to direct the hydro company to buy back all the power produced by solar panels at 80cents per kwh, this directive is for the next twenty years. When one buys traditional power at an average of 10 cents per hour that is a whacking 70cent subsidy per kwh used. What a deal! put enough panels on your roof to power your needs and you will end up being given about 70 cents for each kwh used. That's the way I read it, please correct me if I am wrong. The big question is - how many panels do I need to cover my consumption, because if my roof isn't big enough to handle the requirement why bother?

Another defeat for the Illuminati

One of the most viral conspiracy theories is the one about the One World Government ruled by a mysterious group called the "Illuminati". These people, unseen but living behind the scenes direct all of the major governments because they can and the sitting Pols in these nations - USA, UK, Italy etc - do what these faceless people tell them to do.

One of the planks of this theory is that there will be one world ruler and that would be a partnership between the EU and the USA. The Lisbon treaty ratified by all but one of the EU partner states, calls for the election of an EU President. Until a couple of months ago the first name on the list was the previous PM of the UK - Tony Blair. He of the "third wave" this was a move by "New Labour" to move the labour Party from its traditional political position on the left to the middle right by pure force of personality. It worked and Blair left politics a rich man to embark on a PR campaign and speak about world affairs. But because he was such a duplicitous politician and an obvious lapdog for George Bush he left with his reputation in tatters. But that did not stop him placing himself, or being placed, in contention for the EU Presidency. However this weekend it has come crashing down. Politicians in Europe, for many reasons, have turned against the idea of a Blair presidency.

Eric Margolis, writing in today's Toronto Sun says it best, "Germany's re-elected Chancellor Angela Merkel and France's president, Nicholas Sarkozy, had reportedly favoured Blair, who has spent a lot of time schmoozing these kingmakers. But a senior Merkel aid leaked that she could not bear "listening anymore to Mr. Flash." Sarkozy just reversed course and came out against "my dear friend" Blair's candidacy. Au revoir Tony." .

So long "Bliar", but the illuminati will be back, after all they have been around for a thousand years.

The trials of an investigator

What an idea - try to find out who's going to carry the Olympic flame through Cobourg, when it passes through on the 16th of December. On its way from Kingston to Peterborough. Calculations indicate that if the length of the carry is 500 meters then nineteen people are going to carry it. Considering that the draw for runners was finalised in July the two major sponsors - RBC and Coca-Cola should know just who these runners are going to be. The RBC website (I wish I had a fraction of the website budgets devoted to the Olympics, I would be on a beach in Mexico) and the Coke site publishes some names but not all. So a phone call was made to the VANOC media centre. "Leave a message", I did - no answer. E-mailed them and I get a reply, "Can you give me a phone number", I did. A very nice person told me that even the torch organisors cannot release lists of people selected until after the run!! Apparently all their effort is going into lining up the runners, as the draw was made three months ago and some people may not be able to fulfill their obligation. But celebrations, read sponsorship advertising, will take place along the route and because it is being organised on the fly it will be a surprise. But the intrepid BurdReport will keep on this story, I still have to contact the CC media dept. and attempt to show that all the runners were in fact chosen at random, according to plan, as opposed to being selected for their local celebrity status.